Wednesday, October 28, 2009

A World Series wager


Phillies-Logo Anyone who knows me or who’s been a faithful reader knows that I grew up in Philly and avidly root for all of its teams. Fellow employment law blogger Dan Schwartz (of the Connecticut Employment Law Blog) has a similar affection for his New York teams. For our two blogs, tonight’s World Series is the perfect storm, which has led to the following wager – the loser has to write a post on his blog praising the winning team (with an employment law spin, of course).

Other than reading Dan’s praise of the Phillies, here are 5 reasons to root for the Fightins’:

  1. Win one for Harry: If you wonder why the Phillies are wearing an “HK” patch on their uniforms, it’s for Harry Kalas. Harry the K was the long-time beloved and revered Phillies Hall of Fame broadcaster who died at the beginning of the season. If you’re not from Philly, you probably know him better as the baritone yet lilted voice of NFL Films. He’s also noted for his stirring renditions of the Sinatra classic High Hopes, which the Phillies now play in his honor after home wins.

  2. Blue collar versus white collar: The Phillies personify Philly’s hard-working, blue collar attitude, and work hard for everything they have. The Yankees are effete spoiled rich kids playing in their new $1.5 billion dollar playground, and are expected to succeed because of how much money they spend. Who do you better relate to?

  3. Charlie Manual: Cleveland ran him out of town because he talks like a bumpkin who doesn’t know what he’s doing. As it turns out, he’s forgotten more about baseball than most know. He’s one of the genuinely good guys in sports. A second ring would likely punch his ticket to Cooperstown and seal his legacy.

  4. Steroids: These are two of the most potent offenses ever to match up in a World Series. But, only one lineup has a star player who’s admitted to using performance enhancers. The Phillies sluggers have always done it naturally.

  5. The evil empire factor: The Yankees? Again? Really? It’s like rooting for the Third Reich to win WWII. Sure, the Germans were rooting for their home team, but was anyone else?

Dan, my readers and I look forward to what you have to say about the Phillies after the series is over.

Meanwhile, try not to get a little misty while Harry the K serenades a 2008 playoff pep rally with High Hopes.


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

FMLA’s military leave provisions to be amended today


When President Obama signs the National Defense Authorization Act of 2010 this afternoon, he will make some key changes to how the FMLA covers military leave. Carl Bosland at the FMLA Blog summarizes the details, which expand the coverage and availability of military family leave. The Act’s changes include:

  • Expanding military caregiver leave to veterans, by extending the 26 weeks of FMLA leave to family members of veterans to cover illnesses or injuries for up to 5 years after a veteran leaves active duty.

  • Expanding qualifying exigency leave to cover eligible family members of active-duty service members, and not just family members of those called up to the National Guard or Reserves.


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Do you know? Handling employees with suspected swine flu


The President has officially declared H1N1 a national emergency. Hyperbole aside, it is estimated that as many as 60% of the U.S. population will contract the H1N1 virus this flu season. If these numbers are even close to being correct, then it is almost guaranteed that the swine flu will impact your workplace. The CDC offers the following 10 tips for handling H1N1 in your workplace:

  1. Develop policies that encourage ill workers to stay at home without fear of any reprisals.

  2. Develop other flexible policies to allow workers to telework (if feasible) and create other leave policies to allow workers to stay home to care for sick family members or care for children if schools close.

  3. Provide resources and a work environment that promotes personal hygiene. For example, provide tissues, no-touch trash cans, hand soap, hand sanitizer, disinfectants and disposable towels for workers to clean their work surfaces.

  4. Provide education and training materials in an easy to understand format and in the appropriate language and literacy level for all employees.

  5. Instruct employees who are well but who have an ill family member at home with the flu that they can go to work as usual. These employees should monitor their health every day, and notify their supervisor and stay home if they become ill. Employees who have a certain underlying medical condition or who are pregnant should promptly call their health care provider for advice if they become ill.

