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Management 351 Class 2

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Discrimination based on protected class status is the key (remember this! ... Employment discrimination is prohibited against individuals with disabilities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Management 351 Class 2


1
Management 351 Class 2
  • Chapters 3 and 14
  • Revisions to syllabus
  • Change/confirm paper length 4-6 pages
  • Rework schedule
  • Matewan is now extra credit
  • Room change requested
  • Notes/website reminder

2
Chapter 3 EEO and Legal
  • Whats the point?
  • Doing the right thing
  • Managing risk
  • Protecting employer rights
  • Employee advocate
  • Protecting employee rights

3
Employment law shifting sands
  • A dynamic legal landscape
  • Courts constantly change foundations
  • Legislative changes less frequent
  • Proposed FLSA revisions
  • Complexity is an issue
  • ADA 1,000 disabilities affecting 43MM

4
Color blind vs color conscious
  • Fair employment
  • Decisions are made without regard to color
  • Broadly speaking, protected classes are
    protected
  • Affirmative Action
  • Seeks to right past wrongs
  • Decisions, themselves, NOT affected
  • Processes ARE affected

5
Equal Pay Act
  • Essentially equal pay for equal work
  • Applies broadly to men and women
  • Exceptions
  • Does not prohibit merit pay
  • Quantity and quality of production
  • Bona fide seniority plans
  • Has it worked???

6
Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
  • Often referred to as the CRA
  • Most important employment legislation on the
    books
  • Passed one year after MLKs I have a dream
  • Applies to employers with 15 employees
  • Established protected class categories

7
Protected classes
  • Race
  • Color
  • National origin
  • Age
  • Religion
  • Disability
  • Gender/sex
  • Pregnancy
  • Sexual orientation
  • Marital status
  • Familial status
  • Family leave
  • Injured workers
  • Whistle blowers
  • Retaliation
  • Association

8
Discrimination defined
  • Discrimination making distinctions
  • Discrimination happens all the time!
  • Discrimination based on protected class status is
    the key (remember this!)
  • Disparate treatment intentional
  • Adverse impact (disparate impact) unintentional
    (chart page 92)

9
Griggs v Duke Power
  • Companies may be guilty despite their best
    efforts to not discriminate
  • Burden of proof placed on employers
  • Must show that tests are not discriminatory in
    their impact

10
Defending against discrimination charges
  • Plaintiff establishes prima facie case
  • On its face the actions appear discriminatory
  • Disparate treatment uses McDonnell-Douglas test
  • Applicant not hired
  • Applicant was qualified
  • Applicant is a member of a protected class
  • Company hired someone in another class after
    rejecting the applicant

11
Prima facie and four-fifths rule
  • UGESP
  • EEOC provision for establishing evidence of
    discrimination
  • Compares hiring rates of protected classes to
    those of majority classes (example on page 93)
  • Whites hired at 50 African Americans at 25
    four-fifths (80) of 80 of 50 is 40 which is
    more than 25 (!)

12
After prima facie
  • After prima facie case is established (i.e. the
    employer appears to have discriminated) the
    burden of proof shifts
  • Employer defenses
  • Job relatedness (most common)
  • BFOQ
  • Seniority
  • Business necessity

13
Title VII and pregnancy
  • Protects women based either on
  • Their ability to become pregnant
  • Their actual pregnancy
  • Or a related condition

14
Harassment
  • Based on any protected class
  • Includes general harassment
  • Includes sexual harassment
  • Has this suddenly become an issue?

15
EEOC statistics
  • FY 2001
  • 59,631 Charges filed with EEOC
  • 146.8 million in monetary benefits
  • FY 2002
  • 14,396 Harassment Charges filed with EEOC
  • Ten year increase of 249 (1989 to 1999)
  • FY 2001
  • 22,257 Retaliation Charges filed
  • Ten year increase of 201

16
How pervasive is harassment?
  • Some statistics
  • 31 of females and 7 of males
  • 62 of those harassed took no action
  • 100 of women report it was a man
  • 59 of men report it was a woman
  • 43 report it was a supervisor
  • 27 report it was someone senior to them
  • 19 report it was a peer-level employee
  • 8 report it was a junior-level employee

17
Two broad categories
  • Quid pro quo literally this for that
  • Hostile work environment
  • Teresa Harris v Forklift Systems
  • The behavior need only be such that a reasonable
    person would be offended
  • EEOC definition of harassment (page 95)
  • Supreme Court guidance (page 96)
  • Same sex-sexual harassment

18
Managing risk
  • Employers may be held liable for actions of their
    managers even if they were unaware of the actions
  • Employer defense
  • Reasonable care to prevent
  • Plaintiff failed to report
  • Personal liability exists for managers and
    co-workers alike

19
Civil Rights Act of 1991
  • Amended 1964 CRA
  • Burden of proof returned to Griggs standard
    (shifted BOP back to employers)
  • Quotas specifically outlawed
  • Damages and jury trials
  • Enabled both
  • Punitive damages
  • Compensatory damages

20
Executive order 11246
  • Established affirmative action
  • 50 and 50 rule 50 employees and 50k in
    federal contracts or subcontracts

21
Other laws
  • ADEA of 1967
  • Protects those over 40 (originally 40-65)
  • ADA of 1990
  • Employment discrimination is prohibited against
    individuals with disabilities who are able to
    perform the essential functions of the job with
    or without reasonable accommodation

22
Individuals with disabilities
  • (sample list on page 100)
  • Definition substantially limits a major life
    (NOT WORK) activity
  • Toyota employee with carpal tunnel not successful
    in ADA case
  • Extends to those perceived as disabled
  • Excludes drug and alcohol unless under treatement

23
Essential Functions
  • The reason the job exists is to perform the
    essential functions
  • Marginal functions
  • Secondary job requirements
  • Job functions done on an ad hoc basis
  • Duties that are performed as a back up

24
Reasonable accommodation
  • No bright line test
  • Varies depending on situation and employers
    resources

25
Enforcement
  • EEOC enforces civil rights laws
  • EEOC roles
  • Investigation
  • Conciliation
  • Litigation
  • OFCCP enforces laws and executive orders
    (affirmative action)

26
Affirmative Action Plans
  • Essentially a comparative document with
    corrective action
  • Compares
  • Workforce availability to
  • Workforce utilization
  • Includes specific actions to address gaps in
    utilization

27
Chapter 14 Your rights
  • A right the ability to engage in conduct that is
    protected by law or social sanction free from
    interference by another party.
  • Statutory rights protected by law
  • Contractual rights protected by wait for it
    contracts

28
Comparison of rights
  • Statutory, contractual and other rights (table
    page 467)
  • Wrongful discharge discharge based on protected
    class status
  • Constructive discharge
  • Limited right to privacy
  • Limited right to free speech

29
Management rights
  • Essentially to run a business as seen fit and to
    retain profits
  • Employment at will
  • Either party can,
  • Enter into or dissolve the employment
    relationship,
  • At any time,
  • For any reason,
  • Without or without notice.

30
Legal limitations to at-will
  • Public policy exceptions
  • Filing workers compensation claim
  • Exercising legal duty (i.e. jury duty)
  • Refusing to violate professional ethics
  • Refusing to lobby for a political candidate
    favored by an employer
  • Implied contracts what you say CAN hurt you!
  • Pages 472 to end of chapter skim and be familiar
    light coverage

31
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