Bloomberg Law asks whether employers are âresponsible for paying workers for the time it takes to record their body temperatures before entering the workplace.â
To me, this question doesnât require a legal analysis but a common-sense application of basic decency. If your employees are queuing before entering work because you are requiring them to pass a temperature check, pay them ⌠period.
Since this is a legal blog, however, I might as well look beyond common sense and examine the laws impacted by this issueâthe ADA and the FLSA.
The ADA typically prohibits employers from taking employeesâ temperatures as an unlawful medical examination. Because the WHO has classified coronavirus as a pandemic, however, just about all medical exam issues under the ADA are temporarily moot. According to the EEOC, among other coronavirus prevention measures, employers may measure employeesâ temperatures. This issue, at least for now, is pretty cut and dry.
The FLSA issue is a little more nuanced. In Integrity Staffing Solutions v. Busk, the Supreme Court held that the FLSA only requires employers to compensate employees for time spent performing âpreliminaryâ (pre-shift) and âpostliminaryâ (post-shift) activities that are âintegral and indispensableâ to an employeeâs principal activities. What activities are âintegral and indispensable?â Those that are (1) ânecessary to the principal work performedâ and (2) âdone for the benefit of the employer.â
In Busk, for example, the Court held that post-shift security screenings were not âintegral and indispensableâ for an Amazon warehouse employee, because such screenings are not âan intrinsic element of retrieving products from warehouse shelves or packaging them for shipment,â and the employer âcould have eliminated the screenings altogether without impairing the employeesâ ability to complete their work.â
According to the Bloomberg Law article, employers could look to Busk to argue that pre-shift temperature checks, even if mandatory, are not âintegral and indispensableâ and therefore can be unpaid. (For what itâs worth, I think a just as good, or better, argument is that preliminary temperature checks to protect employees from a deadly virus are integral, indispensable, and compensable.)
Busk or no Busk, this isnât a âwhat does the law allowâ issue; this is a âwhatâs right is rightâ issue. If youâre requiring your employees to queue in a line to take their temperature before youâll let them enter the workplace, pay them. Donât be cheap and donât count pennies.
Your employees are scared. They are risking their own personal health and safety, and that of everyone who lives in their homes, to keep your essential business up and running. They could just as easily stay home, limit their exposure, and collect unemployment.
What they need is your compassion, not your penny-pinching. Times are tough for everyone. I get it. But your business shouldnât go belly up if you pay each employee for a few extra minutes of time each day, especially when the federal government is going to reimburse you through your Paycheck Protection Program loan. (You did apply for your loan, right?)
At the end of this pandemic, many businesses will no longer exist. If thereâs such a thing as karma, one of the deciding factors in which ones survive will be how they treated their employees.
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Donât forget that Iâll live on Zoom tomorrow, April 9, from 11:30 am â 12:30, open paid sick leave and eFMLA issues, and taking your coronavirus questions. And Norah has said she will drop in and share another song. You can access the Zoominar here: https://zoom.us/j/983559955
People share their experiences with depression on Twitter to show support for the mental health community. They join private Facebook groups to discuss similar health issues, without realizing that a âprivateâ online group does not actually offer privacy protections. Companies encourage employees to be open about their health in an effort to create a âculture of health.â And employees join âHIPAA-compliant” wellness programs without realizing that the health data they log in various apps may not be protected by any law if the program is voluntary.Â
When the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act was enacted in 1996, todayâs vast digital space didnât exist. Even if organizations comply with HIPAA, the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act and other laws that protect health-related data, that doesnât necessarily mean the data is protected in many contexts. There are gaps that have yet to be legally addressed. Meanwhile, employees increasingly share health information on digital health apps or online.
A vast amount of employee data is not legally protected. As collectors of employee data, employers should be aware of the health data privacy landscape and the concerns employees may have.
âAs much as it pains me to say, [data privacy] is probably nobody’s top priority,â said data privacy attorney Joseph Jerome. âIt only becomes their priority when something goes wrong or they get concerned or they hear something in the news.â
Employers in the U.S. and internationally have increasingly more data privacy regulations to pay attention to â as laws like the General Data Protection Regulation in the European Union and the California Consumer Privacy Act and Illinois Biometric Privacy Act in the U.S. move the data privacy legal environment forward. In this constantly changing world, thereâs information that can help organizations navigate this complicated intersection more intelligently.Â
There is a lack of understanding of what HIPAA protections apply where, when and to what data, Jerome said. At its core, HIPAA was enacted to facilitate the portability and interoperability of health care records, not for any greater data privacy reason. âWe act like this is a health data privacy law, but no. Itâs designed to govern data in hospital systems,â he said.
