Compliance: Page 53


  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    Littler: Former EEOC general counsel ‘intimidating’ employers over abortion travel benefits

    In a letter to EEOC, Littler claimed Sharon Fast Gustafson sent such messages to “a large number” of U.S. employers, including some of the firm’s clients.

    By Oct. 26, 2022
  • DOL's sign stands outside its headquarters.
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    Thinkstock via Getty Images
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    DOL extends comment period for independent contractor rule after stakeholder pressure

    Business advocates have largely opposed the rule so far, while individual comments appear mixed.

    By Oct. 25, 2022
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    Justin Sullivan via Getty Images
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    Lawsuit alleges Tesla HR, managers ignored ‘obscene and misogynistic’ music at work

    The music contributed to a sexually hostile work environment, the former employee said.

    By Oct. 24, 2022
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    Courtesy of Crush Dynamics
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    DOL: Grape grower illegally gave preference to H-2A visa holders over US workers

    “The wages and hours afforded to migrant workers in the H-2A program cannot shortchange U.S. workers,” a DOL district director said.

    By Oct. 21, 2022
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    Zach Gibson via Getty Images
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    IRS increases 401(k) contribution limit to $22,500 for 2023

    Retirement planning has become a source of stress for workers more than two years into the pandemic.

    By Updated Oct. 21, 2022
  • A shot of blurred taxi in front of a UPS truck
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    Spencer Platt via Getty Images
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    11th Circuit: UPS worker’s FMLA case fell apart due to lack of documentation

    The worker submitted a one-page document without much of the required information, the court found.

    By Oct. 20, 2022
  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    EEOC: Supervisor fired employee for having a panic attack, violating ADA

    A company will pay $175,000 to settle a lawsuit alleging it told a staffing company that an employee had a “nervous breakdown” and that it wished to end her assignment.

    By Laurel Kalser • Oct. 20, 2022
  • 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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    Not so fast: EEOC quickly updates revised poster

    The revised poster may result in an increase in the number of discrimination charges filed by employees, according to one management-side attorney.

    By Updated Oct. 21, 2022
  • A Christmas tree with red and gold ornaments and decorative lights in the background is pictured.
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    Liliboas via Getty Images
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    Workers fired for hosting Christmas party during COVID-19 fail to show religious discrimination

    The 6th Circuit upheld a lower court’s ruling, noting that the two plaintiffs were the only employees in attendance to be terminated.

    By Oct. 18, 2022
  • An image of the White House.
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    Vacclav/iStock via Getty Images
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    What the White House’s ‘AI Bill of Rights’ blueprint could mean for HR tech

    The use of AI in hiring, recruiting and surveillance has shifted from a topic of speculation to tangible reality for many workplaces.

    By Oct. 18, 2022
  • The Justice Department building on a foggy morning in Washington, DC.
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    Samuel Corum/Getty Images via Getty Images
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    DOJ: HR racially harassed employee for reporting ‘abhorrent’ misconduct

    A Bartow County employee complained after a co-worker used a racial slur in a text message, the agency alleged in a lawsuit.

    By Oct. 17, 2022
  • A workplace poster published by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is displayed featuring the EEOC logo.
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    Kate Tornone/HR Dive
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    EEOC’s year-end lawsuit frenzy was more of a flop. So what’s next?

    Despite the judicial rejections of its Bostock guidance, one attorney predicts the agency will double down on fighting LGBTQ discrimination.

    By Oct. 17, 2022
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    David Ryder via Getty Images
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    Seattle, Uber Eats reach $3.3M settlement in gig worker pay case

    In the largest settlement under the city’s COVID-19 Gig Worker Premium Pay Ordinance, the aggregator will pay thousands of workers for alleged violations. 

    By Aneurin Canham-Clyne • Oct. 17, 2022
  • law
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    Al Drago via Getty Images
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    Deep Dive

    SCOTUS ponders: Should a worker making $200K annually be overtime-exempt?

    A small wrinkle in the FLSA’s exemption for highly compensated employees poses a conundrum for the high court.

    By Oct. 14, 2022
  • A man and a woman dressed as a chef look at a tablet.
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    Wavebreakmedia via Getty Images
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    DOL: 2 Boston restaurants to pay $195K for minimum wage, OT violations

    “Too often, we find violations like these in the food service industry,” a DOL spokesperson said.

    By Oct. 13, 2022
  • A female driver holds the wheel of a truck wearing high visibility clothing.
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    davidf via Getty Images
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    EEOC: Staffing firms cannot acquiesce to discriminatory hiring requests

    “The customer is not always right,” Kimberly Cruz, EEOC assistant regional attorney in New York, told HR Dive.

    By Laurel Kalser • Oct. 13, 2022
  • Supreme Court of the United States exterior
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    SCOTUS won’t decide whether employer violated FMLA by discouraging leave

    A corrections officer alleged his employer threatened him with discipline if he took more time off, so he retired.

    By Oct. 12, 2022
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    Scott Olson via Getty Images
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    Jury awards $250K to Sam’s Club employee who alleged retaliation for reporting harassment

    The employer said it fired the plaintiff because it received a complaint about her, but a jury concluded the termination was retaliatory.

    By Oct. 11, 2022
  • DOL's sign stands outside its headquarters.
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    Thinkstock via Getty Images
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    DOL proposes ‘totality-of-the-circumstances’ test for independent contractors

    Whereas a Trump-era rule established a set of two “core factors,” DOL said its new proposal scraps that idea.

    By Updated Oct. 11, 2022
  • A general view of Exxonmobil or Exxon Mobil refinery in the Port of Rotterdam on April 23, 2020 in Rotterdam, Netherlands.
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    Dean Mouhtaropoulos via Getty Images
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    OSHA: ExxonMobil must rehire employees fired over Wall Street Journal leaks

    A federal whistleblower investigation found the workers were illegally fired, and ExxonMobil owes them more than $800,000 in damages, OSHA said.

    By Oct. 10, 2022
  • 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’s war of words continues as 2nd court strikes down LGBTQ guidance

    “Agencies are not all-powerful,” Commissioner Andrea Lucas wrote in support of the injunction.

    By Oct. 10, 2022
  • U.S. President Joe Biden hands a pen to former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson in the East Room of the White House, surrounded by people.
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    Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
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    Deep Dive

    Are NDAs on the way out?

    As the fifth anniversary of the #MeToo movement nears, Congress is making moves to dismantle some of the workplace roadblocks that brought it about.

    By Oct. 10, 2022
  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission exterior
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    Lawmakers accuse EEOC of ‘partisanship and mismanagement’

    The Sept. 27 inquiry from two high-ranking Republicans comes as the Biden administration looks to cement a Democratic majority on the commission.

    By Updated Oct. 6, 2022
  • A group of coworkers stand together in the office happily
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    SolStock via Getty Images
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    EEOC: Employers cannot favor ‘early career’ hires over older candidates

    There are lawful ways to attract and hire younger workers, but not by setting more difficult standards for older workers or rejecting them because of their age, EEOC warned in a lawsuit last week.

    By Laurel Kalser • Oct. 5, 2022
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    Win McNamee via Getty Images
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    SCOTUS won’t hear challenge to health worker vaccine mandate

    In January, the high court upheld the CMS rule mandating that healthcare workers be vaccinated against COVID-19 at medical facilities that receive federal funding.

    By Hailey Mensik • Oct. 4, 2022