Monday, June 22, 2020

Coronavirus Update 6–22–2020: Ohio ends unemployment benefits to employees who refuse to work (with some key exceptions)


The state of Ohio will begin denying unemployment benefits to employees who refuse to work because of coronavirus. 

Governor DeWine issued an Executive Order last week directing the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services to deny unemployment benefits to employees who refuse to return to work after recall to the same position held before the state's Stay at Home Order took effect.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Coronavirus Update 6–19–2020: How to communicate when an employee tests positive


Positive COVID-19 tests are sadly the reality of 2020, and likely at least part of 2021. Nationally, 2.23 million of us have tested positive for coronavirus. If your employees have been fortunate enough so far to avoid the virus, the odds are good that before this pandemic is over one or more of your employees will test positive.

Before we discuss the right way to communicate a potential workplace exposure to your employees, let's explore the wrong way, via one of my favorite punching bags, the WWE. 

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Coronavirus Update 6–18–2020: Errata—employers cannot require antibody tests of employees, says EEOC


Two months ago I suggested that the EEOC would conclude that employers could require COVID-19 antibody tests as a condition of employment. Yesterday, based on updated guidance from the CDC, the EEOC said the exact opposite. Given the inherent unreliability of COVID-19 antibody tests, I'm happy to have been wrong.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Does Title VII protect employees whose spouses are pregnant?


A male Disney employee has filed suit against his former employer, claiming that Disney unlawfully discriminated against him because of his wife's pregnancy. 

According to Steven Van Soeren's complaint, Disney fired him after he took two weeks of paternity leave following the birth of his child, and after supervisors advised him during his wife's pregnancy on the wisdom of having a child. (As an aside, Van Soeren claims that his supervisors learned of the pregnancy by hacking his computer.)

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Everything you need to know about Bostock v. Clayton County—the #SCOTUS LGBTQ discrimination decision—in five quotes


June is Pride Month. If you thought the month's biggest LGBTQ news was Nickelodeon tweeting that SpongeBob was part of the LGBTQ+ community, you have another thing coming. Yesterday, in Bostock v. Clayton County, the United States Supreme Court clearly, decisively, and unequivocally held:
 
An employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender violates Title VII.

The Bostock majority opinion is 33 pages long. I'll break it down for you in five key quotes.

Monday, June 15, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: U.S. Supreme Court holds that Title VII protects LGBTQ employees 🏳️‍🌈


In a landmark ruling issued this morning, the U.S. Supreme Court held that Title VII's prohibition against sex discrimination also prohibits employers from discriminating against LGBTQ employees. The 6-3 decision majority included conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch (who authored the opinion) and Chief Justice John Roberts joining the Court's four liberal justices.

I'll have my full analysis on this case tomorrow. Suffice it to say that June 15 is a historic day for civil rights.

Coronavirus Update 6–15–2020: COVID-19 is not an excuse for age discrimination


Consider these headlines:


While there's still a lot we don't know about COVID-19, one of the things we do know for sure is that is much more greatly impacts people age 65 and above