The Weekly Guide to Employment Law Developments

The Rocky Mountain Employer

Labor & Employment Law Updates

ColoradoCare Amendment Could Lead to Significant Healthcare Cost Increases for Employers

Colorado employers may soon see a significant payroll tax increase.  In November 2016, Colorado voters will decide whether to adopt Amendment 69 (“ColoradoCare”), a universal healthcare system that would eliminate the state’s healthcare exchange and private health plans offered by employers.  If implemented, Colorado employers would largely be responsible for paying for ColoradoCare and its estimated $25 billion price tag.  This article analyzes ColoradoCare and its potential impact on employers.

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Cargill Dispute Highlights Employer Responsibilities Regarding Religious Workplace Accommodations

In the wake of Cargill’s recent religious accommodation dispute, employers should be aware of their responsibilities regarding religious workplace accommodations.  Cargill, the largest private company in the United States, made national headlines when it terminated 150 Muslim employees for failing to show up for work after a prayer dispute.  While the company followed its neutral attendance and religious accommodation policies, the controversial nature of the terminations have sparked interest regarding religious accommodations in the workplace.  This article analyzes the Cargill terminations and an employer’s responsibilities regarding religious workplace accommodations.

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CCRD's 2016 Initiatives -- Fewer Meritless Claims, Increased Awareness of Service and Comfort Animals and Accommodation of Transgendered Employees

In 2016, Colorado employers should expect fewer meritless employment discrimination claims, but more emphasis from the Colorado Civil Rights Division (“CCRD”) on working with employees who need service or comfort animals and accommodation of transgendered employees in the workplace.  On December 15, 2015, Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies (“DORA”) Executive Director Joe Neguse, and CCRD Director Rufina Hernandez addressed the Labor and Employment Council for the Colorado Association of Commerce & Industry (“CACI”) and provided an overview of the CCRD’s 2016 initiatives.  Campbell Litigation attended the meeting and provides the following summary.

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Court May Expand Americans With Disabilities Act Protection to Transgender Employees

The Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) specifically excludes “transsexualism…[and] gender identity disorders [“GID”] not resulting from physical impairments” (the “GID exclusion”) from its definition of “disability,” but the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) has asked a Pennsylvania court to narrow the ADA’s GID exclusion by classifying gender dysphoria as a disability under the ADA.  If the court grants the DOJ’s request, transgender employees would likely be covered under the ADA and employers will likely be required to engage in the interactive process when a transgender employee requests an accommodation. 

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First NLRB Decisions Applying the Expanded Joint Employer Test Yield Mixed Results and Demonstrate Need for Employers to Scrutinize Staffing Relationships with Contractors

            In late summer of 2015, the National Labor Relations Board (“Board” or “NLRB”) issued its Browning-Ferris Industries (“BFI”) decision adopting an expanded joint employer standard. Under the Board’s new test, two or more employers are joint employers of the same employees if (1) they are “both employers [of a single workforce] within the meaning of the common law” and (2) they “share or codetermine those matters governing the [employees’] essential terms and conditions of employment.” In applying this test, the NLRB reversed thirty years of precedent by holding that it would no longer require a joint employer to both possess authority to control employees’ terms and conditions of employment and actually exercise such authority directly. Instead, the Board held that it would find joint employer status where the putative employer (i.e., the assumed employer) has the mere right to control “the means or manner of employees’ work and terms of employment” or actually exercises such control either directly or indirectly.

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Constructive Discharge Case Could Expand Title VII's Time for Filing Charges of Discrimination, Even Without Discriminatory Allegations

             The U.S. Supreme Court will determine whether the time period for filing a charge of discrimination alleging constructive discharge begins to run from the last alleged discriminatory act (the minority view) or the date of the employee’s resignation (the majority view).  This ruling could expand the time period an employee may file a charge of discrimination for constructive discharge claims, even if the last alleged discriminatory act occurred outside the time period for filing a charge of discrimination (45 days for federal employees and 180 days for private employees).

