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Why you don’t need – or want – a Wikipedia listing

By Risk Management Bulletin
Wikipedia can be a good resource for lots of information, and because of its high-profile visibility about 8 million page views PER HOUR in North American alone it’s no wonder businesses view a Wikipedia listing as a penultimate achievement in their marketing strategy. But is Wikipedia all it’s cracked up to be for small- to medium-sized businesses? In most cases, no. Here’s why:
Wikipedia is editable by anyone. That means any person a disgruntled customer, a competitor, an unhappy vendor or just a random stranger can edit your company information, and if you aren’t prepared to constantly surveil your page to hunt down and immediately change erroneous information, you could wind up projecting an image that’s extremely damaging to your brand.
It was just three years ago that a misspoken sentence by Alaska politician Sarah Palin caused havoc at Wikipedia’s page on Paul Revere. When Palin said Revere had announced the arrival of British soldiers by ringing a bell during his famous ride to Lexington, supporters ran to the Wikipedia page to change its contents to match Palin’s misstatements. In return, historians and Palin detractors re-edited the page in a series of salvos that lasted for days.
Of course, that’s an extreme case on a very public page. But considering how easily those edits were made most edits appear as soon as any change is made it’s not hard to see how having your business on a publicly-editable page can pose significant reputational risks.
The cardinal rule in putting your name on a publicly available site: Make sure you have control over the content. That means keeping track of comments on your social sites and blog and amending privacy settings to give you the most control over who sees what.
Wikipedia was designed to be a public exchange of information, facts and data, but its openness has left it open to considerable misuse and abuse. Steer clear of the controversy and focus instead on improving your presence on other platforms to take some of the risk out of reputation management.

 

Do you need business interruption insurance?

By Risk Management Bulletin
Business interruption insurance can play a critical role in just about any business, yet many business owners fail to purchase it or wind up underestimating the amount they need. Why? Because compared to other types of business-related insurance like equipment damage or fire, the role of business interruption insurance may not be entirely understood.
So just what is business interruption insurance? And why do you need it? It’s actually pretty simple: Business interruption insurance is coverage that protects you if your business activities are curtailed (or interrupted) by some unforeseen circumstance, like a fire, wind damage or vandalism. Any of those events and plenty more could keep you from operating your business, and that could mean a substantial loss of profit and opportunity for you and your company.
A business interruption policy covers the revenue you would have earned during the interruption period, and it also covers operating expenses that continue even though your business has come to a temporary standstill. Most policies offer coverage for interruptions caused by events covered under your property insurance policy, with extras like interruptions due to power outages or power surges following an outage available as riders for an extra cost. Because business interruption insurance is in addition to your property insurance, it can be a surprisingly affordable way to gain some added peace of mind.
To determine your needs, consider the potential losses and costs your business would accrue during an extended period of interruption. Many disasters take more than a few days to correct, so be generous in your estimates. Also be sure to determine when business interruption coverage kicks in; many policies aren’t activated until 24 to 48 hours after an interruption begins.
Like other types of insurance, your policy premiums will be based on your business’ risks for fires or other disaster. Your insurance agent can help you perform an assessment to make sure you have adequate coverage based on your historical financial data and other factors.

 

6 Tools to Make Running Your Business Easier

By Risk Management Bulletin
Managing risks is an all-encompassing effort that affects every aspect of your business. In an earlier edition of the newsletter, we looked at a few apps that can help businesses manage risk. This edition, we’re taking a look at six tools that can handle some other business-related tasks to make running your company less stressful and maybe even a little more fun:
Quora: This popular question and answer site enables users to pick the brains of business and industry leaders from across the globe. You can ask questions, get answers and follow lots of different topics that are important for our business.
Todoist: This simple app lets you create to-do lists and share them with project team members, showing real-time progress toward goals so you and your team can stay on track and be as productive as possible.
HootSuite: Being active on social sites is an important part of every business’ marketing strategy, but maintaining multiple accounts can be time-consuming. HootSuite lets you manage and update all your social sites from one place so you can ensure your messages are consistent and published on a regular basis.
DropBox: Store, edit and share documents, videos and photos from any Internet-connected device for easy collaboration no matter where your team members are located. While perhaps not as comprehensive as Google Docs with its plethora of apps and add-ons, DropBox provides a simpler interface that many businesses find easier to use.
Zoho CRM: Managing client relationships is critical, but it’s also time-consuming. ZohoCRM offers a robust client management platform that’s free for up to 10 users. The platform makes it easy to access client data so you can fine-tune future sales efforts and incentive programs.
Free Conference Call: Hold conference calls and online meetings with clients and business partners at no cost. You can record and share calls too, and the meeting app is free for up to 25 participants.
All of these apps are free, and signing up is easy. As with any app, make sure you read the terms of service before registering. Make a commitment to explore one of these apps this weekend to learn if it could make doing business easier for your company.