  6. Encourage workers to obtain a seasonal influenza vaccine, if it is appropriate for them according to CDC recommendations. This helps to prevent illness from seasonal influenza strains that may circulate at the same time as the 2009 H1N1 flu.

  7. Encourage employees to get the 2009 H1N1 vaccine when it becomes available if they are in a priority group according to CDC recommendations. Consider granting employees time off from work to get vaccinated when the vaccine is available in your community.

  8. Provide workers with up-to-date information on influenza risk factors, protective behaviors, and instruction on proper behaviors (for example, cough etiquette; avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth; and hand hygiene).

  9. Plan to implement practices to minimize face-to-face contact between workers if advised by the local health department. Consider the use of such strategies as extended use of email, websites and teleconferences, encouraging flexible work arrangements (for example, telecommuting or flexible work hours) to reduce the number of workers who must be at the work site at the same time or in one specific location.

  10. If an employee does become sick while at work, place the employee in a separate room or area until they can go home, away from other workers. If the employee needs to go into a common area prior to leaving, he or she should cover coughs/sneezes with a tissue or wear a facemask if available and tolerable. Ask the employee to go home as soon as possible.

For other information on dealing with H1N1 in your workplace, flu.gov has a wealth of resources, including a small business guide, a communication toolkit, guidance from the EEOC, and a business pandemic planning checklist.


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Dirty jokes on sex harassment plaintiff’s computer ruled in play


Harassment cases are often he said/she said. How does one go about proving, for example, that a plaintiff isn’t as offended about the her boss’s sexual comments and innuendo as she says she is? In Seybert v. The International Group (E.D. Pa. 10/13/09) [PDF], the employer searched the plaintiff’s workplace computer for evidence of her own participation in sexual banter.

Susan Seybert claimed a sexually hostile work environment based on the following conduct:

  • Her supervisor, Brett Marchand, stared at her breasts on two separate occasions.
  • Marchand comment to her, regarding the dessert at a work-sponsored dinner, “I heard it’s really good if you go down deep, into the chocolate, with your berry.”
  • Marchand berated and yelled at her on a number of occasions, ignored her in a manner that made it difficult for her to do her job correctly, and gave her a bad performance review.

In support of its defense of the harassment claim, ICI argued that Seybert wasn’t subjectively offended by the boorish conduct, and sought to introduce the following intra-office emails from Seybert’s work computer:

Stories, jokes, photographs, cartoons and the like, along with occasional commentary from Mrs. Seybert or others along the specific email chain, using sexual words, metaphors, puns, double entendres, and other innuendo.

Over Seybert’s objection, the trial court allowed the emails to be considered at trial.

Here, the emails with sexual content involve the same general type of humor as Mr. Marchand’s comment at the Recognition Dinner - a humor rooted in sexual innuendo and supposed euphemisms. For instance, Mr. Marchand’s alleged comment about going “down deep into the chocolate [dessert] with your berry” presumably could be likened to Exhibit No. 61, which contains a photograph of an elderly man wearing only a Santa hat and boots, resting on his stomach, with the caption, “Just Roll Me Over Darlin … ‘cause I’m Layin On Yer Present.” … Accordingly, IGI is entitled to pursue the argument that the emails are relevant to Mrs. Seybert’s possible appreciation of this type of humor, and specifically, whether she was subjectively offended by Mr. Marchand’s comment….

Just as the email exchanges are relevant to show whether Mrs. Seybert was subjectively offended by Mr. Marchand’s “berry” comment, they are also relevant to the issue of whether Mrs. Seybert experienced emotional distress as a result of the comment. This is because, at the most basic level, the email exchanges show the effect of the “berry” comment on Mrs. Seybert’s mental state - that is, whether the comment made her distressed, offended, or something else.

As technology continues to evolve and become more entrenched in every aspect of the workplace, more and more employment cases turn on an email, text message, or other piece of electronic evidence. Most times, it seems that employers have these media used against them as proof of the alleged discrimination or other misconduct, It’s refreshing, for a change, to see these tools used by an employer to defend itself.


