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Crucial Concepts in HR What You Need to Know NOW !. Lets Get Acquainted. Please share a little about yourself and your organization: Name, Job Title Employer Name and Industry Number of Employees, Montana only or multi-state Federal grants or Contracts? Our Sponsors Today.
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Crucial Concepts in HR What You Need to Know NOW!
Lets Get Acquainted • Please share a little about yourself and your organization: • Name, Job Title • Employer Name and Industry • Number of Employees, Montana only or multi-state • Federal grants or Contracts? • Our Sponsors Today
Overview of The Day • Breaks every hour or so • Lunch on Your Own • Location of Restrooms • Please turn off your cell phone • The handouts have additional information in the appendices that we will not discuss today
Overview of the HR Function • Many laws (See appendix A) apply to the employment relationship. Which rules apply to your organization depend on the following: • Sector - Public, Private, Non-Profit • The existence of governmental contracts or grants • The number of people you employ • Annual Revenues • The existence of collective bargaining agreements • The jurisdictions in which you operate • This is a partial list
Discrimination Overview • Discrimination based on a protected characteristic in unlawful for all employers in Montana • The law prohibits discrimination before, during and after employment • Discrimination laws apply to nearly every decision and to nearly all employers
Protected Classes • The following characteristics of an employee, applicant or former employee are protected from discrimination: • Race, Color or National Origin • Sex, Age, Marital Status, Religion • Disabilities, Family Medical History, Veterans Status • Sexual Orientation in some Cities • Missoula, Helena, Butte, Bozeman
Forms of Discrimination • Discrimination can take a number of forms: • Hiring or refusing to hire relatives or associates • Setting minimum or maximum ages for jobs where not supported by law • Not hiring or rehiring veterans or National Guard/Reservists • Refusing religious scheduling accommodations • Conducting medical exams before conditional offer of employment has been extended
Forms of Discrimination • Refusing to hire pregnant applicants • Asking suspect questions before hire that reveal protected class information • Asking questions about current or prior disabilities and prior work comp injuries • Asking questions about medical history of family members
Forms of Discrimination • Discrimination can be direct (treating individuals differently due to protected class), or; • Indirect (making employment decisions that negatively impact protected workers • Discrimination includes harassment, retaliation and discrimination due to a relationship with another individual
The Interactive Conversation • If a Disability or religious conflict raises concerns regarding the candidate's ability to perform the "Essential Functions of the Job", employers must engage in an "Interactive Conversation" to identify possibleaccommodations
Criminal Records • The EEOC discourages refusals to hire based on unrelated or older convictions or convictions • The guidance suggests employers should have pre-established criteria regarding disqualifying convictions before applying the criteria • EEOC discourages refusals to hire based on arrests or having any record
Harassment in Employment • Harassment can be based on any protected characteristic (sex, race, pregnancy, etc.) • Harassment is Defined as: • Tangible adverse actions based on an individual's willingness to submit to harassing behavior, OR; • Intimidating hostile or offensive work environments
Harassment Can Occur • When supervisors harass subordinates • When workers harass co-workers • When a customer or visitor harasses an employee • When an employee harasses a customer • When an employee benefits from voluntary participation in consensual relationships
Harassment • Harassment: • Need not be intentional- it is the result that counts • Can occur away from the workplace if the perpetrator has work authority over the victim • Is usually directed at “low power” individuals in vulnerable positions
Case Studies • Are these individuals considered “disabled” under the ADA? • A person with controlled epilepsy? • A pregnant woman? • An individual who used marijuana a few days ago? • An individual has diabetes causing frequent unscheduled absences from work. • She requests the ability to “come to work when she can”. Might this request be a “reasonable accommodation?
Case Studies • A registered nurse announces that she no longer can work from Friday at sundown until Saturday at sundown due to religious reasons. Nurses have always been scheduled on a seniority basis and you discussed this with her at the time of hire. • Must you reschedule her working hours?
Case Studies • An employer has a policy that prohibits employees from discussing their salary with other employees. • A female employee is at lunch with a group of other employees and asks them point blank what their salary is. She tells you she thought that she made less money than male employees who do similar work. • Is the employer justified in disciplining the employee?
Wage and Hour Overview • The FLSA sets requirements for minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping and child labor for full and part time employees. • Montana has a state wage and hour law that tends to be more protective of employees than the FLSA.