 

Fire Drills and Containment Responses

By Workplace Safety

The fundamental reason for fire drills is to organize a plan before disaster strikes.

1. Has everyone escaped the building?
2. Have the fire department or responders been called with all the location information they need?
3. Is someone serving as a signal at the road to wave in the responders?
4. Are there adequate personnel to direct the responders to the site of the fire without getting in the way?
5. Does someone have a list of chemicals and supplies anticipated to be involved or potentially involved in the fire?

Start with the first fundamental: set up a meeting place or places to roll call employees. This task is completed quickly by having each operational group handle their own personnel. Do not count people, roll call.

Have groups of seven to ten people gather and assure all are present. Have one person from each of those groups report to one person. No one need count more than ten people this way, and this process should be complete and specific.

Any visitor to the building should be escorted through the system by the person last with them.

Just get out and account for everyone, then move to step two through five. But have the personnel assigned ahead of time. Panic or stressful situations are a bad time to get organized.

Why not fight the fire with extinguishers?

Absolutely do: trash can fires, small electrical fires, friction fires in machinery. Easily accessible, extinguisher immediately available, small contained fires can be extinguished quickly and effectively. Extinguish the fire and leave the building.

Clear the building anyway. You’ll lose a few minutes of production time, but the live drill will be safety reinforcing and, just in case you’re wrong about the extent of the fire or the chemical release due to the fire, you’ll be safe.

Place fire extinguishers with two thoughts in mind:

1. Easy access and availability to put out fires.
2. Easy access to help fight the way to an exit.

How does the second reason sound compared to getting out before the spread of a fire that looked contained?

 

Lifting Equipment in the Office?

By Workplace Safety

Muscle strains and back sprains from utilizing improper lifting techniques decrease in frequency as management trains the workforce.

What happens when a manager, office personnel or even the boss decides to move a heavy object because “this’ll just take a second”. Are they thinking about the safety aspects of the task or getting it done?

These injuries occur frequently because most companies spend money training the production line personnel but not the office employees. Yet, ergonomically speaking, the office employee manipulates their body in more tortuous ways throughout the day. Add weight to that equation and back strains happen.

How can these injuries be avoided?

1. Design workspaces ergonomically and efficiently. Fewer, more comfortable movements create productivity and safety. Start with the office chair fit for the individual and the task.
2. Encourage standing, even pacing, while on the phone. A change in routine, a change in motion, refreshes the body and spirit.
3. Encourage stretching exercises while working. Even a quick five-minute routine will help break the repetition of paperwork hypnosis.
4. Organize the supply room so bending is avoided, especially to lift objects weighing more than twenty pounds. Store supplies between knee height and shoulder height with the most heavy objects at waist height or slightly higher.
5. Organize supplies in small quantities. A ream of paper is easier to lift than a case. One individual can be trained and tasked with filling copiers and printers with paper every day. Designate a hand truck for this operation if needed. If the office is busy enough or uses hat much paper, task the employee to keep machines filled. Production will rise and injuries will decrease.
6. Train your management team to ask for help or at least think about safe lifting when moving “light” office machines and equipment. Often, the bending and back manipulation creates the injury scenario, like a boom over-extended for the lift.

The most important aspect of office safety is awareness. Even if the job will “just take a second”, take ten more seconds to consider the dangers. Injuries lurk in the safest feeling environments.

 

Environmental Risk Management in the Office

By Workplace Safety

The latest trend in environmental risk management is vapor intrusion, usually referencing toxic fumes from historical external spills penetrating the building envelope creating unhealthy air conditions.

Unfortunately, the canaries in the office coalmine tend to be people already at-risk for lung related issues, like those with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Vapor intrusion worsens in recycled air environments like homes and offices, or trapped areas like basements. Standard air filtration does not always eliminate chemical molecules, so they accumulate to higher concentrations, or worse, react with other present chemicals to create a more harsh molecule.

