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Tag: labor compliance software

Posted on September 30, 2021August 25, 2023

Online time and attendance tracking can save you more than money

If you are still tracking staff attendance using offline methods, such as paper timesheets or even computer spreadsheets, your company is at risk of more than just money lost to inefficiency. With increased scrutiny over working hours and pay—and new labor laws likely to favor workers—sticking with outdated and inaccurate offline methods of recording on-the-clock hours can expose you to expensive legal risks. Here are the key ways in which switching to online time and attendance software for staff management will allow you to stop worrying about legal compliance and concentrate on managing your business.

Be ready for predictive scheduling

One of the most talked-about developments in labor law is predictive scheduling, or “fair workweek.” These laws are designed to protect hourly workers from unpredictable schedules and ensures they are given ample rest between shifts. Predictive scheduling laws are already on the books in multiple states and cities, with more likely to follow.

Complying with predictive scheduling laws without using online time and attendance software is a huge task. Offline staff scheduling systems require managers to spot shifts that clash with these laws by checking and cross-referencing every timesheet and schedule manually. Even with only 10 employees mistakes are easy to make and problematic shift patterns are hard to track.

The risks of getting it wrong are high, as non-compliance results in punitive fines that usually stack per individual infraction. Break the law for one worker’s shift, and you may be fined $5,000. If the same problem occurs for 10 staff, you’re facing a $50,000 penalty. Since scheduling errors rarely impact only one employee, your risk grows exponentially the more workers you have. In April this year, New York City sued Chipotle for $500 million for 599,693 infractions of the city’s 2017 predictive scheduling law. Even if you’re not operating at the level of a brand like Chipotle, the more staff you have, the more shifts you run, the higher the cost of scheduling mistakes.

The benefit of using online time and attendance software such as Workforce.com is that it can be set up with the specifics of any local state or city labor laws, automatically preventing managers from creating a schedule that will break the law. At a stroke, you’ve minimized your exposure to predictive scheduling class action and ensured your staff receives fair treatment that respects their work-life balance.

Avoid costly wage and hour lawsuits

Wage and hour litigation currently makes up the majority of employee class-action suits. Not only are they the most common legal threat faced by businesses, but more suits than ever are successful. That trend isn’t going anywhere soon. The Biden administration is making large-scale changes to the law in this area, extending coverage to protect part-time and “gig economy” workers and the payment of tips to service staff.

It’s never been more important for companies to be sure that they are correctly logging hours worked and wages paid. Using offline time and attendance methods to keep track of these business essentials is prone to error and manipulation, by both managers and employees, and problems quickly become systemic. When that happens, it only takes one employee to cause everything to unravel, as Chicago restaurant Tank Noodle discovered when one employee’s complaint about wage discrepancies snowballed into a federal investigation and a $700,000 bill for back pay to 60 staff.

Online time and attendance software covers you both ways where wage and hour suits are concerned. Software that automatically clocks staff in and out, recording their hours worked down to the second, makes it easier to spot problems and produce data in your company’s defense. At the same time, automatically connecting that attendance directly to your payroll systems means that workers get paid exactly what they have earned—and you have the data to prove it if needed.

Comply with data laws

Unlike some other countries, the US has no clear and simple federal law covering data protection or privacy. Instead, there are various proposed bills making their way through the legislatures of multiple states. California and Virginia have passed data privacy laws, but similar laws were defeated in Washington and Oklahoma. All told, 25 states are considering—or have considered—legislation that dictates how businesses handle personal data.

Excel and paper timesheets can often contain personal identifying information—phone numbers, email, home addresses, etc.—for contact reasons. These can be lost, shared, or printed out and disseminated, creating a compliance nightmare. The rise in biometrics in the workplace adds a new layer of complexity as businesses will not just be storing addresses and phone numbers but fingerprints and retinal scans, too. The Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) passed in Illinois gives a good example of what such laws are likely to require.

Data protection and privacy in the US is very much an evolving topic, but whatever happens, it’s clear that spotless record keeping is going to be more important than ever. Using online time and attendance software that unifies as many of your HR functions as possible—schedules, payroll, on- and offboarding—means all that vital data is stored securely in one place but easily accessed as and when you need it should the legal position change.

Online time and attendance makes old methods obsolete

These are turbulent times for business. The world of work is changing rapidly, legislation is increasingly favoring employees, and successful workplace class-action suits are on the rise. Relying on filing cabinets full of old timesheets or a folder full of spreadsheets on an office hard drive is simply too error-prone and vulnerable in this new landscape. Investing in online time and attendance software is a long-term investment in legal compliance but also gives you the confidence that you are ready for whatever comes next.

If you are intrigued and want to learn more about how to improve in this area, our team is here to help.

Posted on May 15, 2020October 22, 2021

Payroll challenges eased by software solutions

software, compliance

Payroll can be a complicated and time consuming process. If employers fail to be compliant —  intentionally or not — they may face potentially debilitating business consequences.     

Workforce management professionals can use technology solutions to address complicated payroll challenges. 

Challenge: Maintaining tax compliance

Tax compliance challenges come in many flavors. The Federal Unemployment Tax Act poses potential complications for employers, and employers must be careful to compute their FUTA tax liability correctly. 

