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Author: emmawilbur

Posted on July 20, 2018June 29, 2023

A New Look at Caregiving

This past spring, I got that phone call no one ever wants to receive. My mother had experienced a cardiac incident and had to be resuscitated. Mom, heart stopped, resuscitated was about all I heard or understood before I was on a flight.

When I walked into her hospital room the next day, my mom looked decades older than the last time I had seen her. She was stable but weak. I soon learned that the issue was a pulmonary embolism; a big blood clot had traveled from her leg to her lungs and stopped her heart. Had she not been at the hospital when it happened — literally in the arms of a nurse — she would not have survived.

The next several days were some of the most worrisome and stressful of my entire life, and certainly for my dad, sister, and the rest of our family. When my mom was cleared to go home, she faced a double whammy: recovery and physical therapy for her knee replacement (the reason she was in the hospital in the first place), while needing a ton of rest and ongoing monitoring following the embolism.

I spent 2.5 weeks with her, first worrying at the hospital and then helping her at home. All the while, doing my best not to let too much fall through the cracks.

I was only back home for a week when I learned that my grandmother had been rushed to the ER and was in the ICU, awaiting surgery. She is 89 and had been hospitalized not long before. Again, I booked a flight and got to her as soon as I could. For a week, I traded shifts at the hospital with my cousins, aunts and grandfather, spending the night there before and after her surgery.

Fortunately, my mother and grandmother are both doing well now, and the urgency is over. My mom is looking and feeling like her usual vibrant self, and our family is now trying to figure out the right amount of support for my grandparents so they can continue to live independently.

This was all new to me. But my experience is just an example of what is happening all over the country, to millions of families, every day. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than 44 million people provide unpaid care to elders. And very few people have the flexibility or job security I do. So, in addition to all the stress and fear about their loved ones, they worry about their job and paycheck — and the long-term impact on their career.

I’m more concerned than ever about how we address this within our organizations, large and small. Common-sense programs like referral resources and backup child care and elder care already exist. And although 99 percent of employees surveyed by Bright Horizons Family Solutions said backup care is important in helping them complete their regular work responsibilities, only a portion of employers offer this as a benefit.

There are a host of other programmatic benefits that better support caregiving: extended leave, support transitioning back from leave, flexible schedules and work-from-home options, on-site child care and more. We have seen time and time again that introducing these benefits has a positive impact on the whole company, not just those who use them. Yet, McKinsey’s 2017 “Women in the Workplace” report states “support for parents on an ongoing basis is relatively scarce.”

Clearly there’s an opportunity to provide more programs for employees. But it isn’t enough to simply put benefits in place that support navigating care or filling gaps.

Organizations must also have cultures of trust and compassion, so employees can be transparent about the burdens they manage outside of work and so their work can flex around those needs. This is especially important for women — and the organizations that need to and want to retain them.

The burden of caring for others falls disproportionately on women. They’re more likely to take breaks from their careers to help a family member and they are less likely to have a partner who stays at home to care for the family. The impact in the short term is job insecurity and stress. In the long term, it means women have less savings.

The Women’s Institute for a Secure Retirement estimates that women caregivers lose an average of $324,044 in wages, Social Security benefits and retirement income over a lifetime. As a result, they’re twice as likely as non-caregivers to end up in poverty.

Caring for loved ones is real life. It is time for us to build work around that reality.

Posted on July 18, 2018June 29, 2023

Court Says Full-time Work Is Not an Essential Function of Every Full-time Job

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Is an employer required to permit a disabled full-time employee to work a reduced work schedule as a reasonable accommodation?

In Hostettler v. The College of Wooster [pdf], the 6th Circuit concluded that it depends on the specific position, and that an employer risks violating the ADA by declaring full-time work as an essential function of a position without analyzing the actual need for full-time work for that position.

Heidi Hostettler started her job as an HR Generalist at The College of Wooster while she was four-months pregnant. As she approached the end of her maternity leave and return to work, she suffered severe postpartum depression and separation anxiety. As a result, and upon the recommendation of her OB/GYN, Wooster permitted Hostettler to extend her leave by a month.

She eventually returned to work on a reduced, half-time schedule, which Wooster permitted for two months. Thereafter, Hostettler needed to submit a refreshed medical certification. That certification explained that she should continue to work half-time for two more months.