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Proposed Changes to the White-Collar Exemptions Will Require Companies to Increase Exempt Midlevel Managers' Salaries or Pay Overtime

The United States Department of Labor (“DOL”) recently announced major changes to the Fair Labor Standards Act’s (“FLSA”) overtime exemptions to take effect in 2016.  Currently, administrative, executive, and professional employees (“white-collar employees”) who satisfy a duties test, must also meet a salary test and be paid at least $455 per week to be exempt from the FLSA’s overtime requirements.  If the employee satisfies both tests, the employer is permitted to pay the employee on a salary basis without having to pay overtime.  The DOL’s proposed rule more than doubles the current salary requirement to approximately $970 per week, which would cause nearly five million employees to lose their exempt status and become eligible for overtime.  This article explores the proposed changes to the white-collar exemptions, its potential effects, and how employers should prepare.

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Status of Preemption Claims Under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act

Prior to 1979, states handled trade secret misappropriation claims in varying ways.  To unify the contrasting state approaches, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (“UTSA”) in 1979.  The UTSA provides protection for information defined as a “trade secret.”  Notably, the UTSA preempts “conflicting tort, restitutionary, and other [state] law . . . providing civil remedies for misappropriation of a trade secret[.]”  However, the UTSA does not preempt contractual remedies, or other civil remedies “not based upon misappropriation of a trade secret[.]”  A UTSA preemption question often arises when an employer sues a former employee for misusing information gained in the course of employment, and asserts both UTSA claims and state tort claims such as breach of trust, common law misappropriation, conversion, unfair competition, and unjust enrichment.  This paper summarizes the current split of authority regarding UTSA preemption and analyzes the challenges employers may face in states adopting the “majority” approach.

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The Affinity Group Dilemma

Affinity Groups are a popular way for companies to enhance diversity and inclusion goals. These groups provide an opportunity for employees to gather socially, share ideas, and network. They may increase productivity, boost employee morale, enhance marketing, and attract and retain employees—all objectives beneficial to corporate America.  However, Affinity Groups come with various legal and business risks for corporations, including potential employment discrimination and wage claims, unfair labor practice charges, and dissention among employees. 

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The Corporate Trend to Eliminate Performance Reviews Could Create Difficulty Defending Employment Discrimination Lawsuits

A new trend to modify or eliminate the traditional performance review is being led by major companies, such as Accenture, Adobe, and Gap, who have eliminated the traditional performance review, and General Electric, perhaps the country’s most influential corporation, who has recently decided to overhaul how it handles reviews. Corporations are moving away from traditional performance reviews to accommodate or better relate to the newer generation of employees, lighten the growing burden on managers, and save significant cost by modifying or eliminating performance reviews.  While nearly ten percent of Fortune 500 companies have eliminated traditional performance reviews, the current trend may see that number double in the next year.  As the performance review landscape changes, however, that shift could have a profound impact on employers when defending discrimination lawsuits.

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Opportunities for the Future: HSS Partners with Iraqi SIV

 Lateef Taresh might appear to have a common goal: graduate from college, eventually enter the IT field, and provide a quality education for his children. However, there’s nothing common about the ambition and sheer gumption required to get Taresh where he is today.

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Employer Drug Policy Stands in light of Legal Medical Marijuana Usage, but Proposed Federal Marijuana Legislation may Impact Drug Policies

The Colorado Supreme Court recently upheld an employer’s right to terminate an employee who tests positive for marijuana at work when the employee is legally allowed to partake of marijuana off-duty.  See Coats v. Dish Network LLC, 2015 Colo. 44 (2015).  In Colorado, employees are protected by a legal off-duty statute that prohibits an employer from terminating an employee for engaging in legal activity off-duty.[i]  Colorado legally allows for the medical use of marijuana.[ii]  The intersect of these two laws, combined with an employer’s drug policies, provided for some uncertainty for Colorado employers.  The Coats decision has cleared up any confusion.

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