Tuesday, December 15, 2015

EMPLOYMENT LAW QUARTERLY | Volume XVII, Issue iii

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Quiet Changes to Employment Laws: Federal Agencies Recognize Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Discrimination

By Ami J. Patel*

In June, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a landmark decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, holding that all states must issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples and recognize same-sex marriages validly performed in other states. The legalization of same-sex marriage affects the way employers provide benefits to same-sex employees. Marriage is not the only front on which LGBT rights are evolving. With much of the public and the media’s spotlight on changes in the law regarding same-sex marriage, people may not realize that several federal agencies already interpret anti-discrimination laws to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), the Department of Labor (“DOL”), and the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) all take the position that statutes and orders prohibiting sex discrimination, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity (e.g., identifying as transsexual or transgender). These federal agencies reason that discrimination on the basis of gender identity is a form of sex discrimination. The EEOC and the DOL have stated further that prohibitions against sex discrimination protect discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation as well. Therefore, an individual may file a charge of discrimination with the EEOC on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, as a form of sex discrimination. Indeed, the EEOC has reported an increase in sexual orientation and gender identity-based charges, from 765 filed in 2013 to 1,093 filed in 2014.

Ohio’s anti-discrimination laws prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex, but Ohio courts have yet to interpret state law to prohibit sexual orientation discrimination. While Ohio courts generally interpret Ohio’s discrimination law to match federal anti-discrimination protections, Ohio’s 10th district appellate court ruled in its 2014 decision in Burns v. Ohio State Univ. College of Veterinary Med., 2014-Ohio-1190, 2014 Ohio App. LEXIS 1101 (10th App. Dist. 2014), that the state’s prohibition of sex discrimination does not extend to sexual orientation discrimination. Given the rapidly changing legal landscape regarding LGBT rights, Ohio courts’ stance may soon shift. Regardless, employers should be aware that employees experiencing sexual orientation or sexual identity discrimination may seek recourse with state or federal agencies or the court system.

*Ami J. Patel practices in all areas of labor and employment law. If you have questions about your employment policies in light of legal changes regarding LGBT individuals, please contact Ami at (ajp@zrlaw.com) or 216.696.4441.



How Much Is That Doggie In the Window? Or, Rather, How Much Do Employers Have to Pay Police Officers To Care For Those Police Doggies

By Brad E. Bennett*

Years ago, we watched with bated breath as the French mastiff Hooch helped Detective Scott Turner (Tom Hanks) apprehend a murderer. Sadly (*spoiler alert*), Hooch died in the film’s final minutes. However, had he lived and Detective Turner continued to use Hooch in police work, the Cypress Beach Police Department may have faced a question now facing many police departments, officers, and courts – should police departments pay for off-the-clock time spent caring for police dogs?

The Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) generally requires employers to compensate employees for all hours worked. “Work” includes “physical or mental exertion (whether burdensome or not) controlled or required by the employer and pursued necessarily and primarily for the benefit of the employer.” Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. v. Muscoda Local No. 123, 321 U.S. 590 (1944). In addition, the FLSA requires that employers compensate employees for activities performed before or after the employee’s regular work shift if the “activities are an integral and indispensable part of the principle activity” for which the employee is employed. Steiner v. Mitchell, 350 U.S. 247 (1956).

Courts and the Department of Labor have concluded that time-spent off-the-clock caring for police dogs constitutes work and an “integral and indispensable part” of the officer’s principle activity of employment.Specifically, time spent training the dog at home and the dog’s “care” are compensable.  U.S. Dept. of Labor Wage and Hour Opinion Letter August 11, 1993. “Care” includes: bathing, brushing, exercising, feeding, grooming, related cleaning of the dog’s kennel or transport vehicle, administering medicine for illness, and transporting the dog to and from the veterinarian. So how much time must an employer compensate law enforcement personnel for these activities and at what rate?

Generally, employers must pay employees a rate of at least one and one-half times the employee’s regular rate of pay for hours worked in excess of 40 hours in a week. 29 U.S.C. §207(a)(1). However, employers may calculate law enforcement personnel overtime over a longer time-period, up to 171 hours in 28-day period. 29 U.S.C. §207(k). In addition, the FLSA allows employers and employees to agree upon different straight-time hourly rates where the employee performs “two or more kinds of work.” 29 U.S.C. §207(g). In the event an employer agrees upon a different straight-time hourly rate for dog-care, it must ensure that it only pays that different rate for dog-care and not law enforcement activities.

