Compliance: Page 93
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SCOTUS won't hear ex-Walgreens employee's religious discrimination case
Though the case raised two important Title VII issues, it "does not present a good vehicle" to examine them, one justice wrote.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 26, 2020 -
Fitness instructor fired 'only hours' after filing complaint can continue retaliation, bias charge
While timing alone can establish a prima facie case of retaliation, it's not always enough to carry a claim.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 26, 2020 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Adeline Kon/HR DiveTrendlineInside the rapidly changing world of compliance
The HR landscape is ever-shifting, leaving compliance professionals to meet today’s requirements while keeping an eye on the future.
By HR Dive staff -
2nd Cir.: Sales rep with migraines triggered by work had no ADA disability
A disability is a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, according to the federal law.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 26, 2020 -
Senior living company to pay $2M to settle suit alleging '100% healed' policy
The news follows a spate of EEOC suits and settlements targeting similar policies in recent years.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 26, 2020 -
NLRB finalizes joint employer rule
The rule effectively overturns the joint-employer standard established by the Obama-era NLRB's 2015 decision in Browning-Ferris Industries.
By Ryan Golden • Updated Feb. 25, 2020 -
US women's soccer players seek summary judgment, could be due $66M, economist says
The U.S. Soccer Federation shot back, however, saying the "plaintiffs want the court to force U.S. Soccer into paying them as though they negotiated a different contract."
By Sheryl Estrada • Feb. 25, 2020 -
JPMorgan Chase sued for allegedly placing black bankers at lower-income branches
They were also allegedly denied the opportunity, based on their assignments, to participate in a lucrative "Private Client" program.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 24, 2020 -
1 year between complaint and firing doesn't show bias, 5th Cir. says
Employers that can appropriately justify discipline may be in a good position to defend themselves even if temporal distance is minimal, however.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 21, 2020 -
New Jersey proposal would mandate discrimination, harassment policies
The bill continues a trend among state and local governments, particularly those governed by Democratic majorities.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 21, 2020 -
Wendy's pays $400K to settle Massachusetts child labor charges
Several of the nation's biggest restaurant chains have been charged with violating Massachusetts' child labor laws.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 20, 2020 -
Ulta pays $1.75M to settle suit involving off-the-clock work claims
The settlement will cover 23,767 class members. The average estimated payment rings in at $44.38, with the largest payment at $222.45.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 19, 2020 -
California Apple employees owed pay for time spent waiting on bag checks
A state court said the workers were "clearly" subject to Apple's control during the waiting time.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 19, 2020 -
Google engineer's complaint about diversity was protected, NLRB says
Although some of the comments were "somewhat insensitive towards women and minorities," protections still applied, the Board said.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 19, 2020 -
Professor's poor treatment wasn't discrimination, 11th Cir. rules
The court noted an employer may fire a worker for a "good reason, a bad reason, a reason based on erroneous fact, or for no reason at all, as long as its action is not a discriminatory reason."
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 18, 2020 -
Advocacy group moves to protect Glassdoor poster identity
The company that filed suit said it believes negative comments on the job reviewing site are a breach of the contract former employees signed.
By Aman Kidwai • Updated Feb. 18, 2020 -
Alleged plan to remove 'old-timers' wasn't enough to keep age suit alive
For stray remarks to defeat a motion for summary judgment, they must closely relate in time to the adverse action, the 7th Cir. said.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 17, 2020 -
Wells Fargo ends mandatory arbitration of sex harassment claims
The bank's head of HR said the decision is "appropriate" as treatment of sexual harassment claims becomes a more prominent issue for businesses.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 13, 2020 -
Employer adopts hiring goal to resolve claim it hired 155 men, 5 women
Among other things, EEOC alleged the employer's physical tests had a disparate impact on female applicants.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 13, 2020 -
NYC to pay EMTs, paramedics $14.5M in overtime suit
With a new salary threshold in place, it's a good time for employers to audit overtime practices, sources previously told HR Dive.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 12, 2020 -
EEOC to prioritize 'robust' compliance assistance, new chair says
A focus on compliance assistance over enforcement is standard for agencies operating under Republican administrations, experts say.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 12, 2020 -
Gallup: A third of college faculty feel respected at work
Those in higher education aren't the only ones feeling disrespected; 90% of workers in a previous poll reported being bullied in the workplace.
By Valerie Bolden-Barrett • Feb. 12, 2020 -
Stray remarks — even if 'offensive' — didn't show discrimination, 5th Cir. says
Regardless, sources have said HR pros may want to conduct training to prevent stereotyping.
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 11, 2020 -
'Snubbing' from supervisors is not discrimination, 7th Cir. finds
A Wisconsin state worker alleged she endured poor treatment — including eye-rolling and non-material changes to her job — from a new supervisor.
By Jennifer Carsen • Feb. 11, 2020 -
The ability to stay awake is an ADA essential function, 5th Cir. says
The court said an employer was entitled to fire a personnel manager for violating its "alertness policy."
By Lisa Burden • Feb. 10, 2020 -
Quick tips for employers as coronavirus outbreak continues
U.S. employers need not overreact to this news — overreaction may, in fact, cause compliance troubles, one source told HR Dive.
By Katie Clarey • Feb. 7, 2020