How about chemicals brought into an office environment?

Will the rug shampoo react with the linoleum stripper? Will the ink drying agent chemically reduce to a more toxic form?
Read the material safety data sheet (MSDS) alternatively the safety data sheet (SDS) or product safety data sheet (PSDS), to understand the chemicals or vapors potentially released by the product and if they have a injurious pathway to your employees.

Also, read the chemicals which should NOT mix with the product. Make a simple spreadsheet of the main products including cleaners, solvents, inks, bleaches, ammonia products, chemicals used in manufacturing or other processing like dry cleaning.

Most of these sheets are written in understandable language. List the family of chemical and what mixes are to be avoided. Does anything match?

Don’t be fooled by separate spaces or activities. These chemicals, in vapor form, can travel through vents, under and over doors, or through windows. Research each possible toxic material producing combination. Then find a way to change one or both chemicals, avoid possible mixing, or at a minimum, detect the toxic mix when it occurs.

Keep the (National Institute of Health) NIH – WISER (Wireless Information System for Emergency Responders) website handy for quick reference. It is the best tool to quickly determine potential vapor or chemical toxic issues:
www.wiser.nlm.nih.gov/ 

Workers’ Compensation in the Golden Age of Independent Contractors

By Workplace Safety

Do you ask for and receive all the certificates of insurance you need?
General contractors collect insurance certificates as a standard operating procedure. Every subcontractor provides a certificate or they don’t walk onto the jobsite. This transaction defines the standard usage of the certificate.

But what about other operations?

Fundamentally, a certificate of insurance is a standard form which offers proof of insurance: workers’ compensation, general liability, automobile liability, or any coverage required by the recipient.

The certificate outlines the coverage, the limits of the insurance policy and the relationship of the recipient to the contractor in terms of extended inclusion or exclusion under the policy.

This process clarifies which entity provides insurance for specific operations and which entities are insured under the policy.
Outsourcing is just another word for subcontracting. Payroll professionals serve a valuable service for many different companies in diverse businesses. If you utilize this service, you should require a certificate of insurance. Why? If an injury occurs while performing your assigned task, and the company is not insured for workers’ compensation, your company automatically fills that gap in their coverage.

An electrician wires a new wall outlet in the office. Get a certificate.

The coffee service provider injures their back stocking your supplies. Protect your company by requiring a certificate prior to entering your premises.

Any entity providing a service to your office must offer proof of workers’ compensation and general liability insurance or their losses become yours.

This standard operating procedure will sound extreme to some risk managers, so listen you owners: the insurance companies are beginning to look for these situations to charge you a premium.

Contractors have been subject to these audit add-ons for years. It’s part of the business. Manufacturers and office risks have not, except for temporary contract labor directly associated with operations.

The insurance companies awakened to the subcontractor economy. Very specialized services outsourced by mainstream business are now a rich source of additional premium, but an equally scary source of job related injuries and liabilities.

Go through your list of suppliers, outsourced service personnel, grounds keepers, window washers, or any temporary or part-time labor providers and ask for certificates of insurance: workers’ compensation and general liability at a minimum.

 

Leave and the ADA

By Your Employee Matters

One of the more confusing reasonable accommodation issues that employers must handle under the ADA is permitting the use of accrued paid leave, or providing unpaid leave, when an employee’s disability necessitates it. The concept can be difficult to grasp because it doesn’t align with the idea of providing an accommodation that keeps an employee on-the-job. However, the goal in allowing the use of leave time as a reasonable accommodation job-protected time in order to enable a qualified employee with a disability to manage his or her medical impairment and ultimately remain in the workforce.

 

There are many situations that will require an employer to consider allowing an employee with a disability to use leave as an ADA accommodation, barring undue hardship. Some situations include, but are not limited to:

 

when there is no other effective accommodation;

when an employee is not eligible to take leave under the federal Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) but has a qualifying disability under the ADA;

when an employee is FMLA eligible but requires additional time off beyond the twelve-week allowance under that statute; or

when an employee has exhausted paid vacation and sick leave and requires additional intermittent time off because of a qualifying medical impairment.

