• The HR Specialist - Print Newsletter
  • HR Specialist: Employment Law
  • The HR Weekly

Employment Law

Whistle-blower flagging safety violation? Don’t shoot the messenger by retaliating

03/26/2010

Generally, Pennsylvania is an at-will employment state where employers can fire employees for any nondiscriminatory reason. But Pennsylvania also allows lawsuits for wrongful discharge based on public-policy concerns. Those public policies include the right not to be fired for reporting company safety violations that could harm the public.

You’ll need a calendar and a calculator: Track past service to check FMLA eligibility

03/26/2010

Whenever you hire someone, check your records of past employees. If your new employee is a rehire and last worked for you within seven years, be ready to credit that service if FMLA eligibility ever becomes an issue. If you don’t do that, and wind up denying FMLA leave to an eligible employee, you may have to pay double damages.

Pay gap between men and women is wider in Pennsylvania

03/26/2010

Nationally, women earn about 80 cents for each dollar men receive. But in Pennsylvania, that figure is closer to 78 cents. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Pennsylvania women earned a median weekly salary of $642 in 2008. The median salary for Keystone State men was $815.

Hiring bias alert: Beware smoking-gun e-mails

03/26/2010
Remind everyone involved in the hiring process: It’s much better to pick up the phone to discuss a candidate than it is to send an e-mail. E-mails can be recovered (and used as evidence in court); phone calls cannot.

How co-worker harassment can become supervisor harassment

03/26/2010
Generally, co-worker harassment doesn’t mean liability for the employer if the employer had no reason to know about the behavior. But if one of the co-workers has some degree of control over the employee he harassed, courts may conclude that supervisor liability applies.

Remind all decision-makers: Age-related comments almost always lead to courtroom

03/26/2010

We can’t say it often enough: Do everything you can to discourage any age-related comments at work. Make sure managers and supervisors understand that seemingly innocent jokes can come back to bite. Ageist comments do nothing but cause trouble, as this recent case shows:

Act fast to punish violent employee, even if he’s been the victim of harassment

03/26/2010

It’s understandable that employees might get angry if they perceive that co-workers are harassing them. But that doesn’t justify a violent reaction. When alleged victims of harassment lash out, you can and should punish them. But even as you discipline the angry worker, make sure you also do whatever you can to end the harassment that precipitated the violent response.

If no job loss, no damages for whistle-blower

03/26/2010
The New Jersey Superior Court has reversed a large jury award previously won by a whistle-blower because the employer never fired the employee or forced him to quit.

Warn bosses: Loose lips lead to lawsuits

03/26/2010

Some managers can’t seem to understand that they shouldn’t discuss personnel matters with anyone other than the appropriate people within the organization. Consider the following case in which a supervisor’s conversation with an outsider may have cost his employer $100,000.

Could gambling addiction become an ADA-protected ‘disability’?

03/26/2010
Just in time for March Madness … the new draft of a prominent American Psychiatric Association (APA) manual recommends expanding the category of “mental disabilities” to include new disorders, including binge eating and pathological gambling.