How much time a police department must compensate its personnel to care for police dogs varies by court.In one case, the court concluded the District of Columbia had to pay its officers 30-minutes per day (seven days/week) for “the care, feeding, and grooming” of the police dogs. Levering v. District of Columbia, 869 F. Supp. 24 (D.C. Cir. 1994). However, another court upheld the City of Cincinnati’s agreement, reached through a collective bargaining agreement, to compensate its canine officers for 17 minutes of straight-time per day. Brock v. City of Cincinnati, 236 F.3d 793 (6th Cir. 2001). There, in finding the agreement Cincinnati reached with its police union reasonable, the court considered the following additional benefits the City provided (among others): take-home vehicles; concrete-based fenced dog kennel at the officer’s home; payment of food and veterinary care; and the benefit of having a highly trained police dog as a family pet.

Employers that maintain police department canine units should review their compensation system to ensure they are properly compensating those caring for the canines. When determining what constitutes proper payment, in addition to an hourly rate, employers may consider other benefits provided. Employers should attempt to reach an agreement with personnel on a reasonable amount of compensation and contact counsel with questions.

*Brad E. Bennett, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices at the firm’s Columbus office.He is well versed in all areas of labor and employment law including FLSA compliance.If you have questions about the FLSA and police department canine units, please contact Brad (beb@zrlaw.com) at 614.224.4411.




My Employee Said What on Facebook?

By Drew C. Piersall*

“Ok we got Bin Laden . . . let’s go get Kasich next . . . who’s with me?” “[C]an’t believe what a snake my boss is. . . . he needs to keep his [creepy] hands to himself . . . just an all around d-bag!!” “If you are on public assistance, you may not have additional children and must be on birth control (e.g. an IUD).” These are statements that employees made on Facebook for which they received discipline, yet courts and an arbitrator reached different conclusions regarding the appropriateness of the discipline.

The decisions raise many questions. Can employers discipline employees for comments, posts, etc. that employees make while off-duty on non-employer social media sites? What standards apply to employee off-duty conduct? The arbitrator evaluating whether the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction had just cause to terminate the employee who made the Bin Laden comment above considered these issues. State of Ohio, Ohio Dep’t of Rehab. and Corr., (Pincus, Mar. 6, 2013). There, four employees who worked in the same correctional institution “liked” the corrections officer’s Bin Laden Facebook comment, which he posted off-duty. The officer’s Facebook profile included his job location and public employee status. Once the employer learned of the comment, it investigated and ultimately discharged the officer. However, the arbitrator concluded that the officer’s statement was nothing more than empty words. In addition, the employer’s “E-mail, Internet, and On-line Services Use” policy did not place the employee on notice that the policy covered his off-duty conduct. As a result, the arbitrator concluded that while officer’s alleged threat justified a 14-month suspension, the employer did not have just cause to terminate his employment.

The First Amendment protects a public employee’s right “to speak as a citizen addressing matters of public concern.” Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006). A public employee must show the following to establish the First Amendment protected his or her speech: (1) the employee spoke as a private citizen rather than pursuant to official duties; (2) the speech involved a matter of public concern; and (3) the employee’s “interest as a citizen” in commenting on the matter outweighed the State’s interest, “as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.” Westmoreland v. Sutherland, 662 F.3d 714 (6th Cir. 2011).

Employees have raised the First Amendment as a defense to their social media posts in a number of contexts with varying results. For example, the court affirmed the discharge of the children’s services worker who made the above (and many other) comments about people who received public assistance. Shepherd v. McGee, 986 F.Supp. 2d 1211 (D. Or. 2013). The court reasoned that since her comments were banter “rather than speech intended to help the public actually evaluate the performance of a public agency,” they stood “on the periphery of First Amendment protection.” The court also emphasized the heightened government interest that existed since the employee held a “public contact role.” In addition, the employee’s statements impaired her ability to do her job – testify at proceedings, since her statements raised credibility issues for prosecutors.

In evaluating employee conduct, discipline, and social media use, it is helpful for employers to have social media and computer use policies. However, employers must be cautious about the content and prohibitions included in such policies. The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) analyzes whether employers violate Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”), which guarantees employees the right to join unions and engage in “concerted activity” for the purposes of “mutual aid or protection.” 29 U.S.C. §157. In the social media context, the NLRB considers whether an employee could reasonably construe a rule or policy to chill the employee’s exercise of their Section 7 rights.