 

As a practical matter, an employer may want to first determine if an employee is eligible for leave under FMLA, a state leave law, or company leave policy before granting leave as an accommodation under the ADA. Why? Because FMLA, state laws, and company leave policies traditionally include leave entitlements that are more clearly understood. It can be challenging to determine if, and how much, leave is reasonable under the ADA.

 

JAN Consultants respond to a variety of questions related to leave and the ADA. Here are some examples of common questions and responses:

 

Question #1: Can an employer apply its “no-fault” leave policy to everyone?

 

No. According to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), if an employee with a disability requires additional unpaid leave as a reasonable accommodation, an employer must modify its “no-fault” leave policy to provide the employee with additional leave. However, if an employer can show that 1) there is another effective accommodation that will enable the employee to perform the essential functions of the position (and does not interfere with the employee’s ability to address his/her medical needs), or 2) granting additional leave will cause an undue hardship, then the additional leave will not be required. Modifying workplace policies, including leave policies, is a form of reasonable accommodation (EEOC, 1999).

 

Question #2: Is leave provided as an accommodation required to be paid or unpaid under the ADA?

 

Under the ADA, employees may be permitted to use their own accrued paid vacation or sick leave, as-needed, or be granted additional unpaid leave as an accommodation. Paid leave beyond that which is provided to similarly-situated employees is not required. EEOC states that an employee with a disability should be permitted to exhaust accrued paid leave before using unpaid leave as an accommodation.

 

Question #3: What duration of leave is required under the ADA?

 

Unlike the FMLA, the ADA does not require an employer to provide leave for a specified duration of time. Thus, it is up to an employer’s discretion to determine how much leave is reasonable as an accommodation. This determination must be fact-specific and will often depend on whether a particular amount of leave time imposes an undue hardship on the employer. An employer should conduct a case-by-case assessment to determine what is reasonable, just like with any other accommodation. This is where it’s important to not simply apply a no-fault leave policy. Under the ADA, an employer must be willing to allow an exception to a fixed leave policy as a reasonable accommodation, barring undue hardship. Employers should document how an employee’s leave impacts business operations. If providing additional leave poses an undue hardship, an employer should be prepared to demonstrate why.

 

Question #4: Does the EEOC provide any information about how to determine undue hardship related to leave?

 

In its Enforcement Guidance on Reasonable Accommodation and Undue Hardship Under the ADA, the EEOC offers a number of factors to be considered in determining whether an accommodation imposes an undue hardship. Regarding leave as an accommodation, an employer will often need to look at the impact the employee’s absence has had/will have on the operation of the business. The most useful undue hardship factors to consider in evaluating leave as an accommodation are those provided by the EEOC related to attendance issues – factors that put a strain on the employer’s operations, such as:

an inability to ensure a sufficient number of employees to accomplish the work required;

a failure to meet work goals or to serve customers/clients adequately;

a need to shift work to other employees, thus preventing them from doing their own work or imposing significant additional burdens on them; or

incurring significant additional costs when other employees work overtime or when temporary workers must be hired.

 

For more information, see q. 20 in the EEOC’s Enforcement Guidance on Applying Performance and Conduct Standards to Employees with Disabilities.

 

It is suggested that employers make an effort to document the impact employees’ absences have on operations. Not from a morale perspective, but rather, an operational perspective. For example, how was the employee’s work completed while s/he was absent? Were production goals met? Was overtime paid to other employees to complete the work? Was the employer unable to provide a service to its customers? Keep a confidential log of this type of information in order to make a fact-specific judgment of undue hardship, if necessary.

 

Question #5: Can leave be intermittent?

 

Yes. Intermittent leave often involves allowing the use of unscheduled, accrued paid leave or unpaid leave, as-needed, due to a qualifying medical impairment. Granting this type of accommodation will typically also require a modification to an employer’s attendance policy to excuse absences permitted as an ADA accommodation. An employer may determine the number of absences that will be considered reasonable and may request medical documentation that includes an estimation of the number of absences that may be anticipated due to the medical impairment. Note, if employees without disabilities are permitted to use their accrued paid leave intermittently, at-will, then employees with disabilities should not be treated differently. Also, FMLA may apply in situations where intermittent leave is required.

 

Question #6: Does an employer have to hold open an employee’s job while using leave as a reasonable accommodation under the ADA?

