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CHAPTER 40 LABOR AND FAIR EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES. DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.). INTRODUCTION.
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CHAPTER 40LABOR AND FAIR EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8th Ed.)
INTRODUCTION • Labor and fair employment practices laws provide the framework under which workers operate and under which employees are regulated and protected. • Labor law applies to the relationship between management and workers. • Fair employment practices law deals with employer rights and responsibilities.
FEDERAL LABOR LAW • Federal Statutes. • Unions not always a fact of life. • Violent and divisive battles characterized employer and pro-union workers relations. • Federal courts were hostile and viewed union activities as criminal conspiracies. • Clayton Act passed to shield unions from liability under antitrust laws, Supreme Court decisions narrowed statutory protection.
NORRIS-LAGUARDIA ACT (1932) • Immunized certain activities, e.g., peaceful refusals to work, from federal court action. • Authorizes boycotts and picketing. • Barred federal injunctions in the context of labor disputes as well as institution of yellow dog contracts. • Permitted employees to organize and collectively bargain. • Aimed at keeping courts out of the labor field.
THE WAGNER ACT (1935) • Encourages organizing activities and bargaining. • Allows workers the freedom to join unions. • Collectively bargain with an employer. • Engage in mutually beneficial activities. • Established National Labor Relations Board (NLRB): • Charged with administering and interpreting the unfair labor practice provisions of this law.
TAFT-HARTLEY ACT (1947) • Prohibits unfair labor practices by unions. • Separates the NLRB’s functions. • Empowers the courts to grant various civil and criminal remedies. • Created the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service for settling disputes between labor and management.
LANDRUM-GRIFFIN ACT (1959) • Requires extensive reporting on unions’ financial affairs. • Allows for civil and criminal penalties for corruption by union officers. • Provides a “bill of rights” for members regarding elections and meetings. • Mandates democratic procedures in the conduct of union affairs.
FEDERAL LABOR LAW • Further Issues • Questions arise when employees select their bargaining representative. • Employer resists the election/representation process, may attempt to “decertify” the union. • Certification process may raise property issues, because organizers ordinarily distribute union literature to employees in firms. • NLRB invalidates soliciting employees and distributing of literature during working hours.
FEDERAL LABOR LAW • Further Issues • Wagner Act requires good-faith bargaining by employer and the union. • Both sides can use economic weapons outside the bargaining room. • NLRB orders are not self-enforcing, they become law only when imposed by a federal circuit court of appeals.
LABOR • State Laws: • State law regulating labor is preempted by federal law. • Matters peripheral to federal law or of deep state concern are subject to state regulation.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Designed to ensure equal employment opportunity for persons historically foreclosed from the workplace. • Civil Rights Act of 1964. • Title VII of this Act applies to employers with 15 or more employees. • Unions with 15 or more members or who operate a hiring hall and employment agencies. • Law forbids any form of employment discrimination on basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Civil Rights Act of 1964: • Forbids disparate treatment. • Forbids disparate impact. • Forbids harassment. • Affirmative Action. • Sexual Harassment.
SEXUAL HARASSMENT • Although Title VII does not specifically mention sexual harassment as a form of sex discrimination, the U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted Title VII’s prohibition against sex discrimination to include a prohibition against sexual harassment. • There are currently two forms of recognized sexual harassment: • Hostile Work Environment. • Quid Pro Quo.
HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT • Hostile environment occurs when workplace is “permeated” with discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, insult so severe to alter the conditions of the victim’s employment. • The conduct in the workplace must be offensive to a reasonable person as well as to the victim, and it must be severe and pervasive.
HARASSMENT BY SUPERVISORS • Quid Pro Quo harassment involves the demands for sexual favors by a superior from a subordinate, in exchange for some workplace benefit. • Under certain conditions, an employer may be liable for the quid pro quo harassment committed by its supervisory employees.
SUPREME COURT GUIDELINES • Burlington Industries v. Ellerth (1998). • Company liable for harassment even though the employee suffered no adverse job consequences. • Faragher v. City of Boca Raton (1998). • Employer (city) could be liable for supervisor’s harassment even though the employer was unaware of the conduct. Harassment policies and procedures had not be distributed among employees.
SUPREME COURT GUIDELINES • Employers have a defense if: • They took “reasonable care to prevent and correct promptly any sexually harassing behavior” by establishing and distributing effective harassment policies and procedures. • That the employee suing for harassment failed to follow these policies and procedures.
HARASSMENT BY CO-WORKERS • Employer generally liable only if employer knew or should have known and failed to take action. • Employee notice to supervisor is notice to Employer under agency law. • Employers may also be liable for harassment by non-employees. • Same-sex harassment also violates Title VII.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 • Mandates pregnancy be treated as any other disability protected by law. • Expressly states that sex discrimination under Title VII includes discrimination on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 bans discrimination based on national origin or citizenship status. • Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination in wages on the basis of sex. • Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 protects workers aged 40 or older from adverse employment decisions based on age.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 directs federal contractors to reasonably accommodate “otherwise qualified” handicapped individuals in connection with employment.
ADA • The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 guarantees an individual with a “disability” equal access to public services and requires employers to make a reasonable accommodation in employment for qualified persons with disabilities. • Toyota Motor Manufacturing v. Williams (2002).
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Civil Rights Act of 1991: • Amends earlier statutes to broaden the scope of protections afforded under anti-discrimination law. • Prohibits “race norming” of employment tests. • Allows compensatory and punitive damage awards and jury trials.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Family Medical Leave Act. • Mandates that eligible employees receive up to 12 weeks of leave during any 12 month period for certain family related events: • Birth of a child • Placement of a child with the employee for adoption or foster care • Care of a seriously ill spouse, child, or parent • Serious health condition of the employee that make employee unable to perform and of the essential functions of the job.
EMPLOYMENT LAW • Other Fair Employment Practices Laws. • The Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974. • Various executive orders. • Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1871. • State law.
EMPLOYMENT • Occupational Safety and Health Act: • Mandates safe and healthful workplace conditions. • Act authorizes enforcement of standards through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). • Assists and encourages states’ efforts to assure safe and healthful working conditions. • Provides research, information, education, and training in the field of safety and health.
EMPLOYMENT • Social Security. • Provides federal benefits to the aged, the disabled, and other “fully insured” workers. • The Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) taxes paid by employees and employers on wages earned by workers fund social security retirement benefits and Medicare.
EMPLOYMENT • Unemployment Insurance: • Social Security covers unemployment insurance through the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA). • Represents a coordinated state and federal effort to provide economic security for temporarily unemployed workers.
EMPLOYMENT • Workers’ Compensation. • Provide financial benefits to reimburse workers for workplace related injury or death. • Compensation does not refer to wages or salaries but to money paid by the employer to indemnify the worker. • Imposes strict liability on the employer for injuries to employees during the scope to their employment.