Roundup: Employment law predictions; Paid sick leave; TRAP provisions for employee training; When to investigate; FMLA leave and problem employees

NEWSLETTER VOLUME 2.2

January 15, 2024

Salary.com Compensation and Pay Equity Law Review

 

Welcome to Salary.com's Compensation and Pay Equity Law Review.   

  

Our editor, employment lawyer Heather Bussing, is tracking legislation, cases, and analysis to give you the latest critical HR topics.

 

This week we're answering the questions:

  • What happens if you give employment lawyers a pretend crystal ball and ask them to predict what's coming in labor and employment law?
  • Why can't updating paid sick leave laws be easy?
  • What is a TRAP provision relating to employee training?
  • Why does Heather think TRAP provisions are evil?
  • Do you really have to investigate every employee complaint?
  • What do you do when you are ready to fire a problem employee and they go out on FMLA leave?
January 9th, 2024
Law is based on political boundaries. Although political boundaries are completely made up, the legal system has mostly worked because our human existence was based on people, places, and things. That's not so true anymore. And it shows.
January 10th, 2024
Paid sick leave is a good thing. It helps sick employees recover faster and not spread illness to the rest of the people they work with. But dealing with paid sick leave laws means looking at all paid leave laws that apply and making sure that your sick leave and vacation policies work together.
January 11th, 2024
Employers have paid to train their employees since there were employees and employers needed them to do things that required new knowledge or skills. It's part of being an employer and part of the cost of doing business. Don't try to retain employees by threatening with the cost of paying for training they received if they leave.
No? Fine.
January 12th, 2024
Most employees don't want to make complaints because it creates drama, conflict, is disruptive, and it rarely goes well for the employees involved. How many employment investigations end in a clear finding of misconduct, discrimination, or harassment? Not many. So, first you need to figure out what's really going on.
January 15th, 2024
Sometimes employees who are on protected leave use the leave to buy themselves time when they are already in trouble and about to get fired.
By the time the employee is "ready" to return, they have often depleted the patience of even the most serene HR professionals. (Usually the lawyers too.) The temptation is to just tell the employee, "Good luck in your future endeavors" and deal with the fallout.

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