San Jose voters will decide this fall whether to raise the minimum wage for workers in the city to $10 per hour, instead of the state minimum wage of $8 per hour.
The initiative on the November 2012 ballot would also propose tying the minimum wage in San Jose to the Consumer Price Index, which means the minimum wage would rise in future years along with the cost of living.
Currently, San Francisco set a minimum wage of $10.24 per hour for employees who work in the city. This rate is tied to the Consumer Price Index for urban wage earners in the San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose metropolitan statistical area.
Other cities and counties also enacted living wage ordinances that govern contracts with the local government entities.
Michael Allen
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Tags: living wage ordinance, raise minimum wage, San Francisco, San Jose, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, Minimum Wage
The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recently issued final rules implementing whistleblower provisions of two acts:
Tags: Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, federal OSHA, OHSA, Surface Transportation Assistance Act, whistleblower protection, HR Allen Consulting Services, discrimination, HR Informant, employee
The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) recently reported that it reached a settlement with a military vehicle manufacturing company that allegedly fired an employee because he was morbidly obese.
According to the EEOC, the disability discrimination provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) protect morbidly obese employees and applicants. “So long as an employee can perform the essential job duties of a position, with or without reasonable accommodation, the employee should be allowed to work on the same basis as any non-obese employees. Employers cannot fire disabled employees based on perceptions and prejudice.”
The employee weighed nearly 700 pounds at the time he was fired. The EEOC alleged that the employee was qualified to perform the essential job functions of his material handler position. The EEOC also alleged that the company did not engage in any discussions to determine if reasonable accommodations were available.
The EEOC asserted that the employee’s morbid obesity substantially limited him in one or more major life activities and rendered him “disabled” under the ADA Amendments Act of 2008 (ADAAA). The EEOC further asserted that the company “regarded” the employee’s morbid obesity as a disability, even if a court should hold that obesity was not a disability within the meaning of the ADA.
The company will pay the employee $55,000 and provide him with six months of outplacement services. The settlement also requires the company to provide training to managers on equal employment opportunity compliance, disability discrimination law and responsibilities regarding reasonable accommodation.
Tags: ADA, Americans with Disabilities Act, employer, ADA Amendments Act of 2008, ADAAA, obesity, reasonable accommodation, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, disability discrimination
A California Chamber of Commerce-opposed bill mandating private non-unionized employers that do not offer a retirement plan to enroll their employees in a government-created defined benefits plan will be heard in the Assembly Appropriations Committee on August 8.
SB 1234 (DeLeón and Steinberg) subjects employers to significant cost, fiduciary responsibilities and liability with no commensurate benefit to employees by requiring employers without a retirement plan to enroll their workers in the new “California Secure Choice Retirement Savings Program” or pay a penalty of $250 per employee.
Small Business Burden
The new risks mandated by SB 1234 (which applies to employers with as few as five workers) could be particularly harmful to small businesses that can’t afford the added liability, including the duty to properly educate employees about the retirement options available so the employees can make an informed decision.
Employer Liability
Retirement plans for private sector employees are regulated by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), which subjects participants to significant responsibilities and requires every employer participating in the program to file annual reports and actuarial valuations.
According to a recent legal opinion, employers participating in the program would be subject to these ERISA requirements and would incur significant fiduciary responsibilities.
Citing U.S. Department of Labor advisory opinions, the legal opinion concludes that under SB 1234 “each employer sponsor of a plan that participates in the arrangement will be subject to ERISA’s fiduciary provisions.”
Among other responsibilities, California businesses would be personally liable to make good to the plan any losses resulting from any breach of the new fiduciary responsibilities.
Action Needed
The CalChamber and a coalition of businesses, insurers and employer groups argue that the effort, liability and expense of SB 1234 are unnecessary given that California already has a highly competitive retirement savings market. The CalChamber is urging members to contact legislators and ask them to oppose creating the new retirement program in SB 1234.
Tags: small employers, ERISA, private pension, private pension mandate, SB 1234, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant
Employees filed a record number of federal wage-and-hour lawsuits under the Fair Labor and Standards Act (FLSA) from March 31, 2011, to March 31, 2012, according to a chart released by Seyfarth Shaw LLP. The figures were confirmed by the Federal Judicial Center.
FLSA wage-and-hour claims exploded over the past decade — more than tripling since 2002 when only 2,035 claims were filed.