The NLRB has shown it will go to great lengths to protect employee speech. In Three D, LLC v. NLRB, the Second Circuit affirmed the NLRB’s ruling that an employee’s Facebook post that the employer was “[s]uch an asshole” was concerted, protected activity. No. 14-3284, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 18493 (2d Cir. Oct. 21, 2015). The NLRB found the activity concerted because it involved multiple employees and protected because it involved workplace complaints about tax withholdings. Furthermore, the statements were within the NLRA’s protection because the comment at issue did not mention, let alone disparage, the employer’s products. Therefore, at least according to the NLRB, an employee may call their boss an “asshole” on social media without repercussion.

Beyond controlling and responding to employee use of social media, the prevalence of social media bleeds into the hiring process. Social media provides employers with another forum to post jobs and conduct background checks. However, employers should engage in social media checks with caution. First, employers should consider the accuracy of the information (e.g., potential for false profiles or accounts). In addition, by viewing a prospective employee’s social media account, the employer may incidentally obtain information regarding the individual’s race, gender, national origin, religion, age, disability, or genetic background. This knowledge could expose the employer to claims of discrimination. Therefore, any employer who chooses to review prospective employees’ social media accounts should take the following precautionary steps: (1) ensure the person reviewing social media accounts is wholly uninvolved in making the hiring decision; (2) only review publicly available social media; and (3) do not request social media account passwords during the hiring process.

The growing prevalence of social media has created a host of potential issues for employers. Given social media’s fast-paced growth and ever-changing nature, employers should constantly keep abreast of the current status of the law.

*Drew C. Piersall works in the firm’s Columbus office and practices in all areas of labor and employment law. If you have any questions about employee use of social media, please contact Drew (dcp@zrlaw.com) at 614.224.4411.



Employment Practices Liability Insurance – Do Not Wait to Notify Carrier of Claims

By Stephen S. Zashin*

Employers that wait too long to report claims to an Employment Practices Liability Insurance (“EPLI”) carrier may lose coverage. A federal court recently determined that an employer violated its EPLI policy when it waited nearly two years to notify its insurance carrier of an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) Charge of Discrimination (“Charge”). E. Dillon Co. v. Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am., No. 1:14-cv-00070, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76295 (W.D. Va. June 12, 2015). As a result, the insurance carrier did not have to provide coverage for the EEOC Charge and subsequent litigation.

The employer twice waited too long to provide notice of claims to its EPLI carrier. First, the employer waited almost 23 months after it received notice of a pending EEOC Charge (Apr. 4, 2011) before notifying the insurance carrier (Feb. 28, 2013). During that time, the EEOC dismissed the Charge (Apr. 28, 2012), reversed course and found reasonable cause to believe the employer violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (Sept. 27, 2012) and scheduled mediation (Mar. 14, 2013). Later, the employer waited approximately five months after it was served with a lawsuit related to the Charge (Sept. 9, 2013) to notify the insurance carrier of the lawsuit (Feb. 3, 2014). The employer provided notice of the lawsuit eight days before court-scheduled mediation was to occur.

The insurance carrier denied both claims after it concluded the employer failed to provide timely notice. The insurance policy covered any “Employment Claim,” which specifically included EEOC proceedings, and required the employer to provide written notice of claims “as soon as practicable.” The insurance carrier concluded that the employer’s decision to wait nearly 23 months and five months respectively to provide notice of the claims violated the “as soon as practicable” requirement.

The court agreed and concluded that the employer’s failure to provide timely notice constituted a material breach of the insurance agreement.The employer’s notification delay was unreasonable because the insurance agreement specifically defined “Employment Claim” to include EEOC proceedings. In addition, the delay prejudiced the insurance carrier, because the carrier: lost the chance to investigate the claims, to direct the employer’s defense, and t0 attempt to resolve the matter before the EEOC found reasonable cause; and the EEOC’s proposed Conciliation Agreement ($178,000 payment) diminished any settlement leverage the insurance company may have possessed.The court concluded the length of delay alone was sufficient to find that the employer materially breached the insurance agreement. In reaching this conclusion, the court considered other court cases which held that any delay beyond 75 days, without reasonable excuse, was unreasonable.

Upon receipt of a potential claim, employers should carefully review their EPLI policy’s reporting requirements and work with their brokers to avoid losing coverage for failing to timely report.Finally, all employers should consider whether to purchase an EPLI policy.

*Stephen S. Zashin, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment law, is head of the firm’s Labor and Employment Groups.If you have questions about this article, please contact Stephen (ssz@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.



EEOC to Change Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act Regulations on Wellness Programs

By Patrick Hoban*

On October 30, 2015, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking setting forth proposed changes to the regulations governing employer wellness programs in relation to Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (“GINA”). GINA is a federal law that, in part, protects employees and applicants from discrimination based upon genetic information, including that of their family members. The proposed rule seeks to clarify the circumstances under which employers may offer inducements (i.e., wellness program incentives) in exchange for health-status information of employee spouses who participate in the employer’s group health plan.

