Skip to content

Workforce

Author: Mark Jr.

Posted on May 10, 2012August 7, 2018

Investment Executive Aims to Put Retirement Security on Election Agenda

In a presidential election that already has seen days dominated by parsing whether one candidate can be compared with an Etch-A-Sketch and whether another has mistreated a dog, Putnam Investments chief executive Robert Reynolds wants to turn the conversation to something more substantial: whether most voters can retire comfortably.

Reynolds laid out a three-point plan—making Social Security solvent, providing employer savings programs to everyone who pays Social Security taxes and raising workplace savings rates to 10 percent—that he said should be addressed in every federal campaign.

“Implementing these reforms in the real world will take leadership,” he said at a Financial Services Roundtable event in Washington on Wednesday.

“And those of us in retirement services need to both provide it and demand it from candidates seeking public office,” Reynolds said. “All of us in the retirement policy arena … should press our political leaders in this election year for a full, open debate on retirement policy.”

After the election, a lame-duck Congress must decide whether to extend hundreds of millions of dollars in tax cuts approved during the Bush administration and set to expire Dec. 31. Personal rates, as well as capital gains and dividends rates, are set to increase if lawmakers don’t act.

The post-election pileup is an example of Congress’ refusing to make tough decisions on taxes, spending and entitlements, according to Reynolds.

“This ‘fiscal cliff,’ as some people call it, is the result of multiple Congresses and administrations kicking the can down the road,” he said.

“Now the bill is coming due,” Reynolds said. “That’s why we do need to have a great national debate this year about deficits, debt and ways to reboot economic growth, so that the next president and the next Congress can earn a mandate for serious action from the American people.”

Congress is likely to turn its attention to broader tax reform next year.

Reynolds is trying to lay the groundwork for that debate, too.

“Making Social Security solvent and dispelling the uncertainty about its future should be the top priority for bipartisan reform next year,” he said.

Reynolds warned Congress not to touch retirement savings tax deferrals in its efforts to lower tax rates, broaden the tax base and reduce the deficit.

“National solvency and personal solvency go together,” he said. “We should never pit one against the other, but that is exactly what some in Washington want to do.”

Retirement savings tax deferrals, including IRAs and 401(k) accounts, are known as “tax expenditures” in federal budget parlance. They are among the tax breaks that are defined as costing the government revenue each year.

In fact, the favorable tax treatment for retirement savings puts them among the top three tax expenditures.

“They are deferrals, not permanent tax breaks,” Reynolds said. “Every penny will eventually be withdrawn and taxed as ordinary income, even though most of the assets being drawn down will likely come from dividends, interest and capital gains.”

In order to boost workplace savings, Reynolds backs legislation that would establish automatic IRA payroll deductions.

He tried to address two aspects that Republicans have used to argue against such a measure: Workers would not be forced to participate and employers would be compensated for start-up costs.

Most members of Congress understand the urgency of the retirement savings issue, according to Steve Bartlett, president and chief executive of the Financial Services Roundtable. The problem is that they too often use the issue to attack their opponents, making cooperation more and more difficult, he said.

“Our job, politically, is to convince them that their constituents expect them to do the right thing,” said Bartlett, a former House member from Texas.

Addressing the retirement issue forthrightly will help both parties, Reynolds said in an interview.

“If you do fix retirement security in this country, you suddenly have a real sense of confidence and hope,” he said. “People will look forward to the future and not fear it.”

Mark Schoeff Jr. writes for InvestmentNews, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on September 7, 2011June 29, 2023

J.M. Smucker Co Optimas Award Winner for Ethical Practice

From the days more than a century ago when a budding entrepreneur named Jerome Monroe Smucker personally signed the lid of every crock of apple butter he sold, the name J.M. Smucker Co. has been associated with quality products and good people. For the fourth-generation company, family and business values are one and the same. And even with increasing short-term performance pressure in the marketplace, those principles won’t change.

   “Our strategy is built on the foundation of our basic beliefs,” says Robert Ellis, vice president of human resources. “It provides the integrity to our bottom line.”

   The Orrville, Ohio, manufacturer wants to ensure that its signature comfort foods–fruit spreads, frostings, juices and beverages–remain American staples, and that honesty, respect, trust, responsibility and fairness guide daily operations.

   That’s why the firm steeps potential employees in its ethical standards even before they’re hired. Smucker officials refer frequently to company values and how they relate to the particular position a job candidate is seeking, Ellis says. Ensuring that the company meets the highest ethical standards starts with hiring people who already have a strong personal value system. The company tries to make this determination through rigorous reference checks.

   Once an applicant is hired, the ethics emphasis intensifies. Each of the company’s 3,500 employees started his or her career by attending a daylong training seminar. The event includes presentations by company officials, videos and breakout sessions on moral awareness, moral courage and values.