Employers want to learn increasingly more data about their employees, he said. They have the opportunity to do so through commercial apps that capture wellness and fitness data. âThese are things that people perceive as health data, but theyâre not covered by HIPAA, and they were never designed to be covered by HIPAA,â he said. Â
HIPAA â and therefore what data is considered health information â is limited to covered entities like hospital systems and doctorsâ offices. For example, within a health system, a patientâs email address is considered health information under HIPAA, but outside the health system, an email address is not considered health information and does not get HIPAA protection.
HIPAA also doesnât apply to anonymized data â the data remaining after being stripped of personally identifiable information from data sets, so that the people whom the data describe remain anonymous.
Further, anonymous data is fair game, legally. âThere is no regulation of âanonymizedâ data. It can be sold to anyone and used for any purpose.The theory is that once the data has been scrubbed, it cannot be used to identify an individual and is therefore safe for sale, analysis and use,â noted âRe-Identification of âAnonymizedâ Data,â a 2017 Georgetown Law Technology Review article.
A concern here is that anonymous data can be easily re-identified, and itâs tough to hold bad actors accountable for doing so, Jerome said. Further, itâs hard to do anything about it once the data is already identified and public information. Unfortunately, there are realistically not enough reinforcement resources, he added. Â
âThat’s a real problem right now, not just in health care or employment context, but you’ve got this giant ecosystem where a lot of companies are sharing information and they’re all saying they’re good actors, they’re all saying they’re not re-identifying information, they’re all saying they’re not even using personal information,â he said. âBut there’s data leakage all over the place. People are recombining profiles, and it’s very hard to attribute where the information originally came from.â
According to the Georgetown Law Technology Review article, the re-identification of anonymous data can lead to sensitive or embarrassing health information being linked to oneâs employer, spouse or community. âWithout regulation of re-identified anonymized data, employers, neighbors, and blackmailers have an unprecedented window into an individualâs most private information,â the article said. One of the privacy concerns some people have about their health data is that it could eventually be used against them and that they could suffer real-world implications like the loss of job opportunities, the denial of insurance or higher premiums for insurance.Â
The idea behind employee wellness programs is supposed to be a win-win, said Anya Prince, associate professor of law and member of the University of Iowa Genetics Cluster. Employees get healthier, and employers get lower health care costs and a more productive workforce.Â
But wellness programs are often not effective at changing employee health, she said.Â
âIf the premise is we’re doing this to benefit employees [but] there’s not actually evidence that it’s benefiting employees, the question then becomes why are [wellness programs] continuing to happen?â she said. âThe evidence shows that what theyâre doing is shifting health care costs back on to employees in various ways. That’s where the concern comes in.âÂ
Digital health apps on employeesâ phones play a part in many workplace wellness programs. But even though third-party health apps are common on peopleâs phones, the privacy landscape behind these apps is murky at best.Â
âSome of the medical apps are just completely bogus and donât give you anything helpful back,â Prince said about the general health data privacy environment. âBut they are collecting data on you, not just health information but geolocation and other data thatâs worth money.âÂ
Another trend in wellness programs is employers offering employees consumer-directed genetic tests to help them understand what medical issues they may be predisposed to and what preventative measures they can take to combat them. According to the Society for Human Resource Management, 18 percent of employers provided a health-related genetic testing benefit in 2018, up from 12 percent in 2016.
Many studies have shown that people are not aware of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act or what privacy protections they have through the law, Prince said. âGINA is quite protective in employment in the sense that employers are not allowed to use genetic information to discriminate, so they can’t make hiring, firing, promotion, wage, any decisions based on genetic information,â she said, adding that genetic information includes family medical history, genetic test results and more.
Still, she said, there are some exceptions with GINA, including private employers with fewer than 15 employees and any employee in a voluntary wellness program.Â
There is currently a legal debate on whether wellness programs are voluntary or if employees feel coerced to join them, Prince said. Some wellness programs are participatory â meaning that employees donât need to hit a certain health outcome target to earn the incentive â but others are health contingent. Employees need to lose some amount of weight or accomplish another target measurement to get the financial benefits of the wellness program.