Instead, however, Wooster fired Hostettler because she was “unable to return to [her] assigned position … in a full time capacity.”

The court considered whether working full-time was an essential function of Hostettler’s job as an HR Generalist. If it was an essential function, the Hostettler was not otherwise qualified for her position, and loses her ADA claim. If, however, full-time work was not an essential function, then Wooster discriminated against her by firing her for not working full time.

The court concluded that a jury should determine whether full-time work was essential to Hostettler’s job, and rejected the employer’s argument that full-time presence at work is always essential to every job.

[F]ull-time presence at work is not an essential function of a job simply because an employer says that it is. If it were otherwise, employers could refuse any accommodation that left an employee at work for fewer than 40 hours per week. That could mean denying leave for doctor’s appointments, dialysis, therapy, or anything else that requires time away from work.

The court further rejected Wooster’s stated preference for full-time work, finding it unsubstantiated. It instead required the employer to show it why full-time work was essential to Hostettle’s specific job.

Wooster may have preferred that Hostettler be in the office 40 hours a week. And it may have been more efficient and easier on the department if she were. But those are not the concerns of the ADA.… An employer cannot deny a modified work schedule as unreasonable unless the employer can show why the employee is needed on a full-time schedule; merely stating that anything less than full-time employment is per se unreasonable will not relieve an employer of its ADA responsibilities.

Thus, “on its own, however, full-time presence at work is not an essential function. An employer must tie time-and-presence requirements to some other job requirement.… Wooster must explain why Hostettler could not complete the essential functions of her job unless she was present 40 hours a week.”

When presented with this issue by one of your employees, what do you do?

For starters, do not make the same mistake as Wooster, and assume that every full-time employee must be present at work 40 hours per week. Instead, if you want to deny the accommodation, build your case.

  • Are there required aspects of the job that cannot be completed in less than 40 hours a week?
  • Are there specific aspects of the job that cannot be done remotely?
  • Has the employees failed in the past in efforts to complete required tasks in less time, or while remote?

Without answering these questions, and tying the full-time requirement to specific job requirements that will otherwise go unfulfilled or uncompleted, you will have a difficult time meeting your obligations under Hostettler and defeating an ADA claim premised on a denied modified work schedule.

Posted on July 17, 2018September 5, 2023

Why a Focus on Diversity and Inclusion Is Vital to Health Care Companies

diversity, gender

Corporate America is learning that our responsibilities to our stakeholders are multifaceted and interconnected. When we strive for a diverse and inclusive workplace, it benefits everyone — workforce, clients, shareholders, vendors, and communities local and global.

This may be most important in the health care industry, where the workforce needs to be both clinically adept and socially empathetic to serve their increasingly diverse communities.

Focusing on diversity and inclusion is absolutely necessary to access and engage the very best talent available. As everybody should know by now, a company’s workforce is the most critical ingredient in its ability to succeed.

We can’t possibly have the very best team unless we are tapping into the widest and deepest pool of workers available. If any group is not engaged or left out, excellent job candidates with unique experiences and opinions are lost. That means we must be deliberately inclusive to find, hire and retain the top quality workers.

As the leading health care staffing and workforce solutions company, AMN provides a wide variety of health care professionals to clients in all 50 states, from major urban medical centers to home health care companies to rural clinics, while also delivering complex and advanced services ranging from predictive analytics to mid-revenue cycle management. To provide the greatest support to health care organizations, so that they in turn can provide the highest quality patient care, we must have the very best team.

The health care industry we serve is very diverse. Among the overall workforce, 76 percent of people who work at hospitals are women and about 35 percent are black, Asian or Latino, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The percentage of women in health care is higher than any other industry and our team should reflect the clients we serve.

External stakeholders, like vendors, partners and investors, are looking for value and performance, which are directly dependent on a company building the very best team possible. These stakeholders are also looking for companies that they can be proud of — companies that share their values. Many stakeholders today want to know a company’s diversity numbers up front, to ascertain both the company’s value and its values.

For our team members to do their very best work, they must be engaged. Many women, people of various races and ethnicities, and LGBTQ individuals have been excluded or undervalued in business for a long time.

Inclusion must be an action verb. Diversity and inclusion must be actively interwoven into the fabric of company culture so that all people feel like they belong in the workplace — and that they can succeed there. This effort has to start at the top. It can’t just be a few programs; it must be a fundamental part of the corporate framework.

