Roundup: Employee social media; VT pay transparency; Pride and discrimination; Employee feedback; CT paid sick leave
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 are questioning reality, but the employment law questions we cover include:
- Why are employers still trying to control employees' personal social media?
- What is a good faith pay range and why is this so hard?
- Which is more important: religious freedom or human rights?
- What are the laws that protect against discrimination of LGBTQ+ employees?
- What if employee feedback was helpful?
- What does Connecticut's new paid sick leave law require?
Don't Make Employees Do LinkedIn
Don't make employees use LinkedIn. And really don't ask them to give you access to their personal social accounts. In some places, it's illegal. In all places it's bad. Employees personal social media pages are theirs to do or not do what every they want.
Vermont's Pay Transparency Law and Good Faith Pay Ranges
What many employers are doing is posting pay ranges that are completely meaningless. There is no real job that realistically has a pay range of $20,000 to $200,000. Anyone who sees a range like this can tell the employer is being lazy, sneaky, or both.
Pride is Also About Employment Law
Laws that protect against discrimination are about fundamental human rights to be treated with dignity and fairly because you exist and are human. They relate to our ability to work, have housing, have access to public services and businesses, and to be ourselves.
This is a fantastic overview of the legal protections for LGBTQ+ people, including the internal links to more resources. They also offer helpful suggestions, not only on legal compliance, but also what that looks like in practice.
What If Feedback Was Helpful?
If performance feedback was really about helping people learn, solve problems, and improve, it makes sense that it would be in real time and about the work people are doing now. That's exactly what this Chicago law firm decided to do. Not only that, they are working with people to become more comfortable both giving and receiving feedback. They recognize that even attorneys have emotions. I'm joking. Sort of.
Paid Sick Leave is Coming to Connecticut
You don't want your employees sick. They don't want to be sick. And if you make me sick, I'm going to be pissed. Put that in your wastewater.