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Posted on May 25, 2021May 25, 2021

How to enforce mask rules at work without breaching ADA confidentiality rules

coronavirus, mask, reopen

If an employer is supposed to keep an employee’s vaccination status as a confidential medical record, how is an employer supposed to enforce the CDC’s most recent guidance that permits fully vaccinated individuals to unmask?

The EEOC makes it clear that an employer encounters zero legal impediments from “asking or requiring an employee to show proof of receipt of a COVID-19.” But once you obtain that information from an employee, you still must maintain it as a confidential medical record under the ADA.

The ADA requires employers to keep confidential any medical information they learn about any employee and store it confidentially and separately from an employee’s personnel information. An employer may only disclose this information to other personnel on a “need to know” basis.

So, if you intend to follow the CDC guidelines, you need a process to know which employees are vaccinated and which are not, which would involve the disclosure of vaccination status. Then, you need to communicate that information on a limited basis to those managers or supervisors who need to know that information to enforce your mask rule for the unvaccinated.

As long as you limit the disclosure to the narrowest group who reasonably and in good faith legitimately need to know which employees are, and are not, vaccinated, in this employment lawyer’s opinion such disclosure should pass muster under the ADA’s confidentiality rules. (As with all things, check with your own employment counsel before rolling out such a policy.)

Jon, you ask, won’t everyone know who is and is not vaccinated just by looking at who’s marked versus maskless? No really, as some fully vaccinated employees may choose to keep wearing a mask. Moreover, even if only unvaccinated employees wore masks, that would be a function of you following CDC guidelines, not the result of a breach of confidentiality.

Tomorrow, vaccine-status harassment.

Posted on June 8, 2020

‘I was terminated for refusing to wear a Trump 2020 face mask.’

coronavirus, mask, reopen

Ohio requires that all employees wear face masks or other face coverings as a condition to any business reopening that (subject to a few limited exceptions). The only rules are that the mask cover the employee’s nose, mouth, and chin. There are no other requirements about the nature of the mask or face covering, including its design or style.

One southern Ohio business, The Village Inn restaurant in Farmersville, is testing the mask-requirement waters by requiring its employees to wear “Trump 2020” masks.
Worse, it’s firing employee who refuse.
Or at least that’s what Kris Hauser, a former waitress of the restaurant, claimed happened to her in her viral Facebook post describing her termination.

The owner then approached me again and stated I needed to wear my Trump 2020 mask. I responded and told him I would wear it, but I would wear it inside out (which a majority of employees had been doing already for the days prior).

The owner, Scott, told me “No, you will wear it with Trump 2020 facing out for people to see.”

I told him I would not do this and he said that I needed to leave.

Your first inclination might be to say, “Jon, Ohio, like every other state besides Montana, is an at-will state, meaning that an employer can fire any employee for any reason, good or bad. And just last Thursday you told us that there are only a few states that ban political opinion discrimination, and Ohio isn’t one of them. So while many will feel that Kris Hauser’s termination is morally and ethically reprehensible, I don’t see anything unlawful about it.”
While Ohio is an at-will state, it recognizes several key exceptions to employment-at-will, including a tort claim for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy. What does this mean? I’ll let the Ohio Supreme Court explain:

In order for a plaintiff to succeed on a wrongful-termination-in-violation-of-public-policy claim, a plaintiff must establish four elements: (1) that a clear public policy existed and was manifested either in a state or federal constitution, statute or administrative regulation or in the common law (“the clarity element”), (2) that dismissing employees under circumstances like those involved in the plaintiff’s dismissal would jeopardize the public policy (“the jeopardy element”), (3) the plaintiff’s dismissal was motivated by conduct related to the public policy (“the causation element”), and (4) the employer lacked an overriding legitimate business justification for the dismissal (“the overriding-justification element”).

In other words, if a termination offends a clear public policy of the state, and the employee does not have any other remedy to redress the termination, the employee can sue in tort for the wrongful discharge.
In this case, Ohio has a clear public policy against employers influencing employees’ political opinions—Ohio Revised Code section 3599.05, which criminalizes employers that make expressed or implied threats “intended to influence the political opinions or votes of his or its employees.”
That’s exactly what The Village Inn did in imposing its “Trump 2020” mask requirement under threat of termination. And it’s not too far off the mark from Kunkle v. Q-Mark, Inc. (S.D. Ohio 6/28/13), which refused to dismiss a public policy claim based on section 3599.05, after the employer allegedly threatened employees with termination if President Obama won re-election, and allegedly fired the plaintiff after she stated she voted a “straight Democratic ticket.”
I’ve never been shy about calling out an employer that has wronged an employee. The Village Inn has wronged Kris Hauser. The internet has already spoken. I hope Ms. Hauser finds a lawyer to take her case and the courts have their say as well.

 

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