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Author: Site Staff

Posted on October 1, 1999July 10, 2018

How to Handle Daylight Savings Time

When the first hint of fall arrives, it’s time to think about time—daylight saving time.


Under the Uniform Time Act, daylight saving time is observed from the first Sunday in April until the last Sunday in October.


For payroll managers, the ritual of “spring forward, fall back” involves more than resetting clocks, wristwatches and VCRs.


Here’s the drill:
When returning to standard time during the last Sunday in October, clocks are moved back one hour at 2 a.m. Shift workers on duty at that time will actually work an extra hour, for a total of nine hours of work. Employees must be paid for all nine hours. They are also entitled to overtime on the basis of all hours worked during the week, including the extra hour worked during the conversion to standard time.


Conversely, the arrival of daylight saving time in April requires clocks to be moved forward one hour at 2 a.m. Shift workers who are on duty at that time and who normally work an eight-hour shift will actually work only seven hours.


An employer, as a matter of policy, may decide to pay the normal eight hours of pay for that shift. Under the Fair Labor Standards Act, the employer is not required to include the additional hour of pay when calculating an employee’s regular rate for overtime. However, because the extra hour of pay is not compensation for hours actually worked in the work week, no part of that amount may be credited toward overtime compensation that may be due if the employee qualifies for overtime during the rest of the work week.


Source: CCH Incorporated is a leading provider of information and software for human resources, legal, accounting, health care and small business professionals. CCH offers human resource management, payroll, employment, benefits, and worker safety products and publications in print, CD, online and via the Internet. For more information and other updates on the latest HR news, check our Web site at http://hr.cch.com.


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.


Posted on October 1, 1999June 29, 2023

Mergers Don’t Do Well Handling People Issues

Right Management Consultants, based in Philadelphia, asked senior executives in 179 organizations to rank their success in a Merger or Acquisition on a scale from one to five.


The following results show the percentage of people who had clear success doing the item referenced. Clear success is understood in this case to mean the execs marked a four or a five, indicating they were “very successful” or “extremely successful.” in doing the item listed.





SOURCE: Right Management Consultants, Philadelphia, 1999.

Posted on October 1, 1999July 10, 2018

Simplify Your Life

This weekend a friend told me about a “Stone Soup” comic strip he read. In the first frame, a dog was pictured running after a ball, while a caption showed the dog’s thoughts: “Ball! Ball! Ball!”


In the second frame, the dog ran after food, with the caption showing the dog thinking “Food! Food! Food.”


In the third frame, a young boy turned to his mother, and asked, “What’s the secret to life?” She wasn’t sure, but the dog was.


“Simplify,” the dog thought to himself.


Certainly, life can be a bit more complicated than just a tennis ball and a dog dish. But focusing on the things most simple—and most important—to you can improve your outlook.


SOURCE: Workforce Online Editor Todd Raphael.

Posted on October 1, 1999July 10, 2018

CFOs Divided Over Value of Counteroffers

Robert Half International, of Menlo Park, CA, surveyed 1,400 chief financial officers (CFOs) last December and found that 56% would likely use counteroffers to persuade good employees to stay, while 42% would not.


CFOs were asked: “How likely is it that you would make a counteroffer if a good employee announced that he or she was considering a job offer from another firm?” Their responses:


Very likely

18%

Somewhat likely

38%

Somewhat unlikely

21%

Very unlikely

21%

Don’t know/no answer

   2%

 

100%

Posted on September 30, 1999July 10, 2018

Feedback Build it and it Will Come

How can you encourage feedback from employees?


Here are a few tips on how employers can set the stage to receive complaints properly and improve communication.


  • Solicit your employees for company improvement suggestions. Don’t just send out a survey once or twice a year that asks what they like and dislike about their jobs. Start a recommendation reward program. The program should reward any employee who suggests an improvement that helps the company save money, make more money, or become more efficient.
  • When an employee brings a complaint to your company, LISTEN. Always ask them for their ideas on how to fix the problem.
  • If an employee brings up a complaint or constructive suggestion during a group meeting, NEVER criticize or patronize the person in front of the group. Thank them for the comment and if it’s better to address it after the meeting, ask if you could spend some time later discussing and trying to fix the problem.
  • Remember that most employees have or want a reason to work for your company. An employee who complains is probably just saying “let’s fix this problem so I can enjoy working here again.”


SOURCE: Matthew C. Hollingsworth, Techemployment.com, Cincinnati.

Posted on September 29, 1999July 10, 2018

Exercise Caution First Determine if Medical Inquiry Violates the ADA

It is very important for employers to be aware of the scope of proper medical inquiries under the Americans with Disabilities Act. This is especially important considering that some courts will even allow nondisabled plaintiffs to pursue an ADA claim regarding improper medical inquiries. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission offers the following advice on abiding by the ADA:


Pre-offer applicants:
Before making a job offer, an employer is forbidden from asking an applicant whether he or she is disabled. The employer is also forbidden from asking about the nature or severity of a known disability. Finally, the employer may not require the applicant to take a medical examination before making a job offer.