 

Yes, otherwise the accommodation of leave will not be effective. The ADA requires that the employer hold the employee’s position open while on leave, unless it can show that an undue hardship will result. Upon returning to work, an employee must be permitted to return to the same position, if the employee is still qualified and able to perform essential job functions. This is where a fact-specific assessment will be necessary to determine how long the position can be held before hardship results. Courts have held varying opinions regarding the amount of time that is reasonable for holding a position open; anywhere from several months, to six months, to one year. According to the EEOC, if it is an undue hardship to hold an employee’s position while the employee is on leave, then the employer must consider reassigning the employee (absent undue hardship) to an equivalent, vacant position for which s/he is qualified, for the duration of the leave period. The employee would then return to that position when ready to return to work.

 

Question #7: Does an employer have to grant indefinite leave as a reasonable accommodation?

 

According to the EEOC, although employers may have to grant extended medical leave as a reasonable accommodation, they have no obligation to provide leave of indefinite duration because granting indefinite leave, like frequent and unpredictable requests for leave, can impose an undue hardship on an employer’s operations. Also, repeated extensions of leave can become a request for indefinite leave. Employers are encouraged to request an anticipated date of return, even if it’s not an absolute return date. Having an anticipated date of return will help the employer make a determination regarding the amount of leave that will be reasonable.

 

– Tracie DeFreitas, M.S., Lead Consultant, ADA Specialist, Job Accommodation Network

 

SUPREME COURT “SPLITS THE BABY” IN PREGNANCY DISCRIMINATION CASE

 

Rejecting the stated arguments of both parties in Young v. United Parcel Service, Inc., the Supreme Court overturned the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit’s decision affirming the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claims of pregnancy discrimination.  The plaintiff claimed that UPS’s policy of providing light duty to some non-pregnant workers but not to her violated the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA).  The Court found that the plaintiff had proffered sufficient evidence that UPS’s policy was discriminatory, such that her claims should not have been dismissed as a matter of law.

 

Facts of the Case

 

The PDA provides that pregnancy discrimination is a form of sex discrimination prohibited by Title VII.  It further specifies that employers must treat “women affected by pregnancy…the same for all employment-related purposes…as other persons not so affected but similar in their ability or inability to work.”

 

UPS had policies that provided light duty for workers in three categories:  (1) those who had suffered on-the job injuries, (2) those who had “permanent” disabilities covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and (3) those who had lost Department of Transportation certifications.  Light duty was not available for any other reason, including pregnancy.  The plaintiff, a part-time driver, was required to lift up to 70 pounds.  However, she had a pregnancy-related lifting restriction of no more than 20 pounds.  UPS would not permit her to work while under a lifting restriction, and refused to provide light duty for her.  Therefore, the employee remained at home without pay for the majority of her pregnancy, and lost her employee medical coverage.  She then sued, arguing that UPS’s refusal to accommodate her pregnancy-related restriction was illegal disparate treatment under the PDA, since it had accommodated other workers who were similarly unable to work.

 

The trial court dismissed the plaintiff’s claims before trial, finding that, as a matter of law, UPS had not discriminated against plaintiff because of her pregnancy.  It found that the workers in the three categories against whom the plaintiff sought to compare herself were too different to be appropriate comparators.  The 4th Circuit affirmed the dismissal, stating that UPS had implemented a “pregnancy-blind policy” that treated all workers who did not fall into one of the three categories, which included the plaintiff, in the same manner.

 

The Court’s Ruling

 

Of particular note, the Court began its legal analysis by observing that, since the plaintiff’s pregnancy, Congress expanded the definition of “disability” under the ADA to include impairments substantially limiting an individual’s ability to lift, among other things.  It further noted that the EEOC has interpreted this expanded definition to require employers to accommodate employees with temporary lifting restrictions, including those that were not related to on-the-job injuries.  The Court, however, specifically declined to express any view regarding these statutory and regulatory changes.

 

The Court then turned to the interpretation of the PDA clause requiring the same treatment for pregnant employees as “other persons…similar in their ability or inability to work.”  On the one hand, the plaintiff argued that an employer violated the PDA if it provided an accommodation only to a subset of workers and not to pregnant workers, even if other non-pregnant workers do not receive the accommodation.  On the other hand, UPS argued that this clause simply defines sex discrimination to include pregnancy discrimination, such that accommodations provided to pregnant workers are compared to the accommodations to others within a “facially neutral category (such as those with off-the-job injuries).”  The Court expressly rejected both interpretations.