A wellness program is “a program offered by an employer that is designed to promote health and prevent disease.” 42 U.S.C. 300gg-4(j)(1)(a). Wellness programs include a wide range of employer-sponsored services, from smoking cessation to workout programs to health assessments. Under GINA, wellness programs cannot condition employee inducements upon employee genetic information. “Genetic information” includes, among other things, information about employees and their family members’ (including spouses) genetic tests and family medical history.

Employers covered by GINA (i.e., those with 15 or more employees) are prohibited from requesting, requiring, or purchasing employee genetic information, unless a statutory exception applies. One exception allows employers to obtain genetic information as part of employer-provided voluntary health or genetic services, including wellness programs. This exception only applies if: (1) the provision of genetic information is actually voluntary (i.e., employees are not required to provide the genetic information and there is no penalty for not providing it); and (2) the individual provides “prior knowing, voluntary, and written authorization.” 29 C.F.R. 1635.8(b)(2)(i).

The EEOC’s proposed rule adds an additional requirement that an employer’s wellness program must be “reasonably designed to promote health or prevent disease.” This means the wellness program “must have a reasonable chance of improving the health of, or preventing disease in, participating individuals, and must not be overly burdensome, a subterfuge for violating [GINA] or other laws prohibiting employment discrimination, or highly suspect in the method chosen to promote health or prevent disease.”

The EEOC’s proposed rule explains that, under GINA, employers can offer limited inducements for information about the current or past health status of an employee’s spouse covered by the employer’s group health plan. The provision of this information must be part of a “health risk assessment,” (e.g., medical questionnaire or examination to detect high cholesterol) conducted in connection with the spouse’s receipt of health or genetic services as part of the employer’s wellness program. The wellness program inducements may take various forms, from discounts or rebates to the avoidance of a premium surcharge. The total inducements offered under the wellness program may not exceed 30 percent of the total annual costs of coverage. To be valid, the provision of the spouse’s information must meet the requirements of GINA’s wellness program exception discussed above (i.e., voluntary and with prior written authorization). Furthermore, the information provided in exchange for the inducement must be limited to current and past health status and cannot include genetic information such as results of genetic tests.

The proposed exception for inducements is limited to employee spouses who are covered under the employer’s group health plan. Employers may not provide inducements in exchange for employee genetic information or their biological or non-biological child’s genetic information or current or past health status. Employers may offer inducements for completion of health risk assessments that ask questions about family medical history and other genetic information; however, the employer must make it clear that the inducement will be available regardless of whether the specific genetic information questions are answered.

Prior to announcing the proposed rule, the EEOC initiated litigation taking issue with multiple employers’ wellness programs. See, e.g., EEOC v. Honeywell Int’l. Inc., N0. 0:14-cv-04517 (D. Minn. 2014); EEOC v. Orion Energy Systems, Inc., N0. 1:14-cv-01019 (E.D. Wis. 2014). In Honeywell, the EEOC sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction preventing the company from imposing surcharge penalties on employees and spouses that did not participate in biometric testing for health data including cholesterol and nicotine levels. The EEOC argued that the wellness program violated GINA and the Americans with Disabilities Act. The court denied the EEOC’s motion, but noted that “great uncertainty persists in how the [Affordable Care Act], [Americans with Disabilities Act] and other federal statutes such as GINA are intended to interact,” with respect to wellness programs.

The EEOC’s proposed GINA rule comes on the heels of an April 2015 proposed rule (discussed by Z&R here) addressing, in part, amendments to the EEOC’s regulations and guidance on the Americans with Disabilities Act relating to employer wellness programs. The comment period for the proposed Americans with Disabilities Act rule closed in June. The EEOC may make revisions in light of the comments before voting on the final rule. The EEOC is accepting comments on its proposed GINA rule until January 28, 2016. Employers can anticipate continued developments, and litigation, in this nascent area of employment law.

*Patrick Hoban, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices in all areas of labor and employment law. If you have questions about wellness programs, please contact Pat (pjh@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.




Z&R SHORTS


Z&R Announces Its 2016 Super Lawyers and Rising Stars


Zashin & Rich is pleased to congratulate the following 2016 Super Lawyers:


Brad E. Bennett, George S. Crisci, Jon M. Dileno, Jonathan J. Downes, Michele L. Jakubs, and Stephen S. Zashin were named Super Lawyers. Helena Oroz, Ami J. Patel, and David R. Vance were named Rising Stars.



