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Category: HR Administration

Posted on April 3, 2018July 24, 2024

HR Responds to the #MeToo Movement

HR #MeToo
Illustration by Lauren Rebbeck

Human resources is working overtime to address accusations that practitioners have been on the wrong side of the #MeToo movement.

The wide-scale makeover of processes, policies and the profession’s image comes in the wake of revelations of widespread sexual harassment at U.S. employers of every size and in virtually every field, from entertainment to academia to government. They include incidents or alleged incidents at high-profile startups such as ride-hailing company Uber, women’s hygiene products maker Thinx, retail jewelry chain Signet Jewelers and casino operator Wynn Enterprises.

One of the most well-known cases is The Weinstein Co., where allegations of sexual harassment, abuse and rape against co-owner and one-time Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein kicked off the #MeToo movement and led the entertainment firm to the brink of bankruptcy.

Report after report portrays weak HR functions that helped create a breeding ground for harassment and other toxic workplace behaviors. Victims accuse HR of failing to adequately deal with complaints of improper or illegal behavior, provide proper reporting channels or take other actions as warranted. In the most egregious cases, employees, potential employees or independent contractors who report harassment or abuse — the vast majority of whom are women — claim HR representatives aided or covered for the harassers.

In some cases involving startups, there was no HR person or department for victims to turn to, or the function was added only after problems were made public. In other cases, alleged victims or their representatives have linked HR problems related to harassment to personnel who had been promoted into HR roles without adequate experience, credentials or training.

SHRM HR
Elizabeth Bille, general counsel and corporate secretary, SHRM.

Even as more new accusations come to light on a regular basis, HR departments are stepping up their responses by increasing sexual harassment training. They are hiring outside contractors to perform workplace culture audits, provide independent whistleblower services and set up other types of HR tech to support better harassment reporting.

“There’s been a lot of self-reflection about what we have been doing and what more we could be doing,” said Elizabeth Bille, general counsel and corporate secretary of Society for Human Resource Management, the industry’s largest professional group. “There’s momentum and increased awareness and sensitivity that more may need to be done in this area.”

Industry influencers are using the moment to advocate for elevating the profession. They want companies that don’t already have an HR manager in the C-suite to boost the position to that level. They want companies that already have chief HR officers to make sure those executives report directly to the president or chief executive officer.

While that might be good advice for larger companies, it may not apply to tens of thousands of U.S. HR professionals who, according to SHRM, work as “departments of one,” predominately at smaller companies.

Ultimately, HR can only do so much. A company’s owner or upper management sets the tone for what is or is not acceptable workplace behavior. Although companies like Uber, Thinx, Wynn and The Weinstein Co. have removed CEOs who employees claim were harassers or created work environments that allowed harassment to happen, others have yet to take such assertive measures.

Some practitioners are suggesting that HR professionals should be prepared to quit rather than stay at companies with CEOs or boards that are unwilling to make the changes necessary to rein in questionable behavior or to take steps to prevent it from happening in the first place.

“My hope is that all HR folk know where they’re comfortable ethically and then stick to it even if that means leaving a job,” said Kate Bischoff, a Minneapolis employment lawyer, during a recent #HRHour Twitter chat.

A Threefold Increase in Requests for Sexual Harassment Training

Next to suspending or firing harassers, the #MeToo movement’s biggest impact on HR has been bumping up sexual harassment trainings.

Kelly Marinelli, an employment lawyer turned HR consultant, said requests for trainings have increased threefold since early 2017. Marinelli, president of the Boulder, Colorado, SHRM chapter, presents everything from 90-minute webinars to half-day on-site sessions for companies, law firms and other organizations. “People want something they can do right now to make it better, and that’s a first step,” she said.

SHRM HR
Kelly Marinelli, president of the Boulder, Colorado, SHRM chapter.

Training that Marinelli offers goes beyond identifying and addressing sexual harassment. It also educates companies on actions they can take to create a workplace where employees feel comfortable because bullying and power plays aren’t tolerated. “Sexual harassment is about power, not sex,” she said.