   The discussions go much deeper than a trite review of how to be a good person. One session concentrates on three ways employees can make a decision when faced with a dilemma. An option is consequential utilitarianism, or seeking to do the greatest good for the greatest number of people. Or an employee can choose a rules-based approach in which the decision he or she makes will set a standard that everyone else follows. The final alternative is to use the Golden Rule.

   Such sessions also delve into the complexity of ethics. Usually, an employee won’t be in a clear-cut situation where right and wrong easily can be defined. Ethical decisions are more likely to involve a nuanced balance between right and right. For example, the choice an employee might have to make may involve questions related to the pulls between truth and loyalty, the individual versus the community, short-term versus long-term approaches to business decisions.

   “All things being equal, they should go with truth over loyalty, go with community over the individual and long-term over short-term” company interests, Ellis says.

   After employees are trained, the company’s standards are reinforced by their supervisors and work teams. They go through the ethics program every three to five years and sign a nine-page ethics statement annually. “It’s spelled out in a lot of detail so that employees truly understand the level of performance we would expect from them in the work environment,” Ellis says.

   The guidelines are adhered to each day. They might be used to help sort out an employee performance issue, as managers reflect on the ethics paradigms. “It’s truly a working document,” Ellis says.

For putting honesty, respect, trust, responsibility and fairness at the core of its daily operations, and reinforcing high standards with a comprehensive ethics program, the J.M. Smucker Co. is the winner of the 2006 Optimas Award for Ethical Practice.
 

BASED IN ORRVILLE, OHIO, at One Strawberry Lane, the J.M. Smucker Co. has 3,500 employees worldwide and distributes products in 45 countries. In 2005, it generated revenue of $2.16 billion. Timothy Smucker, chairman and co-CEO, and Richard Smucker, president and co-CEO, are fourth-generation leaders of the family-run company.


J.M. SMUCKER MAKES fruit spreads, peanut butter, shortening and oils, ice cream toppings, health and natural foods, and beverages. Famous brands include Smucker’s, Jif, Crisco, Pillsbury and Hungry Jack. The company was founded in 1897, when Jerome Monroe Smucker sold apple butter from the back of a horse-drawn wagon.

Workforce Management, March 13, 2006, p. 19 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on March 19, 2010June 29, 2023

Ads Educate C-Suite About Disability Diversity

With the unemployment rate hovering in double-digit territory, it’s difficult for many people to find a job. It’s an even bigger challenge for Mark Karner, a polio survivor who uses a wheelchair and ventilator.


His disability limits the kinds of jobs he can perform. Wheelchair access is often the first stumbling block when he inquires about an opening.


“Half of them don’t even know what that means,” says Karner, who has been job hunting since September. “That’s really held me back. There’s still a lot of discrimination out there.”


Karner knows the situation better than most people because he previously was disability advocacy director at the Progress Center for Independent Living in Forest Park, Illinois.


Health & Disability Advocates, a Chicago-based group, is trying to change the perception of hiring people with disabilities through an advertising campaign that launched February 1.


The national effort will total $4 million initially for television, radio, print and Internet ads.


It is designed to change the perception of hiring disabled employees. Print ads poke fun at the foibles of typical employees. For instance, “Tina” is portrayed as being “pattern deficient” because her clothes don’t match.


“Just because someone looks a little different doesn’t mean they can’t make your organization look great,” the ad says. “The same goes for people with disabilities.”


Barbara Otto, executive director of Health & Disability Advocates, says that the campaign, a collaborative effort between states and human services agencies, strives to be edgy and creative rather than staid government public service announcements.


“What we’re trying to do is turn the notion of labels on its ear and get decision-makers to go beyond their own bias and look at what a person can contribute to their business instead of looking at their disability,” Otto says.


The target audience, Otto says, is executives at small and medium-size companies that may not have an HR department. The ads will direct them to a Web site (www.thinkbeyondthelabel.com) that outlines state-level resources to help them identify disabled job candidates and modify their workplaces for them.


Small and large employers alike will have to pay closer attention to the needs of disabled employees in the wake of legislation approved by Congress in 2008 that expands the Americans with Disabilities Act.


Regulations are being drafted that would implement the law, which went into effect in January 2009. It broadens the definition of disability in response to Supreme Court rulings that limited the ADA’s scope.


Instead of looking at case history to determine whether an employee qualifies as being disabled, companies must now be more inclined to accommodate him or her.


“Dealing with sick, injured, disabled employees is much more of a high-stakes process,” says Gerald Maatman Jr., a partner at Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago. “The law puts a much higher premium on decision-making. It’s a very employee-friendly set of amendments.”


Despite the ADA, hiring obstacles remain—even in a good economy.


“It’s the last frontier for employers looking to build a diverse workplace,” Otto says.


Workforce Management, February 2010, p. 5 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on February 3, 2010August 31, 2018

Workers’ E-Privacy at Issue

A Supreme Court case involving a police officer’s text messages may provide guidance on the limits corporate HR departments can impose on electronic communication. When employees walk into an office, factory or other business operation, one part of the U.S. Constitution generally does not apply to them—protection from unreasonable search and seizure.