Super Lawyers is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high-degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The selection process includes independent research, peer nominations and peer evaluations.



Super Lawyers Magazine features the list and profiles of selected attorneys and is distributed to attorneys in the state or region and the ABA-accredited law school libraries. Super Lawyers is also published as a special section in leading city and regional magazines across the country.

Please join Z&R in welcoming two new attorneys to its Employment and Labor Groups.


Lisa A. Kainec Joins Z&R Cleveland
Lisa is a legal and human resources professional with 20+ years of experience in employment law across multiple industries including retail, healthcare, municipal, professional services, construction and manufacturing. Lisa has worked in-house as a human resources executive and senior employment counsel at Jo-Ann Stores. Lisa was a Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law. Lisa devotes her practice to providing practical strategies for proactive workforce management as well as vigorous defense of employee claims and litigation.

Brad E. Bennett Joins Z&R Columbus
Brad has 18 years of employment law experience as an attorney and human resources professional across multiple industries including healthcare, aviation, retail, public sector and construction.  He represents public and private sector employers in all aspects of labor and employment law.  In addition to his litigation practice, Brad represents public sector employers in collective bargaining, grievance arbitrations, and impasse proceedings. Additionally, Brad has drafted civil service rules for municipalities, represents public sector employers before the State Personnel Board of Review (SPBR), and counsels public employers regarding compliance with Ohio’s Open Meetings Act and Public Records Act.  Brad is an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Public Sector Alert: Ohio “Bans the Box” – Public Employers Cannot Ask About Felony Convictions on Job Applications

By Brad E. Bennett*

On December 9, 2015, House Bill 56, known as the “ban the box” bill, passed both the Senate and the House. The bill becomes effective within ninety (90) days of Governor Kasich’s approval. This bill prevents all public employers, including counties, townships, and municipal corporations, from asking about previous criminal convictions on their job applications. The bill also modifies Ohio’s civil service law, making it clear that classified employees who are convicted of a felony “while employed in the civil service” may be removed under R.C. 124.34(A). Further, if an unclassified employee loses their position because they are convicted of a felony “while employed in the civil service,” the employee forfeits their right to resume a position in the classified service under R.C. 124.11(D)(3)(a).

The bill does not prohibit a public employer from including in a job application a statement, notifying applicants about potential disqualification, if they have a particular criminal history. The bill also does not prohibit public employers from inquiring about felony convictions later in the hiring process. The inquiry is only “banned” from the job application itself.

Public employers should also remain mindful of the EEOC’s 2012 Enforcement Guidelines. The EEOC has taken the position that employers cannot refuse to hire applicants simply because they have a felony conviction. Instead, the EEOC requires employers to demonstrate that the refusal to hire based upon a conviction is “job related and consistent with business necessity.” This will typically require the employer to weigh various factors including the nature of the job, the type of conviction, and the amount of time that has passed since the conviction occurred.

What actions should public employers take now? Public employers should immediately review and revise their job applications to ensure that they comply with House Bill 56. They should also provide training to managers involved in the hiring process to ensure compliance with House Bill 56 and the EEOC’s 2012 Enforcement Guidelines.

Brad E. Bennett, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices at the firm’s Columbus office. He is well versed in all areas of labor and employment law including assisting public sector employers with establishing lawful hiring guidelines. If you have questions about the H.B. 56 or your hiring process, please contact: Brad E. Bennett | beb@zrlaw.com | 614.224.4411

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Z&R ANNOUNCES ITS 2016 SUPER LAWYERS AND RISING STARS

Zashin & Rich is pleased to congratulate the following 2016 Super Lawyers:

Brad E. Bennett, George S. Crisci, Jon M. Dileno, Jonathan J. Downes, Michele L. Jakubs, and Stephen S. Zashin were named Super Lawyers. Helena Oroz, Ami J. Patel, and David R. Vance were named Rising Stars.

Super Lawyers is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high-degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The selection process includes independent research, peer nominations and peer evaluations.

Super Lawyers Magazine features the list and profiles of selected attorneys and is distributed to attorneys in the state or region and the ABA-accredited law school libraries. Super Lawyers is also published as a special section in leading city and regional magazines across the country.

About Zashin & Rich Co., L.P.A.