These programs are more participatory currently, she said. But if programs that collect genetic information become health contingent, that could bring up ethical issues and become more invasive.Â
âIf you think of [Breast Cancer gene] testing, which is a predisposition to breast and ovarian cancer, one of the preventive measures right now is to prophylactically remove your breast and ovaries. My dystopian future is the employer saying, âHave you finished having kids yet? Get on that, so that you can remove your ovaries,ââ she said. Â
This discussion begs the question of who is ultimately the best actor to push people toward better behaviors and health outcomes, she said. Society has to ask if employment is the best place to do this.Â
âIn a way the answer is yes because we’ve created a system where health insurance and employment are so intertwined, but maybe employment isn’t the right space to be encouraging people to make the right health choices,â she said. âMaybe that should be a public health system or your primary care physician or researchers.âÂ
The Pentagon has advised service members not to engage in 23andMe genetic tests, said Glenn Cohen, professor of law at Harvard Law School, and faculty director of the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics.Â
Thereâs a major national security reason for this, he said, but part of the reasoning also has to do with protecting service membersâ privacy. The military is exempted from GINA, which is the law which prohibiting genetic discrimination by employers.Â
Employers could communicate with employees better, Jerome said. Privacy is more than just legal compliance, which may include a disclaimer in the company handbook or on the employeesâ computers that inform them âAll this can be tracked and monitored.â This can help set up the expectation for employees that they should have no expectation of privacy in anything they do at work.Â
While most employers have done their legal duty, theyâve yet to have a conversation with employees about what theyâre actually doing with this data, Jerome said.Â
âI get that those conversations can be difficult and uncomfortable and frankly might get employees riled up, but I think that’s probably a good thing in the end,â he said.Â
Employers â who sit on large troves of employee health data â may have the legal right to share data, but that doesnât mean employees and other parties wonât criticize them, said Cohen. âThey have to be worried a little bit about how it’s going to play as a PR matter and, in an industry where they’re competing for talent, how employees feel about [it],â he said.Â
When Ascension Health partnered with Google for the âProject Nightingaleâ initiative late last year â allowing the tech company access to the detailed personal health information of millions of Americans â it received a lot of backlash. It could be dangerous for an organization like Google, which already has so much of peopleâs personal data, to get access to peopleâs health records as well, critics argued. Supporters said it was perfectly legal.
âMy recommendation in general is even if you legally have the right to share the data, you may want to think about creating some internal governance mechanisms that have employees involved in trying to decide what gets shared or not,â Cohen said.Â
Practically, this could mean that the organization charters a committee that includes employers, employees and subject matter experts who can explain both the uses and the risks of adopting a certain solution, he said.
This could be a valuable decision for employers because better decisions get made and itâs better for the employer’s reputation, he said. When people find out a company has sold its employees data, it could look bad if there hasnât been employee input in the decision.Â
For most organizations dealing with health data and other personal data, their reputation is based on how they treat that data, said Ed Oleksiak, senior vice president at insurance brokerage Holmes Murphy. A data breach or misuse of data would be bad press, so the company would be incentivized to protect that data and ensure itâs used properly
When there is a health data mishap, there are a couple ways that organizations can address that breach of trust, he said. Organizations can provide impacted employees some kind of identity theft protection that will help them mitigate any harm. Further, the company is required to address whatever has resulted in the breach and do whatever it can to make sure it canât happen again in the future.Â
âWhether it’s the employer’s health plan, a hospital system, or a technology provider, everybody’s reputation is contingent on successfully mitigating that,â Oleksiak said. âYou just have to start over again, and try to fill that cup of trust back up.âÂ
Oleksiak also suggested that employers follow a key tenet of only getting and storing the minimum necessary data. Even though people involved with employee health plans most likely want to use patient data for the right reasons, people who can hack into these systems can access everything, including more unnecessary data.Â
Ultimately, this is an issue of balance. According to the aforementioned Georgetown Law Technology Review âRe-Identification of âAnonymizedâ Data,â âdata utility and individual privacy are on opposite ends of the spectrum. The more scrubbed the data is, the less useful it is.âÂ
Still, there are positive things companies can do with this data, Oleksiak said. No matter what privacy rules and regulations are put in place, a bad actor is going to find a way to do something that’s for their own benefit.
âHopefully we write rules that go after people that abused their position or access to data, but still allow everybody else that’s doing it for the right reasons to get the job done,â he said.
The past two weeks have seen a record 10 million new unemployment claims. This number does not even include many of the millions more who have had their hours or wages cut as businesses continue to struggle with the realities of operating in a world turned upside down by coronavirus. Sadly, we should expect this situation to get a lot worse before it starts to get better.
Thankfully for each worker unemployed or underemployed as a result of coronavirus, the CARES Act provides significant financial relief. It contains the following seven unemployment expansion and enhancement provisions.
1. Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC)Â â This program provides funding for an additional $600 per week in unemployment benefits through July 31, 2020, for any individual who becomes unemployed, partially unemployed, or unable or unavailable to work or telework because of any of the following coronavirus related reasons:
The individual has been diagnosed with coronavirus or is experiencing symptoms of coronavirus and seeking a medical diagnosis.
A member of the individualâs household has been diagnosed with coronavirus.