 


The Fourth Amendment prohibits government intrusion. An employer, however, can review the contents of a purse or a desk. This spring, a Supreme Court ruling may help set a standard for how much electronic privacy workers can expect. The case that the court will review involves Jeff Quon, a police sergeant in Ontario, California. In 2002, Quon exceeded the 25,000-character limit for text messaging on a two-way pager issued by the department, which had a policy allowing supervisors to monitor e-mail messages and Internet usage. It was silent on texting.


When the chief of police investigated Quon’s text overage, he obtained transcripts of Quon’s messages from the city’s wireless provider and found that many of Quon’s communications were sexual in nature.


In a suit against the city, Quon and three colleagues argued that an informal policy allowed them to use their pagers for personal matters as long as they paid the overage fees.


A district court ruled that Quon could not expect to maintain the privacy of the messages on his department pager. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the decision, holding that the department’s review of the message content was “unreasonable in scope.”


For the first time in more than two decades, the Supreme Court will rule on a significant workplace privacy issue, says Kent Richland, a partner at Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland in Los Angeles.


“It may be the first time the Supreme Court makes the law crystal clear in this area,” says Richland, who will represent the Ontario Police Department before the high court.


The circumstances of the case may limit its application to the private sector. Fourth Amendment rights are more relevant when the employer is the government. The Supreme Court would have to issue a broad decision for it to directly affect corporate practices.


Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts “has made it quite clear that the court is going to adhere to the tradition of ruling on the narrowest grounds possible,” says Zan Blue, a partner at Constangy, Brooks & Smith in Nashville, Tennessee. “If they do that, they’re not going to touch on the issues affecting the private sector.”


For instance, a legal question more relevant to companies involves the extent to which employees have a right to privacy when accessing personal e-mail accounts from a work computer, Blue says.


“There are traces left on the hard drive,” Blue says.


Nonetheless, the case may still provide guidance to corporate HR departments on the limits they can impose on e-mail, texting and Internet use, according to Michael McAuliffe Miller, a partner at Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.


“You’re getting to the point where you have to review your technology policy as often as you change your phone provider,” Miller says.


Workforce Management, January 2010, p. 3 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on October 1, 2009June 27, 2018

A U.S. Training Upgrade

With partisan divides widening on health care reform and energy, most of the focus in Washington currently is on legislative battles.


But the Obama administration, Congress and the private sector actually do agree on something: U.S. workers need more education and training to fill jobs that increasingly demand higher-level skills. The House recently approved a bill that included funding for President Barack Obama’s plan to bolster community colleges, the American Graduation Initiative.


The $12 billion, 10-year program is designed to help the institutions improve their facilities and expand online education. The House measure would allocate $10 billion.


Obama asserted that an additional 5 million people would earn degrees and certificates from community colleges, a down payment on his effort to ensure that by 2020 the U.S. has the highest proportion of college graduates in the world. In a July 13 report, the White House Council of Economic Advisers projected that by 2016, occupations requiring an associate’s degree or advanced vocational training will grow twice as fast as jobs with fewer qualifications. Health care, education, transportation and construction will be the areas in highest demand.


If 5 million more people join the labor market with associate’s degrees, it could help transform notions of job training, according to Louis Soares, director of the economic mobility program at the Center for American Progress, a Washington think tank.


“That’s a material shift in how we view the workforce credential,” Soares says. The degree also falls in the “sweet spot” of one to two years of postsecondary education, which many employers require for hard-to-fill jobs.



Neither Congress nor employers have a good grasp of what the current system offers. “We understand very little of what we’re buying with [Workforce Investment Act] dollars.”
—Louis Soares,
director, economic mobility program, Center for American Progress

A recent Conference Board report, “The Ill-Prepared U.S. Workforce,” shows that nearly half of 217 employers surveyed provide remedial training to shore up employees’ writing, math and problem-solving deficiencies. The report was co-sponsored by the Society for Human Resource Management, the American Society for Training & Development and Corporate Voices for Working Families.


Although there’s not yet a Senate bill that includes Obama’s community college plan, the idea may provide fresh thinking about the Workforce Investment Act, according to Soares.


For the last six years, Congress has failed to reauthorize the measure, which governs the federal training system. Programs continue to function, but they have not been reformed since the bill was enacted in 1998.


A variety of political problems have created the bottleneck—from concerns about faith-based organizations providing services to worries about consolidating funding streams and protecting union jobs at federal employment offices. Democratic leaders on the House and Senate labor committees voice optimism that the act will be reformed by the end of 2010.