A workplace harassment resource page on SHRM’s website has gotten “millions of views” since it was launched in early November, according to Kate Kennedy, an organization spokeswoman. The resource page launched only weeks after initial reports of Weinstein’s alleged harassment and abuse, which victims claim goes back decades and includes cover-ups by company staff.

Sexual harassment-related calls to a separate SHRM Knowledge Center also are higher today than they were at the same time in 2017, Kennedy said.

In recent months, SHRM has increased the number of training sessions it sponsors, and is advising state legislatures on sexual harassment policies, said Bille.

“There’s recognition that as a baseline matter, HR professionals need to go back to their anti-harassment and retaliation policies and make sure they’re strong enough,” she said. “Does the policy fully address all the behaviors we’re seeking to prevent that constitute sexual harassment? Do we have enough reporting mechanisms so individuals have not just one but several people they could go to to report concerns? Do we have an investigation procedure in place that’s ready to be used in the case of sexual harassment?”

Women who claim to have been harassed have characterized HR as only caring about protecting corporate interests. It’s not a notion that sits well with many HR practitioners who see themselves as champions of employees, said Anne Tomkinson, an HR generalist and board member of SHRM’s Washington, D.C., chapter.

Long-time HR executives such as Tomkinson are using social media and private online forums to support each other. Methods for handling the issue and making employees feel supported are popular topics on a private Slack messenger channel frequented by HR veterans. “We collaborate a ton on all these things, and it comes down to helping people feel good about their work and doing the best work they can,” said Marinelli.

Also listen to: “Sexual Harassment at Work in a Post-Weinstein World”

Companies are hiring law firms and other outside services to audit reporting procedures or to set up whistleblower hotlines, following the likes of Uber, which launched an internal sexual harassment audit following allegations of misogyny and harassment chronicled by a former employee in a now well-known February 2017 blog post. Uber’s audit, conducted by an employment law firm and headed by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, resulted in 20 employees being fired, including many senior executives, and reprimands for 40 other employees. Since then, organizations such as the New York City Ballet and Metropolitan Opera also have hired law firms to conduct audits. Other lawyers have started posting information about audit services they provide on their websites.

HR tech vendors are capitalizing on the situation by offering cloud-based harassment training and related services. One is Vantage Point, a startup created by a two-time survivor of sexual violence. Vantage Point sells virtual reality-based sexual harassment training videos.

HR Departments of One Can Lead to Knowledge Vacuums

A number of high-profile sexual harassment cases cited HR personnel who lacked education, experience, training or credentials for the job.

Especially at small companies and startups, it’s common for a co-founder or owner to handle payroll, benefits and hiring until the work becomes too much to handle and they pass it off to someone who’s proficient at administrative tasks. But knowing how to run payroll doesn’t mean knowing how to handle a sexual harassment complaint, Tomkinson said.

SHRM HR
Anne Tomkinson, HR generalist and board member of SHRM’s Washington chapter.

SHRM estimates that about 55,000 of its 290,000 members work as HR departments of one, with sole responsibility for personnel matters, including providing harassment training.

For the majority of the 10-plus years Tomkinson has been in HR she has been one of those one-person HR departments at a variety of small businesses. Tomkinson holds SHRM certifications and a master’s degree in management. But many people who are moved into HR jobs at small companies don’t have previous experience or training and might not be aware of resources available for guidance and support, she said. Oftentimes they’re working in isolation and making their best guess.

“A lot of what feels like common sense isn’t best practices,” she said.

As an example, she said employees might come to HR with a problem and ask that the conversation be confidential or that no action be taken. If it’s a difference of opinion with a co-worker, Tomkinson said she might listen and offer counsel if they ask for it. “But if it strays into something that sounds like it could be harassment, I say I can appreciate that you want it to stay confidential, but I am required to do some sort of investigation.”

The nature of the allegation drives the type of investigation. “There’s a difference between the president of the company pressuring someone for sex if they want to get a promotion, and someone who says a co-worker is hitting on them and they don’t like it,” Tomkinson said.

‘HR Can Only Go So Far’

All the training, internal audits and other compliance fixes won’t work if upper management doesn’t live and breathe them.

Many larger companies that have come under scrutiny had formal HR departments with sexual harassment policies and training and still weren’t able to avoid these problems, said Beth Steinberg, chief people officer at cloud-based workforce app company Zenefits.

