Title: Employment Legal Issues
1Employment Legal Issues
- Beginning, Managing Ending
- Employment Relationships
- Amy Adelman
- Beth Clark-Morrison
- Office of the General Counsel
- Emory University
- School of Medicine Department Administrators
Training Program
- November 3, 2006
- 1230 p.m. 130 p.m.
2Goals
- Overview of Relevant Laws Know the playing
field
- Hiring Decisions You Will Not Regret
- Managing Employee Performance/Avoiding Legal
Landmines
- Termination without Litigation
3Knowing the Playing FieldFederal and State Laws
4Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
- Prohibits discrimination on the basis of race,
color, religion, sex and national origin
- Includes pregnancy and sexual harassment
- Prohibits retaliation
- Requires reasonable accommodations for genuinely
held religious beliefs and practices
5Title VII prohibits sexual harassment
- Quid Pro Quo harassment
- decisions are based on submission to or
rejection of unwelcome sexual advances
- Hostile Environment
- unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature that is
sufficiently severe or pervasive and unreasonably
interferes with an employees job performance or
creates an intimidating, offensive or hostile
work environment - Supervisors generally have a duty to investigate
allegations of sexual or other harassment and to
ensure a harassment-free work environment
6Age Discrimination inEmployment Act (ADEA)
- Prohibits discrimination against people age 40 or
over
- Prohibits age-based harassment
- Prohibits retaliation
- Court may find discrimination based on age even
if both employees/applicants are over 40
7Americans with Disabilities Act(ADA)
- Prohibits discrimination against a qualified
individual with a disability who can perform the
essential functions of the job with or without
reasonable accommodation - Requires employers to make reasonable
accommodations, such as unpaid leave, change in
work schedule, transfer to a vacant position
8What is a Disability?
- Physical or mental impairment that substantially
limits a major life activity
- Record of such an impairment
- Perceived/regarded as having such an impairment
- Examples alcoholism, hearing or visual
impairments, HIV status, diabetes, mental
impairments
- Disability is broadly defined.
9Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
- Requires covered employers to provide eligible
employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave during a
twelve month period for
- Birth or adoption of child
- Employees serious health condition
- To care for spouse, child or parent with a
serious health condition
- Intermittent leave may be necessary
- Burden generally on Employer to offer FMLA
10Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
Rights Act (USERRA)
- Covers employees who are called to military
service/training
- Restoration rights upon return from service
(rights differ based on length of service)
- Includes an escalator clause put the employee
in the place they would have been (raises,
promotion) but for military service
11Other
- 42 USC 1981
- National Labor Relations Act
- Workers Compensation on the job injuries
- Fair Labor Standards Act
- State law theories invasion of privacy,
defamation, breach of contract, negligent hiring,
negligent supervision, assault battery
12Whistleblower Laws
- Protects employees who participate in
proceedings under such statutes as the Fair Labor
Standards Act, National Labor Relations Act,
Occupational Safety and Health Act, Clean Air
Act, Medicare/Medicaid Anti-kickback Statute,
False Claims Act. Employers may not discharge,
refuse to hire, harass, or otherwise discriminate
against a person because of such activities.
13HIRING Decisions YouWill Not Regret
- Key Find the right person for the job by
- Appropriate interviews, careful consideration and
thorough background checking
- Consistent fact-gathering process
- Not over-estimating ability to prevent history
repeats
- Avoiding the warm body syndrome
14HIRINGInterview Topics
- General Rules
- Pre-employment interviews may include any
question which is job-related and designed to
give interviewer knowledge of applicants
qualifications for the vacancy - If interviewer does not have a legally
permissible reason to use requested information,
interviewer should not ask
15HIRINGInterview Topics
- Topics that should be avoided
- Gender/Marital Status
- Are you married/engaged/divorced/dating?
- Is Miss, Mrs., or Ms. appropriate?
- What is your spouses occupation?
- What are the ages of your children?
- Do you plan to have additional children?
- Would you return to work after having children?
- What are your childcare arrangements?
16HIRINGInterview Topics
- Topics that should be avoided
- Age
- What is your age?
- How long do you plan to work before retiring?
- Religion
- What church do you attend?
- Do you always wear that head scarf?
17HIRINGInterview Topics
- Topics that should be avoided
- Race
- What is your race?
- How do you feel about workforce diversity?
- National Origin/Citizenship
- What kind of name is that?
- Where were you born?
- What is your citizenship?
- Permissible to ask Are you either a citizen of
the U.S. or otherwise legally authorized to work
in this country?
18HIRINGInterview Topics
- Health/Medical Information
- ADA prohibits employers at the pre-offer stage
from asking an applicant whether s/he has a
disability or about the severity of any
disability.
19HIRINGInterview Topics
- ADA-related topics that should be avoided
- Do you have any medical conditions?
- Is there any health-related reason that you may
not be able to perform the job for which you are
applying?
- How many illness-related absences did you have
last year?
- Are you taking any prescription drugs?
- Have you ever filed for workers compensation
insurance?
- Have you ever been treated for drug addiction or
alcoholism?
20HIRINGInterview Topics
- ADA-appropriate lines of inquiry
- Does applicant meet the specific pre-requisites
for the position (e.g., degree, work experience,
license)?
- If applicant reveals or has obvious disability,
the issue can be carefully discussed pre-offer.
Best to avoid/limit topic.
- Post-conditional offer, the candidate may be
asked if s/he can perform essential job functions
with or without reasonable accommodation for any
impairment
21HIRINGMedical Exams
- Pre-Offer Medical exams are unlawful.
