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Category: Commentary & Opinion

Posted on November 22, 2016June 29, 2023

Dropping Some Wage and Hour Wisdom on Turkey Giveaways

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

One law firm for which I used to work provided each staff member an annual Thanksgiving turkey as a holiday thank you to its employees. With the hindsight of two decades of employment-law experience, here’s my question — should the fair market value of that turkey been included in the employees’ regular rate of pay? Because if it was, the company would have to include its value in the calculation of employees’ overtime rates.

Thankfully, the FLSA excludes such gifts from the regular rate of pay. Employers, your Thanksgiving turkeys and supermarket gift cards are safe from the clutches of the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division.

Under the FLSA, “regular rate” does not include “sums paid as gifts; payments in the nature of gifts made at Christmas time or on other special occasions, as a reward for service, the amounts of which are not measured by or dependent on hours worked, production, or efficiency.”

To qualify under this exclusion, “the bonus must be actually a gift or in the nature of a gift. If it is measured by hours worked, production, or efficiency, the payment is geared to wages and hours during the bonus period and is no longer to be considered as in the nature of a gift.”

The DOL gives this example:

If the bonus paid at Christmas or on other special occasion is a gift or in the nature of a gift, it may be excluded from the regular rate under section 7(e)(1) even though it is paid with regularity so that the employees are led to expect it and even though the amounts paid to different employees or groups of employees vary with the amount of the salary or regular hourly rate of such employees or according to their length of service with the firm so long as the amounts are not measured by or directly dependent upon hours worked, production, or efficiency.

So, what does one have to establish such that a turkey or other holiday gift is excluded from the regular rate calculation?

  1. It is a discretionary gift.
  2. Its value is not measured by hours worked, production achieved, or efficiency attained.
  3. It can be provided with sufficient regularity such that employees expect it (i.e., an annual tradition), provided that it remains discretionary and not tied to hours worked, production, or efficiency.

I’m off the rest of the week to enjoy my turkey and fixings with my family. I hope you enjoy yours too. And, I hope you take you at least a few moments to reflect on that which you are thankful. So often we get bogged down in the everyday, which can prove to be both negative and mundane. One of the reasons I love Thanksgiving so much (other than my mother-in-law’s turkey) is because it gives you the chance to stop and reflect on all of the good that you have in your life. And we each have a lot of it.

Cheers.

Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.

Posted on November 21, 2016June 29, 2023

Working Unwell: Mental Health by Profession

wf_1121_workingwell_depressedjobs_articlecopy2If my main source of mental health information is the truly excellent 1990s sitcom Frasier, my second main source is a podcast called Psychology in Seattle, hosted by Dr. Kirk Honda.

There are many parallels with Frasier, including A) the practice of psychology in, you guessed it, Seattle; B) the use of some modern audible medium to get the message across (talk radio in the 1990s vs. podcasts in 2016) and C) the celebrity cameos from people like Halle Berry, Macaulay Culkin and Kevin Bacon. NO! That last one’s a joke 
 .

A recent podcast I listened to was titled “Depression.” Dr. Honda had an expert on depression (not Kevin Bacon) talk about the clinical illness. Some takeaways were:

  1. Even if somebody with depression isn’t showing the symptoms, it doesn’t mean they’re not going through it.
  2. Depression can have serious social implications. For example, if somebody tries opening up to somebody else who has not experienced depression, they may get advice like, “Just try not to think about it,” or something that really doesn’t help. A person might remedy this by finding other people experiencing the same thing. On one hand, this is positive, because it doesn’t allow one to “marinate” in their own depression alone. One the other hand, surrounding yourself with equally sad people may cause a double whammy of depression.

So, how does this translate to the workplace?

The other day I received a new study, “Depression Among Demographics,” which looked at professions and lifestyles that have the highest levels of depression.

“Our study helped us look at the prevalence of depression across industries and lifestyles,” wrote a spokesperson at MentalHealth.net in an email interview. “The signs of depression can be hidden, and the stigma that often comes along with mental illness can make it tough for those suffering from depression to speak up about their struggles.”