“The root of the issue is often the leadership team,” she said. “Are they engaged in these kinds of activities themselves? Do they encourage proactively addressing issues or make positive changes when issues come to light? If not, HR can only go so far.”

The personnel problems that tripped up Zenefits several years ago didn’t include sexual harassment allegations. But the company had a frat-party atmosphere led by its co-founder and former chief executive officer that included employees having sex in stairwells and doing shots after closing sales.

It also was fined by multiple state regulators for letting unlicensed employees sell insurance policies. In the past two years, Zenefits parted ways with the CEO and pivoted away from benefits to selling cloud-based HR tech software. The reorganization included hiring Steinberg, an HR heavy hitter who has advised numerous startups on people issues.

In late 2014, a Zenefits board member invited Steinberg to discuss creating a chief people officer role at the company and the possibility of taking on the role. But “there wasn’t an alignment” with top management over the value such a role could bring, and she passed, Steinberg said. That changed under current CEO Jay Fulcher, she said.

Zenefits previously had a CHRO, but when Steinberg came onboard in August 2017, it was as the chief people officer reporting directly to Fulcher, and she thinks there’s a big difference. “It signals the importance of this role to the company,” she said. “If the person leading people strategy is less valued than a technical leader or another leader, it says a lot.”

When corporate ethics and values don’t line up with what an individual believes, people need to ready to act.

Ultimate Software CHRO
Vivian Maza, CHRO of Ultimate Software

Michael Rasmussen, a compliance consultant in Waterford, Wisconsin, left a former employer a decade ago after the organization invited a senior executive at an adult entertainment company to deliver a keynote speech at one of the company’s conferences. “I thought this was a slap in the face to the women that worked in the company and were our clients. I protested and it was the foundational reason I left,” Rasmussen wrote in a recent blog post.

He’s not alone in urging HR practitioners to act on their convictions. HR leaders must commit to what they think is right, said Vivian Maza, chief people officer at Ultimate Software. Maza advocated for women employees during a panel at an HR technology conference last fall.

“As HR professionals, you have to feel it and fight for it every day to do the right thing for employees,” she said. “If [your job] doesn’t align with what your philosophy is or what your gut is telling you, you’re in the wrong place.”

Posted on March 21, 2018June 29, 2023

How Can You Transition Older Workers if You Can’t Force Them to Retire?

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

A Michigan oral surgery practice has agreed to pay $47,000 to settle an age discrimination lawsuit filed by the EEOC. The agency alleged that it violated the ADEA by maintaining a policy that required employees to retire at at 65. The lawsuit stemmed from the firing of an employee four days after her 65th birthday.

According to Kenneth Bird, regional attorney for the EEOC’s Indianapolis District Office, “December 2017 marked the 50th anniversary of the ADEA, Five decades later, the EEOC remains committed to vigorously enforcing that all-important law. Private employers need to understand that mandatory retirement policies run afoul of the ADEA and will be met with challenge.”

He’s absolutely correct.

It’s still a fairly popular misconception that businesses can force employees to retire at a certain age.

In truth, with the exception of a few limited circumstances, mandatory retirement ages are about as close to a slam-dunk case of illegal age discrimination you can find. The exceptions permit — but do not require — mandatory retirement:

  • at age 65 of executives or other employees in high, policy-making positions.
  • at age 55 for publicly employed firefighters and law enforcement officers.
Forcing an employee out is the same as requiring an employee to retire. While lessening duties and responsibilities, demotions and reductions in pay could cause an older employee to retire, it could also cause that same employee to claim a constructive discharge.
Yet companies do need to plan for their futures. This planning is becoming more difficult as more employees are working older. According to the 18th Annual Retirement Survey (conducted by the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies):
  • 53 percent expect to retire after age 65 or do not plan to retire at all.
  • 56 percent plan to work at least part-time in retirement.
  • Of those employee who plan to work past age 65, more than three-fourths are motivated by financial reasons or health reasons (such as “being active,” and “keeping my brain alert”).
Despite the aging nature of our workforce, many employers are unprepared, ill equipped or unwilling to accommodate its needs. Indeed, 38 percent of baby boomers report that their employers do absolutely nothing to help facilitate their transition to retirement.