 

The Court found that the plaintiff’s interpretation would grant pregnant workers “most-favored-nation” status, meaning that if an employer provided only one or two employees with an accommodation, it would then be required to provide similar accommodations to all pregnant employees regardless of any legitimate differences between the workers – such as the type of job, the criticality of the affected employee’s presence, seniority, or age.  The Court determined that Congress did not intend to grant unconditional most-favored-nation status to pregnant workers.  In fact, as the Court noted, an employer is normally permitted “to implement policies that are not intended to harm members of a protected class, even if their implementation sometimes harms those members, as long as the employer has a legitimate, nondiscriminatory, nonpretextual reason for doing so.”  The Court also specifically rejected the EEOC’s 2014 pregnancy guideline on which the plaintiff and the government relied.  In the guideline, the EEOC stated that “[a]n employer may not refuse to treat a pregnant worker the same as other employees who are similar in their ability or inability to work by relying on a policy that makes distinctions based on the source of an employee’s limitation (e.g., a policy of providing light duty only to workers injured on the job,”) and provided an example of such discrimination that was clearly based on the fact pattern in this case.  The Court noted that the EEOC’s guideline was questionable based on its timing (issued after the Court accepted this case for consideration), consistency (it takes positions inconsistent with those previously advocated by the government), and thoroughness of consideration (the EEOC failed to explain the basis for this interpretation).

 

The Court also refused to accept UPS’ interpretation, finding that the clause provides more than a simple definition of sex discrimination to include pregnancy.  The Court noted that the PDA was passed specifically to overturn the Court’s prior holding in General Elec. Co. v. Gilbert, which had found a company plan that provided nonoccupational sickness and accident benefits to all employees, but failed to provide such benefits for pregnancy, did not violate Title VII – and thus permitted employers to treat pregnancy less favorably than other conditions resulting in a similar inability to work.

 

Instead, the Court adopted a third approach.  It applied the McDonnell Douglas framework, under which a plaintiff alleging that a denial of accommodation was disparate treatment under the PDA must first establish a prima facie case of discrimination, by demonstrating “that she belongs to the protected class, that she sought accommodation, that the employer did not accommodate her, and that the employer did accommodate others ‘similar in their ability or inability to work.’”  The burden then shifts to the employer to demonstrate a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its refusal to accommodate her – in this case, its light duty policies.  The burden then shifts back to the plaintiff to establish that the employer’s reason is actually pretextual.  The Court stated, “We believe that the plaintiff may reach a jury on this issue by providing sufficient evidence that the employer’s policies impose a significant burden on pregnant workers, and that the employer’s ‘legitimate, nondiscriminatory’ reasons are not sufficiently strong to justify the burden, but rather – when considered along with the burden imposed – give rise to an inference of intentional discrimination.”

 

In the present case, the Court stated that the plaintiff potentially can demonstrate a significant burden by providing evidence that the employer accommodates a large percentage of non-pregnant workers while failing to accommodate a large percentage of pregnant workers.  The Court also suggested that the plaintiff could also argue the fact that UPS has multiple policies to accommodate non-pregnant employees suggests that its reasons for failing to accommodate pregnant employees are not sufficiently strong, and a jury could possibly infer intentional discrimination.  The Court referenced its “longstanding rule” that plaintiffs can rely on circumstantial evidence to rebut the employer’s proffered reason – and more specifically, that the plaintiff can rebut such reason by showing how the policy works in practice.  Finding that the plaintiff offered sufficient evidence to sustain a claim of discriminatory treatment and her claims should not have been dismissed as a matter of law, the Court returned the case to the lower court for further proceedings.

 

It is worth noting that this opinion was not unanimous.  The dissent, which would have upheld the light duty policies as being “neutral,” castigates the majority for “craft[ing]…a new law that is splendidly unconnected” with the PDA.  The dissent argues that the majority’s interpretation – that the PDA requires employers to refrain from adopting policies that impose “significant burdens” upon pregnant women without “sufficiently strong” justifications – is pure invention, not grounded in in the PDA or legal precedent.