Certain findings were of special interest to me: First, the professions with the highest rates of depression are public and private transportation, real estate, social services and manufacturing. One commonality that connects these very different industries is that these are “often thankless jobs in which workers experience the best (and worst) of society on a daily basis,” according to the study.

Second, and not surprisingly, people with private health insurance see a depression rate of 5.3 percent, compared to 7.8 percent with no coverage and 12 percent with Medicaid or CHIP. So, based on these findings, the type of health care an employer can offer may play a big role in depression among employees.

Based on these findings, what are suggestions of improving mental health from both the organizational and the individual perspective?

My point of view, as someone who occasionally researches mental health for this blog, is that organizations should treat mental health issues the same as they would physical health issues. That is, they should acknowledge that mental health has the potential to affect a person’s life and performance just as much as physical health and then offer appropriate resources — even though the symptoms may not necessarily be visible. Offering nothing seems like the institutional equivalent of, “Try not to think about it.”

On the flipside, employees going through this need to acknowledge the mental health problem, even if it doesn’t manifest in visible symptoms, and take advantage of any resources which their employer may offer.

wf_1121_workingwell_depressedjobs_articlecopyThis is all very basic and obvious. However, American Express’ Healthy Minds program is one concrete example of a corporate program which deals with the mental health of its employees. It’s worth revisiting for more specific workplace initiatives.

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below, or email at aburjek@humancapitalmedia.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on November 21, 2016June 29, 2023

Some Workplace Haiku to Start Your Week

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Lately, the news has been so grim, with

Cleveland’s Fox 8 recently published a list of workplace haiku. Here are some of my favorites:
Office thermostat
Why do you hate me so much?
I’m freakin’ freezing
My biggest weakness
Why would you even ask that?
Nobody’s perfect
Used corporate card
To buy beer and Pokémon
Does that count as fraud?
Tweeted those pictures
Interview begins at 2
Can I delete them?

Reading those inspired me to write a few of my own.

Workplace harassment
HR ignored her for months
We have to pay, big!
Email from PayPal
Time to update my account
What is ransomware?
HR’s big headache?
An hour here, hour there
Intermittent leave
Exempt / non-exempt?
We owe unpaid overtime
Class lawsuit; oh crap!
How about you? Share your own workplace haiku in the comments below, or on Twitter, with the hashtag #haikuatwork.
Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.
Posted on November 17, 2016June 29, 2023

Judge Takes NLRB to Task for Rules Protecting Racist, Sexist Workplace Misconduct

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Of all of the decisions the NLRB has handed down in the past eight years,

Consolidated Communications v. NLRB (D.C. Cir. 9/13/16) is one such case.

More compelling than the decision, however, is the concurring opinion written by Judge Patricia Millett, in which she calls on the NLRB to carry out its mission to protect the rights of all employees, not just those who happen to be walking a picket line. How can a picket line magically convert misconduct that is “illegal in every other corner of the workplace” into the “unpleasantries that are just part and parcel of the contentious environment and heated language that ordinarily accompany strike activity,” she asks?

Her opinion is so well written, I’ve excerpted almost all of it below for your reading and consideration.


I write separately, though, to convey my substantial concern with the too-often cavalier and enabling approach that the Board’s decisions have taken toward the sexually and racially demeaning misconduct of some employees during strikes. Those decisions have repeatedly given refuge to conduct that is not only intolerable by any standard of decency, but also illegal in every other corner of the workplace. The sexually and racially disparaging conduct that Board decisions have winked away encapsulates the very types of demeaning and degrading messages that for too much of our history have trapped women and minorities in a second-class workplace status.