What steps can employers take to help facilitate the transition of aging employees out of the workplace, without committing age discrimination? Consider the following four suggestions, culled from the tips offered by the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies):

    1. Help with retirement planning. Offer a retirement plan (to include part-time workers, if feasible). Consider auto-enrolling your employees to increase participation, and escalating contribution rates to increase salary deferrals. Structure matching contributions to promote higher salary deferrals (i.e., 50 percent of the first six percent instead of 100 percent of the first three percent).
    2. Educate your employees about saving and investing. Any 401(k) provider worthy of your (and your employees’) investment will help with this task. Offer guidance and information on how to calculate a retirement savings goal and on the basic principles of saving and investing. Most importantly, ensure that your employees understand that taking loans and premature withdrawals from their retirement accounts is an absolute sin.
    3. Offer benefits to enhance employees’ long-term financial security. Consider disability insurance, life insurance, employee assistance programs, workplace wellness and financial wellness programs, long-term care, and other insurances, all of which can help protect employees’ overall financial security as they age.
    4. Create employment opportunities to assist employees to phase into retirement. Consider offering voluntary flexible work schedules and arrangements, transitions from full-time to part-time, and shifts of aging employees to work in different capacities
And, most critically, get rid of your mandatory retirement policy.
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 March 7, 2018June 29, 2023

Measure Twice, Cut Once and Don’t Email Porn to Everyone on Your Company’s Contact List

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

In what may be the greatest (or, depending on your perspective, worst) employee mistake of all time, the Utah State Bar emailed a photo of a topless woman to more than 11,000 of its members.

For its part, the Bar has apologized, and has said it is investigating how the incident occurred and will publicize its findings.

Speculation on the cause of the unfortunate email ranges from hackers to a disgruntled employee.

It’s neither.

Readers, let me break this case for you.

This is nothing more than a good ol’ fashioned mistake, or a series of mistakes.

Employee has porn on his work computer (Mistake No. 1.)

He is tasked with sending an email to all of the organization’s members regarding its spring convention.

Part of that email was to be an attached flyer.

Employee attaches a file to the email that he thinks is the flyer. It’s not; it’s the porn image. (Mistake No. 2.)

He then clicks “send,” without realizing his error and without checking to see if he attached the correct image. (Mistake No. 3).

I’ll be floored if the investigation reveals anything different.

So, what lessons can we learn from this unfortunate story?

First, let’s please, as part of our annual harassment training, remind our employees that they should not be viewing porn in the workplace, let alone storing it on their computer. Nothing good ever comes from that.

Second, let’s remind our employees to slow down. Yes, we are all busy, and, yes, we are all under a lot of pressure to complete a lot of tasks on a daily basis. But, as if often the case, it’s so much better to get it right than to get it done.

Yes, emailing porn to everyone on your employer’s mailing list is not great, but it could have been so much worse. Imagine if, instead of an image of a topless woman, it was a confidential business plan, or the employer’s financial records.

“Measure twice, cut once” applies to just about anything anyone does at work. A simple double checking of the attachment could have saved everyone involved a whole lot of embarrassment.

Or, this employee simple could have kept his porn at home. Just sayin’.

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 February 23, 2018June 29, 2023

Saying Goodbye to a Game Changer

Game Changer Jonathan Flickinger
Son Isaiah, daughter Lydia and wife Jenna with Jonathan Flickinger, who died Dec. 28 in a car accident.

Our Workforce Game Changers are special people. They are the young shakers and movers who will be shaping people management for decades to come.

One Game Changer in particular really captured our attention in 2016. We saw Jonathan Flickinger as a unique talent — a background in law and an advanced certificate in strategic HR management from Cornell University just for starters. He was someone who “didn’t just get his foot in the door to begin his HR career — he kicked his way through it,” as writer AnnMarie Kuzel summarized in his Game Changer profile. It’s not surprising that Jonathan was tagged with the moniker “mixed-martial HR generalist.”

