by Tammy Binford
President Donald Trump’s latest order targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices by employers brings up issues about how employers with federal contracts can ensure compliance.
by Tammy Binford
President Donald Trump’s latest order targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices by employers brings up issues about how employers with federal contracts can ensure compliance.
Q We’re planning to allow employees with underlying health conditions to telecommute as a temporary reasonable accommodation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on our assessment, however, they could perform only 50...
We have collectively gone through what we hope to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience in which many of us have been working remotely, trying to keep our children from permanently injuring themselves, and preparing for a...
Q If an employee on Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) leave submits a letter signaling his intent to resign at the end of his leave, do we have to wait until the leave is over, or can we terminate the employee now? A...
We are living in trying times. We and the people we work with have had to deal with numerous hardships, which will continue indefinitely. Some have lost, or at least been separated from, family and friends. Some are...
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought unprecedented changes to all facets of our lives, especially our work. Employers have faced incredible challenges of rushed remote work arrangements, meeting new workplace safety...
Undoubtedly, the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN Act) has popped up on your radar during these times of economic uncertainty arising out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Any number of articles, posts...
Q We received a wage garnishment notice for an employee who has been laid off temporarily, but the documents don’t look legitimate. What do we look for to confirm if this is a legitimate wage garnishment we need to...
As new unemployment claims rise, impostors seek to scam the unemployment system at the expense of the state, employees, and employers. Here’s how to respond to—and lower the risk of—fraudulent unemployment claims. Spike...
As we predicted in the January issue of Virginia Employment Law Letter, the Virginia General Assembly has increased the state’s minimum wage for the first time in 10 years and established a mechanism to raise it again in...
In previous issues of Mid-Atlantic Employment Law Letter, we’ve highlighted the Virginia legislature’s historic expansion of worker protections during the 2020 legislative session. Most notably, the legislature passed...
Virginia has always allowed you to impose reasonable restrictions on your employees’ ability to compete after the termination of the employment relationship. While this right was not unfettered, you could take steps to...
As states reopen their economies and allow employees to return to their physical offices, employers need to consider a multitude of issues, including how to comply with employment laws in an entirely new environment. In...
The Trump administration continues to try to cut back on legal immigration in whatever ways it can do so unilaterally through regulation, executive order, or proclamation without legislation requiring congressional...
In an opinion issued in May 2020, the Tennessee Court of Appeals provided guidance regarding the application of the common interest privilege and its impact on defamation and invasion of privacy claims within the...
In a recent case involving multiple issues—Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, constructive discharge, and state law claims among them—the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals (which covers South Carolina employers)...