To be able to track your progression it is important to establish the demographic metrics of your team and regularly check your numbers. Diversity and inclusion are not abstract concepts. They are quantifiable, and a company must keep track to know whether they are making progress.

AMN Healthcare has been striving for gender equality for decades, and more recently has been working harder on other areas of inclusion. In the spirit of transparency, here are the AMN numbers as of April 2018:

  • 66 percent of our entire team companywide is women.
  • 62 percent of our supervisors and senior managers are women.
  • Our executive team includes women as CEO, general counsel, chief clinical officer, chief talent officer, and divisional or brand presidents.
  • 34 percent of our entire team is nonwhite.
  • Our team is 56 percent Millennials, 34 percent Generation X and 11 percent baby boomers.

We’re pretty proud of our gender diversity. But we know we can improve in other areas. And we need to enhance the culture and spirit of inclusion companywide. So here are some of the things we are doing:

  • Talent acquisition strategy for diversity, including metrics on diverse candidate slates.
  • Employee resource groups to support a variety of groups and to help the company become a better place for everybody to work.
  • Diversity champions and committees.
  • Companywide engagement survey that includes questions about diversity and inclusion.
  • Unconscious bias training.
  • Support for and membership in the Gender Equality Index and Human Rights Campaign Index.
  • Increasing diversity among our suppliers.
  • Promoting a commitment to diversity externally, particularly in the communities where our team members live.

Diversity and inclusion are the right thing for our team members, our communities and our country. And for our company value and performance. The growing commitment to diversity and inclusion in corporate America is making the workplace a better place.

Posted on July 17, 2018June 29, 2023

Firing of Deaf Employee Costs Costco a Costco-sized Verdict

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

I’ve had a lot of thoughts walking through Costco.

Why aren’t the free samples out yet?

What the heck am I going to do with 10 pounds of cheese, but damn that’s a good price?

How did I just manage to spend $250?

But the one thing I’ve never thought?

It’s so loud in here; I wish the employees would speak more quietly.

Then again, I’ve never been in the Costco in Pompano Beach, Florida.

That’s where Christine D’Onofrio worked for 24 years, until she was fired for speaking too loudly.

Her excuse? She’s deaf, and couldn’t self-regulate the volume of her own voice.

According to the Sun Sentintel, the store provided her a video phone to help her communicate. She alleged that after managers complained that she was yelling into the device, she was written up for being too loud.

She responded by sending a letter to Costco’s CEO. Shortly thereafter, she says, the store suspended her for a week, and then fired her.

For its part, Costco argued that D’Onofrio had a history of discipline “for serious misconduct and insubordination.”

It also argued that if any unlawful activity occurred, it “was outside the scope of that individual’s employment, was not authorized or condoned by Defendant, and was undertaken without the knowledge or consent of Defendant.” (P.S. That’s not a defense to a discrimination claim.)

The jury awarded D’Onofrio $750,000 for emotional pain and mental anguish caused by the denial of reasonable accommodations, and $25,000 for punitive damages.

Employers, listen to (and don’t punish) your disabled employees when they ask for reasonable accommodations. The alternative could prove quite costly.

Posted on July 16, 2018June 29, 2023

Are You Ready for Rolling Background Checks of Employees?

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Last week, Bloomberg published an article warning businesses to get ready for rolling background checks at work — the practice of running regular background checks of existing workers in addition to the routine pre-employment screening.

I bring this story your attention not only because it’s quality information, but also because it happens to quote yours truly (thanks to Mike Sasso for the interview):

“I think the concern is coming from a fear that either something was missed the first time around or a fear of, ‘Really do we know who’s working for us?’ ” said Jon Hyman, a Cleveland employment lawyer who has seen a pick-up in calls from manufacturers in the past six months inquiring about continuous checks.

“I think the MeToo movement plays into this, too, because they wonder, ‘Do we have people who might have the potential to harass?’ ” he added.

Indeed, rolling background checks are a thing, and they very well might be the right thing for your business. They will tell you if someone working for you was convicted or a crime, or filed a bankruptcy, or perhaps suffered some other key life event that impacts their ability to perform their job for you, which either happened during their employment, or perhaps was missed during the initial pre-employment check.

The catch, however, is that this rolling check must still comply with the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act.