 

Practical Impact of the Ruling

 

The Supreme Court majority’s decision recognizes that the PDA does not require employers to ensure that pregnant employees receive preferential treatment as compared with other employees, but the standard devised by the majority appears to require just that.  In addition, the Court effectively has created a new and lower burden of proof for pregnant employees seeking to show that a denial of accommodation is disparate treatment under the PDA; a standard that permits discrimination to be inferred if the employer’s justification for a policy is not “sufficiently strong” to impose the burden on pregnant workers. We note, however, that because of the expansion of the ADA to include temporary conditions, such as pregnancy-related conditions that substantially limit a major life activity, employers will be subject to a reasonable accommodation obligation under the ADA for pregnant employees – and that the ADA’s mandate does not require consideration of whether such accommodations have been provided to other, non-pregnant employees.

 

Article courtesy of Shawe Rosenthal www.shawe.com

Handling Suspected Employee Drug Use

By Your Employee Matters

A problem faced by everyone from Highway Patrol Officers to employers is what does it mean to be “under the influence “and how can you test for it? Unlike alcohol, no breathalyzer can be used. At least not yet. All you can determine is marijuana is in the bloodstream (and it can last up to a month). Authorities are trying to establish a threshold for determining intoxication. Given this difficulty, how does an employer handle a potential issue where an employee is suspected to be using illegal drugs?
In most states you would want to have “just cause” or reasonable suspicion prior to accusing or testing an employee for marijuana use. In some states you are still permitted to do random testing. Either way, nothing bars you from discussing observed behavior in the work place. Exercise caution as to the business necessity, if a prescribed medication may be the cause, as this can be covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
Reasonable suspicion is not merely rumor or speculation but rather based on specific, objective facts and rational inferences from observing an employee’s behavior. Specific objective facts and rational inferences drawn from those facts must justify reasonable suspicion. Evidence sufficient to justify reasonable suspicion need not rise to the level of full probable cause. This may include marijuana on the breath, lapses in performance, inability to appropriately respond to questions, and physical symptoms marijuana influence.
Indications of marijuana use include, but are not limited to, the following signs:

  • Odor of marijuana
  • Slurred speech
  • Red eyes
  • Pupils dilated or constricted, or unusual eye movement
  • Lack of coordination
  • Weariness, exhaustion, sleepiness
  • Frequent breaks outside of the building

In reference to testing for substances based upon this, even with an accumulation of facts and rational implications to be used for conducting a “reasonable suspicion” test, it can be dangerous for the employer to order an employee to submit to drug testing. It is wise to have two separate witnesses to the behavior, including a supervisor; to have all supervisors trained to detect signs of usage (this does not have to be a certified training); and to escort the employee to and from the lab involved. Important to note is that the employer should have a substance abuse plan and policy in place before taking any such action related to testing.

To learn more about medical marijuana use in your state please go to your Comply state law section.

 

How Do You Maintain a Drug-Free Workforce in Marijuana-Legal States?

By Your Employee Matters

First it was just for “medicinal” use. Now it’s expanding to “recreational” use. Either way it is causing headaches for employer in pro-marijuana states. 23 U.S. states have legalized medical marijuana, with Colorado and Washington voting to legalize recreational marijuana in 2012 for those 21 and older. Voters in Oregon, a state which allows medical marijuana use, rejected recreational use in 2012. You can see a list of these states at http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000881
The question is how do these statutes affect employers? Answer is it depends on the state. The Colorado law states that “nothing in this section is intended to require an employer to permit or accommodate the use, consumption, possession, transfer, display, transportation, sale or growing of marijuana in the work place or to affect the ability of employers have policies restricting the use of marijuana by employees.” The Washington statute does not mention using marijuana in the employment setting. Connecticut’s law bans employers from acting against workers who use medical marijuana off-duty.
Federal law prohibits marijuana use, whether medicinal or recreational. The Department of Transportation does not accept medical marijuana for medicinal use. Since marijuana is illegal under federal law, institutions that receive federal funds will still be subject to testing consistent with the federal Drug Free Workplace Act.
The handful of court decisions interpreting these laws have come down on the side of the employer. They can discipline, terminate, or not hire employees who test positive for marijuana, even if properly used under state law. However, it will be interesting to see how these laws are interpreted either by way of state regulations or court decisions. In a state like Connecticut, where you can’t fire somebody for non-workplace use, what if somebody smoked a ton of weed one evening, and they come to work fuzzyheaded, would an employer have the right to test them? Or suppose they smoked on the way to work or during a break on their “own” time? There are no definitive answers to these questions and there may not be for years.