During the week between Christmas and New Year’s, I noticed an unusually large spike in page views for Jonathan’s 2016 Game Changer profile. Considering that web traffic is terribly slow at that time of year, out of curiosity I Googled his name.

My search revealed the stunning news that Jonathan died in a three-car accident while on his way to work on Dec. 28. Tragically, the story continued, Jonathan left behind his wife Jenna, a 3-year-old daughter and an 8-week-old son.

Just a month earlier, Jonathan started a new job as chief human capital officer for Quality Life Services, a home health care company in Butler, Pennsylvania, not far from his home in the Pittsburgh suburb of Bridgeville.

It was a well-earned position for him, especially after he endured much adversity in the 18 months since his recognition as a Game Changer. Jonathan was a lifelong resident of western Pennsylvania’s coal country. Working in that dying industry had its risks, which unfortunately struck when Jonathan was laid off after his selection to our Game Changers Class of 2016.

Workforce never had an unemployed Game Changer in the program’s history. Admittedly, his new work status gave us pause … for about five seconds.

Jonathan was a special talent, and despite the hard luck he remained a solid choice as a Game Changer. His versatility and command of his profession was further evidenced in an opinion piece he authored for Workforce on President Trump’s declaration to restore jobs to the ailing coal industry.

Following his selection as a Game Changer, former Workforce Managing Editor James Tehrani called Jonathan to hear firsthand what happened with his job situation.

Like a true HR pro, Jonathan did not fault his former employer. There was no bad blood, no sour grapes, no “woe is me” at being dealt a rotten hand, despite any worries he might have had about having to provide for a young family.

And while his former employer declined to comment, they said it was because of company policy and not because of our questions about Jonathan.

And now we learn of a much bigger misfortune — a car crash from which there can be no recovery. It’s hard to fathom why someone as talented and committed to his profession, community and family was tragically taken at just 34 years old. While we at Workforce and others who Jonathan touched through his work try to rationalize his death, the hard reality is that there remains a family coping with the loss every day.

I recently talked to Jonathan’s older brother, Christopher. “We’re all functioning,” he said of the family. As most big brothers would do, he proudly talked up his little brother’s achievements. He also recalled a conversation over the holidays. A growing family and finally a new gig in the profession he loved, Jonathan radiated with an air of satisfaction, Christopher said.

“He said, ‘I finally got everything I wanted.’ ”

Sadly, that world was shattered three days after Christmas. And while the family still grieves, Jonathan’s wife and children are struggling to get by. Christopher asked me to pass along that a GoFundMe page has been set up for them (search jonathan-flickinger-memorial).

Like many young families, Jonathan had no life insurance. His young family also has no health insurance benefits because he had taken the CHRO position just a month prior and insurance hadn’t kicked in yet.

“Perhaps your story would move others to donate, which would truly help Jenna, Lydia and Isaiah,” Christopher added.

In short, it’s an HR leader’s nightmare scenario. But if I have learned one thing about HR people, it’s that they live to turn adverse situations into something positive. Jonathan Flickinger was a positive force, a bright, shining beacon of HR’s future whose life and influence on the workplace ended too soon.

Jonathan always wanted to make a difference, his brother said.

Now it’s our turn to rally, to support the recovery of one young family from the HR community. To be game changers. Just like Jonathan.

Rick Bell is Workforce’s Editorial Director. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on January 22, 2018June 29, 2023

The 3rd Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Camera Creep

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

The third nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 might be the creepiest I’ve shared yet.

From the Tampa Bay Times (c/o the ABA Journal):

Attorney James Patrick Stanton, accused of secretly videotaping nude and partially clothed female employees of a Tampa company, has agreed to never practice law again in Florida.

Before a brief hearing today, Stanton signed a consent to disbarment. …

Among those expected to testify at the hearing was former MaintenX employee Jeremy Lenkowski, who was repairing Stanton’s laptop in 2010 when found the videos. …

After leaving the company in 2014, Lenkowski turned the videos over to Tampa police, who arrested Stanton on 123 felony counts of video voyeurism. Prosecutors reduced the charges to misdemeanors, and a judge dismissed them altogether after Stanton’s lawyers argued that the statute of limitations had expired. …

In 2014, five “Janes Does” sued Stanton, MaintenX and other defendants in Hillsborough County Circuit Court. A Tampa attorney representing the women, Steven Parker, said today that the claims against Stanton had been settled confidentially but that neither he nor the women could comment.