While the law properly understands that rough words and strong feelings can arise in the tense and acrimonious world of workplace strikes, targeting others for sexual or racial degradation is categorically different. Conduct that is designed to humiliate and intimidate another individual because of and in terms of that person’s gender or race should be unacceptable in the work environment … .
Nothing in the Board’s decisions has offered any plausible justification, and I can conceive of none, for concluding that the rights of workers — all workers — are protected by turning picket lines into free zones for sexually or racially abusive and demeaning conduct. Instead, the Board’s rulings dismiss such abhorrent behavior as “unpleasantries” that are just part and parcel of the contentious environment and heated language that ordinarily accompany strike activity … .
There is no question that Emily Post rules do not apply to a strike … .
So giving strikers a pass on zealous expressions of frustration and discontent makes sense. Heated words and insults? Understandable. Rowdy and raucous behavior? Sure, within lawful bounds. But conduct of a sexually or racially demeaning and degrading nature is categorically different. Calling a female co-worker a “whore” or exposing one’s genitals to her is not even remotely a “normal outgrowth” of strike-related emotions. In what possible way does propositioning her for sex advance any legitimate strike-related message? And how on earth can calling an African-American worker “nigger” be a tolerated mode of communicating worker grievances?
Such language and behavior have nothing to do with attempted persuasion about the striker’s cause. Nor do they convey any message about workplace injustices suffered, wrongs inflicted, employer mistreatment, managerial indifference, the causes of employee frustration and anger, or anything at all of relevance about working conditions or worker complaints. Indeed, such behavior is flatly forbidden in every other corner of the workplace because it is dangerously wrong and breathes new life into economically suffocating and dehumanizing discrimination that we have labored for generations to eliminate. Brushing that same behavior off when it occurs during a strike simply legitimates the entirely illegitimate, and it signals that, when push comes to shove, discriminatory and degrading stereotypes can still be a legitimate weapon in economic disputes.
And by the way, the Board is supposed to protect the rights of all employees covered by the Act … . Holding that such toxic behavior is a routine part of strikes signals to women and minorities both in the union and out that they are still not truly equals in the workplace or union hall. For when the most important labor/management battles arise and when the economic livelihood of the employer and the employees is on the line, the Board’s decisions say that racial and misogynistic epithets, degrading behavior, and race- and gender-based vilification are once again fair game … .
Nor do the Board’s decisions grapple with the enduring effects in the workplace of such noxious language and behavior. The assumption that such gender- and race-based attacks can be contained to the picket line blinks reality. It will often be quite hard for a woman or minority who has been on the receiving end of a spew of gender or racial epithets — who has seen the darkest thoughts of a co-worker revealed in a deliberately humiliating tirade — to feel truly equal or safe working alongside that employee again. Racism and sexism in the workplace is a poison, the effects of which can continue long after the specific action ends … .
Accordingly, if the Board’s decisions insist on letting the camel’s nose of racial and gender discrimination into the work environment, the Board should also think long and hard about measuring the “threats” associated with such sexually or racially degrading behavior from the perspective of a reasonable person in the target’s position, and how nigh impossible it is to cabin racism’s and sexism’s pernicious effects … .

To be sure, employees’ exercise of their statutory rights to oppose employer practices must be vigorously protected, and ample room must be left for powerful and passionate expressions of views in the heated context of a strike. But Board decisions’ repeated forbearance of sexually and racially degrading conduct in service of that admirable goal goes too far. After all, the Board is a component of the same United States government that has fought for decades to root discrimination out of the workplace. Subjecting co-workers and others to abusive treatment that is targeted to their gender, race, or ethnicity is not and should not be a natural byproduct of contentious labor disputes, and it certainly should not be accepted by an arm of the federal government. It is 2016, and “boys will be boys” should be just as forbidden on the picket line as it is on the assembly line.


Bravo. I couldn’t have said it better myself.

Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.
Posted on November 16, 2016June 29, 2023

The Newest Threat to Your Cybersecurity? Lunchroom Appliances

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Dinner is always a bit of cluster in my house. We are a home of two working parents, and, with music lessons and band rehearsals three nights a week, it seems that we are always scrambling for our evening meal. More often than not, we end up eating out, which is neither good for our wallets nor our waistlines.