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Friday, October 23, 2009

WIRTW #100


Hard to believe this feature has hit the triple-digit mark.

Frank Roche called his shot even before last night’s dissection of the Dodgers. Read why he thinks the Phillies are going to win it all.

Louis DiLorenzo, at the New York Labor & Employment Law Report, offers 7 tips to keep in mind as you begin drafting those year-end performance reviews.

Self-proclaimed animal lover Molly DiBianca, at the Delaware Employment Law Blog, shares her thoughts on bizarre service animals under the ADA.

Jewel Bennett, at Arkansas Employment Law, thinks that just because conduct may not rise to the level of actionable harassment, it does to provide an excuse to be uncivil.

Sindy Warren, at the Warren & Hays Blog, draws some workplace lessons from the never-ending “Balloon Boy” saga.

Matt Mennes, writing at COSE Mindspring, thinks employers should be using pre-dispute arbitration clauses with employees. I could not disagree more.

Eric Welter, at The Laconic Law Blog, thinks the workplace is no place to wear Halloween costumes.

Jeffrey Hirsch, at the Workplace Prof Blog, reminds us that October is National Work and Family Life Month.

Roger Matus’ Death by Email gives yet another example of things that just should never be committed to writing.

But, the winner of the week is FailBlog, with maybe the worst idea ever to celebrate Disability Awareness Month.


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Let’s all try to be a little more gracious


When my family and I flew to Florida last month, we met Jonathon and Amelia Sawyer and their kids in waiting area at the gate. Jonathon is the owner/chef at The Greenhouse Tavern, which Bon Appétit Magazine recently named one of the top 10 best new restaurants in America. We had a nice chat with the Sawyers, and we told them that we’d have to stop in their restaurant sometime since we’d never eaten there. That sometime was last Saturday, when my wife and I had a rare night out. Jonathon and Amelia could not have been more gracious, including a round of after-dinner drinks. Chef Sawyer even came out of the kitchen to say hello and personally thank us for stopping in. On top of everything, the food rated an A+.

If employers treated their employees with half of the degree of grace and hospitality  Jon and Amelia Sawyer gave me and my wife, I’d likely be out of a job. On second thought…


Presented by Kohrman Jackson & Krantz, with offices in Cleveland and Columbus. For more information, contact Jon Hyman, a partner in our Labor & Employment group, at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Can employers require flu shots for their employees?


As H1N1 becomes more widespread, and as the vaccine is beginning to become available, employers are beginning to require that their employees become vaccinated. The question, however, is whether such a practice is legal. According to one New York judge, the answer is that it may not be, at least when the directive comes from the state. That judge temporarily halted a New York State directive requiring that all health care workers be vaccinated for the seasonal flu and swine flu. Yet, as Kelly Brewington at the Baltimore Sun points out, many health care facilities are mandating that all employees receive the seasonal flu and H1N1 vaccines as a condition of their employment.

According to the EEOC, employers can compel all of its employees to take the influenza vaccine, with a couple of important exceptions:

An employee may be entitled to an exemption from a mandatory vaccination requirement based on an ADA disability that prevents him from taking the influenza vaccine. This would be a reasonable accommodation barring undue hardship (significant difficulty or expense). Similarly, under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, once an employer receives notice that an employee’s sincerely held religious belief, practice, or observance prevents him from taking the influenza vaccine, the employer must provide a reasonable accommodation unless it would pose an undue hardship as defined by Title VII (“more than de minimis cost” to the operation of the employer’s business, which is a lower standard than under the ADA).

At least as far as the EEO laws are concerned, private employers can require flu shots as long as you are willing to accommodate employees’ disabilities and religions. The New York case raises different issues because it was state-issued mandate (which raises constitutional privacy issues), as compared to a rule specific to a private workplace.