With offices in Cleveland and Columbus Ohio, Z&R represents employers in all aspects of employment, labor, and workers' compensation law. The firm represents private and publicly traded companies as well as public sector employers throughout Ohio and the United States. Z&R defends employers in all aspects of private and public sector traditional labor law, employment litigation, and workers' compensation matters. The firm also counsels employers on a variety of daily workplace issues including, but not limited to, employee handbooks, non-compete agreements, social media, workplace injuries, investigations, disciplinary actions, and terminations.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

FOOL’S GOLD: When HR Policies Are Not Enough

By Lisa A. Kainec*

Every HR professional knows that solid policies are essential to protect a company against legal claims and liabilities. Unfortunately, even the best policies cannot provide the best protections. Ask yourself a few “what if” scenarios about your key employees, your monetary investment in those employees, the information they have at their fingertips, and what would happen to your business if that information made its way to your competition? If your answers to those questions raise concerns, let’s talk about getting your best protections in place now and hope you’ll never need to use them.

Consider the following policies:

  • Confidential Information: Most employee handbooks clearly set forth the employer’s policies on protecting the proprietary and confidential nature of information available to the employees. Those policies certainly provide the basis for corrective action up to and including termination of the employment relationship. But do those handbook policies adequately protect the employer if the employee takes confidential information – in paper or electronic form – prior to leaving the company?
  • Relocation Benefits: Does your company provide relocation benefits to new employees? Many employers have great relocation packages that afford new employees payment for numerous relocating expenses. However, does your company only have a relocation policy that explains the benefits, but no contractual agreement that permits you to recoup those expenses if the employee leaves employment after a short time?
  • Non-Compete and Non-Solicitation: What if the employee leaves and solicits his or her existing accounts to work with his or her new company? What if the employee solicits co-workers to join his or her new company? What happens when an employee leaves and attempts to compete with the prior employer? Is the employer protected from losing its customers and employees?

So why isn’t an employee handbook enough to protect you? In virtually every instance, a company’s employee handbook is not a contract of employment and the employer can amend, change, or modify the handbook at any time. In light of such rights, the statements made in an employee handbook are not contractual. The same also holds largely true for offer letters, codes of conduct, and other employer communications. In virtually all of these documents, the employer correctly advises employees that the policies are not contracts and that either the employer or the employer can terminate the relationship at any time.

While those disclaimers protect an employer from certain contractual claims, many employers are left vulnerable and unprotected. The above examples (among others) are instances where an employer’s best protection is a simple written agreement with the employee that specifies their obligations during and after employment. That is why a separate written agreement is essential for certain employees and situations. It also is critically important that a company work with labor and employment lawyers to ensure that their policies will hold up when challenged and are otherwise lawful.

*Lisa A. Kainec, former Vice President of Human Resources and Senior Employment Counsel for Jo-Ann Stores, recently joined the firm’s labor and employment group in its Cleveland office. Lisa represents employers in all areas of labor and employment law including policy review and compliance. If you have questions about employer policy or contract drafting, please contact Lisa A. Kainec | lak@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441

Monday, November 16, 2015

DOL PRESSES PAUSE: Delays Implementation of its Proposed Changes to the FLSA

By Brad E. Bennett*

Have you prepared to comply with the Department of Labor’s (“DOL”) proposed rule amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act’s "white collar" exemption tests for executive, administrative, and professional employees? You know, the proposed rule that will increase the salary basis test from $455 per week to $970 per week ($50,440 annually) beginning in 2016? As Z&R previously explained, the proposed rule will cause many employees that are currently exempt to lose their exemption and will dramatically increase the number of U.S. workers who are eligible for overtime pay.

Many have anticipated that the DOL would implement its pending final rule by the end of this year or in early 2016. According to a recent Wall Street Journal article, however, the rule will not appear until the end of 2016. Why the delay? Solicitor of Labor Patricia Smith recently stated that the DOL needed more time to draft the final regulations due to the sheer volume of comments it received during the comment period. The DOL received 270,000 comments from individuals and organizations during the comment period – more than three times what it anticipated.

While this is certainly good news for employers, employers should utilize this period to ensure compliance with existing employee classifications and plan for the implementation of the proposed FLSA rule amendment.

Brad E. Bennett, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices at the firm’s Columbus office. He is well versed in all areas of labor and employment law including FLSA compliance. If you have questions about the DOL’s proposed regulations, please contact: Brad E. Bennett | beb@zrlaw.com | 614.224.4411

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Fifth Circuit Re-Rebukes the National Labor Relations Board on the Validity of Class and Collective Action Waivers

By David P. Frantz

On October 26, 2015, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit once again butted heads with the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) over the issue of class and collective action waivers in employment dispute arbitration agreements. See Murphy Oil USA, Inc. v. NLRB, No. 14-60800 (5th Cir. Oct. 26, 2015). In Murphy Oil, the Fifth Circuit rejected the NLRB’s decision that arbitration agreements with class/collective action waivers violate employees’ rights to engage in protected concerted activity under Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). The Fifth Circuit’s December 2013 decision in D.R. Horton, Inc. v. NLRB, 737 F.3d 344 (5th Cir. 2013) (which Z&R discussed here) reached the same conclusion.