The FCRA is the federal statute that requires specific written consent by an employee before an employer conducts certain background checks, along with other specific notice and disclosure requirements (check with your counsel).

But it’s the specific written consent that comes into play with these rolling background checks.

Before you run an FCRA-covered background check, you must:

  1. In writing and in stand-alone format (i.e., not part of an employment application or other document), tell the applicant or employee that you might use information in a background check for employment-related decisions; and
  2. Obtain the applicant’s or employee’s written permission.

Here’s the catch with rolling background checks.

If you want the authorization to allow you to run these background checks throughout the person’s employment, you must sure you say so clearly and conspicuously in the notice and consent. Otherwise, you have to provide a fresh new notice, and obtain a new consent, each time.
According to the FTC [pdf]:

An employer may use a one-time blanket disclosure, and obtain permission from applicants or current employees to procure consumer reports, at any time during the application process or during the employee’s tenure. The disclosure must state “clearly and conspicuously” that the employer intends for the disclosure and authorization to cover both the application for employment and, if the consumer is hired, any additional consumer reports obtained while the individual is an employee. A valid disclosure and consent remain effective throughout the duration of employment.

Readers, I ask, have you considered, or used, rolling or continuous background checks for your employees? If you’ve used them, how have they worked out? If you’ve rejected, the idea, why? Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below.

Posted on July 12, 2018June 29, 2023

Does an Employer Have a Duty to Protect the Personal Information of Its Employees?

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Consider the following scenario.

An employer discovers that an employee who worked in its information technology department had been stealing older laptop computers. Some of those computers had been used in the employer’s human resources department and contained former employees’ personal information (including Social Security numbers and drivers’ license numbers), which the company collected on each employee at the time of hire.

The employer attempts to recover the stolen computers and informs its employees of the data breach. Some time later, however, an employee learns that several of his accounts with online retailers were compromised and used to make unauthorized purchases.

He sues his employer for, among other claims, breach of contract (based on the company’s data security policy in its employee handbook) and negligence. Who wins?

These are the facts the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals recently considered in Enslin v. Coca-Cola Co. In opinion drafted by twice-SCOTUS bridesmaid Thomas Hardiman, the court found for the employer. It concluded that the employee could not prevail because he could not establish that the employer caused his damages. The harm flowed “from the compromise of his retail accounts rather than directly from … [the] theft of his personal information,” and the employee presented “no evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that his accounts were compromised because information was gleaned from the stolen laptops.”

Similar to Enslin is Dittman v. UPMC d/b/a the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, in which a Pennsylvania appellate court held that an employer “did not owe a duty of reasonable care in its collection and storage of the employees’ information and data.” The court found it “unnecessary to require employers to incur potentially significant costs to increase security measures when there is no true way to prevent data breaches altogether.”

Do not, however, allow these cases to lull you, as an employer, into a false sense of immunity from claims by employees following data breaches. Indeed, several other courts that have examined this issues have reached the opposite result.

    • Sackin v. TransPerfect Global, Inc. (S.D.N.Y. 10/4/17): “Employees ordinarily have no means to protect that information in the hands of the employer, nor is withholding their PII a realistic option. The employer is best positioned to avoid the harm in question. Employees — much more than employers — suffer the harmful consequences of a data breach of the employer. Potential liability in the absence of reasonable care provides employers with an economic incentive to act reasonably in protecting employee PII from the threat of cyberattack.” 
    • Hapka v. CareCentrix, Inc. (D. Kan. 12/19/16): Employer “owed a [common law] duty to Plaintiff and the Class to exercise reasonable care in obtaining, securing, safeguarding, deleting, and protecting Plaintiff and Class members’ personal and tax information within its control from being compromised, lost, stolen, accessed, and misused by unauthorized persons.”

Regardless of whether you, as an employer, have a legal duty to protect the personal information and data of your employees, you still have a significant financial and reputational incentive to take reasonable steps to maintain the privacy and security of the information.

What should you be doing?

    1. Implementing reasonable security measures, which includes encryption, firewalls, secure and updated passwords, and employee training on how to protect against data breaches (such as how not fall victim to phishing attacks).
    2. If (or more accurately when) you suffer a data breach, timely advising employees of the breach as required by all applicable state laws.
    3. Training employees on appropriate data security.
    4. Drafting policies that explain the scope of your duty as an organization to protect employee data.
    5. Maintaining an updated data breach response plan.

