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We recently published an update to our 50-state Shelter-In-Place / Reopening Tracker.

Please see HERE. This is updated weekly.

For your convenience, here is a summary of the major updates from around the country:

  • The governors of Mississippi, South Carolina and Vermont extended their state’s shelter in place orders.
  • Several states have entered or will soon enter the next phase of their reopening plans or expanded current phases to include more businesses or regions, including Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Pennsylvania, Utah and Virginia.
  • The shelter-in-place orders was lifted in New Jersey, but phased reopening guidance and certain additional restrictions remain in effect.

For more information, please contact your Baker McKenzie attorney.

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We hope you have found our video chat series helpful and informative. We are continuing this series of quick and bite-sized video chats, where our employment partners team up with practitioners in various areas of law to discuss the most pressing issues for employers navigating the return to work. Each 15-minute Q&A session offers targeted insights into critical issues employers are facing as we navigate the COVID-19 pandemic.

This series builds on our recent client alerts, webinars, podcasts and Shelter-In-Place Tracker that are all designed to help employers as they consider reopening the workplace.

Please click below to watch this week’s video chats.

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On June 10, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) released new guidance, in the form of frequently asked questions and answers, regarding the use of masks in the workplace.

The new guidance outlines the differences between cloth face coverings, surgical masks and respirators. It further reminds employers not to use surgical masks or cloth face coverings when respirators are needed. In addition, the guidance notes the need for social distancing measures, even when workers are wearing cloth face coverings, and recommends following the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s guidance on washing face coverings. (For our FAQ on face coverings, click here.)

Importantly, the new guidance is not a standard or regulation, and it creates no new legal obligations. It contains recommendations as well as descriptions of mandatory safety and health standards. OSHA states that the “recommendations are advisory in nature, informational in content, and are intended to assist employers in providing a safe and healthful workplace.”

We’ve copied the most helpful OSHA FAQs here and underlined pertinent language for emphasis:

Are employers required to provide cloth face coverings to workers?

Cloth face coverings are not considered personal protective equipment (PPE) and are not intended to be used when workers need PPE for protection against exposure to occupational hazards. As such, OSHA’s PPE standards do not require employers to provide them.

Continue Reading OSHA Guidance on Wearing Masks in the Workplace

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Join us for Part 3 of our webinar series on the USMCA, as we approach entry-into-force of the agreement on July 1, 2020.  In this webinar, “USMCA: Labor Rules and Trade Remedies,” Baker McKenzie experts from the United States, Mexico and Canada will discuss how to prepare for enforcement under the Rapid Response Labor Mechanism (RRLM).

Join us for a 60-minute discussion about the RRLM*:

  • how it originated, and how will function,
  • what it means for manufacturers in Mexico,
  • what it means for U.S. and Canadian importers,
  • factors indicating a high risk of enforcement, and
  • what sort of due diligence should be undertaken as we approach July 1 entry into force of the USMCA.

This session is intended primarily for in-house counsel of U.S. and Mexico companies with responsibility for overseeing international trade and supply chain issues, as well as labor and employment issues.  Trade compliance professionals, HR professionals and business managers may also find it useful.

*The RRLM is a first-of-its-kind trade remedy tool that will be used to tie trade benefits, like preferential duty treatment, and even the right to import into the United States, to the protection of labor rights at factories in Mexico.  The RRLM is expected to primarily be enforced by the United States (and Canada) against manufacturing facilities and mining operations in Mexico

Click here for more information and to register.

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We are excited to invite you to the webinar, “Filling Data Protection Gaps in the New Working Environment,” scheduled for Wednesday, June 24, 2020, from noon – 1:00 pm ET.

Click here to view the invitation and register. We look forward to your participation.

 

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We hope you found our first three weeks of video chats to be helpful and informative. Due to popular demand, we are continuing this series of quick and bite-sized video chats, where our employment partners team up with practitioners in various areas of law to discuss the most pressing issues for employers navigating the return to work. Each 15-minute Q&A session offers targeted insights into the critical questions employers are facing as we navigate the COVID-19 pandemic.

This series builds on our recent client alerts, webinars, podcasts and Shelter-In-Place Tracker that are all designed to help employers as they consider reopening the workplace.

Please click below to watch this week’s video chats:

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We recently published an update to our 50-state Shelter-In-Place / Reopening Tracker.

Please see HERE. This is updated weekly.

For your convenience, here is a summary of the major updates from around the country:

  • The governors of a few states extended their shelter-in-place orders, including Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Texas and Utah.
  • Several states have entered or will soon enter the next phase of their reopening plans or have expanded the current phase to include more businesses or regions, including California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and Washington.
  • The state-wide shelter-in-place order in Delaware expired June 1, 2020, but phased reopening guidance is in effect.

Last, note that our Tracker now includes information about what’s open in each state.

While most states continue to encourage or even require telework or work-from-home where possible, many states continue to gradually reopen sectors of their economies as indicated in the “What’s Open” table. We added this to each page to highlight the reopening status of four major sectors (office, manufacturing, retail and bars/restaurants).

For more information, please contact your Baker McKenzie attorney.

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With special thanks to our Australian colleagues Michael Michalandos and Carmel Foley for this post. 

This briefing contains a summary of everything an employer in Australian needs to know about the operation of the award system.

Why this is important?

