Chapter 28
Wagner Act of 1935
(NLRA) Adopted to encourage the formation of labor unions and provide for collective bargaining between employers and unions. Also created the NLRB
Employees _____ _____ their employers if it was the employer's intentional or grossly negligent conduct that caused the injury or illness
*may sue*
Employee handbooks contain
-History of company -hiring procedures -hours of employment -payment of salaries -salary increments and promotions -termination procedures -benefits -leaves of absence -safety and security -miscellaneous
Employment contract clauses
-Maintaining confidentiality with respect to trade secrets -Restrictive covenants -Agreements to arbitrate in the event of a dispute between parties
Unreasonable publicity of private life or facts
-Medical information -Affairs and personal relationships -History of drug use -Sexual abuse
Intrusion into private affairs
-Must be unreasonable, unjustifiable, and unwarranted -Employee Must have reasonable expectations of privacy
FMLA leave for
-Personal medical reasons -To care for a child, spouse, or parent
OSHA
-Requires that companies maintain records of employee work related accidents and sicknesses and post data regarding these every February -Inspects workplaces to be certain that these worksites comply with safety and health standards and imposes penalties if it finds any violations -Can impose penalties ranging from fines to facility closings (may reach $500,000 or jail time)
Federal level
-Several statutes that require employers to maintain a safe and healthful work environment -Most important of these federal statutes is the *Occupational Safety and Health Act*
Recording phone conversations
-Texas: 1 party consent (1 person on call has to consent to record) -Illegal to record if not a party
Fair labor standards act of 1938 standards (FLSA)
-The minimum age an employee can be -The minimum wages an employee can earn -The rate at which an employee is paid if he or she works more than a certain number of hours in a given week
Surveillance
-Video surveillance is okay expect in private spaces -No audio -No notice or consent required
Negligent misrepresentation-Occasionally, employers attempt to reduce their risk of liability in providing references by:
-Withholding negative reference information -Simply not responding to a reference request
Privacy issues
-drug, medical, and genetic testing -polygraphs -workplace and personal possession searches -monitoring phone calls, computers, and emails -video surveillance and audio recording
Monitoring phones, computers
-notice of monitoring means no expectation of privacy -employer email -facebook -personal email
Invasion of privacy: An employer can safely disclose information about a current or former employee in the following areas
-the employee's prior employment and educational history -the employee's character *as such relates to the job* (teamwork, leadership, etc) -the employee's performance capabilities -the employer's willingness to rehire the employee
Categories of employees excluded from coverage of FLSA
1. Executives 2. Professional employees 3. Outside sales associates
Do you think you have a case?
1. Intrusion into private affairs 2. Unreasonable publicity of private life or facts
A negative reference can give rise to 3 kinds of lawsuits brought by current or former employees (or prospective employers)
1. Invasion of privacy 2. Defamation 3. Negligent misrepresentation (brought by employer)
In order for employees to be eligible to receive unemployment compensation, they must have:
1. Lost their job through no fault of their own 2. They must meet the minimum state requirements for wages or time worked during an established period of time
Ti be eligible for FMLA an employee must have worked at least _____ hours in the previous year
1250
The overtime pay rate for employees who work more than ___ hours in a workweek is ____ times regular wages
40 1.5
The FMLA applies to all employers who employ _____ or more employees
50
Minimum wage
7.25
Defamation
A current or former employee may sue his or her employer for defamation if the employer provides information to a third party that is untrue, irrespective of whether or not it relates to the employee's job performance *many states enacted laws to shield employers from the risk of liability for defamation if previous employer has good faith belief that the statements from reference are true*
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
A federal agency responsible for administering laws relating to labor unions Interpret and enforce National Labor Relations Act
Boycott
A group's refusal to have commercial dealings with some organization in protest against its policies
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
A law created the agency to administer its many provisions
Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA)
A state system that provides unemployment compensation to those who are qualified and lose their job
Worker's Compensation
A type of insurance that provides that employees may recover damages for work related injuries and illnesses without having to prove negligence on the part of the employer *Fault does NOT matter*
Exclusive remedy
An employee who sustains a work-related injury or illness can recover damages only through workers' compensation and MAY NOT FILE A LAWSUIT against his or her employer
Wrongful discharge
An employer's termination of an employee's employment in violation of the law or an employment contract
Invasion of privacy
Disclosing personal, irrelevant information about a former employee, irrespective of whether the information is true or false
Employee references
Employers are asked to provide references for employees who are currently working for them or who have worked for them in the past *Employees need to be extremely careful as to how they respond to these requests*
Landrum-Griffin Act of 1959
Governs the internal operations of labor unions
Negligent Misrepresentation
If a prospective employer hires an employee based on an incomplete reference, and then suffers damages that may have been avoided had the previous employer provided an accurate reference, the prospective employer may sue the previous employer
Covenant clauses
If you leave the job, you can't work in a 50 mile radius for 2 years
Early exemptions to the doctrine disallowed an employee from being terminated for
Jury duty Being called to active duty in the military Whistleblowing
Doctrine of employee at will
Just as an employee may choose to terminate his or her employment at any time he or she wishes, so too an employer may terminate an employee's employment at any time for a good reason, a bad reason, or no reason at all
Employee handbooks
Manuals that contain the many policies of the firm (some states consider it a contract and other say it's not)
Since workers' compensation is almost mandatory and provides employees with..
Nearly automatic recovery, it is considered to be the exclusive remedy
FUTA Do you pay into this like a retirement account?
No
Strike
Nonviolent refusal to continue to work until a problem is resolved
Picket
Parade in front of the employer's business carrying signs about the dispute
Unemployment insurance
Provides financial stability, in the form of unemployment compensation, to eligible employees who lose their job
Taft-Hartley Act of 1947
Restricted activities from Wagner act Passed to curtail some of the powers the unions had acquired under the wagner act
Labor Unions
Rights under the law that pertain to employees, unions, and employers
Dual program
State and federal statutes create a system whereby employers are required to pay federal and state unemployment insurance taxes
Drug testing
Texas is not a state that limits employers right to give you a drug test Know your employers antidrug policy if they have one They must get consent, but they can fire an employee for not consenting
Privacy
The ECPA of 1986 does offer protection, but the purpose was not for protection from your employer at work on a work computer Telephone calls might be different
Arbitration clauses
The US supreme court has rules that arbitration clauses in employment contracts are enforceable provided the employee: -has signed agreement -has a reasonable time to file a claim -has access to the same remedies that a court could provide -has access to an arbitrator with expertise in employment law -has the right to be represented by an attorney -does not have to pay for the cost of arbitration
Worker Safety and Health
There are numerous federal and state laws that serve to protect employees from accidents and sicknesses that are job-related State and Federal Level
Occupational Safety and Health Act
This law was passed to promote safety and health in the workplace
Labor unions have played a vital role in both _______ and its ________
Us economy Politics
State level
Workers' compensation statutes, which pertain to how a worker may recover damages for work-related injuries and illnesses
Electronics
You DO NOT have a reasonable expectation of privacy when using your employer's email system, even during nonworking hours They do not have to warn you or tell you they are monitoring you
FUTA Who pays for this benefit?
Your employer through taxes
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
a federal statute that provides eligible employees with the right to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave
Such defamation is consider Slander Libel
if spoken if written
Employment contract
specifies that the employer agrees to pay, and the employee agrees to work, for a specified period of time at a specified salary