In D.R. Horton, the Fifth Circuit previously held that the NLRA does not prohibit mandatory arbitration agreements with class/collective action waivers. The court explained that class or collective action procedures are not substantive legal rights; they are merely procedural devices. Thus, the NLRA’s protection of employees’ substantive rights does not extend to filing class or collective actions. However, the Fifth Circuit also held that the language of the arbitration agreement at issue reasonably could be construed to prohibit employees from filing unfair labor practice charges (“ULP”) with the NLRB. Such prohibitions violate the NLRA.

When issuing its underlying decision in Murphy Oil, the NLRB engaged in “Board nonacquiescense” and disregarded the Fifth Circuit’s D.R. Horton holding. Murphy Oil involved four employees who filed a federal wage and hour collective action after signing arbitration agreements with class/collective action waivers. Murphy Oil moved to dismiss and compel arbitration, and the federal court stayed the collective action proceeding pending arbitration (which never was initiated). While the motion to dismiss was pending, one of the employees filed a ULP with the NLRB, alleging the arbitration agreement violated her rights under the NLRA.

In October 2014, ten months after the Fifth Circuit’s ruling in D.R. Horton, the NLRB issued its decision in Murphy Oil, holding that the arbitration agreement violated the employees’ substantive rights under the NLRA and reasonably could be construed to prohibit employees from filing ULPs. The NLRB also found that Murphy Oil’s motion to dismiss and compel arbitration in the wage and hour lawsuit was a separate violation of the NLRA. The NLRB determined that Murphy Oil “acted with an illegal objective in seeking to enforce an unlawful contract provision.”

On appeal before the Fifth Circuit, the court reaffirmed its analysis in D.R. Horton, stating: “Our decision was issued not quite two years ago; we will not repeat its analysis here.” Murphy Oil asked that the court hold the NLRB in contempt for its “defiance” of the D.R. Horton decision. The court declined to do so because the NLRB’s Murphy Oil decision could have been appealed in a number of jurisdictions outside the Fifth Circuit, and the NLRB may not have known which circuit’s law would apply. The court stated, “[w]e do not celebrate the Board’s failure to follow our D.R. Horton reasoning, but neither do we condemn its nonacquiescence.”

The Fifth Circuit also addressed whether Murphy Oil’s arbitration agreements reasonably could be construed to prohibit the filing of ULPs. The court examined two versions of the arbitration agreements: one in effect for employees hired before March 2012, and a revised version for employees hired thereafter. The pre-March 2012 version included language that “any and all disputes or claims” must be resolved through arbitration. The Fifth Circuit held that this broad “any claims” language, without any qualification, can create the reasonable impression that the employee is waiving both trial rights and administrative rights. Employee-employer agreements that limit the NLRB’s ability to prevent unfair labor practices violate the NLRA. As waivers of administrative rights would have such an effect, they are illegal.

The Fifth Circuit did not hold that the arbitration agreement must expressly state that the employee may file ULPs with the NLRB; however, “[s]uch a provision would assist, though, if incompatible or confusing language appears in the contract.” Murphy Oil’s revised arbitration agreement included such language, stating that it does not preclude employees from participating in ULP proceedings. Based on this language, the Fifth Circuit held that the revised agreement was valid.

Finally, the Fifth Circuit rejected the NLRB’s conclusion that Murphy Oil violated the NLRA by moving to dismiss and compel arbitration in the wage and hour suit filed by its employees. Based in part on its D.R. Horton decision, the court held Murphy Oil’s motion was not a baseless attempt at discouraging employees from exercising their rights under the NLRA.

The Murphy Oil decision reassures employers that, at least in the Fifth Circuit, arbitration agreements with class and collective action waivers are enforceable. Likewise, the Second, Eighth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits have reached the same conclusion or indicated that they would. However, employers should ensure that their arbitration agreements and class/collective action waivers cannot be construed to prohibit employees from pursing administrative claims, including ULPs.

*David P. Frantz practices in all areas of labor and employment law. If you have questions about the Murphy Oil decision, arbitration agreements, or class and collective action waivers, please contact: David P. Frantz | dpf@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

DOES YOUR COMPANY CONDUCT THIRD-PARTY BACKGROUND CHECKS… AND COMPLY WITH FCRA? The frightful law you may not fear, but you should.

