Title: Chapter 11 Complying with Workplace Justice Laws
1Chapter 11Complying with Workplace Justice Laws
2HRM and Competitive Advantage
HR Planning Job Analysis
Recruitment Selection
Output Retention Legal Compliance Company Image
Competence Motivation Work Attitudes
Cost Leadership Product Differentiation
Training/Develop. Performance App. Compensation Pr
oductivity Imp.
Workplace Justice Unions Safety
Health International
3Workplace Justice Practices and Links to
Competitive Advantage
Reduce Litigation Costs
Workplace justice
Enhance Perceptions Of Fair Treatment
Competitive Advantage
Promote A Favorable Company Image
4Workplace Justice Laws
- Fairness of organizational practices
- Protect workers from arbitrary treatment
- Dictate day-to-day treatment of employees
- Ensure basic right
5Employee Responses to Perceived Unfair Treatment
- Active e.g., lawsuits, protests
- Passive e.g., lowered commitment, poor
organizational citizenship
6Discrimination Issues in Day-to-Day Treatment of
Employees
- Sexual harassment
- Pregnancy discrimination
- Family and medical leave
- Discharge
- Layoffs
- Early retirement
7Sexual Harassment
- Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual
favors, and other verbal or physical contact of a
sexual nature
8How Sexual Harassment Damages Competitive
Advantage
- Morale
- Teamwork
- Productivity
- Turnover
- Absenteeism
- Stress
- Psychological
- Problems
Increases
Decreases
9Forms of Sexual Harassment
Sexual Harassment
Quid Pro Quo
Hostile Environment
10Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment
- Employee or applicant must provide sexual favors
in order to be hired, promoted, granted a pay
raise, or allowed to keep a job.
11Hostile Work Environment Sexual Harassment
- Employees are subjected to unwelcome,
intimidating working conditions - Unwelcome direct or indirect evidence
- Based on gender
- Abusive severity, frequency, total number of
days, context - Reasonable person standard
12When Sexual Harassment Occurs
- Employer is not liable if
- it exercised reasonable care to prevent and
promptly correct the sexual harassment. - the employee unreasonably failed to take
advantage of the corrective opportunities
provided by the employer.
13Employer Responses to Sexual Harassment
- Establish a written policy
- Provide supervisory training
- Establish investigatory guidelines that maintain
confidentiality - Establish a committee of both men and women to
investigate claims - Use surveys and exit interviews to detect
unreported harassment
14Investigating Claims of Sexual Harassment
- Determine if the alleged behavior has actually
occurred. - Determine if the behavior could be legally
construed as sexual harassment. - Determine appropriate action to take.
15Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978
- Firms may not discriminate against employees on
the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related
medical conditions. - Employees who are temporarily unable to perform
their jobs because of a pregnancy-related
condition must be treated the same as those who
are temporarily disabled for other reasons.
16Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993
- Affects employers with 50 or more employees
- Up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave per year
- Care for newborn child, ill family member, or self
17Fetal Protection Policies
- Exclude women of childbearing age from jobs with
potential reproductive hazards - Employers between a rock and a hard place
18Guidelines for Dealing with Fetal Protection
Policies
- Support research on reproductive risks
- Estimate the firms health risks
- Inform employees about health risks
- Consider technological controls
- Reduce employee exposure to toxins
- Conduct genetic testing
- Implement a fetal protection policy
19Discharge and Discrimination
- Employee misconduct
- Poor performance
20Employee Misconduct
- Infraction of workplace rules
- Just cause
- Due process
- Progressive discipline system
21Just Cause
- Cause of action should be a fair one.
22Due Process
- Inform employees of charges against them.
- Provide employees opportunity to defend
themselves.
