U.S. sues AT&T for age discrimination

August 21st, 2009

AT&T Inc has been sued by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which accused the largest U.S. phone company of age discrimination for refusing to rehire previously retired workers over age 40.

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Creating a Supervisors’ Handbook - If Not Now When?

August 20th, 2009

There is a real urgency out there for a specific handbook for your supervisors. Even small missteps can cause enormous pain for your company, from a legal prospective. Now is the best time to create your supervisors handbook, long before a charge is made. If you don’t clarify important employment laws, most supervisors won’t know or will find out until when it’s far too late. Act now to give them something to hold and study.

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EEOC Seeks Conciliation with Belmont Abbey over Denial of Oral Contraceptive Coverage and Retaliation

August 19th, 2009

According to the Gaston Gazette , the EEOC has issued a letter to Belmont Abbey, making a determination that the Catholic college discriminated against women by removing coverage for prescription contraceptives from the health insurance plan and by publishing the names of faculty members who filed a charge with the EEOC.

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Employee Background Checks - The Hidden Roadside Bomb

August 18th, 2009

Gone forever are the days in which an employee (literally) stayed on one job for life. What human resources departments have to content with today is a highly transient workforce. People in perpetual motion for numerous and diverse reasons; not the least includes economic reasons, health reasons, and even reasons relating to criminal activities. This makes conducting backgrounds check an absolute must in order to protect all employees. Failure to perform a “due diligence” search of those people you bring onboard the premises could cost your company millions.

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New Rochelle schools reach undisclosed settlement with custodian over hangman nooses

August 17th, 2009

The school district has reached a settlement with a middle school custodian who complained last year about nooses he found in management offices including one around the neck of a toy monkey.

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Polygraph Tests and Employment

August 16th, 2009

A lot of people are unfamiliar with the laws protecting them from employers, either prospective or actual. For example, the Employee Polygraph Protection Act (EPPA) of 1998 protects employees or potential employees from being forced to take a lie detector test for almost all private businesses. It prevents employers from forcing applicants to take polygraph tests, requiring current employees to take such tests, or punishing employees for a failure to take such tests.

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U.S. Department Of Labor’s OSHA Teams With Odom’s Tennessee…

August 15th, 2009

Providing better workplace safety for employees working in the Little Rock metropolitan area is the goal of a partnership agreement between the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Odom’s Tennessee Pride in Little Rock.

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Are You Prepared For Potential Employer Law Cases?

August 14th, 2009

Even businesspeople that have been running their own enterprises for decades may not know everything they need to know about employer law. They could have a good basic knowledge of state and federal employment laws, but still be unaware of recent changes in these laws. After all, if they’re preoccupied with keeping their companies afloat during these perilous economic times, they might not have time to stay current with all issues related to employment law. That’s why even the most ethical, experienced, and canny business owners need to retain quality legal counsel with experience in employer law. One way to do this is to keep a lawyer on retainer, but that can get prohibitively expensive. A better alternative for small to medium-sized businesses is to work with a legal service that does nothing else but provide counsel and legal assistance for employment law problems.

There is an old saying that forewarned is forearmed. Running a business with multiple employees can be a complex and difficult undertaking, fraught with many perils to that company’s continued profitability, and even its very existence. Many well-meaning, basically honest employers have unwittingly fallen foul of employment law issues because they did not have good legal counsel. Don’t let that happen to you! Protect your personal assets, including your business, from anyone who might try to sue you over perceived violations of employer law. Being the boss means you sometimes have to make tough calls that some of your employees might not be happy with. These days people are so litigious that they will sue at the drop of a hat, so you need to be armed against potentially damaging lawsuits with the best legal advice that you can afford.

The good news is that you don’t have to keep an expensive law firm on permanent retainer to get the advice of experienced, ethical lawyers with experience in employer law cases. The best alternative is to retain the services of a firm that handles nothing but employer law cases and keeps abreast of the rapidly changing network of laws governing how employees must be treated in the workplace. The right employment law firm for you will provide 24-hour-a-day access to a real lawyer to address all of your legal questions and deal with any legal problems that can spring up for a business owner with frightening speed. You should also seek out an employer law service that can either tailor its legal services to your precise needs or offers a variety of service packages at reasonable prices. Your business is too important for it not to be protected against the possibility of a lawsuit that could wipe it out. Having good legal advisors will also help you protect your company’s reputation against efforts to besmirch it. After all, any company’s reputation is one of its most valuable assets.

So, whatever the size of your business, whether you employ 20 employees or 20,000, you need the benefits of the best advice about employer law that you can get. In the case of small or medium-sized businesses, the best thing you can do is partner with an employer law service that can call on experienced, knowledgeable lawyers to defend your interests. In tough economic times like these when employers must make hard decisions regarding their employees, it’s good to know that you have top-shelf legal advisors to back you up. Face it, some of your employees may not be happy with what you have to do in terms of layoffs, scheduling or changes in working conditions, so if they decide to sue you, you’ll be prepared. Don’t be caught off guard. Be sure that you have already retained the services of a firm that specializes in employment law and can go to bat for you in court if necessary.

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EEOC: Southwestern Ill. company settles federal race-discrimination lawsuit

August 13th, 2009

A southwestern Illinois packaging and warehousing company will pay more than $57,000 to settle a federal race-discrimination lawsuit involving a former worker.

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Definition of the Equal Pay Act

August 12th, 2009

There are several employment discrimination laws enforced by the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to ensure that American citizens are protected from compensation discrimination. Among them are the Equal Pay Act of 1963, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Age Discrimination Act of 1967, and the American Disabilities Act of 1990.

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