Telecommuting—A Reasonable Accommodation?
Posted on May 2, 2014
Posted in Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
Can an employee request the ability to work from home as a reasonable accommodation? And how easy is it for an employer to demonstrate that an employee’s physical presence in the workplace is required? In a world in which telecommuting is becoming ever more prevalent, yet companies still maintain that they benefit greatly from employees’ […]
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Request for Vacation Not Protected by FMLA and Cannot Support Interference Claim
Posted on April 11, 2014
Posted in Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
Does an employee’s request for leave have to be protected by the FMLA to give rise to a potential interference or retaliation claim? Last month, the Eleventh Circuit answer said yes in the case of Hurley v. Kent of Naples, Inc., et al., No. 13-10298 (11th Cir. 2014). Hurley was employed as the CEO for […]
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No Adverse Employment Action = No Claim for Retaliation
Posted on February 21, 2014
Posted in Retaliation, Title VII
Where employee voluntarily quit her job at a restaurant in anticipation of a transfer to a different location that never came to fruition, she has not suffered an adverse employment action and thus has no claim for retaliation. Last week, in Andrews v. CBOCS West, Inc., et al., No. 12-3339 (7th Cir. 2014), the Seventh […]
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Retaliation Claims–Beware the Trickle-Down Effect of the “Wishes of the King”
Posted on January 15, 2014
Posted in Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), Retaliation
Generally speaking, when an employee clearly violates established policy, employers feel pretty comfortable terminating that employee, regardless of his past complaints of discrimination or about overtime, particularly where other employees have been fired for violating the same policy. Not so fast, warns the First Circuit in Travers v. Flight Services & Systems, Inc., 2013 U.S. […]
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