Compliance: Page 17


  • The headquarters of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Washington, D.C.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    Home care agency settles allegations it accommodated ‘race-based requests’ for aides

    The home health aide provider allegedly terminated the assignments of Black and Hispanic aides to accommodate patients’ and family members’ racial preferences, EEOC said.

    By Sept. 25, 2024
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    Philipp Tur/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
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    Major companies keep hiring North Korean IT workers

    Dozens of Fortune 100 organizations have inadvertently hired workers from North Korea applying for remote jobs, Mandiant said.

    By Matt Kapko • Sept. 25, 2024
  • The front view of a gray municipal building, a sign reads, "William L. Guy Federal Building Post Office and United States Courthouse".
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    Jack Dura/AP

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    Judge stops EEOC from enforcing pregnancy rule, harassment guidance against Catholic association

    The association, which includes 1,400 employers, objected to legal requirements related to abortion, infertility treatments, pronoun usage and single-sex spaces.

    By Sept. 24, 2024
  • A farmworker in protective layers bends over to pick produce.
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    Mario Tama via Getty Images
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    Agricultural employer group sues to block rule strengthening H-2A worker protections

    The rule, which bars employers from retaliating against organizing efforts among temporary farmworkers, has already been overturned in 17 states.

    By Sarah Zimmerman • Sept. 24, 2024
  • The ADP logo is visible on an office building exterior.
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    Michael Vi via Getty Images
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    False felony conviction on ADP background check tanked candidate’s job offer, suit alleges

    The company’s screening services have been the subject of several lawsuits in recent years.

    By Updated Sept. 24, 2024
  • An exterior view of a court house.
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    PierreDesrosiers via Getty Images
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    EEOC: Employer refused remote work for employee who had stroke, violating ADA

    Working on site was not an essential function of the employee’s job responding to customer inquiries, according to the lawsuit.

    By Laurel Kalser • Sept. 23, 2024
  • A sign advertises job openings at McDonald's starting at $12 per hour.
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    Joe Raedle / Staff via Getty Images
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    North American firms are largely transparent on pay — mostly thanks to regulators, WTW finds

    Jurisdictions in 15 states and Washington, D.C., mandate pay transparency, and some also mandate pay data collection.

    By Sept. 20, 2024
  • Wide exterior shot of an "All Day Medical Care Clinic" beige office building with lots of windows, surrounded by a parking lot, on a sunny day.
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    Retrieved from All Day Medical Care Clinic on September 19, 2024
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    Clinic settles ADA claim alleging it fired worker on her first day

    The company’s CEO allegedly told the employee “she should have disclosed her disability and need for accommodation during her interview.”

    By Sept. 19, 2024
  • Patagonia store closed for voting sign on door
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    Permission granted by Patagonia
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    Election 2024

    40% of states mandate paid time off to vote — but some employers go a step further

    Only 29% of U.S. adults said their company has a voting leave policy, according to the results of a recent survey by Brightmine.

    By Sept. 19, 2024
  • Newspapers stacked for sale.
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    Joe Raedle / Staff via Getty Images
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    Court tosses journalists’ ‘reverse discrimination’ challenge to Gannett’s diversity policy

    The plaintiffs still have a chance to amend their complaint to sufficiently allege a cause of action for disparate treatment, the court said.

    By Laurel Kalser • Sept. 17, 2024
  • A close-up image of a person in brightly colored safety gear writing on a clipboard.
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    Thank you for your assistant via Getty Images
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    Generation Z employees are more willing to bend the rules to ‘get the job done,’ survey says

    Generational gaps in ethics and compliance could lead to unique challenges for companies with multi-generational workforces, a new report finds. 

    By Carolyn Crist • Sept. 17, 2024
  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission exterior
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    EEOC claims employer treated workers’ failure to return from FMLA leave as ‘voluntary resignation’

    Exhaustion of FMLA leave does not necessarily preclude additional leave under the ADA, the commission and federal courts have said previously.

    By Sept. 16, 2024
  • Age and pay bias charges are a problem for the tech industry, EEOC says

    The industry’s diversity has “barely changed in a generation,” Chair Charlotte Burrows said Wednesday.