In advance of the Workforce Investment Act’s reauthorization, the Department of Labor is planning improvements to federal “one-stop” employment offices. The agency is seeking to deliver more services online, emphasize “green jobs,” reach underserved minority populations and create career pathways rather than just provide one-off skills training. “They are steps along the path to a reformed WIA that hopefully Congress will pass in the next year,” says Deputy Labor Secretary Seth Harris.


One of the biggest problems with the current federal workforce system is that neither Congress nor employers have a good grasp of what it offers, according to Soares.


“Right now, we understand very little of what we’re buying with WIA [tax] dollars,” Soares said. Nearly every witness who has testified at Workforce Investment Act reauthorization hearings has stressed the importance of collaboration among government, educational institutions and employers in identifying skills needed in regional economies.


Workforce Investment Boards include seats for business representatives. But many corporations don’t participate. CVS/Caremark is an exception. The drugstore chain uses the federal system to fill jobs in its pharmacy and photo-processing departments, as well as other store positions. The company also has located its own training centers at one-stop facilities.


“It’s our national employment office,” says Steve Wing, CVS director of workforce initiatives. “We want to help get more companies involved.”


But reforming the Workforce Investment Act—or bolstering community colleges—doesn’t go far enough in the view of some experts.


Grant Aldonas, former undersecretary of commerce for international trade, is calling for a summit of business, labor and education experts to chart a national human capital strategy that would overhaul the nation’s approach to education and training. Aldonas is the author of a new book, Globalization and the American Worker: Negotiating a New Social Contract.


“If we’re going to succeed as a society, this is the investment we have to make,” he says.


Workforce Management, September 14, 2009, p. 30-33 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on July 7, 2009June 27, 2018

Two Ways to Legislate Slogging Along Improves Outcomes

Employers aren’t going to embrace a bill approved by a House committee on June 24 that would require increased disclosure of 401(k) fees and toughen standards for investment advice.


But the bill has gone through a legislative process that has allowed employers to make input and soften some of the edges that they thought were sharpest. The measure was first introduced in last year’s Congress, where it died when the House Education and Labor and House Ways & Means committees couldn’t agree on the language.


This year, it was reintroduced. Hearings were conducted and, on June 17, there was a subcommittee vote on the bill—the first for the House labor committee since 2006, according to panel Republicans.


In contrast, four congressional committees are rushing to cobble together health care legislation that so far looks as if it is headed for a partisan collision. The Senate Finance Committee, which has taken a more measured and inclusive approach, may yet pull health care out of the fire by forging a bipartisan agreement.


So far, there’s nothing bipartisan about the 401(k) fee bill either. It was approved by a party-line vote by the House labor committee. Each Republican amendment was shot down along party lines too.


But along the way, subtle but important changes have been made. For instance, the bill calls for service providers to disclose fees to employers and employees in four areas: plan administration and record keeping; transaction-based fees; investment management; and all other fees.


Those categories have been whittled from the 13 that were in the bill last year. In addition, the fees can be expressed in dollars or as a percentage of total assets. In both areas, the bill is a little friendlier to employers.


Another dimension of the bill deals with investment advice.


Democratic advocates say that it eliminates a misguided part of the Pension Protection Act, signed into law in 2006, that allows investment companies sponsoring a 401(k) plan to provide advice to workers who are part of the plan. The fear is that employees will be pushed into investments that are good for the plan sponsor rather than the worker.


But during the process of putting the bill together, the conflicted-advice section has been modified to give “safe harbor” to a Sun America computer model and other advice arrangements that were approved by the Department of Labor prior to passage of the pension reform legislation.


Those developments are part of “a work in progress,” as House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-California, calls the bill.


“Clearly, there’s been a willingness to listen and respond to some of the concerns,” said James Delaplane Jr., a partner at Davis & Harman, a consulting firm in Washington. The changes “are helpful and noted and show there’s been some productive dialogue.”


The discussions continued at the June 24 markup. Rep. Rush Holt, D-New Jersey, offered an amendment that would strike two lines from the 69-page bill that prohibited investment advice from the plan investment provider. It was the only amendment that drew bipartisan support.


“It is quite simply a step too far in the repeal of the [Pension Protection Act],” Holt said. “The legislation as it stands would deny the employee the advice that we want them to have.”


Rep. Robert Andrews, D-New Jersey, countered that advice from plan sponsors would inherently be conflicted.


“The person giving the investment advice should have only one interest in mind, and that is the best interest of the person they’re advising,” Andrews said.


That was a rare Democrat-Democrat exchange during the 3½-hour markup. There also were lively, thoughtful and sometimes funny Republican-Democratic exchanges over the issue of “unbundling” fees, which is a key part of the bill.


Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-California, likened it to a golf club price being broken down into the cost of the head, shaft and grip. He said the only number that really matters is the total price. Forcing employers to deal with a more highly calibrated number might raise the cost of providing plans.


Miller said that middle-class workers who were investing hard-earned dollars were better off having disaggregated fee information.


“We’re talking about people’s life savings,” Miller said.