Nevertheless, the employer may ask questions the applicant’s about ability to perform job-related functions, so long as the questions are not phrased in terms of disability. The employer may also ask the applicant to describe or to demonstrate how, with or without reasonable accommodation, the applicant will perform job-related functions.


Post-offer prospective employees:
After a job offer is made, but prior to the commencement of employment duties, the employer may require the applicant to take a medical examination if everyone who will be working in the job category must also take the examination. The employer may lawfully condition the job offer on the results of the medical examination. However, if an individual is not hired because a medical examination reveals the existence of a disability, the employer must be able to show that the reasons for exclusion are job related and consistent with business necessity. The employer must also be able to show that there was no reasonable accommodation that would have made it possible for the individual to perform the essential job functions.


Current employees:
Once the employee has begun his or her job, the employer cannot require a medical examination or ask the employee questions about disability unless it can show that these requirements are job related and consistent with business necessity. However, the employer may offer voluntary medical examinations that are part of an employee health program.


The results of any medical examinations and any information gained from medical inquiries about a disability must be kept confidential and maintained in separate medical files. State workers’ compensation agencies, however, may receive medical information that is necessary for their administration of state workers’ compensation laws.


SOURCE: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.


Source: CCH Incorporated is a leading provider of information and software for human resources, legal, accounting, health care and small business professionals. CCH offers human resource management, payroll, employment, benefits, and worker safety products and publications in print, CD, online and via the Internet. For more information and other updates on the latest HR news, check our Web site at http://hr.cch.com.


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.


Posted on September 28, 1999July 10, 2018

Inflated Withholding Exemptions What is Your Obligation as Employer

Issue: An employee fills out a Form W-4 on which he claims 99 allowances and exempt status. After you forward the W-4 to the IRS, you receive an IRS notice instructing you to withhold tax at the single, no allowances rate and to ignore any further W-4s from that employee. If you withhold per the IRS instructions, can the employee file suit against you to recover the withheld taxes?


Answer: No. An employer cannot be held liable to an employee for complying with its legal duty to withhold tax. If the IRS issues a directive instructing an employer to disregard an employee’s W-4 as defective, the employer must withhold based on the directive, not the W-4.


Ordinarily, an employer is not concerned with the number of withholding exemptions an employee claims on Form W-4. You are under no duty to determine whether the number of exemptions claimed is more than the employee is entitled to. If, however, you have reason to believe that the number of exemptions claimed exceeds the number the employee is entitled to, you should so advise the appropriate IRS district director.


The following are instances when a Form W-4 would be clearly invalid:


  1. If an employee claims more than 10 withholding allowances (you must withhold on the basis of the statements made in that certificate until receipt of a notice from the IRS);
  2. If an employee claims to be exempt from withholding and earns more than $200 per week when the Form W-4 is filed (you must withhold on the basis of the statements made in that certificate until receipt of a notice from the IRS);
  3. If the Form W-4 contains an alteration or unauthorized addition or does not fully and clearly set forth the required information;
  4. If the employee clearly indicates that the Form W-4 is false by an oral or written statement made to you before or when he or she submits the certificate.

Invalid withholding certificates must be submitted with Form 941, 941E, or 941-M for the last month of the reporting period. Copies of the invalid certificates must be sent to the IRS even if they are not in effect at the end of the quarter. The IRS may send you a notice to advise you that the employee is not entitled to claim exemption from withholding or is not entitled to claim a total number of withholding exemptions in excess of a number specified by the IRS. Regardless of whether you receive a corrected certificate from the employee, you must withhold on the basis of the maximum number specified in the IRS notice.


Cite: Pesci v. IRS, et al., (DC Nev 1999), Dkt. No. CV-S-98-00245-DWH.


Source: CCH Incorporated is a leading provider of information and software for human resources, legal, accounting, health care and small business professionals. CCH offers human resource management, payroll, employment, benefits, and worker safety products and publications in print, CD, online and via the Internet. For more information and other updates on the latest HR news, check our Web site at http://hr.cch.com.


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.


Posted on September 27, 1999July 10, 2018

Should You Always Be Polite

It’s usually a good idea to say your “pleases” and your “thank yous.” It’s good customer service, and builds good will.


But is it always a good idea?


Keep in mind that each of these words has a specific connotation in marketing and customer service. Today I noticed the can of Sun-Maid® Raisins, for example. It says, “Please use our Web site.” The connotation: “If you use our Web site, you’d really be doing us a favor. There’s nothing in it for you, since the last thing you want to do is read about raisins on the Internet. The only benefit is for us at Sun-Maid®.”


When you’re working on a business deal, and you thank the other party, it has a similar connotation. It means the other party just did you a favor, and in a sense, you “owe them one.”


Use this rule of thumb: If someone lets you out of the subway car on the way to work in lieu of plowing you over, thank him or her.


But if you’re negotiating the purchase of an automobile, and the dealer throws a couple free car mats into the mix, hold on to your thank-you before you lose the upper hand.