Yet, winter is coming, which means crockpot season. The problem with some crockpot recipes, however, is that they cook for far fewer than the 10-plus hours we are out of the house every day. Wouldn’t it be great if there was a way to connect your slow-cooker to your WiFi network and control it via an app from your phone? That way, I could start the meal at 2 p.m. and not not worry about coming home to a tarry, burnt mess of chicken and sauce (yes, this has happened, and, yes, we ate out that night).

“Today’s your lucky day,” you say. “Behold, the Wifi-Enabled Slow Cooker. There’s just one drawback. Cyber criminals can seize control of it to take down websites and access your smartphones and home networks.” Yikes!

I’ll let Vice explain:

If you have an internet-connected home appliance, such as a crock-pot, a lightbulb, or a coffee maker, you can control it from the comfort of your smartphone. But a bug in the Android app that controls some of those devices made by a popular manufacturer also allowed hackers to steal all your cellphone photos and even track your movements.

Security researchers found that the Android app for internet-connected gizmos made by Belkin had a critical bug that let anyone who was on the same network hack the app and get access to the user’s cellphone. This gave them a chance to download all photos and track the user’s position 
 .

This problem is not small or inconsequential. The White House is even paying attention. Just yesterday, it issued sweeping guidelines for IoT (Internet of Things) Cybersecurity [pdf]. The paper calls for an engineering-based approach that bakes security systems directly into Internet of Things devices and technology.

If you have smart appliances in your workplace, the Wall Street Journal recommends the following best practices:

  • Research before purchasing your smart home products. Consumers need to research the security protocols that their connected devices follow, and pay attention to how device makers issue security updates for devices’ software.
  • Update the firmware of your devices. The WSJ recommends regularly updating devices, even new ones, as security updates could be released or change on a daily basis.
  • Change the password for your smart home devices. Most hackers attempt to obtain a universal password for users so they can hack into all of the connected devices in the home.
  • Secure your router. This means updating your firmware more frequently or simply setting your router to the WPA2 security setting, which can help a great deal.
  • Create a separate network for your devices. By setting up a separate router and network for smart home devices, users can prevent them from being hacked by PCs.
  • Point connected cameras in the right direction. Your connected cameras can be among the most easily hackable devices. Because of this, consumers should not have connected cameras pointed in the direction of their bedrooms, living rooms, or other very personal areas of the home.
  • Ask your service provider about device security. They are the ones that should know all of the security precautions that users of their devices should be taking.
  • Buy new devices, especially if your connected devices are older models.
If one good thing came out of the 2016 presidential election it’s that cybersecurity came to the forefront and entered our collective consciousness. If people were not previously aware of cyber-risks, they are now, thanks to Wikileaks. Employers should take advantage of the moment and capture employees’ attention with cyber policies and training.
Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.
Posted on November 15, 2016June 29, 2023

What Happens to the New FLSA Salary Test Under President Trump?

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

The one employment-law question I’ve been asked most since waking up last Wednesday to the reality that The Donald will be The President (aside from, “How did this happen?” and for that I direct you to 

The short answer? “No, it does not mean that.”

Beginning Dec. 1, the salary level for white-collar FLSA exemptions will increase to $913 per week, period. After all, the new regulations roll in on Dec. 1, and President-elect Trump does not become president until 51 days later. So, even if he wants to stop them from taking effect, he’s powerless to do so, and any legislative efforts would die at the hands of the current president’s veto.

The long answer, however, is a bit more complicated.

If you take a look at Trump’s campaign website, he has an entire page dedicated to “Regulations.” And Trump does not like regulations. What did his campaign promise he’d do to regulations once becoming president?
  • Ask all department heads to submit a list of every wasteful and unnecessary regulation which kills jobs 
 and eliminate them.
  • Reform the entire regulatory code to ensure that we keep jobs and wealth in America.
  • Issue a temporary moratorium on new agency regulations that are not compelled by Congress or public safety in order to give our American companies the certainty they need to reinvest in our community, get cash off of the sidelines, start hiring again, and expanding businesses. We will no longer regulate our companies and our jobs out of existence.
  • Decrease the size of our already bloated government after a thorough agency review.