That kind of back-and-forth is part of the beauty of the sausage-making on Capitol Hill. You may not see much of it in health care reform.


Three House committees have put together a bill that they introduced on June 19. Hearings began this week in each committee.


They want to have the 850-page bill ready for a floor vote before the end of July. Their Senate counterparts are on the same timetable, a breakneck pace for Capitol Hill that probably won’t allow the kind of input that is being given to the 401(k) fee bill.


The first health care hearing of the House labor committee, on June 23, was a brittle, partisan session.


Democrats said the bill would reduce costs, guarantee choice and ensure access to quality health care. Republicans called it a “one-size-fits-all approach” that would result in government domination of health care.


Rep. Tom Price, R-Georgia, asserted that a provision of the bill that requires employers to meet a certain coverage standard or be assessed an 8 percent payroll penalty would cause those who do provide coverage to drop it—even if their employees like the plan.


Earlier in the hearing, Christina Romer, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, addressed how the employer mandate would affect companies providing coverage.


“The employer mandate will tell them to keep doing what they have been doing,” she said. “There will be no effect on them.”


In the rush toward a health care bill, that may be the end of the conversation. Don’t look for a subcommittee markup on this measure. There’s no time for one.

Posted on July 7, 2009June 27, 2018

Health Care Union Accuses SEIU of Card-Check Hypocrisy

One of the leading proponents of a bill that would allow workers to form a union by signing authorization cards is being accused by a California health care union of blocking such a card-check election for its members.


In January, the National Union of Healthcare Workers was established by former leaders of the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West. They had been removed from SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West executive board and steward positions after accusing the SEIU of centralizing power at its Washington headquarters and making “corrupt deals” with employers.


Since then, about 100,000 health care workers throughout California have petitioned to leave the SEIU and join the new union. The effort has been stymied, according to the National Union of Healthcare Workers, by SEIU tactics that resemble those of businesses that want to prevent unions from forming.


The SEIU has tied up the process by filing charges in court and at the National Labor Relations Board, according to the union. It also has been accused of intimidating workers who want to change union affiliation.


According to an executive of the National Union of Healthcare Workers, the situation is analogous to the bleak scenarios offered by opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill that would facilitate unionization.


“Some of the criticisms of the right resonate as we see [the SEIU’s actions] in play,” says Sal Rosselli, the union’s president.


An SEIU spokeswoman did not respond to two interview requests. But the SEIU does address the situation on its Web site.


In a January 27 statement, SEIU president Andy Stern said that a review conducted by former Labor Secretary Ray Marshall found that leaders of the breakaway union undermined democracy and committed financial improprieties. The SEIU took over the local California union by imposing a trusteeship.


“Today’s action is being taken to correct financial malpractice, restore democratic procedures and safeguard the collective bargaining relationships of UHW,” Stern said.


One person involved in the California health care union’s defection from SEIU found it ironic that Stern would not let the decertification process occur through card check.


“He seems to be an advocate of EFCA except for SEIU members,” said John Borsos, vice president of the National Union of Healthcare Workers.


A focal point of the intra-union battle is Kaiser Permanente, the $40.3 billion health care organization based in Northern California. The National Labor Relations Board dismissed a decertification petition for 48,000 Kaiser workers on April 7.


The company, which employs about 182,000, is held up as an example of healthy labor practices that have included allowing card-check elections for the formation of some bargaining units.


But Rosselli says that a once-collaborative relationship between Kaiser and its unions has become adversarial since the SEIU imposed the trusteeship.


“The labor-management partnership is unraveling,” Rosselli says.


Prior to the trouble, Rosselli says that Laurence “Lon” O’Neil, who was at the time Kaiser’s senior vice president for HR, set a cooperative tone and included employees in decision-making.


“He’s an employer representative that has a fundamental appreciation for the involvement of workers and tremendous respect for people’s opinions, which is highly unusual,” Rosselli says. “To make Kaiser Permanente the health care provider of choice, Kaiser had to be the health care employer of choice. Lon fully believed that.”


O’Neil is now president and CEO of the Society for Human Resource Management. His spokeswoman did not make him available for comment despite repeated interview requests in May and June.


The tension at Kaiser is likely to continue. The National Union of Healthcare Workers’ petitions for decertification are still languishing after six months because of “bogus, cookie-cutter charges” filed by the SEIU, Rosselli says.


“It’s totally a logjam,” he says.


The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

Posted on July 7, 2009August 31, 2018

NLRB Decisions Could Make Card Check a Reality

If the card-check provision of the Employee Free Choice Act fails to survive legislative negotiations, it may not necessarily die.


There is a possibility that the National Labor Relations Board could rule, if the right case comes along, that a company must recognize a union formed through the card-check process. Card check, also known as majority sign-up, means that a company recognizes a union if a majority of employees sign cards authorizing a bargaining unit.


Currently, employers can require a secret-ballot union election supervised by the NLRB, or they can agree to card-check authorization.


