GROUP BLOG: Intermittent Family Medical Leave — A delicate balance of rights

The Family Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA) has been in effect for more than 20 years. It has undergone several updates in recent years including an extension of additional benefits to military families, airline flight crews and in certain instances equivalent benefits to same-sex spouses. However, the concept of intermittent FMLA still remains a mystery to most employees and even many employers. Both parties have obligations under the statute and finding the right balance may be the key to preventing misunderstandings that could lead to unnecessary litigation.

Click here to learn more about intermittent FMLA.

GROUP BLOG: West Virginia Wage Payment Collection Act — Class actions can apply to out-of-state employers

As a follow up to a previous post, Ryan Mick provides a brief primer on class action claims brought under the West Virginia Wage Payment Collection Act (WPCA), which governs the manner and method in which West Virginia employers provide wages to their employees. Click here to read how this act and its class action implications apply not only to West Virginia employers, but to out-of-state employers providing employment services in the state as well.

LEGAL UPDATE: OSHA accepting comments on proposed changes for regulations on chemical management and PELs

By: Cressinda D. Schlag

On Oct. 9, 2014, OSHA published a Request for Information (RFI) on Chemical Management and Permissible Exposure Limits (PELs) in the Federal Register. OSHA’s RFI requests that stakeholders, including businesses and local government entities, comment on the potential impact of an alternative approach to managing chemicals in the work environment through the modification of the current PEL process.

OSHA has set enforceable PELs, or regulatory limits on the amount or concentration of a substance allowed in the air, for over 500 chemicals. These PELs are addressed in specific standards for the general industry, shipyard employment and construction industry. Despite multiple proposals from both OSHA and industry groups seeking to change or enhance specific PELs over the past decade, 95% of the PELs have been in existence without change since 1971. OSHA’s limited ability to modify or enhance PELs within the current regulatory framework is the administration’s primary incentive for changing current regulations on chemical management and PEL regulations.

OSHA’s RFI raises several potential approaches to chemical management, which include: a tiered approach, hazard banding, task-based approach and informed substitution. Any of the proposed approaches would drastically streamline OSHA’s existing regulatory framework for PELs by allowing OSHA to regulate groups of chemicals or types of chemical exposures in the same manner, without identifying or establishing exposure limits for each individual chemical.

For example, if OSHA adopted the proposed “control banding” approach, all chemicals with similar qualities would be grouped and regulated based on the group’s qualities instead of a single chemical’s qualities. OSHA would therefore avoid having to develop PELs for every single chemical.

Although OSHA’s RFI has no impact on OSHA’s current enforcement policies, information obtained during the RFI could significantly impact the administration’s future approach to chemical regulation and in turn could severely affect employers with chemical exposures. Employers should therefore consider reviewing and commenting on OSHA’s RFI.

Comments on OSHA’s proposal are not due until Wednesday, April 8, 2015 or 180 days after the RFI’s Oct. 10 publication in the Federal Register. You can access OSHA’s RFI and electronic submission page at https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2014/10/10/2014-24009/chemical-management-and-permissible-exposure-limits-pels

For more information about any of OSHA’s proposed approaches or to obtain assistance in writing a formal comment, please contact any member of the Burns White Occupational Safety and Health team.

LEGAL UPDATE: OSHA announces top 10 violations for 2014

By: Cressinda D. Schlag

At the end of September, OSHA released its list of the top 10 most frequently cited standards in violations resulting from work site inspections during the 2013 fiscal year. In the 89,664 industry inspections performed, the top number of violations occurred in these ten categories:

  • 1926.501 Fall Protection
  • 1910.1200 Hazard Communication
  • 1926.451 Scaffolding
  • 1910.134 Respiratory Protection
  • 1910.305 Electrical, Wiring Methods
  • 1910.178 Powered Industrial Trucks
  • 1926.1053 Ladders
  • 1910.147 Lockout/Tagout
  • 1910.303 Electrical, General Requirements
  • 1910.212 Machine Guarding

Nearly all of the standards noted on OSHA’s top ten list appeared on last year’s list, and notably, the top four violations — fall protection, hazard communication, scaffolding and respiratory protection — appeared in the exact same order.