The individual is providing care for a family member or a member of the individualâs household who has been diagnosed with coronavirus.
A child or other person in the household for which the individual has primary caregiving responsibility is unable to attend school or another facility that is closed as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency and such school or facility care is required for the individual to work.
the individual is unable to reach the place of employment because of a quarantine imposed as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency.
The individual is unable to reach the place of employment because the individual has been advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to concerns related to coronavirus.
The individual was scheduled to commence employment and does not have a job or is unable to reach the job as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency.
The individual has become the breadwinner or major support for a household because the head of the household has died as a direct result of coronavirus.
The individual has to quit his or her job as a direct result of coronavirus (which one could interpret as covering employees who quit out of fear of contracting coronavirus).
The individualâs place of employment is closed as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency.
Additionally, this program contains a non-reduction rule, which prohibits states from changing how they compute regular unemployment benefits to reduce the average weekly benefit amounts or the number of weeks of benefits payable to impacted employees.
In Ohio, this means that a minimum wage employee with no dependents would see his weekly unemployment benefit increase from $171 to $771 (an annualized salary of $40,092), and an employee with three dependents maxed out on unemployment would see his weekly benefit increase from $647 to $1,247 (an annualized salary of $64,884).
Because of this substantial increase, I am worried that many employees will decide that they are better off (either financially or for health-related reasons) quitting their jobs and collecting unemployment, leaving essential employers with huge labor gaps to fill to maintain basis minimum operations. For this reason, essential employers should be communicating with their employees on a daily basis about all of the steps they are doing to ensure, as best as possible their employeesâ health and safety.
2. Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) â This program provides unemployment compensation through December 31, 2020, for individuals who are self-employed, seeking part-time employment, or who otherwise would not qualify for regular unemployment benefits because of one of the above-listed coronavirus related reasons.
5. Emergency state staffing flexibility â States as provided flexibility through December 31, 2020, to modify their unemployment compensation laws and policies with respect to work-search requirements, waiting weeks, good cause standards, and employer experience rating. Ohio, for example, has eliminated its work-search requirement and waiting periods, and is not counting coronavirus related unemployment claims against an employerâs experience rating.
6. Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) â This program provides up to 13 weeks of additional unemployment benefits through December 31, 2020, for individuals who have exhausted all rights to regular unemployment compensation under state or federal law or have no rights to regular unemployment compensation under any other state or federal law. The law requires individuals seeking PEUC benefits to be able to work, available for work, and actively seeking work. States, however, are required to offer flexibility in meeting the âactively seeking workâ requirement for individuals unable to search for work because of coronavirus, including illness, quarantine, or movement restrictions.
One of the questions I have received the most since the passage of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act is how employers claim the tax credit available under the Act for paid leave provided to employees.
Late on March 31, the IRS published a detailed list of FAQs explaining all of the mechanics of this tax credit. I want to focus on the key employment law piece of these FAQ, how an employer should substantiate its eligibility for tax credits, i.e., the documentation you need to keep.
The IRS discusses this important issue in Questions 44â46. Iâll break it all down for you here.
What information should an âEligible Employerâ (a business with fewer than 500 employees) receive from an employee to substantiate eligibility for the sick leave or family leave tax credits?
Â
The IRS says that an employeeâs leave request must be in writing and must include:
The employeeâs name;
The date(s) for which leave is requested;
A statement of the coronavirus related reason the employee is requesting leave and written support for such reason; and
A statement that the employee is unable to work, including by telework, for such reason.
Additionally, for a leave request based on a quarantine order or self-quarantine advice (the employeeâs or someone elseâs for whom the employee is providing care), the employeeâs statement should include the name of the governmental entity ordering quarantine or the name of the health care professional advising self-quarantine, and, if the person subject to quarantine or advised to self-quarantine is not the employee, that personâs name and relation to the employee.
For a leave request based on a school closing or child care provider unavailability, the statement from the employee should include:
The name and age of the child (or children) to be cared for;
The name of the school that has closed or place of care that is unavailable; and
A representation that no other person will be providing care for the child during the period for which the employee is receiving family medical leave.
Also, note that there is a cut-off age at age 13 for care during daylight hours. An employee unable to work or telework during daylight hours because of a need to care for a child age 14 and older must also provide a statement that special circumstances exist requiring the employee to provide care.
Additionally, for all paid leave under the FFCRA for which an employer claims a tax credit, the employer must also provide:
Documentation to show how the employer determined the amount of qualified sick and family leave wages paid to employees that are eligible for the credit, including records of work, telework and qualified sick leave and qualified family leave.
Documentation to show how the employer determined the amount of qualified health plan expenses that the employer allocated to wages.