Remember, data breaches are not an if issue, but a when issue. Once you understand the fact that you will suffer a breach, you should also understand the importance of making the issue of data security a priority in your organization. The average cost to a company of a data breach in 2018 is $3.9 million (and increasing annually). While I don’t work in the business of guarantees, I can guarantee that any expenses you incur to mitigate potential cost of a data breach is money well spent.

Posted on July 11, 2018June 29, 2023

The 13th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Hire-to-Harm Manager

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Today’s post is a lesson in how not manage a poor performing employee.
Believe it or not, it’s generally considered poor employee management to attempt to motivate employees by causing them serious physical harm. It’s even worse when that serious physical harm results in an employee’s death.
From Cleveland.com:

A Solon man who hired a handyman to do some yard work around an Elyria convenience store is accused of conspiring with two men to hurt him, resulting in the handyman’s death, Elyria police say.
Willie Fisher, 46, of Lakewood, was found shot dead about 6:30 p.m. Friday behind the Convenient Food Mart on East Avenue near Fuller Road, police said.
During the course of their investigation, police learned that Fisher was hired as a handyman to do some yard work around the store by 56-year-old Bruce Arnoff, of Solon, a news release from the Elyria police department says.
Arnoff became upset with Fisher, and he asked two East Cleveland men, 29-year-old John Sullivan and 18-year-old Saint-Velle Pruitt, to “cause serious physical harm” to Fisher, police said. Their actions resulted in Fisher’s death.

The Convenient Food Mart is not directly owned by Arnoff, property records show. It’s unclear if he is an employee at the business or works for a third party that hired Fisher.

If you (allegedly) cause the death of an employee by (allegedly) hiring two men to rough him up as a workplace motivational tool, you might be the worst employer of 2018.

Previous nominees:

The 1st Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Holy Harasser

The 2nd Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Arresting School Board

The 3rd Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Camera Creep

The 4th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the (in)Humane Society Harasser

The 5th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Political Pension Preventer

The 6th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Sadistic Sergeant

The 7th Nominee for Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Pregnancy Provoker

The 8th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Age Discriminator

The 9th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Retaliator

The 10th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Whitewasher

The 11th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Supervisor Supremacist

The 12th Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Soulless Supervisor

Posted on July 9, 2018June 29, 2023

No, You Can’t Require Your Employee to Work During an FMLA Leave

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Let’s examine a question I receive all too often — can an employer require an employee to work during an FMLA leave?

So as not to bury the lede, the answer is pretty strong no.

To examine this issue, let’s take a look at Lay v. Louisville-Jefferson Cnty. Metro Gov’t (W.D. Ky. 5/29/18).

Justin Lay, a packer in the Solid Waste Management Division of the Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government, applied for, and won, a promotion to an equipment operator. The new position required Lay to hold a commercial driver’s license, which the collective bargaining agreement provided three months to obtain.

During that three-months period, however, Lay suffered a broken leg in an off-duty accident. As a result, he took an FMLA leave. During that leave, however, the employer terminated his employment because he had failed to obtain his CDL as required by the position.

Lay sued, claiming that his termination — specifically, the expectation and requirement that he obtain his CDL while out on an FMLA leave — violated his rights under the FMLA.

The court agreed that “requiring an employee to work while on leave from work is the definition of interference with an employee’s FMLA rights,” and that requiring an employee to complete the requirements for a CDL and take the driver’s test while on FMLA leave constituted this mandatory work. It concluded that a jury should determine whether the employer violated Lay’s FMLA rights and set the case for trial.

What can employers learn from this case? If an employee is out on FMLA leave, leave the employee alone.

There is a distinction to be made between “fielding occasional calls about one’s job while on leave [as] a professional courtesy” (which a New York federal court, in Reilly v. Revlon, concluded was not an FMLA violation), and requiring one “to continue to perform work-related tasks while ostensibly on medical leave” (such as providing updates on accounts and pending sales, which the 6th Circuit, in Arban v. West Publishing, concluded was an FMLA violation).

Generally, speaking, however, anything more than routine questions that can be fielded in a quick phone call or email will likely constitute a violation of your employee’s FMLA rights.

Make sure your managers, supervisors, and the co-workers left behind know and understand that an employee out on FMLA is not to be working. Otherwise, you just might be buying yourself an FMLA lawsuit.


 

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