For more information on OSHA’s Top Ten Violations list or how OSHA’s emphasis programs might affect your business, contact any member of the Burns White Occupational Safety and Health team.

GROUP BLOG: NLRB holds that a Jimmy John’s franchisee had unfair labor practices, protects employees’ free speech

On April 21, 2014, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) held that a franchisee of the Jimmy John’s sandwich chain committed unfair labor practices, ordering it to cease and desist disparaging or promoting the disparagement of pro-union workers. Additionally, the decision required the franchisee to offer reinstatement for discharged employees, rescind each disputed written warning, and provide full back-pay to each employee for lost earnings and/or other benefits.

Click here to read more about this unique case.

LEGAL UPDATE: OSHA tightens severe injury reporting requirements for employers in final rule

In the final rule for Occupational Injury and Illness Recording and Reporting Requirements released on Sept. 11, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration tightened its reporting requirements for all employers covered by the Occupational Safety & Health Act. This revised rule, which will go into effect on Jan. 15, 2015, will require employers, whether exempt from maintaining injury and illness records or not, to notify OSHA of any work-related fatalities within eight hours, and any work-related in-patient hospitalizations, amputations or losses of an eye within 24 hours. In contrast, the prior standard only imposed the reporting of in-patient hospitalizations affecting three or more employees.

In addition to the phone reporting system already in existence, OSHA is currently developing a web portal for employers to submit incidents electronically.

Along with the new reporting requirements, OSHA issued an update to the list of industries that are exempt from routinely keeping and maintaining injury and illness records based on the North American Industry Classification System. The reporting exemption for any employer with 10 or fewer employees, regardless of their industry classification, remained intact in the final rule.

For more information on how these changes to the Occupational Injury and Illness Recording and Reporting Requirements might affect your business, contact any member of the Burns White Occupational Safety and Health team.

GROUP BLOG: West Virginia’s Wage Payment Collection Act: Employers’ Failure to Pay Final Wages Can Be Costly

The West Virginia Wage Payment and Collection Act (WPCA), at first glance, is relatively straightforward. However, scenarios can arise that will frustrate compliance for the employer, specifically the payment of final “wages” to an employee. An employer’s failure to pay final wages in accordance with WPCA can be costly.

Click here to read more about the WPCA.

GROUP BLOG: ADA 101: Types of reasonable accommodations employers should make for four common disabilities

As most employers are probably aware, the ADA makes it illegal to discriminate against job applicants and employees based on a physical or mental disability if they are otherwise qualified. The law also requires that employers provide reasonable accommodations to those applicants or employees, unless doing so would impose an undue hardship on the employer. In recognition of the 24th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), this post looks at the types of reasonable accommodations that are necessary for an employer to make in four common disabilities.

Click here to read the full post on the Employment Law Blotter.

GROUP BLOG: Employers should tread lightly when searching social media in the recruitment process

Thanks to easier accessibility via smartphones and other mobile devices, social media is everywhere — in the home, at the grocery store, at school, and even at work. With recent studies indicating that Facebook has more than 1.32 billion users, and that LinkedIn has surpassed 300 million, chances are that your employees are logging in daily — oftentimes blurring the lines between work and personal online activity. Such pervasive use of social media in today’s workplace presents new opportunities for employers, as well as some concerns such as employee productivity and information breaches. Amid these and other issues that frequently arise, employers must now be mindful of how information obtained from social media sites is utilized in the recruiting and hiring process.

Click here to read the full post on the Employment Law Blotter

ATTORNEY BLOG: Two recent Commonwealth Court decisions show the need for thorough investigations involving alleged injuries sustained on employer premises

By: Joseph C. Romano, Esq.

The Commonwealth Court recently issued two decisions relating to issues involving course and scope of employment and premises liability: Ace Wire Spring and Form Co. v. WCAB (Walshesky), 29 PAWCLR 110 (Pa. Commw. 2014) and PPL v. WCAB (Kloss), 29 PAWCLR 112 (Pa. Commw. 2014). Both of these decisions underscore the importance of an early and thorough investigation prior to acceptance or denial of an alleged injury.