Copies of any completed Forms 7200, Advance of Employer Credits Due To COVID-19, that the employer submitted to the IRS.
Copies of the completed Forms 941, Employerâs Quarterly Federal Tax Return, that the employer submitted to the IRS (or, for employers that use third party payers to meet their employment tax obligations, records of information provided to the third party payer regarding the employerâs entitlement to the credit claimed on Form 941).
Employers must keep these records for at least four years after the date the tax becomes due or is paid, whichever comes later, and should be available for IRS review.
I encourage all employers to have a conversation with their accountant and/or tax lawyer before filing your next quarterly payroll taxes to make sure you are claiming this exemption correctly.
COVID-19 clearly has severe and potentially deadly physical symptoms. But that doesnât mean mental health is something that can be sidelined for now.
Parents with children they must homeschool are feeling the stress of working, teaching and having little to no free time to take care of themselves. People who have certain mental illnesses may find themselves especially vulnerable in times of social or physical distancing.Â
And employees on the front lines like health care workers, delivery people and grocery store employees may find themselves stressed due to the nature of their jobs and having a greater risk of interacting with people who have COVID-19.Â
âWith the workplace a defining part of many individualsâ lives, managing employee morale and mental health, as well as providing resources and support to help them cope, is understandably top of mind with employers,â said Brad Hammock, co-chair of employment law firm Littler Mendelsonâs Workplace Safety & Health Practice Group and a leader of the firmâs COVID-19 Task Force, in a press release.Â
While businesses must manage many other legal and operational issues, progressive employers are also focusing on resources and means of support to help employees cope, according according to a recent report from Littler.Â
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people who may respond more strongly to the stress of the COVID-19 crisis include those are especially vulnerable to the virus (older people and those with chronic diseases), children and teens, people with mental health or substance abuse issues and caregivers and health care providers who are helping others deal with health issues.Â
The CDC provides ways to cope with mental health issues â including taking breaks from watching the news, making time to unwind and connecting with loved ones. But the workplace has a role as well.Â
HR plays a central role in tempering employeesâ feelings of anxiety, according to Human Resource Executive. âRemind employees that every single person in the organization, including the CEO, is facing unprecedented upheaval, fear and uncertainty â and that the only way to get through this is by pulling together and supporting each other like never before,â the article advised.Â
Further, while employee assistance programs have generally been underutilized, now is an ideal time to communicate the usefulness of EAPs to employees, according to HRE. EAPs address personal and professional challenges that employees may face, including financial problems, substance abuse issues, grief, family issues and stress. These areas of oneâs life are also areas that could be greatly impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak, the article noted.Â
Nonprofit news organization Marketplace suggests that employers offer and communicate the availability of telehealth mental health care. It also noted that accessible, affordable care is important. For example, Starbucks is offering all U.S.-based employees and their family members with access to 20 free therapy sessions starting April 6. These sessions are available through video appointments as well as in-person appointments.
The Canadian Mental Health Association advises that employers communicate in a reassuring manner. âKnow that work will likely be impacted â work will slow down, necessary travel may be canceled. Reassure staff that expectations will shift accordingly, and thatâs OK. The company will get through this.âÂ
Organizations can also refer employees to reports indicating that most people who become infected with the virus will recover, the Canadian Mental Health Association noted. They can also emphasize with employees that they know this is a stressful time and that itâs OK to feel anxious.Â
âMental Health And COVID-19 â Information And Resourcesâ (Mental Health America)
âMental health and psychosocial considerations during the COVID-19 outbreakâ (World Health Organization)
âInterim Guidance for Businesses and Employers to Plan and Respond to Coronavirus Diseaseâ (CDC)
âCoronavirus and isolation: supporting yourself and your colleaguesâ (Mental Health at Work)
âHow to tackle mental health in the workplace as a manager and colleagueâ (UCL School of Management)
For Workforce.com users there are features on our platform available to keep communication lines open during this difficult time. Engage your staff, schedule according to operational changes, manage leave, clock in and out remotely, and communicate changes through custom events, among other things.
In normal times, accessing health care on the property of an employer is a convenience. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, such access may stoke safety and hygiene concerns. Patients are supposed to avoid getting medical care unless itâs necessary in order to avoid coming into contact with the virus, and even accessing shared surfaces like biometric time clocks can put employees at risk.
According to Mercer, 17 percent of U.S. employers with at least 500 employees offer primary care through onsite or near-site clinics. During the COVID-19 outbreak in which people must social distance, employers may come across unique challenges with their onsite clinics and need to strategically rethink how to manage them
The guide focuses on best practices to mitigate risk for employees and patients, respond to staffing limitations, identify supply chain barriers and âoptimize the interest of public health.â The top six steps are:
Review and update existing plans.
