Compliance: Page 44


  • Serious woman of color is listening to her peer
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    Alex Green / Pexels

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    Job seekers want ‘ethical’ employers. But what does that mean?

    Employees are looking for commitments to sustainability and transparency, among other things.

    By May 24, 2023
  • A female worker leans against the counter looking frustrated at a coffee bar with her head on her hand.
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    ljubaphoto via Getty Images
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    Young female employees harassed at multiple San Diego restaurant locations, EEOC alleges

    A suit filed May 17 involves nine locations of Swami’s Café and Honey’s Bistro.

    By May 23, 2023
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    AndreyPopov via Getty Images
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    Paycor miscalculated employee pay, client alleges in lawsuit seeking $570K

    The alleged breach of contract resulted in overpayments, Eagle Express said.

    By Updated May 25, 2023
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    Alex Wong / Staff via Getty Images
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    3 things HR needs to know about the end of remote I-9 document review

    The COVID-era policy ends July 31, and employers have just a few additional weeks to work through any backlog.

    By May 22, 2023
  • Greying, brown man uses laptop to work at home
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    FG Trade via Getty Images
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    6 do’s and don’ts for a return-to-work program

    Two leave experts from Sedgwick outlined how employers should approach return-to-work programs in a Thursday webinar for the Disability Management Employer Coalition.

    By May 22, 2023
  • Employers can’t cut pay to limit overtime costs, 11th Cir. opinion shows

    An employee plausibly alleged his employer used “prohibited arithmetic” to calculate overtime pay, in violation of the FLSA, the appeals court said.

    By May 19, 2023
  • A close-up of a semi-faceless Black person with braids
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    Anna Stills via Getty Images
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    Kaiser settles suit claiming branch ignored use of racial slur

    HR is obligated to go further than having an anti-racist policy, EEOC reminded employers.

    By May 18, 2023
  • 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 issues guide to auditing AI for discrimination

    The document cautions employers that they may be responsible for such tools even if designed and administered by a vendor.

    By May 18, 2023
  • College campus building
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    Rawf8/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
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    ADP settles lawsuit alleging background check incorrectly reported job seeker was a drug dealer

    The lawsuit was proposed as a class action representing potentially “hundreds of thousands of individuals.”

    By Updated Nov. 15, 2023
  • A sign marks the location of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's Local Office in Savannah, Georgia on September 17, 2022.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    EEOC: End of public health emergency doesn’t mean the end of COVID accommodations

    The agency cautioned employers against revoking COVID-related ADA accommodations without an individualized assessment.

    By May 16, 2023
  • A close-up of an Uber app.
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    Matthew Horwood/Getty Images via Getty Images
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    Uber drivers are not exempt from arbitrating wage and hour claims, 3rd Cir. rules

    Over the past few years, Uber has been embroiled in a number of misclassification cases, some ending in high-priced payouts.

    By Laurel Kalser • May 16, 2023
  • Corporate logos are seen outside  on May 15, 2006, in Macclesfield, England.
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    Christopher Furlong via Getty Images
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    Court shoots down former AstraZeneca employee’s religious, disability discrimination COVID-19 vaccine case

    The court dismissed the case because the worker did not show proof of a disability or of a religious opposition to vaccination.

    By May 15, 2023
  • Photograph of the UMass Memorial Medical Center University Hospital at dawn.
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    "UMMMC Dawn" by Cxw1044 is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
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    UMass Memorial agrees to pay $1.2M to settle FLSA claims stemming from Kronos outage

    A ransomware attack took the UKG product offline for weeks and has spawned several lawsuits.

    By May 15, 2023
  • Image of a phone and headset
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    iStock / Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
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    E-ZPass operator, staffing agency will pay $120K to settle claim they fired worker for hearing disability

    An EEOC attorney said employers can’t “hide behind staffing agencies” to evade the ADA’s requirements.

    By May 15, 2023
  • A snapshot of regulatory text describes EEOC's enforcement objectives.
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    Jon Frederick/iStock/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
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    Maryland HVAC contractor settles equal-pay suit for $210K

    An Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claimed Mechanical Design Systems paid a woman project manager half as much as men.

    By Joe Bousquin • May 15, 2023
  • Keith Powers, of the New York City Council, presides over a meeting with an American flag to his left and a man seated to his right.
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    Screenshot taken during virtual meeting. 

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    NYC bans employment discrimination based on weight and height

    The law, signed earlier this year, takes effect Wednesday.

    By Updated May 26, 2023
  • The Theodore Roosevelt Federal Building that houses the Office of Personnel Management headquarters in Washington, D.C.
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    \Mark Wilson / Staff via Getty Images
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    Feds propose salary history ban for federal workers

    The U.S. Office of Personnel Management director expressed a desire to make the government a “national leader in pay equity.”

    By May 12, 2023
  • racetrac
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    Retrieved from Racetrac website.
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    RaceTrac sued by former employee over medical leave rights

    The worker, who had a stroke last summer, was fired in February for “excessive absences,” which they claim violates the Family and Medical Leave Act.

    By Brett Dworski • May 12, 2023
  • A photo of Starbucks workers participating in a strike in Nottingham, Maryland, Nov. 17, 2022
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    Permission granted by Aleah Bacetti
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    Starbucks union faces 2 decertification petitions in New York

    The petitions are unlikely to result in elections to remove the union from the stores, but Starbucks’ hardball tactics may be working. 

    By Aneurin Canham-Clyne • May 11, 2023
  • An exterior view of a Hobby Lobby store
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    Joe Raedle via Getty Images
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    Hobby Lobby settles EEOC claim involving service dog for $50,000

    A Kansas-area store refused to allow a worker to use her service dog as a reasonable accommodation for anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, the agency alleged.

    By May 10, 2023
  • A close-up of the creamy exterior of the Department of Labor building.
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    DOL poster updates include breast milk pumping breaks for exempt employees

    The agency also refreshed its Family and Medical Leave Act poster.

    By May 9, 2023
  • The front facade of a courthouse is shown, bearing the words "John Minor Wisdom United States Court of Appeals Building Fifth Circuit"
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    Rex_Wholster via Getty Images
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    5th Cir.: FMLA leave doesn’t ‘immunize’ employees from termination

    A sheriff’s department employee who took FMLA leave a few days before she was slated for termination wasn’t entitled to reinstatement when her leave ended, the appeals court held.

    By Laurel Kalser • May 9, 2023
  • image of Goldman Sachs logo on wall with red background.
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    Michael M. Santiago/ via Getty Images
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    Goldman Sachs to pay $215M to settle gender discrimination case

    The Wall Street giant will engage an independent expert to review performance evaluation and pay practice to check for gender pay gaps.

    By Rajashree Chakravarty • May 9, 2023
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    Joe Raedle via Getty Images
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    DeSantis inks Florida E-Verify law for private employers

    While champions say it will increase national security and protect jobs, others think the new legislation will harm sectors that rely on immigrant labor.

    By Zachary Phillips • Updated May 11, 2023
  • Students walk across the University of Michigan campus
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    Bill Pugliano via Getty Images
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    Jury may decide whether supervisor was fired for opposing disability discrimination

    The late employee argued the University of Michigan retaliated against her for standing up for a worker with disabilities.

    By May 8, 2023