The OSHA Cares website focuses on small to mid-sized employers, providing resources that include awareness and education.
Read MoreOur editors boast more than 60 years of experience in employment law and HR related topics. Find advice to those tricky issues such as when to terminate, as well as stay up to date with the latest regulations as they occur.
The OSHA Cares website focuses on small to mid-sized employers, providing resources that include awareness and education.
Read MoreA new executive order issued March 26 ups the ante by targeting racially discriminatory DEI activities in federal contracts and subcontracts. It also beefs up enforcement.
Read MoreEmployers are free to manage their workforce through evaluations and, if work is found to be lacking in quantity or quality, create an improvement plan without worrying that constructive criticism will land them in court.
Read MoreWe are planning a layoff due to economic reasons. We have an employee on FMLA leave. He’s on the layoff list. How do we make sure we’re not interfering with his FMLA rights?
Read MoreThe Department of Labor has launched a one-stop web resource for employers, faith organizations and employees aimed at eliminating religious discrimination in the workplace and federal grant-making and contracting.
Read MoreThe Safeguarding Human Intelligence and Employment in Labor Displacement Act would require advance notice before employers can terminate an employee because AI made the worker redundant.
Read MoreEmployers are required to provide disabled workers reasonable accommodations that allow them to perform the essential functions of their jobs. Sometimes, that means allowing the employee to telework when their disability makes it difficult or impossible to perform their work onsite.
Read MoreFederal contractors will have to do more than certify that they don’t engage in racial discrimination. They must also show how they reached that conclusion, as they may need to conduct an EEO analysis to confirm they found no pattern or practice of disparate treatment or proxy discrimination based on race.
Read MoreOne of the effects will be to discourage U.S. employers from using H-1B visas to hire entry-level workers, leaving those positions open for American workers seeking those jobs.
Read MoreThere’s something inherently suspicious about following up a valid charge of discrimination or harassment with an almost immediate employment action against the employee who filed the initial claim. That smacks of retaliation.
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