By Helena Oroz*

In honor of the scariest, spookiest month of the year, here are the scariest things we are hearing these days about using background reports and complying with the law that governs use of that information:

  • “I think FCRA is that law about credit reports. But we don’t check credit for our job applicants. So we’re good, right?”
  • “Do we disclose to applicants that we’re requesting consumer reports? We inform them of a lot of stuff. I think it’s in our employment application somewhere.”
  • “Adverse action letters? Two of them? Is that a new thing?
  • “My background check company handles all those forms. So we’re good, right?”
  • “I’m pretty sure we’re doing most of that stuff right some of the time. But don’t quote me on that.”

Okay, full disclosure: these are not real quotes. But they do represent real misunderstandings and confusion about employer obligations under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”).

If these questions and statements sound reasonable, the FCRA class action bar is looking for your company. Here is a small sampling of large companies that settled FCRA class actions in 2015:
  • Fernandez v. Home Depot – $3 million
  • Brown v. Delhaize America (owns Food Lion grocery stores) – $2.99 million
  • Marcum v. DolgenCorp (owns Dollar General stores) – $4.08 million

But it doesn’t matter if you are small or large, local or national – you are just their type.

Third-party background check reports are “consumer reports.” In simplest terms, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, or FCRA, is a federal law that governs the collection, assembly, and use of information about consumers. The first thing you need to understand about FCRA is that it applies to employers, but also lots of other entities, so it’s not written for employers. Its name is confusing and so is the term “consumer reports,” both which feed misperceptions about what the law covers.

So know this: if your company requests any information about an applicant (or current employee) from a third party and then uses it to make an employment decision, your company has requested a “consumer report” and must comply with FCRA’s disclosure, authorization, and adverse action notice requirements. Common “consumer reports” that employers use to vet applicants include criminal history reports, driving records, education records, employment history, and yes, credit history.

Employers are on their own when it comes to FCRA compliance. This is the second thing you need to understand about FCRA: it is a hyper-technical statute with little to no guidance to lead you to compliance. Even if you have the right notices in place, they still may not be technically compliant if, for example, they contain extraneous language or too much information.

Explanatory regulations? Model forms? FCRA is no FMLA, people. Don’t look to government agencies to fill that guidance vacuum anytime soon. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been the primary agency responsible for interpreting FCRA for more than five years, yet it has not issued a single piece of useful guidance regarding employer FCRA obligations during that time. As for the Federal Trade Commission, if this blog post is any indication, no one is at the wheel there anymore (if they ever were).

Instead, that vacuum is being filled, slowly but surely, with court decisions and an absolute deluge of recent FCRA class actions across the county. According to a recent report from WebRecon, FCRA lawsuits increased 83% in August 2015 from the same period in 2014. From Whole Foods to Michaels Stores to Amazon, even the giants are getting hit for FCRA violations.

What should employers do? Don’t let FCRA scare the living daylights out of you. First, review your hiring practices to ensure that your company is at least doing the following:

(1) making a clear, conspicuous written disclosure to each applicant that consumer reports may be obtained about them for employment purposes;

(2) obtaining each applicant’s written authorization to obtain consumer reports;

(3) when your company decides not to hire an applicant based on information in a consumer report, providing the applicant a copy of the report at issue and a summary of their FCRA rights before taking the action (commonly referred to as pre-adverse action notice); and,

(4) after taking the action, providing the applicant with notice of the adverse action, contact information for the agency that provided the report, and other information (commonly referred to as post-adverse action notice).

Second, if you think your company is FCRA-compliant because it does complete each of the above steps, review your disclosure, authorization, and adverse action notices. Extra information or confusing language in those documents could jeopardize your company’s compliance efforts. Additionally, if your company uses “investigative reports" – reports based on personal interviews concerning a person's character, general reputation, personal characteristics, and lifestyle – your company has additional obligations under FCRA.

Third, if your company operates in more than one state, be aware that a number of states (a number which is growing) have their own “mini-FCRAs” with separate disclosure, authorization, and/or adverse action requirements. Many states also severely restrict use of credit information and/or criminal background information for employment purposes.

Finally, DO NOT rely on your background check provider for FCRA compliance. Ask questions and make sure you know exactly what your background check company is doing on your behalf. Do not forget that FCRA compliance is ultimately your company’s responsibility, not your provider’s.

*Helena Oroz practices in all areas of employment law compliance and often assists Z&R’s clients with FCRA and state fair credit reporting and background check laws. For more information or assistance with your company’s FCRA compliance, please contact Helena | hot@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441