Donât make staff or patients sick.
Protect staff and patients by implementing new ways of working.
Prepare for absenteeism of staff.
Communicate, communicate, communicate.
Review and address any contractual requirements.
Regulatory considerations.
Just like larger health care systems, all employer health clinics and health workers must be prepared to evaluate and manage risks related to COVID-19. Proper infection-control equipment is a must, and clinic workers must know how to âsafely isolate, transport and quarantine potential patients.âÂ
Reducing the number of people requiring face-to-face examinations is necessary and can be accomplished via telehealth phone calls or video appointments.
Clinic staff members may get sick or need to take time off to care for a sick family member. Preparing for staff absenteeism doesnât necessarily mean employees canât work just because they canât visit the clinic. Organizations can ârepurpose clinical staff confined to their homes to be part of a virtual care team,â the guide stated. âThis team can work together remotely to triage and serve patients via telephone or video visits to forestall the need for an in-person visit.â
Organizations can also support older staff members or those with health conditions by providing them virtual assignments only.Â
Meanwhile, communication is a key factor in all these steps. Employers should plan to communicate with their staff at least once a day regarding the status of COVID-19 in their community and within their organization, according to the guide. Whatâs especially important to communicate is how the company is dealing with various issues and challenges brought on by the outbreak.Â
Some communications best practices for employer clinics include:
Establish an emergency response command task force â all departments represented, reporting to the C-suite.
Establish a clinical response team, physician led â a team of clinicians who can track Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and World Health Organization information and summarize and distribute it to employees.Â
Communicate with the employee population regularly via a patient app.Â
Post information on the intranet and include information for appointment scheduling, the nurse call hot line and telehealth.Â
Educate employees on slowing the number of patients to not overwhelm the health care system.   Â
Track lessons learned for post-pandemic response debriefing and process improvement.Â
COVID-19 is rapidly changing how businesses operate. We recognize that organizations need an extra helping hand right now. So weâre offering our GPS clock in tool for free to new sign-ups over the coming months. Sign up today and our Workforce Success team will provide a personal, online walkthrough of our platform to help you get started. It can be fully deployed in 1-2 days.
On March 26, the DOL published a second round of FAQs (numbers 15-37)Â answering more questions on the operation of paid family and sick leave under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act.
Hereâs what the DOL has to say:
Employers are entitled to require documentation from employees in support of their need for paid family leave or paid sick leave under the Act. This documentation includes a copy of the Federal, State or local quarantine or isolation order, written documentation by a health care provider advising you to self-quarantine, or a notice of closure or unavailability from a childâs school, place of care, or child care provider. Employers are also required to retain this documentation. Note, however, that the requirement of medical documentation is contrary to the CDCâs recommended best practices, for fear of overburdening our already stressed medical system and providers.
Intermittent paid family leave and paid sick leave are allowed under the Act in any increment, but only if the employer agrees and if the employee is unable to telework their normal schedule of hours because of one of the qualifying reasons for leave under the Act. Note that the DOL is encouraging âemployers and employees to collaborate to achieve flexibility and meet mutual needs,â and that it âis supportive of such voluntary arrangements that combine telework and intermittent leave.â
An inability to telework means a complete inability to perform the job remotely. If an employer and employee agree, for example, that the employee will work the normal number of hours, but outside of normally scheduled hours (for instance early in the morning or late at night), then the employee is able to work and leave is not necessary.
If an employer closes prior to April 1, its employees are not eligible for paid family or sick leave. Employers that close after April 1 are only required to pay employees for family or sick leave taken under the Act through the date of closure.
Employees on furlough or temporary layoff are not eligible for paid family leave or paid sick leave under the Act. Further, employees cannot use paid family or sick leave for hours not working because of a reduced work schedule.
Employees may not use their employerâs available paid time off to make them whole during a paid leave provided by the Act unless the employer expressly agrees. In other words, because FFCRA leave is capped, and may result in an employee receiving less than full pay, the Act does not permit employees to substitute other paid leave during FFCRA leave to make them whole.
Employers cannot require that employees use available paid time off to make them whole during a paid leave provided by the Act.
Employers are always free to provide employees more paid leave than the Act requires, but cannot claim any tax credit for the excess leave.
Itâs still not clear from yesterdayâs guidance who gets to make the ultimate call on whether the employee can telework and what happens if/when the employee objects to telework. We could use more guidance there.
What rules will DOL apply to exempt small businesses with fewer than 50 employees when the lawâs requirements would jeopardize the viability of the business? [Me: this is a biggie]
Will DOL give guidance to employers with fewer than 25 employees as to how they comply when they cannot return an employee to an equivalent position.
