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New HR Challenges in the Dynamic Environment of Legal Compliance. By Teri J. Elkins. Regulatory Issues. Legal compliance in HR has increased in significance, complexity and breadth over the last 50 years
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New HR Challenges in the Dynamic Environment of Legal Compliance By Teri J. Elkins
Regulatory Issues • Legal compliance in HR has increased in significance, complexity and breadth over the last 50 years • Failing to comply with business regulations can have significant negative outcomes for the organization
Topics • Employment discrimination • Corporate reform • Alternative dispute resolution
Sexual Harassment • This section looks at recent rulings related to an employer’s liability for hostile work environment harassment and provides some guidelines on how organizations can protect themselves in such cases
Vicarious Liability Defense • An employer is liable for hostile work environment sexual harassment committed by nonsupervisory employees when the employer knew or should have known about the harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action (29 C.F.R. § 1604.11(d))
Defense for the Company • The employer exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct promptly any sexually harassing behavior • The plaintiff employee unreasonably failed to take advantage of any preventive or corrective opportunities provided by the employer or to avoid harm
Exception to the Defense • No affirmative defense is available when the supervisor's harassment culminates in a tangible employment action, such as discharge, demotion, or undesirable reassignment.” (Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, at 2292-2293, 1998; Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, at 2270, 1998)
Policy Guideline • Guideline 1: Write, communicate, and implement comprehensive anti-harassment policies • Employers may be liable for harassment if employees are unaware that anti-harassment policies exist
Training Guideline • Guideline 2: Provide training to all employees regarding the organization’s anti-harassment policies and complaint procedures • All employees should receive periodic training regarding an organization’s anti-harassment policies and complaint procedures
Training Content • All employees should be informed about specific prohibited behaviors, how to report complaints of harassment, and the company’s complaint procedures
Training Content Continued • Managers should also be instructed on how to monitor for sexual harassment, and how to handle complaints, documentation, performance evaluations, counseling, and the company’s prohibition against retaliation
Investigative Guideline • Guideline 3: Conduct thorough investigations of harassment complaints and take appropriate corrective actions • Failing to conduct proper investigations can result in company liability for compensatory as well as punitive damages
How to Investigate • The investigator should interview the complainant, the alleged harasser, and any relevant third parties • Credibility should be determined based upon plausibility of the accounts, demeanor, motives to lie, corroboration, and past records
Investigator Actions • The investigator should determine whether sexual harassment occurred, inform the parties of the decision, and take immediate appropriate corrective action • This may include a written/oral reprimand, demotion, decrease in salary, suspension, termination, training, and monitoring
Age Discrimination • This section looks at recent rulings related to an employer’s liability for disparate impact claims of age discrimination and provides some guidelines on how organizations can protect themselves in such cases
Disparate Impact Claims • U.S. employers cannot discriminate against individuals 40 and older because of their age • Suit can be brought against a company that discriminates unintentionally through neutral policies
Age Discrimination Guidelines • Guideline 4: Review HR policies and practices for disparate impact based upon age • Evaluate benefit plans, layoffs, retirement/pension plans, compensation systems, restructuring, and hiring and promotion policies
Age Discrimination Guidelines Continued • Guideline 5: Identify and document reasonable factors other than age for problematic policies
Alternative Dispute Resolution • This section looks at recent rulings related to the legality of using mandatory arbitration agreements and provides some guidelines on how organizations can use such agreements to their benefit
Arbitration • Arbitration is less expensive than most litigation and it can be a much faster mechanism for resolving disputes than the trial process
Mandatory Arbitration Agreements • Overall, federal statutory law and court decisions in the United States have been favorable toward mandatory arbitration clauses in which, as a condition of employment, employees and applicants agree to arbitrate claims against employers and waive their right to litigation
Arbitration Guidelines • Guideline 6: Follow contract law principles when executing a mandatory arbitration agreement • Guideline 7: Establish terms and conditions in mandatory arbitration agreements that ensure procedural and substantive fairness
Corporate Reform • Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining an adequate internal control structure and procedures for financial reporting • Assessing the effectiveness of the internal control structure and financial reporting procedures
Reform Guidelines • Guideline 8: Work with the company’s finance department to comply with financial controls requirements • HR should work closely with finance to develop documentation that will be will be requested by auditors
Reform Guidelines Continued • Guideline 9: Write, communicate, and implement a comprehensive code of ethics • Codes should describe specific prohibited behaviors, create confidential reporting mechanisms, identify investigation procedures, and protect whistleblowers
Reform Guidelines Continued • Guideline 10: Establish procedures for reporting and investigating complaints of Sarbanes-Oxley Actviolations • Establish confidential complaint mechanisms such as hotlines, helplines, and web sites to a wide range of stakeholders
Reform Guidelines Continued • Guideline 11: Review and monitor compensation and benefits policies for compliance • HR should conduct a thorough review and stop illegal practices
Concluding Guideline • Guideline 12: Utilize the outreach and training functions of administrative agencies to monitor changes in the legal environment