And while this is all very disturbing, it’s what I omitted that earns Stanton’s employer, MaintenX, its nomination:

In a lawsuit he later filed, Lenkowski said he told top MaintenX executives about the videotapes but said nothing was done by the company except to remove the cameras and instruct Stanton to get counseling.

If your learn an employee has secretly videotaped women showering, going to the bathroom, and changing clothes at work, and your only reaction is to remove the cameras and send the employee to counseling, you might be the worst employer of 2018.

Previous nominees:

The 1st Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Holy Harasser

The 2nd Nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 Is … the Arresting School Board

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 January 18, 2018June 29, 2023

Employee’s Refusal to Take Drug Test Dooms Discrimination Claim

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

Can an employee, terminated for refusing to submit to a “reasonable suspicion” drug test, sue the employer for discrimination?

According to one recent federal district court opinion (and good ol’ common sense), the answer is no.

James Tombeno worked for FedEx for 22 years as a sales executive. At the time of his hire, Tombeno signed an agreement that required him to submit to drug and alcohol testing upon FedEx’s request.

FedEx required Tombeno to submit to a drug screen after his supervisor smelled marijuana in Tombeno’s work vehicle. When Tombeno refused, FedEx fired him.

The court had little difficulty dismissing Tombeno’s claims of discrimination (age and sex), as well as his claims for hostile work environment harassment, retaliation and breach of contract.
Why did this employer win? Beside the fact the employee refused to take a required drug test, the employer had a policy, to which the employee agreed, that defined when a drug test could be required and the consequences an employee would suffer upon a failed or refused test.

What are some considerations for your workplace drug testing policy? Here are five thoughts:

    1. What is the scope of your policy? When are employees expected to be drug-free? At work? Away from work? How many strikes are employees allowed (i.e., is your policy zero tolerance)?
    2. Under what circumstances can you test employees? Pre-employment (allowed by the ADA for illegal drugs)? Reasonable suspicion (if you reasonably believe, based on objective factors, that an employee might be under the influence)? Periodic or random (but, note that random does not mean at your whim; you need a process to ensure bona fide randomness)? Post-accident (provided there is a reasonable nexus between the accident and potential impairment)?
    3. What are the consequences for failure? Your policy should expressly state the consequences of a positive drug test, or a refusal to submit to, or complete, a test (i.e., termination of employment).
    4. Do you offer resources for employees upon a failed test? The ADA does not protect employees who are under the influence of an illegal substance while at work. Nevertheless, addiction is an ADA-protected disability. Offering assistance to an addicted employee (EAP services, unpaid time off for rehabilitation) will satisfy an employer’s reasonable accommodation requirements for employee-addicts who are not impaired at work.
    5. Do you ensure confidentiality? Drug-test results are medical records protected under the ADA’s confidentiality requirements, and should be treated as such.
The one thing you should not do is drug-test employees without a policy protecting both the act of the drug test itself and any employment actions you take against employees as a result.
If you don’t have a workplace drug testing policy, or aren’t sure that yours is up to snuff, I may know an employment lawyer who’d be happy to draft or review for you.
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 January 3, 2018June 29, 2023

NBC’s New Anti-Harassment Policy Enters the Overreaction Phase

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

When one of your biggest stars loses his high-profile job in one the year’s biggest sexual harassment scandals, how to you react?

With a brand new, and painfully detailed, anti-harassment policy.

Page Six [h/t Kris Dunn] details NBC’s new “Matt Lauer” harassment policy:

NBC has issued strict new anti-sexual harassment rules to employees — including that staffers must snitch on any misbehaving colleagues.

NBC employees have been ordered to report any inappropriate relationships in the workplace — and if they fail to do so, they could be fired for covering up for colleagues.

Detailed rules also have been issued about conduct in the office, including how to socialize and even how to hug colleagues.

If you wish to hug a colleague, you have to do a quick hug, then an immediate release, and step away to avoid body contact.