In Walshesky, the Commonwealth Court affirmed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge and Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board, determining that the claimant sustained a left-sided stroke and paralysis due to a fall in the employer’s parking lot while furthering the business affairs of the employer. The evidence of record indicated that the claimant arrived at work sometime between 6:30 and 7:30 a.m., before his 8:00 a.m. shift. Upon arriving, the claimant entered the employer’s building to retrieve uniforms, walked to his car to place the uniforms inside the vehicle, then slipped and fell on ice while returning to building. Testimony revealed that the claimant and other employees routinely arrived early for work.

Before the Commonwealth Court, the employer continued its argument that the claimant was not within the course and scope of his employment as he arrived at an unreasonable time prior to the start of his shift (approximately 90 minutes prior). The court disagreed, finding that the evidence did not establish that the claimant’s presence on his employer’s premises between thirty (30) to ninety (90) minutes before his work shift was an unreasonable amount of time before his shift began.

In making its decision, the court held that there is not a bright line test for assessing how long prior to the commencement of a scheduled shift is unreasonable. Instead, “the exact amount of time does not appear to be as important as the claimant’s purpose or activities during that time.” The court then considered the claimant’s purpose for being there, retrieving uniforms, and the fact that the claimant and other employees routinely arrived early for their respective shifts. Finally, the court did not find any credible evidence to demonstrate that the claimant abandoned his employment, engaged in something entirely foreign thereto, acted contrary to any positive orders of his employer, or was a trespasser within the time leading up to his shift.

In Kloss, the Workers’ Compensation Judge and Appeal Board determined that the claimant, a steno clerk, had successfully proven that she was in the course and scope of her employment when she fell, following her shift, in a restricted use parking garage that was physically connected to the employer’s premises. However, upon review, a majority of the Commonwealth Court reversed the Appeal Board’s and Workers’ Compensation Judge’s rulings.

The evidence revealed that the claimant parked in a nearby parking garage that was leased to the employer and one other business, but was not available for public use. The parking garage was not owned nor operated by the employer, but the employer did pay a pro rata share of the electric bill, based on occupancy of its employees. Employees of PPL also received a parking subsidy for utilizing that garage, as well as one other one, but were not required to park in either garage. A transportation subsidy was also available for the use of public transportation. Additionally, the parking lot was connected to the PPL building by a skywalk owned by PPL.

On the date of the incident, the claimant used her employer-issued swipe card to enter the parking garage. The claimant parked on the second floor and utilized an elevator to go up to the third floor where she entered the employer’s building through the skywalk. Following her shift, the claimant exited the building onto a public street and walked to the parking garage. Upon entering the garage, the claimant started walking toward the elevators when she slipped and fell, injuring her right arm and shoulder.

In reversing, the Commonwealth Court determined that the parking garage was not a part of the employer’s premises. In so finding, the court held that the parking subsidy was merely an employment benefit and immaterial to the determination of whether the parking lot constituted the employer’s premises. The employer did not require employees to park in the lot. Rather, parking in this lot was optional and subject to availability. Additionally, the employer offered subsidized parking at another parking lot, as well as a subsidy for bus transportation. The majority further held that the claimant failed to establish that her injury was the result of a condition of the premises, as the claimant testified that she tripped over her own feet while walking to the elevator.

These recent decisions by the Commonwealth Court highlight the necessity for a thorough investigation of an alleged injury when issues such as course and scope of employment and premises liability are present. When reduced to the very basics, each case involved an injury in a parking lot before and after a work shift. However, the specific facts crucial to each case separate a compensable work incident from a non-compensable work incident. In each instance, the Commonwealth Court undertook an intensive factual review in making its determination.

With that in mind, it is imperative for employers to thoroughly investigate all alleged injuries and communicate as much information as possible to their insurer or third-party administrator. The communication of these facts is crucial when making a determination to accept or deny a claim. As an insurer or third-party administrator, it is equally important that you attempt to obtain as much information as possible to determine the potential liability or defense strategy and communicate that information with defense counsel.

For more information on investigations, premises liability or other workers’ compensation-related matters, contact attorneys of the Burns White Workers’ Compensation Group at 412-995-3000 or email Joseph C. Romano at jcromano@burnswhite.com.

1 4 5 6 7 8 10