    By Sept. 16, 2024
  • A Chuck E. Cheese sign.
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    Justin Sullivan via Getty Images
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    Chuck E. Cheese parent company sued over workplace sexual harassment

    A 17-year-old employee alleged she was inappropriately touched by a manager over a period of months while working at a West Virginia Chuck E. Cheese.

    By Aneurin Canham-Clyne • Sept. 13, 2024
  • A person walks toward the door of the U.S. Department of Labor building.
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    Kate Tornone/HR Dive
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    5th Circuit signs off on DOL’s overtime salary basis test

    The court’s decision may not be the last word on the issue, however, one attorney told HR Dive.

    By Sept. 13, 2024
  • The exterior of the Labor Department building, with a sign that says "United States Department of Labor"
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    Alex Wong via Getty Images
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    3rd Circuit revives lawsuit against DOL’s home care wage-and-hour final rule

    The agency argued that a lawsuit filed by several home care companies was barred by a federal statute of limitations, but the court disagreed, overturning a district court decision.

    By Sept. 12, 2024
  • The headquarters of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Washington, D.C.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    EEOC: Barber school said having two pregnant workers wasn’t in its ‘best interest’

    An applicant was rejected for a hair braider position based on her pregnancy, the lawsuit alleged.

    By Sept. 11, 2024
  • EEOC settles 3 construction harassment cases for a combined $2.9M

    The federal workplace watchdog took enforcement actions against Florida-based J.A. Croson, New Jersey's Asphalt Paving Systems and Balfour Beatty's U.S. infrastructure arm.

    By Joe Bousquin • Sept. 9, 2024
  • Pallets of baby formula are unloaded from a FedEx cargo plane upon arrival at Dulles International Airport on May 25, 2022, from Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
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    Drew Angerer via Getty Images
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    FedEx required employees with disabilities to be 100% healed, EEOC claims

    The company placed employees on leave even when they could perform essential job functions with or without a reasonable accommodation, per the suit.

    By Sept. 9, 2024
  • The Potter Stewart U.S. Federal Courthouse, location of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
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    LeMay, Warren. (2019). "Potter Stewart US Federal Courthouse, Cincinnati, OH" [Photograph]. Retrieved from Flickr.
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    6th Circuit revives ADA suit alleging Ohio plant failed to accommodate employee with COPD

    An automotive painting company allegedly failed to conduct an “individualized inquiry” into the employee’s actual breathing limitations, the court said.

    By Laurel Kalser • Sept. 9, 2024
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    Brian Tucker/HR Dive
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    Mailbag: We rejected a job candidate. When can we delete their information?

    General guidance on this question differs depending on whether the employer is a government contractor, management-side attorneys told HR Dive.

    By Sept. 9, 2024
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    Stock photo via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    7 issues to consider when conducting layoffs

    Employers should be aware of their rights and obligations in these difficult situations and plan carefully, write Tamsin Kaplan and Michelle Cassorla of law firm Davis Malm.

    By Tamsin Kaplan and Michelle Cassorla • Sept. 6, 2024
  • A building is seen from a parking lot with a sign that reads "UKG."
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    Photo: Obtained by Industry Dive

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    Judge sides with UKG in assisted living company’s Kronos outage lawsuit

    Aegis Senior Communities LLC failed to show that UKG committed gross negligence and fraud amid a 2021 ransomware attack, a California district court found.

    By Sept. 6, 2024
  • A construction worker works at a job site with palm trees in the background.
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    Mario Tama / Staff via Getty Images
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    This week in 5 numbers: Employers to evaluate worker experience, safety

    Here’s a roundup of eye-catching numbers, from the percentage of workers uncomfortable providing feedback to HR to the growing Hispanic labor force.

    By Sept. 5, 2024
  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    Longtime EEOC employee alleges discrimination by agency

    The employee, an enforcement manager, said the agency perpetrated gender, race and national origin discrimination when it passed her over for a promotion, according to a lawsuit.

    By Sept. 4, 2024