The snitching part, I’m more than OK with. In fact, it mirrors what the EEOC, and I, have been recommending for months — that moving forward, any anti-harassment program worth its salt must place a serious onus on all employees to report any workplace harassment. As I noted a few months ago, if you’re not taking an active role to stop harassment, you’re complicit in it; and that must stop.
The workplace hugging dance-step chart … is a bit much. This is where common sense has to kick in. If you are comfortable giving a co-worker a hug (really close friends, for example), and you know that co-worker is comfortable receiving the hug, then hug away. If you have any doubts, then don’t hug. It’s really that simple.
To me, this part of NBC’s policy seems like an over-reach. In fact, it seems a bit silly. The one reaction you do not want your employees to have to your anti-harassment policy is laughter. If they reject one part of the policy, you risk them rejecting all of it, which is very dangerous.
I fear that given the revelations of the past few months, we will see more and more employers overreact with policies that try to regulate every aspect of employees’ inter-personal relationships. Until the anti-harassment pendulum swings back to a more reasoned middle ground, we must remain vigilant in rooting out and stopping all workplace harassment, while at the same time not overreaching with policies and regulations that turn employees off from the very real and valuable message we are trying to communicate.
Posted on December 26, 2017June 29, 2023

Helping HR Care for the Business Traveler

Imagine it’s late evening and an unexpected incident has occurred somewhere in the world. Does your company know where its traveling employees are? Could they determine within minutes who was impacted, safe or might need assistance?

business travelIn the year ahead, we expect employee safety and duty of care to remain a top business priority. Businesses will scrutinize their data, systems, processes and procedures to determine how they can improve their ability to ensure employee safety when the unfortunate occurs. Human resources will continue playing an important role in this.

In light of terrorist attacks and natural disasters in an increasingly global economy, business traveler safety is a growing concern. More and more companies are sending their employees out to do business worldwide, meaning employees are entering potentially unpredictable environments and need to be equipped with key safety information, and peace of mind that their employer will be there in the face of an emergency.

Duty of Care in Today’s Organizations

Duty of care responsibilities span multiple departments, including human resources, corporate travel, security and legal. This can mean a lot of gray area and potential confusion around who is ultimately responsible to fulfill this need. A recent report by the Global Business Travel Association Foundation found three in five travel managers rely on travelers to contact them during times of crisis and uncertainty, whereas 58 percent of travelers say they would contact their supervisor, not a travel manager, if in need of support or assistance in such a situation.

In addition to protocol issues, there’s a lack of education and awareness of the tools employees could be provided or how employees should react in the event of a safety incident. Only three in five (62 percent) travelers are given pre-travel information and even fewer (53 percent) are given information on local providers for medical and security assistance services before leaving the country.

Duty of care is a company’s obligation to ensure the safety and security of their employees. In addition to a moral component, it also has both legal and business components HR teams should be aware of:

  • Liability and obligation: Most countries have local regulations requiring employers to provide a safe work environment. With international travel, these legal duty of care obligations aren’t always clear, but legal experts say this does not necessarily mean there are no legal obligations for the health and safety of business travelers abroad.
  • Business risks: By having a meaningful, surefire plan in place, HR professionals are able to protect their greatest assets — their employees — in addition to the business at large. A poorly managed traveler emergency can also negatively impact a business’ competitive advantage, business continuity and financial health.

HR’s Role in the Year Ahead

HR professionals can help alleviate risks and take steps to help ensure the safety of employees:

  1. Develop a cohesive and comprehensive employee safety policy. HR professionals are increasingly responsible for workplace safety and security matters, including program and policy development. To create a comprehensive workplace safety policy, travel risk management must be a core part of it. HR and corporate travel teams should work closely to align travel and on-site safety risk programs and clearly communicate those policies to mitigate employee confusion.
  2. Educate employees on resources and procedures. A key role of HR is to deliver employees the appropriate education and resources to ensure a safe and thriving work environment. The effectiveness of workplace safety and security measures will depend on an organization’s ability to communicate these initiatives. By creating an ongoing employee engagement strategy complemented by resources and training, HR can partner with corporate travel to keep employees educated and up-to-date on travel risk management policies and protocols.
  3. Provide integrated technology solutions employees can access anywhere, anytime. Once employees are on the road, companies need the ability to locate and communicate with them immediately if an incident occurs. Every extra minute spent trying to get in touch could be putting them in greater risk. Organizations that use technology leveraging up-to-date business traveler data and 24/7 monitoring and communications services can rest easy knowing they can help guide employees to safety in the event of a crisis.