Iâll be discussing these FAQs, along with answering all of your coronavirus-related employment law questions live on Zoom, Monday from 1-2 ET: https://zoom.us/j/856368874.
There will be plenty of room for everyone, as Iâve bumped the capacity to 500. And donât forget, Norah promised sheâll drop by to share a song with everyone. Come for the info, stay for the music.
One thing COVID-19 has done in the United States is put a spotlight on how a pandemic impacts lower wage hourly workers versus salaried, higher-earning employees.Â
âWhile most people infected with COVID-19 will not need to be hospitalized and can recover at home, according to the World Health Organization, those who do need to go to the ICU can likely expect big bills, regardless of what insurance they have,â the article stated. âAs the U.S. government works on another stimulus package, future relief is likely to help ease some economic problems caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but gaps remain.â
Amid the COVID-19 outbreak, workers who need paid sick days the most have the least, wrote Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, in an EPI article. Only 30 percent of the lowest-paid workers â many of whom are hourly workers in the service industry â have the ability to earn paid sick days, and these are the workers who typically have contact with the public.
These workers also typically are the ones who canât work from home. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, among 25 percent of full-time workers who earn the least, only 9.2 percent have the option to work from home compared to the 61.5 percent of employees who earn the most.Â
Some companies have been positive in their response to COVID-19. Microsoft decided to continue to pay all its hourly service providers their regular pay while the company has reduced service needs. Walmart also announced that workers would receive up to two weeks pay should they be quarantined or test positive for the virus.Â
According to a Willis Towers Watson survey of 805 companies polled the week of March 16, 72 percent of employers will continue to pay hourly workers who test positive for coronavirus. Similarly, 54 percent will also pay hourly employees who have cold or flu-like symptoms and choose to stay home. Less promising, only 36 percent will continue paying hourly workers when they stay home because they donât have child care.
Meanwhile, other companies have decided that mass layoffs are necessary so its out-of-work employees can collect unemployment benefits and return to their old job âwhen this extraordinary episode ends.â
Laid-off employees can sign up for Affordable Care Act coverage, but they need to avoid common, easy mistakes, according to the USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy, which provides laid-off employees guidance to find a new insurance plan. For example, short-term insurance coverage can be misleading for consumers, the report noted. This type of health plan may not cover costly services like hospital visits and often doesnât protect people with pre-existing conditions.
In light of the unique issues facing low-wage and hourly workers, there are certain best practices companies can consider. According to Gallup, these best practices include:
Approving additional budget for supplies or additional paid time off.
Granting paid time off for symptomatic employees, employees who must care for family members who are diagnosed with COVID-19, and/or employees with diagnosed cases of COVID-19.
Permitting unlimited unpaid time off without penalty.
Paying for time spent under quarantine.
Communicating employer-sponsored insurance and other relevant benefits.
Making revisions to employee compensation and benefits policies.
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Health care workers have a vital role in caring for patients with coronavirus. But theyâre also at risk themselves.
Theyâre in a tough situation because an outbreak among health care professionals and those who work at health care facilities not only impacts an organizationâs finances, but it can also cascade into a larger health care crisis, according to a guide prepared by law firm Seyfarth, âCoronavirus Preparation for Health Care Facilities and Workers.â While providers have obligations to their patients, they also have responsibilities to their employees to keep them safe.Â
These issues are true for both private and public health professionals, but the public workforce in particular has unique challenges. It has been chronically underfunded, especially since the Great Recession of 2008, said Rivka Liss-Levinson, director of research at the Center for State and Local Government Excellence.Â
While health care workers are doing the best they can to control and contain the coronavirus outbreak, thereâs a limit to what people can do with limited funding, she said. Meanwhile, these employees are highly educated and have jobs that require specialized skills and credentialing, so health care systems facing a shortage due to an outbreak have trouble replacing them.Â
âTo successfully tackle todayâs greatest public health challenges, a workforce of sufficient size and with the appropriate skill sets is needed. This requires allocating adequate funding,â she wrote in her blog, âWe Shouldnât Wait for a Crisis like Coronavirus to Fund Public Health.âÂ
Turnover may be a concern for their employers. The public sector workforce is mostly mission-driven, and they know they wonât be paid as much as they would in the private sector. They want to make a difference in their community, Liss-Levinson said. Still, they also want to be compensated fairly. Â
She cited a study from de Beaumont Foundation and Association of State and Territorial Health Officials which found that 47 percent of this workforce plan to leave their jobs in the next five years. While some of this (22 percent) is due to retirement, 25 percent of employees said they wanted to leave for new positions. Â
Meanwhile, available public health care plays a big role in rural areas, which may face unique challenges in that they have fewer resources and harder-to-access care compared to urban areas. Itâs important for people to access care in these communities, whether itâs for a pandemic or something more common.Â
âWe have a tendency to really put a spotlight on public health when there are emergencies like this but we need to be adequately finding public health at all times. When you are underfunded, you are then not able to deal with an emergency,â Liss-Levinsom said. âWe need to be aware of the role the public health workforce plays every day in protecting us, not just when thereâs something like coronavirus.â
Thereâs a difference between forming a healthy habit and developing an obsession. Sometimes I wonder if individuals or corporate wellness marketers realize this difference.Â
Helping employees sleep better is a lifestyle change workplace wellness has taken on, but simply strapping on a sleep-tracker might not be your best bet to catch more ZZZs. In fact, for some people it may actually make their sleep worse. The New York Times looked into this phenomenon in July 2019 in the story âThe Sad Truth About Sleep-Tracking Devices and Apps.âÂ
Personal tech columnist Brian X. Chen tracked his sleep using an Apple Watch and some software downloaded on his phone. He shared his own experience in this column and backed it up with research from Rush University Medical College and Northwestern Universityâs Feinberg School of Medicine.
