April 18, 2022

It Pays to Listen to Your Employees

       

A Kentucky jury’s recent finding underscores how important it is to listen to employee’s needs, after office workers threw a birthday party for an employee who had asked them to skip the celebration. A lab technician working for Covington-based Gravity Diagnostics asked his manager not to throw the party because of his social anxiety.  While the manager was absent, fellow workers went ahead with the plans, which proved disastrous.

Days after the party, the employee was confronted for his “somber behavior” by supervisors and three days later was fired via email because he had displayed violent behavior, allegedly, during a panic attack brought on by the confrontation. 

The technician brought a suit against the company and a jury awarded him $450,000 in lost wages and mental damages. The company plans to challenge the ruling on several legal grounds, but regardless of outcome, this is an important reminder to listen to the wishes of employees, especially when employees are sharing the mental health bases for their requests. Such open-minded attitudes and awareness of the consequences of disability discrimination usually lead to less strife and more equity in the long-run.

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Returning to Work After Protesting: Employee Rights and Employer Responsibilities

June 29, 2020
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Some employers may be concerned about the risk posed by the return of employees who have participated in protests to newly reopened workplaces. Similarly, employees may want to know whether their increased risk of exposure could affect their job security, and what their rights are in this situation.

The Week in FFCRA Complaints

June 26, 2020
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This is the second installment in our roundup of FFCRA complaints. As we noted in the first post, we will be keeping you up to date with all the cases and highlighting the ones that we think have special bearing on our practice, employment law in New York State, or are just particularly noteworthy.

Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup

June 26, 2020
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This week we’re looking at how women’s job losses are bad for the hops of a wider economic recovery, New York’s plans for phase three of reopening, and the trend to home birth trends, which we will also be discussing at greater length in a multi-post blog about coronavirus’s effects on pregnancy, abortion, and childbirth, specifically for low-income black women and women of color.

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