The claims forming the bulk of these numbers include misclassification of employees, alleged uncompensated “work” performed off the clock and miscalculation of overtime pay, according to Richard L. Alfred, chair of Seyfarth Shaw’s wage-and-hour litigation practice.
As employers in California are all too aware, wage-and-hour lawsuits brought under California’s labor laws increased similarly in recent years. This year, California employers received welcome guidance from the California Supreme Court in one area of wage-and-hour litigation — meal and rest periods — in the Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court decision.
Tags: misclassification of employees, wage and hour lawsuits, work off the clock, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, overtime pay, Fair Labor Standards Act, FLSA
Interns can be an excellent source of inexpensive — or even free — labor for small businesses. In the ideal scenario, everyone wins: Your company gets a helping hand, and the intern gains professional experience.
Tags: HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, Hiring, GoOverseas.com, interns, internship programs, training
When it’s time to sell your business, one immediate concern should be how to address the issue with your employees. Business owners and experts are divided on the best approach to take. Some assert that you should be completely transparent from the outset. Others contend that knowing a sale is imminent may adversely affect morale and productivity. Here’s a look at both options.
Do your employees frequently head out the door at the end of the workday without having completed many of the tasks on their to-do lists?
These staffers probably aren’t slacking off intentionally. It’s more likely that they’re bombarded with email and other distractions, notes Elene Cafasso, founder and president of Enerpace Inc., an executive coaching firm near Chicago. “Now that technology has us available 24/7, we never have time to think,” she says.
Although it may be frustrating to acknowledge low productivity among your staffers, there’s good news: Setting a few simple boundaries can help your employees focus and finish those projects you’ve been waiting for.
Here are four easy ways to get your employees back on track:
- Invest in headphones. To help workers tune out office conversations and clamor, offer them a pair of noise-cancelling headphones. Better yet, let them buy their own and expense the purchase. “You’ll get a much better buy-in if the employee selects the headphones they want most, rather than giving them a pair,” notes Steve Deckert, marketing manager and rewards specialist at Sweet Tooth, an Ontario, Canada-based developer of e-commerce tools. The company’s team of 20 works in close quarters, and each new employee is allowed to pick out a set of high-end cans to help them stay focused on the job.
- Set “office hours.” If co-workers continually interrupt one another with questions, create a schedule that gives them time to work alone and time to answer questions, Cafasso suggests. For example, ask everyone to remain at their own desks from 8 to 10 a.m., then allow for a half hour of open conversation to address questions and concerns. After that, it’s back to working solo until the next scheduled “office hours.”
- Use time-management software. If your employees spend hours at the computer, helping them fight online distractions can boost their output. There are many time-management apps out there; finding the best fit for your office will depend on your specific needs. Sweet Tooth uses Strict Pomodoro, a Google Chrome extension with a timer countdown. For 25 minutes, certain websites, such as Facebook, are blocked. After that, a five-minute break kicks in.
- Establish an email policy. Email is probably the worst offender when it comes to interruptions, Cafasso notes. To counter time lost on electronic communications, consider setting an email policy. If your employees don’t need to answer email immediately as part of their job, designate two or three blocks of time during the day for checking and responding to business-related email.
Tags: Productivity, distractions
On July 23, 2012, in Harris v. Superior Court (Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.), a case that the California Supreme Court previously had reversed and remanded, the California Court of Appeal stuck by its prior conclusion and held that insurance claims adjusters do not qualify for the administrative exemption from overtime pay requirements.
Tags: administrative exemption, overtime claims, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, California Court of Appeals, California Supreme Court
California Attorney General Kamala Harris announced today that the state Department of Justice created a new Privacy Enforcement and Protection Unit. The new Privacy Unit will focus on protecting consumer and individual privacy through civil prosecution of state and federal privacy laws, according to a statement from the attorney general.
The Privacy Unit will enforce laws regulating the collection, retention, disclosure and destruction of private or sensitive information by individuals, organizations and the government. This includes laws relating to cyber privacy, health privacy, financial privacy, identity theft, government records and data breaches.
The Privacy Unit will be housed in the state’s eCrime Unit and will include six prosecutors who will concentrate on privacy enforcement.
Tags: California Attorney General, cyber privacy, privacy enforcement, privacy laws, sensitive information, HR Allen Consulting Services, HR Informant, Privacy