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Firing

New case shows legal risks of ‘papering’ fired employee’s file

04/15/2013
When preparing to terminate a worker, you want to be able to produce the most solid documentation to defend a potential lawsuit. Just make sure supervisors know to document employee performance and behavior at the time it occurs—not just before or after the employee leaves the building.

Terminated worker won’t return property

04/12/2013
The problem: A terminated employee fails to return company equipment, such as a laptop. How do you get it back? You have different options to consider, depending on your state’s laws.

FMLA leave + Facebook + fraud = fired!

04/11/2013
You’ve been warned not to discipline employees for their Facebook rants about the company. (That could be “concerted activity.”) And you have to be careful not to use Facebook info when hiring. (That could be discrimination.) So can employers really use Facebook for anything these days? Yes, you can.

HR should have last word on terminations: Supervisor bias can taint firing decisions

04/10/2013
For harried HR professionals, the temptation may be strong to quickly rubber-stamp supervisors’ termination recommendations. But that’s an unwise move, which became even more legally dangerous with a 2011 Supreme Court decision.

Can HR professionals be fired for insisting on legal compliance?

04/03/2013
Have you ever been frustrated that your CEO doesn’t seem to care about the FLSA, FMLA, ADA or any other of those magic compliance acronyms? What if the boss gets tired of your compliance complaints and sends you packing?

Older worker too slow? Firing isn’t age bias

04/01/2013
Some older workers hear “slow” and immediately assume that’s code for “old.” But sometimes, slow just means slow.

You could personally pay for FMLA violations

03/29/2013
Some federal labor laws provide extra incentive for managers to understand how to administer them. The FMLA is one of those laws. It provides for individual liability for those who are responsible for approving FMLA leave and ensuring the employer follows the law on leave and reinstatement.

Base firing on solid evidence of wrongdoing

03/25/2013
Solid, substantiated and legitimate reasons for firing someone almost always trump bias claims based on a few isolated slurs—even when the trash-talking comes from a supervisor.

Court refuses to help pro se litigant after EEOC, attorneys reject her case

03/25/2013
Here’s some good news for em­ployers frustrated with former employees who file groundless discrimination lawsuits. Judges are increasingly unwilling to bend over backward to enable lawsuits that look like sure losers by assigning court-appointed attorneys.

When rude boss spouts off, expect little sympathy from juries

03/21/2013
A supervisor’s foul temper can alienate employees—and wind up costing an employer big bucks.