Many frivolous cases will be tossed out without ever having been seen by an NLRB investigator if the information isn’t submitted within two weeks.
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.
Many frivolous cases will be tossed out without ever having been seen by an NLRB investigator if the information isn’t submitted within two weeks.
Read MoreWhen HR launches a discrimination or harassment investigation, it’s a good idea to stay attuned to how that investigation may look to outsiders a year or so down the line. That requires those performing the investigation to put aside any preconceived notions about what happened.
Read MoreIf you’re still utilizing noncompete agreements, there’s news on the state front. Many states that regulate their use set earnings limits below which noncompete agreements can’t be enforced and update those limits every year. This year is no different.
Read MoreDoes the PUMP Act support/cover an accommodation in the form of 100% telework for a breastfeeding mother?
Read More“Illegal” DEI started out relatively undefined. The EEOC and the Department of Justice have been refining its definition ever since. The problem: The government’s definition of DEI runs headlong into Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act, which are still good law, and against two Supreme Court decisions affirming employers’ voluntary DEI programs in narrow circumstances.
Read MoreHeading into the Valentine’s Day holiday is always a good time for HR professionals to dust off their company’s fraternization policies, and to remind your managers and employees of these guidelines.
Read MoreThe cap on nonimmigrant H-2A visas for the agriculture industry has been increased by the availability of over 64,000 additional visas for fiscal year 2026.
Read MoreBack in late 2025, the NLRB laid out a new rule on when employers may ban workers from carrying and using recording devices, including phones and other smart devices like Apple watches. That new rule told employers that banning recording via a handbook rule was presumptively an NLRA violation, and employers have a heavy burden to prove their handbook rule is legal.
Read MoreIf you’ve had to create lunchroom rules based on what employees are bringing to eat or heating up in the microwave, it’s time to rethink that strategy. An employer recently paid $200,000 to a couple whose discrimination lawsuit began with a co-worker’s complaint about allegedly “pungent” Indian food and deteriorated from there.
Read MoreThe Biden administration nixed the program largely because it allowed employers to avoid penalties and the doubling of unpaid wages the FLSA allows the DOL to assess for violations if only they confessed to their mistakes and told the DOL. PAID is now back and open to employers who want to resolve FLSA problems as well as FMLA issues.
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