The five-member board is poised to have a Democratic majority now that a Democrat is in the White House, giving it a pro-union orientation. Currently, the board only has two commissioners—one Democrat and one Republican.


President Barack Obama has nominated two people for board positions. One of them, Craig Becker, is the associate general counsel to the AFL-CIO and the Service Employees International Union.


Each side in the EFCA debate has a different view of whether the new board will—or even can—make card-check recognition compulsory. Those who support EFCA say it is plausible. Those opposed to EFCA say that the NLRB lacks the authority.


In 1947, the National Labor Relations Act was amended so that the NLRB had to resolve representation disputes through a secret-ballot election. In 1974, the Supreme Court ruled that an employer does not have to recognize a union even if a majority of workers have signed authorization cards. Instead, it could insist on a secret-ballot election.


But in making its ruling, the Supreme Court relied on the expertise of the NLRB in reading the labor statute, according to William Gould, a professor of law at Stanford University who was NLRB chairman from 1994 to 1998.


Gould says that the board frequently reverses itself in its interpretation of labor laws. A new NLRB could take a fresh look at card check and decide that is an acceptable way to create a union.


“The board could develop new expertise based on new evidence and new facts and come to a different conclusion,” Gould says. “In my judgment, yes, the board could issue such a ruling.”


An employer-side attorney, however, says that the NLRB has always favored secret-ballot union elections, regardless of its political leanings.


“That’s been a consistent philosophy of the NLRB through Democratic and Republican administrations,” says Matthew Damon, a shareholder at Halleland Lewis Nilan Johnson in Minneapolis. “It’s a pretty fundamental point.”


But precedent doesn’t stand for much at the NLRB, and its new chair, Democrat Wilma Liebman, may be inclined to bolster card check through adjudication, according to Jim Rowader, vice president and general counsel at Target.


“She’s very open to rule making to make significant changes to labor law,” Rowader says. “It will result in a lot of conflict and litigation all the way up to the Supreme Court.”


Before the board gives new life to card check, it should more effectively use enforcement mechanisms that are already available, says Arnold Perl, a partner at Ford & Harrison in Memphis, Tennessee.


For instance, the NLRB can issue a bargaining order that would effectively authorize the formation of a union through card check. The board doesn’t often make such a move, and it usually comes in response to egregious employer behavior.


“The Obama board can be much more aggressive in their administration of the statute by providing effective remedies to address serious instances of employer unfair labor practices,” says Perl, who served on an NLRB advisory panel during the Clinton administration.


Rowader favors strengthening the board’s punitive options. For instance, it should be able to impose economic damages on employers, such as forcing cost-of-living benefit adjustments, or to impose mandatory arbitration. But the latter should be a board option, not a codified mandate, as it would be under EFCA.


“If employers are going to violate the law, then let’s come at them with a remedy that would disincent them from doing the wrong thing in the first place,” Rowader says.


It’s difficult to predict whether the new NLRB will address card check. But experts agree that the board will revisit decisions made during the Bush administration.


One previous board ruling held that employees could file a decertification petition within 45 days of voluntary recognition of a union.


“That case will clearly be overturned by the Obama board,” says Charles Craver, a professor of law at George Washington University.

The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

Posted on June 25, 2009June 27, 2018

SHRM Members Tap Local Chapters for Support, HQ for Information

HHR practitioners stressed out by delivering bad news during layoffs aren’t likely to contact the industry’s national organization for emotional support.


Rather than serving as a massive employee assistance program, the Society for Human Resource Management is providing professional guidance to help manage the economic downturn.


“Our members are coming to us for those tactical, regulatory, legal data points so that they can advise their executive management,” says China Miner Gorman, SHRM chief operating officer.


Yet SHRM also is hearing about individual pain that comes from losing a job or having to deliver the bad news when others are downsized. Those stories, however, are conveyed at 600 local SHRM chapters during monthly lunches or dinners.


At a recent meeting of SHRM of Greater Tucson in Arizona, participants spoke about layoff rounds at their companies, according to Judith Burgard, president-elect of the organization. Others mentioned job openings at their firms.


It was a sort of employment exchange that could help HR managers point displaced workers in the direction of a job. At another meeting, the group shared ideas about novel ways to avoid layoffs.


The Tucson SHRM chapter also revived a program to help members who have lost their jobs, while it continues to offer skills training that will keep them competitive in an increasingly brutal labor market.


Taken together, these initiatives can soothe frazzled HR professionals.


“That is what the chapter network does informally,” Burgard says. “It’s a very important stress reduction factor.” When she visited the SHRM chapter in Detroit in May, Gorman thought she might encounter frayed nerves and negative attitudes.


“Nothing could be further from the truth,” Gorman says. “They were strong. They were positive. I left inspired by their professionalism [and] the strategic thinking in that room. HR is playing a critical role in leading their community forward as the primary industry that supported that economy for so long is unraveling.”