SOURCE: Workforce Online Editor Todd Raphael.

Posted on September 27, 1999July 10, 2018

Write Your FMLA Leave Policies Carefully

Issue: Your company provides its employees with a notice describing their Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) rights. However, your notice does not unambiguously and “explicitly state that FMLA leave would run concurrently with paid sick leave and vacation time.” Is your notice nevertheless adequate under federal law and regulations?


No: Even though an employer’s FMLA guidelines “arguably” provided notice that FMLA leave would run concurrently with available paid leave, a federal district court in Chicago ruled that the guidelines were too “ambiguous” to entitle either party to a dispositive finding that the guidelines did or did not provide adequate notice, as required by FMLA regulations, that the employees’ FMLA leave and available paid time off would run concurrently.


How clear does notice need to be?
To determine whether the notice was adequate, the court compared the language the employer had used and the language of the “Prototype Notice” found in the regulations. As the court explained, the language the employer had used (“any leave requested for the employee’s own illness will be paid through accrued sick time … [and] vacation time, personal and bonus time may is [sic] payable once the sick bank is exhausted”), even setting aside the typographical error, didn’t make it “unambiguously clear” that what the employer was trying to say was that (1) it would substitute vacation leave and sick leave for FMLA leave, and (2) the employees’ FMLA leave would run concurrently with paid time off.


In contrast, the prototype notice did explicitly specify when, and under what “conditions” an employee’s paid leave would be substituted for FMLA leave. The prototype stated in pertinent part, “This is to inform you that … [ ] you may elect to substitute paid leave for unpaid FMLA leave. We [ ] will [ ] will not require that you substitute accrued paid leave for unpaid FMLA leave. If paid leave will be used the following conditions will apply:” When compared against the clear wording of the prototype, the court declared, the employer’s guidelines were simply “too ambiguous” to support a finding that they had provided the employee with “adequate notice as a matter of law.”


What should you do?
Employers who have written guidance for employees about benefits or leave rights, such as employee handbooks, must include information about FMLA entitlements and employee obligations, including any requirement that an employee provide a fitness-for-duty certification to return to work.


When employers do not have written policies, manuals, or handbooks describing employee benefits and leave provisions, employers must provide clear and unambiguous written guidance about employee rights and obligations to employees who request leave under the FMLA. It is strongly suggested that employers duplicate and give employees a copy of the FMLA Fact Sheet, which can be obtained from local offices of the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor.


Cite: Chan v Loyola University Medical Center, (ND Ill 1999) 138 LC 33,918.


Source: CCH Incorporated is a leading provider of information and software for human resources, legal, accounting, health care and small business professionals. CCH offers human resource management, payroll, employment, benefits, and worker safety products and publications in print, CD, online and via the Internet. For more information and other updates on the latest HR news, check our Web site at http://hr.cch.com.


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.


Posted on September 22, 1999July 10, 2018

Will HIPAA’s Model Certificate of Creditable Coverage Be Revised

According to a recent report from the Government Accounting Offices (GAO), implementing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) has proceeded fairly smoothly in the large-employer market. But one area of concern cited by the GAO is the model certificate of creditable coverage jointly issued by the Department of Labor (DOL), IRS and Department of Health and Human Services, which is used by many employers to inform health plan participants of their rights. According to the GAO, the model certificates do little to explain some of the key concepts of the law. Therefore, the GAO is recommending that the three federal agencies amend the model certificate when final regulations are released.


Areas of concern.
According to the GAO, the model certificates are deficient in several areas. For example, the certificate fails to inform participants that once they leave the group market:


  • They may have a right to obtain health insurance in the individual market.
  • If they accept other employment, they might not have to fulfill a preexisting condition period under the new employer’s group health plan.

The GAO has made several recommendations for retooling the certificate to better educate the health plan consumer, and the DOL and the Health Care Financing Administration have generally agreed with the GAO’s recommendations. Therefore, it wouldn’t be surprising to see some changes in the model certificate when final regulations are released. (Currently, the GAO notes that officials expect to finalize HIPAA regulations in 2000.)


What should employers do?
Employers wishing to stay ahead of the game should consider revising their certificates to incorporate some of the GAO’s recommendations. Specifically, the GAO recommends that the following information be highlighted:


  • The rules relating to preexisting conditions and the guaranteed renewability of health coverage.
  • The prohibition against discrimination against an insured on the basis of that individual’s health status.
  • The right to guaranteed access to insurance for individuals losing group coverage.

In addition, the GAO strongly recommends that the certificates inform participants whom they should contact for further information about their rights under HIPAA. Adding this information to the certificate should take plan administrators little time and, in the long run, may actually save time, since employees will be better informed and may have less need to contact plan administrators for further information after employment is terminated.


Source: CCH Incorporated is a leading provider of information and software for human resources, legal, accounting, health care and small business professionals. CCH offers human resource management, payroll, employment, benefits, and worker safety products and publications in print, CD, online and via the Internet. For more information and other updates on the latest HR news, check our Web site at http://hr.cch.com.


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.


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