If you ask any small business owner, the FLSA’s new salary test checks each of these Trumpian boxes.

Yet, this issue was not one on which Trump focused during the campaign. In the only campaign interview I could locate that touched on this subject, he did not call for repealing the upcoming FLSA changes outright, but instead called for “a delay or a carve-out of sorts for our small business owners.”
Please also read: We Measure Salaries for FLSA Exemptions Weekly, Not Annually
One possible solution? Take a look the bipartisan H.R. 5813, which would phase in the new salary test over four years, and eliminate its triennial re-indexing. If you are looking for potential models Trump might adopt, you could do a lot worse for a starting point.
The bottom line. You cannot, and should not, hope for a reprieve from these rules at the 11th hour. The new salary test is coming, regardless of what Trump may choose to do after the fact.
In other words, if you’re not prepared for these new rules, you better get prepared, and quickly, because in 16 days they become the reality of every business.
Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.
Posted on November 14, 2016June 29, 2023

Sometimes It’s OK to Be Political at Work

I was invited to a party last week. A gathering of like-minded folks intending to celebrate our winning presidential pick, or to mute our disappointment with wine and cheese. I didn’t go.

This election 
 let’s just say, I knew I would feel more strongly about it than any other in which I’ve cast my vote to date, and I wanted the luxury of freely expressing those emotions in private.

Election night I watched the state tallies roll in one by one, and after a while, I went to sleep. I woke at 4 a.m., checked my phone, and well, the rest is history. I sent my sister a text. She replied instantly. She was also up, and we talked for a good long while.

Actually, it wasn’t so much talking. The conversation alternated between talking, hollering and crying out in that hands-to-the-ceiling type way that goes beyond plebian tears. I wanted to get it out of my system, or as much as I could, before I got to work. We talked about what to expect, how did it happen, how would it affect us, our families and friends, what should we do now?

I told my sister one thing, the same thing I told my mother and everyone else who’s asked me similar questions or expressed even a hint of vulnerability or fear: Tighten up. Take that how you like, but I mean: build good money habits, accustom yourself to discipline and enjoy life, for this too shall pass.

Honestly, what shocked and surprised me the most was not the outcome of the election — my gut told me how things would play out before they actually did — it was how my workplace reacted to the election outcome. I spent almost two hours hollering into the phone at my sister early in the morning on Nov. 9 because I wanted to be composed and professional when I got to my office.

I suspect more than one person had the same idea because my commute was eerily quiet. Even when people spoke, they whispered rather than talk in normal tones. The people I passed in my building, the mood was somber — just a little too quiet, if you know what I mean. It was as though everyone had a tight rein on themselves. That or there was some sort of informal gag order at play, muzzling the inhabitants of various offices lest they burst with emotion of one type or another.

wf_1116_kellyeblogimage_whitehouseBut my boss shocked me. In our weekly editorial staff meeting he opened the floor to a conversation about the election. He literally gave us that forum in which to safely air our feelings about what’s happening — or what may happen — in the country, and it was surprising. Welcome, but surprising. I don’t recall ever having such a conversation before, nor feeling the need for one. This time around? Let’s face it — there’s little to no way a working American won’t feel some type of way about the outcome of the 2016 presidential election

So, we sat around the table, with the door closed, and we talked. We shared general impressions, debated implications for our work as journalists and how we planned to cover various aspects of related content for our readers. We shared personal ondits on how things might go for us, and we were fervently appreciative for the opportunity to speak freely. It was refreshing, it was a relief, and it was completely unexpected.

There are backgrounds and beliefs that we don’t bring to work because they just aren’t part of our jobs. Political beliefs are a prime example. They are often too unexpected, too judgmental, too personal, or too potentially explosive if the mantle of professionalism that most of us wear should grow thin or brittle. Employers don’t encourage political discussion — many actively forbid it — for this reason.