We have prepared this briefing because there has been a high incidence of employers in the information technology industry failing to have regard to the application of modern awards in their workforce or misunderstanding how these awards operate. In particular, many employers have issued employment contracts which do not identify the applicable award and do not contain provisions which comply with the award.

This may result in a potentially serious compliance issue which could cost the business a significant amount of money in terms of back-payments, penalties, and potential reputational damage.


What is an award?

Modern awards (or, simply, “awards”) are industrial instruments created by the Fair Work Commission (FWC) that set and regulate minimum terms and conditions of employment for certain employees in Australia. Currently, there are 122 awards and almost all businesses in Australia will employ award-covered employees. Awards operate in a similar way to legislation and their application can only be circumvented in very limited circumstances.

Who do awards cover?

Awards generally fall into one of two categories: “industry awards” or “occupational awards.” Some awards apply on both an industry and occupational basis, for example the Professional Employees Award 2010 (Professional Employees Award) which, for example, covers engineers on an occupational basis but also covers employers operating in the “information technology industry” (as defined) on an industry basis.

Continue Reading A Quick & Timely Guide to the Australian Award System

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US employers are rethinking how and where their employees work as a result of COVID-19 and shelter in place orders. Whether your company is considering rolling out telecommuting options for the first time or has allowed telecommuting for years, setting expectations and establishing clear guidelines is critical for your workforce.

Here are 10 key ingredients to include in a robust telecommuting policy:

  1. Define who is eligible. The ability to telecommute is a privilege, not an employment right or entitlement and it may not be appropriate for all employees in all locations or positions to telecommute at all times. It is important to carefully define which positions are eligible.
  2. Create a specific approval process. Make it clear that specific individuals in the company must approve all telecommuting arrangements in advance on a case-by-case basis, consistent with business needs, job duties, and job performance. Maintain flexibility and discretion by including caveats such as: “Authorization to telecommute will be granted in the Company’s sole discretion and the Company may postpone or cancel approved telecommuting arrangements at any time and for any reason.”
  3. Remind telecommuters that the regular rules still apply. Reiterate that telecommuting employees remain subject to company rules and expectations, such as Anti-Discrimination and Anti-Harassment, IT Resources and Communications Systems (including the lack of an expectation of privacy), Confidential and Proprietary Information, and Workplace Safety policies.
  4. Call out that disability-related requests for accommodation are handled separately from the telecommuting policy. Requests to telecommute may be disguised requests for disability accommodation. Help mitigate the risk of unintentionally denying requests for accommodation by refusing telecommuting by direct employees to the company’s reasonable accommodation procedures in the telecommuting policy itself.
  5. Detail employee responsibilities and expectations. Set the parameters of the remote working arrangement by describing, among other things:
    1. Work hours;
    2. Time recording and reporting;
    3. Accessibility during work hours;
    4. Frequency of communications with the employee’s manager.
  6. Remind employees about their responsibility to protect and secure the company’s propriety information, and to comply with all company policies regarding data security. Remote work presents new and wide-ranging concerns for protecting, handling and disposing of trade secrets and confidential information. For more on this topic, click here: Keep Trade Secret Protections Top Of Mind While You Deploy Remote Working.
  7. Outline the company’s responsibilities, including:
    1. Any technical support provided to the employee;
    2. Work expenses the employer reimburses; and
    3. Equipment the employer provides and repairs (for example, computers, cell phones, teleconferencing equipment, facsimile equipment, anti-virus software, and office supplies).
  8. Reference your expense reimbursement policy. It is critical to: (a) manage expectations about which business-related expenses may be reimbursed; (b) establish procedures employees must follow to be reimbursed; (c) set reasonable cost controls on employee business expenses; and (d) ensure that business expenses are appropriate. For more on expense reimbursement obligations, click here: Reimbursement Refresher: Cell Phone and Internet Expenses Related to Telecommuting in the US.
  9. Describe the employee’s specific job duties, work area, and break times to mitigate liability for injuries that are not work-related. Clearly define the workspace and work time to establish some reasonable limits on the employer’s responsibilities for accidents and illnesses that occur in remote locations.
  10. Require acknowledgment of receipt and review, and confirm at-will employment status. A signed acknowledgment of receipt, review, and understanding of any employee policy not only re-enforces the expectations of the employer and an employee and negates the ability of the employee to plead ignorance of that policy as an excuse for non-compliance, but also provides another opportunity to acknowledge the at-will nature of employment.

For help crafting your US telecommuting policy, please contact your Baker McKenzie employment lawyer.

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Addressing union organizing in the workplace has bedeviled employers since the adoption of the National Labor Relations Act. The National Labor Relations Board has historically permitted employers to ban employees from soliciting co-workers during working time. No solicitation policies have been narrowed and refined over the years, as demonstrated by the Board’s holding in Essex International, Inc., 211 N.L.R.B. 749 (1974). Essex distinguished between policies that prohibit solicitation during “working time” (permissible) and those that prohibit solicitation during “working hours” (invalid).

In Wynn Las Vegas, LLC, 369 NLRB No. 91 issued last week, the NLRB broadened the definition of solicitation to include urging a co-worker to vote “yes.” The Wynn Las Vegas decision reverted to the Board’s traditional interpretation and acknowledged the NLRB’s failure to obtain court approval for its narrower meaning.

Continue Reading NLRB Broadens Definition of “Solicitation,” Expanding Conduct That May Be Deemed Unprotected