Mike Eberhard is the president of Concur, which provides travel, expense and invoice management solutions. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on December 21, 2017July 30, 2018

The 12 Days of Employment Law Christmas (2017 edition)

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer

For the past five Noels, I’ve concluded my posting year with “The 12 Days of Employment Law Christmas.” As this has become a year-end tradition at the blog, I’m sharing it again with updated verses and links. If you’re feeling brave, post a video of yourself singing along.

(Some musical accompaniment)

On the first day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.On the second day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the third day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
3 data breaches,
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the fourth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the fifth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the sixth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the seventh day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the eighth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
8 LGBT discriminators,
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the ninth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
9 OSHA penalties,
8 LGBT discriminators,
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the tenth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
10 FMLA notices,
9 OSHA penalties,
8 LGBT discriminators,
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the eleventh day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
11 employee handbooks,
10 FMLA notices,
9 OSHA penalties,
8 LGBT discriminators,
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

On the twelfth day of Christmas,
my employment lawyer gave to me
12 accommodations,
11 employee handbooks,
10 FMLA notices,
9 OSHA penalties,
8 LGBT discriminators,
7 workplace posters,
6 Facebook firings,
5 harassment claims,
4 collective actions,
3 data breaches
2 labor changes,
and Harvey Weinstein in a pear tree.

Merry Christmas and happy holidays!
I’ll be back on Jan. 3 to kick off 2018 with the first Worst Employer nominee of the new year.

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 December 20, 2017June 29, 2023

Announcing the Worst Employer of 2017

Jon Hyman The Practical Employer
The day has finally arrived. It’s time to announce the Worst Employer of 2017.

To remind you, we had three finalists in contention for this … honor:

  • The Cancerous Boss — An employee was diagnosed with kidney cancer and required immediate surgery to remove the tumor. His employer denied the request for a 10-day leave of absence, while telling him she doesn’t “need people with cancer working in her office … this is America and in America you have to work even if you’re sick.” She finished by informing him that “with your illness, people die and I cannot keep you as a worker not knowing what is going to happen to you.”
  • The Horny Head of HR — A male HR employee complained that the female head of HR nibbled on his ear while romantically whispering, “I hope you’re not going to sue me.” The nibble followed on the heels of her repeatedly telling him about her and her husband’s swinging lifestyle, hugging him against his will, peppering him with questions about his sexual orientation, and sending various inappropriate text messages, including a picture of a man reading the book, “A** Eating Made Simple,” a video of a masturbating monkey, and a picture of a man with an erection going through airport security.
  • The Racist Boss — An African-American employee complains to her boss about his repeated racist comments in the workplace (“We’ll just make the Mexicans do it,” and telling his African-America employees, “Y’all are my b******.”). Thereafter, he Christmas gifts her a rhinestone-studded purse of the Confederate flag and several photos of him posing with said flag.
The final vote wasn’t close. The winner tallied an astounding 66% of all first place votes.
The Worst Employer of 2017 is…
The Cancerous Boss
At the end of the day, I think people’s choices came down an issue to which they could best relate — needing time off to deal with a serious medical issue.
As for me, I awarded my first place vote to The Horny Head of HR. While the misconduct may not be the most egregious among the contenders, if this is how your HR department functions, you have zero chance of success as a employer. The Horny Head of HR had the second most first place votes (18%), but finished third overall in the weighted score.
Which leaves The Racist Boss and his rhinestone studded Stars-and-Bars purse as the runner up, to assume the title in the event The Cancerous Boss cannot fulfill its duties.
This brings 2017’s contest to a close. I hope everyone had fun reading during the course of the year, and learned something along the way.
The contest will resume on Jan. 2 with the first nominee for the Worst Employer of 2018 — The Holy Harasser.
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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