23Progressive Discipline System
Termination
Suspension
Written Warning
Verbal Warning
24Poor Performance
- Last resort
- Performance-based
- Non-discriminatory
- Adequate documentation
25Importance of Effective Performance Appraisal
System
- Clear performance standards
- Appraisers follow company guidelines
- Provide corrective feedback
Performance Appraisal
26Layoffs and Discrimination
- Potential age discrimination
- Must have valid nondiscriminatory business
justification - Must implement in nondiscriminatory manner
27Employers Defense in Age Discrimination Layoff
Case
- Layoff not a pretext for discrimination
- Considered all other options
- Justified for a particular complainant
- Statistical evidence of non-discrimination
28Early Retirement and Discrimination
- Potential age discrimination
- Ask retirees to waive right to sue
- Older Workers Benefit Protection Act
29How Violations of Employee Privacy Damages
Competitive Advantage
- Resentment
- Fear and
- suspicion
- Turnover
- Absenteeism
- Lawsuits
Increases
Decreases
30Personal Information That May Violate Employee
Privacy
- Home ownership
- Previous marriages
- Sexual orientation
- Parents occupations
- Previous arrest records
31Privacy Act of 1974
- Only applies to public sector employees
- Employees have right to
- Determine what information is being kept on them
by their employers - Review that information
- Correct erroneous information
- Prevent invalid uses of that information
32Freedom of Information Act of 1966
- Makes government records available to the public
with proper authorization
33Criteria for a Legal Employee Search
- Reasonable basis
- Written guidelines informing employees of search
policy - Reasonable precautions
- Not offensive or abusive
34Surveillance Monitoring Employees
- Advantages
- Improve efficiency
- Provide job feedback
- Ensure customer satisfaction
- Detect thef
- Disadvantages
- Degrades employees
- Causes stress
- Lowers morale
- Lowers job satisfaction
- Increases turnover
35Implementing Surveillance and Monitoring Practices
- Inform employees of practices.
- Explain to employees why and how practices will
be implemented. - Ensure that practices are job-related.
- Dont monitor restrooms or lounges.
- Encourage employee participation in developing
policies.
36Undesirable Employee Behaviors
- Theft
- Insubordination
- Drug use
- Horseplay
- Destruction of property
37Workplace Rules
- Enforced in a nondiscriminatory manner
- Would not be considered outrageous by
reasonable persons
Rule 1
38Controversial Workplace Rules
- No-smoking rules
- Rules governing romantic relationships
- Employee misconduct outside the workplace
Rule 1
39Employment-At-Will
- Employers may discharge their employees for any
reason, even an unfair one, unless the discharge
is limited by contract or by federal or state
statutes.
40Exceptions to the Employment-At-Will Doctrine
- The public policy exception
- The implied contract exception
- The good faith and fair dealing exception
41Public Policy Exception to Employment-At-Will
- Any doctrine that serves society
- If public policy is violated, society will suffer
harm - Examples
- Whistleblowing
- Jury duty
42Implied Contract Exception to Employment-At-Will
- Statements that imply contractual agreements
- Examples
- Employee handbook
- Job interviews
43Good Faith and Fair Dealing Exception to
Employment-At-Will
- Prohibits discharges that are particularly
repugnant or unfair - Examples
- Unfairly discharging within a short period an
employee who moved from one city to another - Firing employees to prevent vesting their benefits
44How to Prevent Wrongful Terminations
- Avoid making statements that promise long-term
employment - Include at-will statement on application
- Place disclaimer in employee handbook
- Train interviewers
- Ensure that discipline and discharge practices
are fair
45Conducting a Disciplinary Investigation
- Get the facts.
- Review applicable rules.
- Meet with the employee.
- Decide what kind of discipline, if any, to
recommend. - Provide the proper documentation.
46Conducting a Disciplinary Conference
47Conducting a Disciplinary Conference
- 1. Get the facts.
- 2. Arrange for the interview.
- 3. Put the employee at ease.
- 4. State the facts of the case.
- 5. Ask for reasons.
- 6. State the company policy that has been
violated.
48Conducting a Disciplinary Conference
- 7. State the reason for the policy and the
possible harm caused by the employees violation. - 8. Get the worker to agree on the problem.
- 9. If disciplinary action is needed, state the
action and the reasons for it. - 10. Involve the employee in a problem-solving
discussion.
49Conducting a Disciplinary Conference
- 11. Have the employee summarize the problem and
the agreed-on solution. - 12. Agree on a follow-up date.
- 13. End the discussion on a positive note.
50Line Managers and Workplace Justice
- Communicate workplace policies and procedures.
- Create a good work environment.
- Deal effectively with possible policy violations.
51The HRM Department and Workplace Justice
- Implement discipline and discharge policies.
- Develop a conflict-resolution mechanism.
- Assist managers with workplace justice-related
issues.