PART 541--DEFINING AND DELIMITING THE EXEMPTIONS FOR

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Transcript PART 541--DEFINING AND DELIMITING THE EXEMPTIONS FOR

What’s New in HR
Presented to
Helena Chapter of SHRM
by
James A. Nys, SPHR, MPA
Personnel Plus! Consulting Services
2015 Montana Legislature
Public Employees
– HB 13 is the State Pay Plan for the 2015-17
– LC 194 would prohibit rollovers into government
457 deferred compensation plans
– LC 634 would eliminate the requirement for state
service to be continuous when calculating
longevity pay
Health Insurance
– Numerous bills would address the extension of
Medicaid or prohibit the same
– The Republication majority plans to introduce an
alternative to Medicaid expansion
– SB 99 would change the small employer tax credit
to a deduction and replace the Insure Montana
Purchasing Pool with a premium incentive plan
– LC 350 would authorize “Direct primary care
provider plans“
• Would not be an insurance plan and billing insurance
would be prohibited
Wage and Hour
• SB2 would increase the MT Min wage to
$10.10 plus index to future inflation
Unemployment Insurance
– SB 85 would give DOLI authority to collect unpaid
taxes or benefits overpayments
– SB 105 would mandate filing of reports and
payment of contributions electronically for
employers with 50+ staff or $1 million in wages.
– LC 1494 would allow UI for non-instructional
school employees between school years or during
vacations or holiday closures
Unemployment Insurance
– LC 635 would eliminate the 10 week limit on UI
benefits for victims of domestic abuse
Guns
– LC 298 provides for creation of home guard
companies and provides for activation by state or
county officers
– LC 498 would provide for an Employee’s “Safe
Travel to Work”
Workers’ Compensation
– Numerous Workers’ compensation bills are
pending but only those related to governance of
the state fund are public.
OSHA
– LC 477 sets the stage for Montana to implement a
state sponsored OSHA plan beginning in 2017
• Initial step is to develop a plan and get US Department
of Labor approval.
• If plan is approved, 2017 would create the
infrastructure
Hiring
– LC 633 and 983 would provide for a “hire
Montanans First” provision in construction
contracts and provide both penalties and tax
consequences for energy facilities not constructed
with Montana labor
– LC 618 would create a voluntary private sector
Vets hiring preference
Miscellaneous
– LC 616 would provide that if an employer has paid
vacation or sick leave, employee must be able to
use the credits for domestic violence or sexual
assault related absences
Pay Equity
– LC 626 would ban employer prohibitions on
discussing wages and require that wages be based
on factors as education, training, and experience
or bona fide factors other than gender if the
employer is able to demonstrate that the factor:
• is not based on or derived from a gender-based
differential in compensation;
• is job-related with respect to the position in question;
and
• is consistent with business necessity.
Privacy Related
– Several bills would revise Montana law to allow
for same gender marriage.
– LC1299 would allow drug testing of any
prospective or current employee
– LC 73 would prohibit employers requiring
disclosure of social media passwords and
expressly allows access to devices issued by the
employer
Federal Issues
Discrimination Law- EEOC
• Reasonable Accommodation during
Pregnancy
• US Supreme Court’s Young v UPS case
Federal Contractors
• Federal Contractors have new or proposed
rules related to:
• A minimum wage of $10.10 per hour
• Wage Transparency rules
• New affirmative action obligations for veterans
and disabled
• Safe Workplace
Collective Bargaining- NLRB
• The NRLB has issued decisions, new or proposed rules:
• The final “Ambush” Election Rule:
• requires the employer submit a “Statement of Position” within 7
days of receipt of the election petition
• Requires a pre-election hearing within 8 days of receipt of the
election petition but limits the issues and evidence that can be
presented at a pre-election hearing
• Eliminates the employer’s ability to appeal pre-election decisions
• Eliminates the current 25-day “grace period” between the end of
the hearing and the election
• Employers are required to employee personal information—home
addresses, telephone numbers, shift schedules, work locations,
and e-mail addresses—to union organizers
Collective Bargaining- NLRB
• NLRB is modifying the current joint employer
standard
– For over 30 years, the NLRB has viewed direct and
immediate control over the same employees as
joint employment
– The McDonald’s and Browning-Ferris cases will
changes this to make brand name corporations
responsible for the employment decisions and
actions of its local franchise business owners
The NLRB’s Purple
Communications Decision
• The Communications Workers of America filed
a complaint in 2012; it was decided December
11, 2014
• employees who have rightful access to their
employer’s email system in the course of their
work have a right to use the email system to
engage in Section 7-protected
communications on nonworking time.
– Employers can justify a blanket ban on nonwork
time use of email only by demonstrating that
“special circumstances make the ban necessary to
maintain production or discipline.”
– Employers are permitted to apply uniform and
consistently enforced controls over its email
system “to the extent such controls are necessary
to maintain production and discipline.”
Federal Contractors - OFCCP
• New Minimum Wage for Federal Contractors
• $10.10 effective 1/1/15
• Wage Transparency Rules
• Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces (Eff 2016)
Significant US Supreme Court
Decisions
– Integrity Staffing v Busk- Security screening not
compensable
– Mach Mining v EEOC- Must EEOC pursue
conciliation before litigation
– EEOC v Abercrombie- When is an employer “on
notice” of the need for a religious accommodation
SCOTUS
– Perez v Mortgage Bankers- Must an Agency notice
and take comments on significant changes of
interpretations of regulations
– King v Burwell- Are tax credits allowed in federal
ACA exchange?
State Trends
• Ban the Box:
• Seven states have restricted the use of credit
reports in hiring or made them a post-offer issue.
20 states are considering such restrictions.
(Montana-2011)
• Twenty states protect sexual orientation
• Sixteen states protect gender identity
(Montana)
• Seven states have restricted the use of credit
reports in hiring or made them a post-offer issue.
20 states are considering such restrictions.
(Montana-2011)
• Twenty states protect sexual orientation
• Sixteen states protect gender identity
(Montana)
• Five jurisdictions mandate paid sick (Montana has a 2015 bill)
• Several states (MD, MA, NY) are considering anti-bullying laws (Montana
2015)
• Seventeen States require E-Verify use Supreme Court approved Arizona
law.
• Tennessee considering criminalizing some union activity
• A dozen states protect workers rights to have guns in workplace. (Montana
2003-2011)
For More Information:
•
Jim Nys [email protected]