Min Wage and Overtime • All non-exempt employees must be paid at one and a half times the regular rate of pay for all hours worked beyond 40 hours per workweek • Both the FLSA and Montana law provide exemptions from overtime and/or minimum wage • Designating an employee as ‘salaried' does not automatically qualify the employee as ‘exempt' from overtime pay requirements
Overtime Exemptions • White Collar- Executive, Administrative, Professional, Computer-related, Outside Sales • Other Exemptions- Retail sales, mechanics, certain drivers, newspaper deliverers, lumberyard employees, farm workers, seasonal workers (each under certain circumstances)
White Collar Exemptions • The following must be true for all positions for which an employer claims and exemptions (except outside sales and computer exemptions) • Minimum Salary of $455 a week except for the computer exemption which requires $1105.20 a week • No minimum salary for Outside sales, doctors, lawyers • Salary Basis Form of Payment- Must comply with salary basis pay deduction rules
Predominate Duty Test- Generally 51% or more of working time must be spent performing exempt job duties • Nature of Work (See handouts page 6 for detail)
Outside Sales Exemptions • Outside Sales Representatives are exempt if their primary duty is making sales or obtaining orders for services or for the use of facilities for which a consideration will be paid by the client or customer; and • they are customarily and regularly engaged away from the employer's place of business in performing the sales duties
Retail Sales Exemption • An individual employed in a retail establishment is exempt from overtime if: • he/she receives over half their pay in the form of commissions and • the regular rate exceeds 1 1/2 times the minimum wage during a representative period of time of at least 30 days • “Retail” is defined in regulations • 51% rule
Minimum Wage • Employers must pay covered non-exempt employees no less than the current minimum wage. • Federal Minimum wage is $7.25 ($10.10 for federal contractors) • State minimum wage is $7.90 (inflation adjusted each January) • Montana employers may not use tip credit or other sub-minimum rules
Child Labor • Workers under 18 years old. are limited in work they may perform • The FLSA has specific requirements for youth ages 14–15 and youth ages 16–17 • The requirements generally pertain to types of jobs allowed and for how much time during each workweek. • After age 18 a person may perform nearly any job, including hazardous jobs without restrictions
Time Worked • Breaks And Lunches: • If the break exceeds 20 minutes and the employee is relieved of all duty/responsibility, it is considered to be a meal period and the time is not counted. • Otherwise the time is considered a rest period and the time is counted as "Time Worked"
Time Worked • Waiting And On-call Time: • If the employee is free to use the time for his/her own purposes the time may not be working time
Time Worked • Travel Time: • Home to work travel time is normally not counted. • If traveling during work day, time is counted even if it extends workday • If traveling out of town, time traveling during normal work hours is time worked even if traveling on non- scheduled work day
Time Worked • Training and Meetings: • Time spent in meetings, training, etc is not working time if all four following rules are followed: • The meeting is outside regularly working hours • Meeting attendance is voluntary with no repercussions for non-attendance • The subject matter of the meeting does not relate to employee's current job duties • No productive work is performed during the meeting
Time Worked • Working Without Permission: • If an employer knows, or has reason to know, an employee has worked and does not act to stop the employee from working, the time may be considered approved
Time Worked • Volunteers • Employees cannot work "off the clock" • Real volunteers can only work for a non-profit • Special rules exist for interns • Montana restricts volunteers to individuals who are not already employed by the entity • Volunteers can be reimbursed for certain expenses but cannot be paid more than a nominal fee that is not based on productivity
Overtime Rules • Employers must pay 1.5 times the regular rate as overtime to non-exempt employees who work over 40 hours during a seven day workweek • No 8 hr/day overtime in MT • Time may not be averaged against another week • Employers do not have to count time for which an employee is paid but did not work when computing hours
The Regular Rate • The Regular Rate is obtained by dividing all pay (including non-discretionary bonuses, commissions, etc. but not including statutory exclusions) by the number of hours worked during the workweek • Certain payments such as expense allowances and reimbursements for some expenditures may need to be included to the extent they exceed the actual or reasonably approximate cost
Wage Payments • Timeliness of Payments • Wages are due and payable within 10 days for continuing employees; • The next pay day or 15 days for terminating employees • Wages for employees terminated for cause or laid off are due immediately unless the has adopted a written policy providing for payment on a later date- but no later than the sooner of 15 days or next pay day
Withholding From Wages • Montana prohibits withholding wages for theft, breakage, shortages, waste, etc • Employers may withhold for room, board, etc. when agreed to in advance of employment • Free and Clear payment of wages required
Electronic Wage Payments • Employers must have written employee permission in writing • Employees must opt into electronic wages not opt out • Additional rules exist related to fees charged and to payment by debit pay card
Case Studies 1. An employee turns in the following time sheet for a two week pay period: The Employee is paid $10.00 plus commission. During Week One the employee earns $200 in commission. During Week Two the employee earns no commissions. Calculate the wages for the two week pay period.
Case Studies • Which of the Following individuals may be exempt from overtime? • A Computer programmer who earns $60,000 per year. • A salesperson who sells advertising over the phone for a newspaper. • A truck driver that hauls cargo between Montana and Salt Lake City • An insurance agent who works for an insurance brokerage.
Case Studies • Which of the following might be working time? • A staff meeting held after working hours to discuss the company’s new health insurance benefit plan. • An employee of a travel agency who is taking a discount vacation to visit a new resort that the company will represent. • An employee who is on call and is required to be no further than 20 minutes from work during the on call period.
Case Studies • A restaurant has a long established policy that employee are required to share a percentage of their tips with cooks and employees that “bus” tables. • A recently hired employee refuses to share her tips. • Is the employer within its rights to enforce its policy?
The Affordable Care Act • Employers that provide "applicable employer-sponsored coverage" under a group health plan are subject to a reporting requirement • IRS has granted relief for employers filing fewer than 250 W-2 forms by making this requirement optional until further guidance is issued
Shared Responsibility Payment • The annual employer mandate fee is a per employee fee for employers with over 50 full-time equivalent employees who don't offer health coverage to full-time employees • An FTE is 30 hours worked per week • The employer mandate is based on full-time equivalent employees, not just full-time employees
The fee is based on whether or not you offer affordable health insurance to your employees that provides minimum value. • The annual fee is $2,000 per employee if insurance isn't offered and 1+ employee receive subsidy • The first 30 full-time employees are exempt • Fee is assessed monthly and is not tax deductible
Small Employers • Employers With Fewer Than 50 FTE (30 hr week=1 FTE) are NOT subject to penalty if not offering affordable healthcare coverage but may qualify for tax credit to help pay for insurance
Intermittent Employees • Employers may use a “lookback period” of 3 to 12 months to determine if coverage must be offered to intermittent or seasonal employees • No penalties apply for not offering insurance during lookback period • If employee worked more than 1,560 hrs then they are eligible for insurance (or would incur a penalty) for the remainder of the stability period
Federal HR Update • The US Supreme Court declined to expand the definition of supervisor for vicarious liability purposes. Vance v Ball State University • Social Media Policies- • The NLRB has disapproved a number of policies that limit employee’s social media discussions of terms and conditions of employment as being violations of Section 7 of the NLRA