Further, certain flexible work arrangements may introduce tax complexities to employers who must figure out how, when and where to withhold state taxes for their employees. Remote work is mostly a positive trend. Employees are generally more productive working outside the office, and employers can consider a larger pool of candidates for a job. But the company must make sure they have an effective system that takes state and local tax laws into account, especially if it manages a geographically scattered workforce. 

The right payroll system will help employers do this by allowing them to input all relevant tax laws in the system. Then managers don’t need to worry that the laws aren’t being addressed in their payroll, and they can continue benefiting from a flexible, remote workforce. 

Challenge: Balancing federal, state and local compliance laws

An “overwhelming alphabet soup of laws, regulations and agencies” govern the workplace — and not just regarding tax compliance. Federal agencies like the EEOC and OSHA and regulations like FMLA and COBRA affect workplace decisions on everything from payroll to health care to time off and beyond.

Managers may have a lot on their plate in addition to payroll, like creating effective schedules, controlling wage costs and taking overtime in account. While they deal with everything on their plate, they also have many legal responsibilities to balance. 

Labor management software can take on the most difficult part of this process, knowing how to apply different laws and regulations to every payroll decision. This leaves time and mental energy for workforce management professionals to focus on other parts of their job, rather than getting bogged down by compliance concerns. 

Benefits of payroll software

Payroll is a baseline, necessary duty of many managers’ jobs. Still, they have many other responsibilities that occupy their time and attention. Technology allows them to automate what is taking up too much of their time and energy and increasing efficiency at the organization.

Try Workforce.com software for your payroll and scheduling needs, which has saved managers: several hours a week by automating time consuming tasks like payroll. 

Posted on May 4, 2020June 29, 2023

Labor compliance software sorts through complex legal issues

thanksgiving, soup

Labor compliance software is an innovative way to manage the overwhelming alphabet soup of laws, regulations and agencies that govern the workplace.

Labor compliance software; alphabet soupHR practitioners must recognize the regulatory distinctions of the FMLA and FLSA and navigate the nuances between the ADA and ADAAA. What are the latest regulations surrounding the ACA? Can a misstep with COBRA come back to bite them? And SOX … is that a professional baseball team or a law protecting corporate whistleblowers?

If assessing guidance from agencies including OSHA, DOL and EEOC wasn’t enough to cope with, labor compliance software is a must-have now as the coronavirus invades organizational policies. HR leaders and corporate counsel must quickly familiarize themselves and understand the implications of implementing workplace laws surrounding a new bowl of alphabet soup — PPP, FFCRA and the CARES Act.

 The value of labor compliance software

Maintaining corporate compliance with government regulations isn’t easy. Besides knowing what agencies actually do and how regulations affect employers, labor laws are dense, complex and confusing. A single unintentional compliance misstep by an organization can lead to a costly and time-consuming lawsuit with the potential to disrupt or even bankrupt a small, growing organization.

Compliance solutions allow organizations to avoid a trip to court and more easily comprehend constantly changing federal, state and local legislation. Employers can disseminate policies to employees, provide guidelines for regulatory enforcement and manage confidential documents all while saving money by easing time-consuming, onerous reporting rules.

Workforce management systems typically assist with traditional compliance issues while a specialized compliance solution takes employers beyond the basics and provides expert guidance on critical regulations. It can be like having a team of legal experts at your fingertips with minimal expense.

Labor compliance software also allows businesses to communicate company and legislative policies to their employees.

Key areas for compliance software

Regulatory software helps an HR department remain in compliance across all organizational departments. According to peer-to-peer software review site G2, there are business functions and the germane laws that can be undertaken by labor compliance software:

Benefits — Affordable Care Act (ACA); Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA); Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA); Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA); Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA); Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA).

COVID-19-related policies — Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act); Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) and Payment Protection Program (PPP).

Labor and employment relations — Labor union updates (AFL-CIO, AFGE, SEIU, etc.); Department of Labor (DOL); Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC); National Labor Relations Board (NLRB); Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP).

Payroll — Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA); Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA); Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA); Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX).

Risk — Employee safety is a top priority for all organizations. Compliance software can manage and track guidance and enforcement by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).

Companies needing compliance software

No organization is immune from U.S., state and local labor laws. True, regulations often vary depending on factors including employee count. A four-person mom-and-pop shop does not face the same labor compliance regulations as a multinational company.

Yet it is crucial that company policies remain up to date and comply with changes in legislation. Despite the expense a lawsuit can present, many smaller organizations are hesitant to call on legal resources simply based on costs. Those concerns can be streamlined by compliance software.

Small companies have difficulty keeping up with changes in compliance because they lack the manpower, and HR departments are already stretched thin or responsibilities are divided among employees as collateral duty. There is no point person to track and update compliance regulations.

Compliance is particularly crucial to navigating the maze of workplace issues. Municipalities and some states have instituted fair workweek policies in the past two years with more on the horizon.

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, mandatory sexual harassment prevention training is compulsory in six states. Compliance training, employee handbooks and more can be structured and simplified with a compliance solution.

Small and midsize organizations in particular have difficulty keeping up with HR compliance regulations as new legislation is continually introduced. When the HR team is small (or even just one person), their bandwidth quickly becomes strained.

Sorting through the alphabet soup of labor regulations can be an eye-glazing exercise for employers. Labor compliance software helps them to spell out attractive cost-savings, easy-to-use solutions and avoid unintentional noncompliance.


 

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