Roundup: Recruiting scams; Discrimination and harm; MD pay transparency; New benefits rules; Looks and discrimination
Salary.com Compensation and Pay Equity Law Review
Our editor, employment lawyer Heather Bussing, is tracking legislation, cases, and analysis to give you the latest critical HR topics.
This week we're answering the questions:
- Are people really messing with job seekers then stealing their personal information?
- What does the Supreme Court case on job transfers mean for discrimination cases?
- Will Maryland get more pay transparency?
- What are the new rules regarding benefits?
- Are people either discriminated against or rewarded because of their looks?
Watch for Recruiting Scams
Job seekers are vulnerable enough without scammers pretending to be legit recruiters to deal with. They post fake jobs using fake information in order to steal personal information from people.
Discrimination is Harm
If you have ever experienced discrimination or being rejected simply for who you are, this is not hard. Of course, it's discrimination. It's fundamentally unfair to give someone a lower status job because of their gender even if the pay is the same.
It's not about the money. Here are links with excerpts and analysis of the Muldrow decision, discussing discrimination and harm.
New Maryland Pay Transparency Law
While there are things that are as important as money, like the people we work with, the work itself, and the environment and culture we deal with, money still matters. And pay transparency is a good thing for everyone.
New Rules for Benefits
There's really no way to give good advice in the abstract on benefits. It depends on what your organization offers, which laws apply, and how you want to approach it. Before you change anything, get expert advice.
Pay, Looks, and Discrimination
Humans tend to judge other humans harshly based on little or no information, including looks. Some of it is instincts about what is familiar and safe. All of it is unfair.
This is a great discussion of "pretty privilege" and making employment decisions based on looks.