âIn their study, the researchers warned that sleep-tracking tech could provide inaccurate data and worsen insomnia by making people obsessed with achieving perfect slumber, a condition they called orthosomnia,â Chen wrote. Health apps donât necessarily make people healthier, and this was just the latest research to show that.Â
For some people, trying to “hack” their sleep, health or productivity can lead to stress or anxiety.
The story wasnât completely negative and did also share some potential positives of certain sleep-trackers. While some users get in the habit of waking up in the middle of the night and obsessively checking their sleep patterns, others do say that using these apps genuinely helped them.
Still, this measured, balanced perspective was a valuable, realistic look at the potential behind this technology versus excessively optimistic marketing copy. The bottom line for users of sleep tech was this: âSleep-tracking apps and devices can be useful for getting a broad look at your sleep, but people should resist drawing conclusions about their sleep health.âÂ
Just as thereâs a name for people obsessed with getting perfect sleep, thereâs also an eating disorder in which people are so obsessed with being healthy, that it makes them unhealthy. Itâs called orthorexia, and itâs something we see in the wellness influencer community. What I wonder is if we also see it in the workplace wellness community.Â
Psycom.net notes some of the problems it causes, including malnutrition, heart conditions and social isolation. âOrthorexia nervosa can easily go unnoticed because it does not seem unusual to be âobsessedâ with healthy eating during a time when researchers, health professionals, food marketers, and media seem to constantly change the definition of a healthy diet,â according to the site.Â
I donât believe this is out of the realm for employers because of how often organizations try to push wellness programs and the âculture of healthâ on employees, even the healthy ones who manage their health on their own terms. Not everyone needs to join a workplace program. It’s not necessary for people to do to be good at their job.
Also, for employers who have weight-loss programs at your company, it couldnât hurt to ask yourself how employees are losing weight. Are they doing it in a healthy way or are they adopting an unhealthy string of diets?Â
Finally, Iâll mention one more workplace obsession tangentially related to health: productivity. Think about the culture that exists in many organizations in which employees are always trying to do more in a better, faster way, looking for ways to âhackâ their productivity and accomplish the most possible. Ultimately, they canât hit this impossible goal, which can cause stress or anxiety.Â
This is according to a thought-provoking LinkedIn post last month, and I completely agree. It referenced an article from âThe Ageâ entitled âWhy productivity hacks mostly don’t live up to their promise,â which dug into the âsuccess industryâ and how it ultimately canât really make us feel successful. In the end, it makes us feel inadequate and distracted.Â
The article quoted Vice Mediaâs Head of Innovation Mark Adams, who has a TED talk about the âcultâ of extreme productivity. As you realize there are always more hacks and you can always do more, it creates a sense of chronic anxiety, he said.Â
âItâs time to take a breath and accept that it is another trap,â he said. âThis whole billion-dollar success industry … it doesnât work.âÂ
I also enjoyed this quote from psychologist Marny Lishman:Â
âThe wellness industry has a lot to answer for â itâs pushing us to be busier, better and constantly dangling the pressure to reach our potential in front of us â when often the answer to wellness resides right inside of us in the enjoyment of the moment… A little chaos, a little adversity, mistakes and failures â all of these help guide us throughout life. We are missing out on these if we are life hacking everything.â
My message to employers based on all this is, rather than constantly trying to push your employees to be better, faster, stronger and healthier, think about the culture youâre creating. Do you have realistic expectations for how productive or health-conscious your employees should be? Or do you expect employees to be like machines that can be constantly upgraded with no impact on their well-being?Â