April 16, 2021
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CLE Webinar Discusses the Vaccination Pros and Cons for Workplaces

A recent Association of Corporate Counsel CLE webinar run by members of the employment law firm Jackson Lewis provided an important look at what employers should be thinking about as vaccination efforts here in the US speed up. 

The presentation summed up the various state and federal plans, noting that there remains no federal laws requiring employees to be vaccinated and some states, such as New York have proposed multiple bills that would prohibit employers from requiring employees to be vaccinated, although they are not likely to pass. They also highlighted guidance from the EEOC regarding vaccines, suggestions that haven’t changed since December. 

The webinar then laid out four possible options for employers. They are: having no vaccination policy, a soft or strong encouragement policy, and a mandatory vaccination policy. The presentation then went into some detail about the pros and cons of any mandatory policy, which roughly 10% of employers nationwide have already enacted.

Positives include getting workers back to the office more quickly and providing customers with some level of assurance about their own safety. Negatives included the potential for employees to blame the company if they experience adverse reactions and the possibility of workplace friction due to political, religious and personal sentiments that clash with the policy and the potential for organized labor to use such policies as a rallying cry. 

Finally, with the increasing availability of vaccines, it may be that more employers opt for a mandatory policy, deciding that the pros outweigh any cons.


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Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup

July 6, 2020
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Here in New York, the governors of the tri-state area have formalized a quarantine for visitors from the hardest hit states while also mooting any chance of indoor dining in the foreseeable future, which mounting research indicates is a significant source of potential infectio

The Week in FFCRA Complaints

July 1, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
Paid Family Leave
Overall, we are beginning to see some patterns in the thematic nature of the complaints. Specifically, plaintiffs seem to be those whose employment has been terminated either after expressing concerns about workplace health and safety (e.g. improper distancing, lack of PPE, and not enforcing CDC-recommended quarantine procedures) and parents whose employment has been terminated because they were unable to locate appropriate childcare or family care.

What Employees Should Know About Their Rights to Protest, in Person or on Social Media

June 29, 2020
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Employees may find themselves retaliated against because of their protesting outside of the workplace, in person or online. But, as the protests continue, and the depth of feeling about their purpose grows, there will be increasing interest in using all available legal tools to allow employees to express their political views off-site while remaining employed.

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