- Post-Offer Medical exams are lawful if all
employees in the job category must undergo same
exam, exam is business-related and medical
information is kept confidential.
22HIRINGInterview Topics
- Military Obligations
- No future military service obligation
questions.
- Credit History
- No prior bankruptcy or garnishment questions.
23HIRINGBackground Checks
- Thoroughly check backgrounds of finalists
- Invest enough time in this process
- Feedback from references and prior/current
supervisors
- Find people who will share information
- Google individual
- Best predictor of future conduct is past conduct
24HIRINGCriminal Background Checks(if applicable)
- Prior convictions may be considered but not an
absolute hiring bar
- Other mandatory considerations
- Nature of job
- Nature and seriousness of offense and
- Length of time since conviction
- Arrests, without convictions, may only be taken
into consideration if employer has reasonable
evidence that the person actually engaged in the
conduct for which s/he was arrested
25HIRINGBackground Checks
- Negligent Hiring Claims
- Thorough reference checking helps to eliminate
claims
- Scope of check should be commensurate with risk
to the public
- Tension between not investigating enough
(negligent hiring claim) and being too intrusive
(federal discrimination laws)
26HIRINGEmployment Offers
- Proper authority
- Offer in writing
- Should state that the employment is at will and
terminable at any time for any reason (for
non-faculty)
- Use Deans Office templates for offer letters to
faculty
- Refer to employee as a regular, full-time, or
part-time employee, rather than a permanent
employee
- Do not indicate a specified term/length of
employment
- Quote the wage in the smallest appropriate
increment (hourly or monthly rate)
- Reference any contingencies
27Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Communicate expectations dont expect your
employees to be mind-readers.
28Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Give honest, timely and fair performance
appraisals
29Things NOT to Say in Performance Appraisals or
Other Documentation
- Do not refer to an employee who has taken FMLA
leave as unreliable or not dedicated
- Do not describe an employee who has filed a
complaint as disruptive or as having a bad
attitude
- Dont describe an older worker as lacking
energy or slowing down (and dont urge
employees to retire)!
- Dont include anything you wouldnt be
comfortable explaining to a jury
30Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Treat employees with respect
31Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Document, Document, Document!
32Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Goals of Documentation
- Define expectations
- Explain, as specifically as possible, how
employee is not meeting expectations
- Explain consequences of continued failure to meet
expectations
- Provide opportunity for improvement
- Offer assistance if needed
- Avoid termination, but if termination is
ultimately necessary, the documentation will show
that we have been fair
33Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Dont avoid problems.
- They just become bigger problems.
34Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Dont diagnose. Discipline!
- (FSAP wont turn your underperforming employees
into star performers!)
35Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- No mandatory referrals to FSAP
- Make sure employee is aware of available
resources
- It is ultimately the employees decision
- Dont inquire as to whether employee went to
FSAP
- Special rules apply in fitness for duty
situations only used to determine if employee
is a danger to self or others/fit to perform
essential functions of the job
36Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Dont take action (or inaction) based on
perceptions
- She wont improve. Shes too paranoid to be
productive.
- He wont respond to constructive criticism
because hes passive-aggressive.
37Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
38Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Dont ignore complaints, even if employee
requests confidentiality.
39Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Dont ignore requests for accommodation
- Whose responsibility?
- What constitutes a request?
- Whats reasonable?
40Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Call for help when
- An employee requests an accommodation or special
treatment
- An employee mentions sexual or other
harassment
- An employee complains of unfair treatment
- You need to discipline an employee who has filed
a complaint
- An employee needs a medical or personal leave of
absence
- Any time you find yourself in unfamiliar territory
41Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- Assume every e-mail you write to or about an
employee may be seen by a jury someday.
42Managing Employees/Avoiding Landmines
- No good deed goes unpunished.
43TERMINATIONThe Rationale
- At-Will Doctrine Discrimination/Retaliation
Exception
- Typical Reasons for Termination Desire
- Poor work quality
- - unable to perform job
- - motivational issue
- Misconduct
- - almost always a motivational issue
- Fairness Consistency (in policy and
application) Matter
- Thoroughly Investigate Facts
44TERMINATION Termination Worthy?
- Illegal Bias Risk Analysis
- Is employee in a protected class?
- Is replacement in a protected class?
- Has employee raised prior discrimination,
harassment, or compliance complaint?
- Is termination related in any way to protected
class or prior complaint?
- Considering termination because employee is a
complainer or disruptive?
- Is employee long-term?
45TERMINATIONTermination Worthy?
- Supervisors Responsibilities
- Has policy/expectation been consistently
applied?
- Has employee been progressively disciplined/given
ample opportunity to address issue?
- Has issue, prior warnings and opportunities to
improve been documented?
- Are performance evaluations honest and supportive
of termination?
- Is this a Lengthy Tolerance, then
Quick-Strike scenario?
46TERMINATIONTermination Worthy?
- Supervisors Responsibilities
- Options in lieu of discharge?
- Mislabeled RIF?
- Grey Book requirements?
- Comfortable explaining discharge to Dean,
President, Board and/or jury?
47TERMINATIONDelivering the Message
- Very emotional for employee
- Delivery influences decision to sue
- Face-to-face private meeting is best
- Two supervisors (or supervisor HR) present
48TERMINATIONDelivering the Message
- Unequivocally state termination
- Calm, courteous, respectful, business tone
- Keep meeting short
- Give employee chance to speak but do not debate
- Be prepared to discuss COBRA rights and final
paycheck or set up appointment with HR
- Discuss return of Emory property and collection
of personal property
- Avoid security escorts to car