Whatever side of the political fence you may be on, once the election hubbub has died down, we still have to work together. Anything said in the heat of the moment, political passions expressed, unusual or unexpected beliefs aired, these things won’t be forgotten, and an otherwise valuable working relationship could be damaged. That my employer should voluntarily open this particular Pandora’s box and invite us all to unpack its contents said much for our welcoming stance on diversity of thought.

It spoke volumes about our culture and how inherently generous, collaborative and respectful our workplace is. It also cast a bright new shine on the phrase freedom of speech, and not just because as journalists we live and die by those weighty words. For some this activity might not work as well.

For instance, if your organization depends on customers. Grubhub CEO Matt Maloney found himself on fire after he sent out a memo clearly weighing in on one side of the presidential coin vs. the other.

That likely didn’t happen at my company because no one explicitly said, pro this, con that. There was no debate over right or wrong. We just talked, and we did so privately. There was no outward or public declaration.

I can only hope in the months and years ahead that other employers, that other people, adopt that same generosity of spirit and action as we navigate this new political landscape. I think they will. I can already see it.

For some, right now it’s colored with resignation, muddied by disbelief, disappointment and even anger. But the sentiment seems widespread: with open hearts, minds and mouths, we will overcome and advance together.

Kellye Whitney is associate editorial director for Workforce. To comment, please email editor@workforce.com.

Posted on November 11, 2016June 29, 2023

Retiring Well: How to Convince Employees to Save Enough

wf_1111_workingwell_benefitsmgrscomm_articleimage
Experts say there are three motivators for retirement savings: company match, tax benefits and time.

People are worried about their financial future, but are they saving enough for retirement?

I spoke to Ed Farrington, executive vice president at Natixis Global Asset Management about how benefits managers should communicate with employees about their retirement. He referenced the Natixis 2015 Retirement Plan Participant Study, which surveyed 1,000 employees with access to a workplace defined-contribution plan.

A quarter of those surveyed chose not to participate in the plan. Four out of 10 contributed less than 5 percent. And many had borrowed (37 percent) or withdrawn (30 percent) money from their retirement account before actually retiring. None line up with recommended practices, such as not accessing money in your retirement account until you retire and contributing 10 percent, as experts suggest.

Benefits managers, Farrington said, need to focus on employee motivation: What keeps them from participating in a plan? What provides an incentive to start saving for a comfortable retirement?

There are three major motivations: company match, tax benefits and time. If you can prove to people that by not participating in a plan they’re leaving money on the table, then most people will at least consider contributing to a plan. And, of course, the sooner people start saving for retirement, the less they actually have to contribute to reach their goal, thanks to the power of time.

wf_1111_workingwell_benefitsmgrscomm_edfarringtonphoto
Ed Farrington, EVP, Natixis Global Asset Management

“Showing people the power of money in an account is a compelling proposition to make [employees] realize they have a lot of control over their destiny when it comes to what will their life look like at retirement,” said Farrington. “They have control, and the sooner they can takecontrol the better.”

Interestingly enough, the millennial generation was the one that did the best at saving for retirement, according to this survey. Some start saving right out of college. People in this age group were more on track to reach their retirement goals than baby boomers or Generation X.

As a millennial, I wonder what the deeper reasoning is behind this. While many people in my generation deal with high rents, student loan debt and perhaps other type of debt, we also don’t own homes or support family members as much as people in older generations. We’re relatively young and healthy. I wonder if factors like these, or others, contribute to the generation’s level of preparedness for retirement? I don’t have the answer for this, but it seems like something worth looking into.

Finally, the third takeaway from this conversation was the importance of not only understanding what motivates people to participate, but also what motivates people to not participate. In every generation, the main thing that keeps people from contributing to a plan is debt, ranging from student loan debt to credit card debt. A third (34 percent) of those surveyed overall and 40 percent in Gen X, specifically, cited personal debt as a reason for not saving for retirement.