Breaking bread with peers at local chapters is one of the defining moments of SHRM community, according to Sue Meisinger, former SHRM president and CEO. It’s one of the few places where members can vent because they often find themselves isolated in confidentiality at work.


“Those local relationships built through the chapters are very important during tough economic times,” Meisinger says. “It’s one of the ties that bind.”


Members are likely to turn to SHRM headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, for advice on conducting layoffs or managing benefits for separated workers.


They can do that through the Knowledge Advisor service that puts them in touch with certified HR experts on topics like reducing headcount without violating federal notice requirements. Or they can e-mail information queries to Express Requests.


This year, more than 47,000 members have used Express Requests and about 24,500 have utilized Knowledge Advisors. Those totals represent 40 and 17 percent increases, respectively, over the same period in 2008.


The SHRM annual conference in New Orleans has been programmed to offer recession-response information with such things as a career transition center.


Workforce Management, June 22, 2009, p. 22 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on May 27, 2009June 27, 2018

Employers Turn to Lobbyists to Navigate Benefits Policy Issues

In the face of stepped-up activity on workplace law in Washington, employers are increasingly turning to lobbying organizations to help them navigate actual and potential changes in benefits policy.


President Barack Obama and Democratic majorities in Congress see government action as the primary catalyst for economic growth and as the remedy for inequities in the workplace.


For example, the $787 billion economic stimulus package signed by Obama in February originally contained a provision that would have required employers to extend health care until age 65 to laid-off workers 55 or older or who have been with the firm 10 years. But that measure was knocked out by business community lobbying.


More recently, the Society for Human Resource Management issued a set of principles for workplace flexibility designed to begin talks on Capitol Hill that could lead to alternatives to mandatory sick leave legislation expected to be introduced in May.


For specific areas where changes in the law can be costly, employers rely on organizations like SHRM and the American Benefits Council, a national trade association for mostly large companies, to be their eyes and ears in Washington.


Rather than seeing a decline in its membership at a time when businesses are shedding expenses, ABC has added 11 new member companies to its roster so far this year, marking a 4 percent increase, says Jason Hammersla, a spokesman. The group now has 286 members.


“We’ve found ourselves being approached by new companies,” says Deanna Johnson, ABC director of membership. “They are feeling the impact of the recession, and how it has affected their benefits.”


SHRM membership also has been rising. It now stands at 252,000, up from 225,000 in 2007. Some of the spike can be attributed to increased interest in what Congress is doing, says Amy Thompson, SHRM director of public affairs. The organization’s legislative conference in Washington in March sold out, drawing 589 paid registrants. Attendance was 551 in 2008 and 512 in 2007. Sessions on workplace legislation have been added to all SHRM conferences for the rest of the year.


It’s not just lobbying organizations that are experiencing an increase in activity. The premium for Washington information puts demands on groups that help their members understand developments in the capital, even if they don’t promote specific bills.


WorldatWork, a professional association that concentrates on total rewards, compensation, benefits and work/life balance, opened a Washington office in 2007 in order to better communicate with members of Congress. SHRM is located across the Potomac from Washington in Alexandria, Virginia.


Cara Welch, director of public policy at WorldatWork, didn’t have a staff at first. Over the last couple months, she has added two colleagues to the policy shop and started a blog, Public Policy Perceptions.


Welch is trying to satiate the appetite for Washington guidance from WorldatWork’s 30,000 members, who are trying to gauge how all the legislative activity might affect their operations.


“They’re coming to expect more and more information,” Welch says. A webcast in December drew more than 350 participants. In 2008, Welch spoke at three or four WorldatWork events. Her speaking schedule exceeded that total in the first quarter of 2009.


“We’re just working all the time,” Welch says.


Another organization that does not lobby but does provide information and analysis is the Employee Benefit Research Institute. The group has added several new members and others have increased their participation this year, according to Dallas Salisbury, EBRI president and CEO. He adds that some members have dropped out because of budgetary strains caused by the recession.


Salisbury says members increasingly want to know about target-date funds, which were added as qualified default investments for retirement plans by the Pension Protection Act. EBRI databases and models analyzing the funds have led to issue briefs for congressional staff and contributed to EBRI hearing testimony.


SHRM, WorldatWork, EBRI, ABC and other organizations will stay active as Congress and the Obama administration maintain their focus on benefits policy.


Lobbying in action
Lobbyists for employers took actions immediately with the introduction of the stimulus package earlier this year. One major concern that employers had about the legislation was a nine-month, 65 percent subsidy for COBRA costs for workers laid off between September 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009.


The HR Policy Association and ABC were among the lobbying groups that spent hours on Capitol Hill fighting aspects of the provision—and managed some victories. In the original stimulus bill, employers would have been required to extend COBRA coverage until workers 55 or older, or who have been with the company 10 or more years, are eligible for Medicare.


Consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers estimates that the policy would have increased costs for employers by $39 billion-$65 billion because workers who maintain COBRA coverage tend to file claims that are more expensive than the health care charges for the average person in a company plan.


There was no magic way for business groups to persuade members of Congress—and just as important, their staffs—that their point of view was correct. It required wearing down a lot of shoe leather on Capitol Hill. ABC engaged in key discussions with the Joint Tax Committee, the House Education and Labor Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee. From January 26 to February 11, the group also sent letters to the House and Senate stimulus bill negotiators, Senate leadership and the Senate Finance Committee.


“Once politicians were educated on [the ‘55-and-10’ proposal], they realized it wasn’t a free ride,” says Mike Thompson, a principal in HR services for PricewaterhouseCoopers. “That’s why it’s critical we stay on top of the agenda.” PwC wasn’t involved in lobbying but provided analyses of the cost of the 55-and-10 provision to the HR Policy Association.


That provision, which may come up again in broader health care reform, was only one facet of a complex, massive and fast-moving stimulus bill that flew through the legislative process in weeks. It’s difficult for individual companies to keep up with every development, so they depend on ABC and other groups.


“It’s the details that matter,” says Lynn Dudley, ABC senior vice president for policy. “We are a portal for companies to weigh in on an efficient basis.”


Lobbying groups helped save companies tens of billions of dollars by killing the 55-and-10 proposal. Membership in ABC costs $4,000 annually for companies that employ fewer than 5,000. It costs $6,000 annually for larger companies.


Many companies have their own government relations representatives in Washington. But they follow legislation pertaining to the company’s portfolio. Tracking and influencing benefits policy is something that they tend to outsource.


“We’re able to come in and help them on a particular area that they may not be familiar with because it’s not part of their normal line of business,” Johnson says.


The communication goes two ways. ABC connects companies to congressional staff and administration officials so that they can learn about legislative and regulatory developments that are likely to impact their bottom line.


Those discussions also provide an opportunity for the companies to weigh in on how a proposal might change the benefits packages they offer to employees.


The corporate testimonials can potentially change minds on Capitol Hill. “To hear those details from the company helps terrifically,” Johnson says.


Getting the concerns of HR professionals in front of Congress was the motivation for SHRM to release its principles for workplace flexibility on May 7. In a letter to all members of Congress, SHRM proposed that companies be shielded from federal benefits mandates if they voluntarily offer paid time off. SHRM acted in advance of the introduction of a bill that would require employers to offer seven paid sick days annually.


“We want to try to start a dialogue before people get entrenched in reacting to a specific piece of legislation,” says Mike Aitken, SHRM director of government affairs.


SHRM followed up on the letters with ads in Capitol Hill newspapers and meetings with congressional staff.


Corporations don’t depend solely on organizations like SHRM and ABC to be their Washington surrogates. Sometimes they come together on their own, as they did in 2007 to form a coalition to protect the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, the federal law that bars states from setting their own benefits coverage rules.


The catalyst for the formation of the National Coalition on Benefits was a hearing held by Rep. Robert Andrews, D-New Jersey and chairman of the House labor subcommittee on health, employment, labor and pensions.


At that meeting and on other occasions, Andrews has expressed a willingness to ease ERISA rules to let states impose so-called “pay-or-play” mandates on companies. Under such legislation, an employer would have to meet minimum coverage standards set by a legislature, city council or another local government body.


“This is the first big employer coalition formed in health care, and it was formed around ERISA,” says Martin Reiser, manager of government policy for Xerox and chairman of the benefits group.


The coalition now numbers more than 175 companies and trade associations. Since its formation, it has conducted 75 meetings on Capitol Hill.


Those sessions revolve around the concern that the cost of meeting different health care coverage standards in different states would threaten their ability to provide benefits.


“It’s a bottom-line, non-negotiable issue for a lot of companies,” Reiser says. “There’s a growing recognition of the importance of ERISA at the staff and member [of Congress] level.”


Companies will be watching intently developments on ERISA and other benefits policy—and crafting benefits strategies and scenarios for whatever laws may finally emerge.

Posts navigation

Page 1 Page 2 … Page 5 Next page

 

Webinars

 

White Papers

 

 
  • Topics

    • Benefits
    • Compensation
    • HR Administration
    • Legal
    • Recruitment
    • Staffing Management
    • Training
    • Technology
    • Workplace Culture
  • Resources

    • Subscribe
    • Current Issue
    • Email Sign Up
    • Contribute
    • Research
    • Awards
    • White Papers
  • Events

    • Upcoming Events
    • Webinars
    • Spotlight Webinars
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Custom Events
  • Follow Us

    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • RSS
  • Advertise

    • Editorial Calendar
    • Media Kit
    • Contact a Strategy Consultant
    • Vendor Directory
  • About Us

    • Our Company
    • Our Team
    • Press
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Use
Proudly powered by WordPress