The concern here, Farrington said, is that while people are looking out for their short-term financial needs, meanwhile they’re sacrificing their long-term financial wellness. It’s important for benefits and HR managers to know that debt is keeping people from participating in plans, he added, and for them to educate employees, whether that’s through technology or face-to-face interactions.

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below or email at aburjek@humancapitalmedia.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on November 9, 2016June 29, 2023

Corporate Travel Benefits Extend to Non-Business Travelers

wf_1102_workingwell_hotelengine_image_articleimage
Crater Lake National Park is one travel option for leisure travel.

I recently came across a pretty unique benefit. Although certain perks are attractive to business travelers — things like deals, loyalty points, the ability to tack on vacation days at the end of a work trip — I haven’t seen many geared toward leisure travelers.

Kind of a bummer for me as someone who obsessively researches Crater Lake National Park every so often, counting down the days when I can finally vacation there (hopefully next summer?).

Which is why some recent news in the benefits world recently struck me. Hotel Engine, a company that provides hotel booking solutions for business, officially launched in the employee benefits space Oct. 20. That is, people can use Hotel Engine for their own personal leisure travel now as a benefit, at no cost to the employee or the employer. They can get discounted hotel prices (between a 25 and 60 percent), the corporate rate for leisure travel.

“It’s one of the benefits that more and more employees are looking for, and so being able to offer them these deeply discounted rates to use when they have vacation is huge,” said Sonia Reid, vice president of marketing and communications at Hotel Engine. “We’ve see a lot of positive feedback.”

Hotel Engine also helps on the implementation side and the marketing side, to make sure the rollout goes smoothly. Also, Hotel Engine extends its customer service and anything it would do for any business travel client to the leisure realm as well. It works because it’s not strictly leisure travel. You have to be part of a business which offers it as a benefit.

“We saw an opening in the market. There was a need for this type of service, and we could offer it,” said Reid.

I know I’ll be interested to see if these types of leisure travel benefits continue to make their way into the benefits space. Of course, there are those business traveler perks already, and sabbaticals for employees who have been at a company for a designated time (example: Epic Systems), but what about something for a different type of employee, they kind who hasn’t necessarily been at a company long enough to earn a sabbatical and who doesn’t travel for work? Discounts and deals could be an attractive perk for people in that group.

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below, or email at aburjek@humancapitalmedia.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on November 3, 2016June 29, 2023

Employers, Do Not Ignore Obvious Disability Accommodations

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer
All the way back in 2014,

An employee must ask for ADA accommodation to receive it.

That is, an employee must ask for an accommodation unless the employee’s need for an accommodation is so obvious that the employer cannot reasonably turn a blind eye toward it.

Case in point? Kowitz v. Trinity Health (8th Cir. 10/17/16).

Roberta Kowtiz worked for Trinity Health as a respiratory therapist and lead technician in its blood gas laboratory. She also suffered from cervical spinal stenosis, a degenerative spinal disease, for which she took a 12-week FMLA leave. She returned to work with restrictions that included max eight-hour shifts and no lifting more than 10 pounds. In the interim, Trinity updated the training requirements for Kowitz’s department to include renewed CPR training. Kowitz’s work limitations, however, prevented her from completing the training, a failure which resulted in her termination.

In her ensuing ADA lawsuit, the appellate court concluded that Kowitz’s failure to request a reasonable accommodation relative to the CPR training was not fatal to her ADA claim.

Though Kowitz did not ask for a reasonable accommodation of her condition in so many words, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Kowitz, her notification to her supervisor that she would not be able to obtain the required certification until she had completed physical therapy implied that an accommodation would be required until then.

What is the key takeaway for employers? You cannot ignore what you know about an employee’s disability and the potential need for an accommodation. Instead of ignoring the employee, you must engage in the interactive process with that employee to determine the need for, and feasibility of, the accommodation, whether or not the employee actually requests it.
Jon Hyman is a partner at Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis in Cleveland. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Hyman’s blog at Workforce.com/PracticalEmployer.

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