Employment Litigation Lawyer

Are you a small business owner that is facing an employment-related litigation filing from a current or former employee? Due to a downturn in the economy and stricter government enforcement, discrimination and wage hour violations are becoming more common for businesses. Save yourself from the potential fines,penalties, and judgments and speak with an employment litigation attorney for advice on the best methods of handling these situations. Through a customized approach, proper counsel can assist you with an individualized strategy specific to your business objective.

The wage and hour violations often stem from incorrect employee misclassification.Is an employee exempt or non-exempt? Just because someone is on salary does not make them exempt. Similarly, the definition of an independent contractor is established by statute and court cases, and cannot be altered by an employer.

Some common examples of California Wage hour violations include:
Unpaid straight-time wages: If you ask y9our employees to work off the clock, your business can face severe penalties in addition to unpaid wages.
Unpaid overtime wages: If the a non-exempt employee works over 8 hours in a day OR over 40 hours in a week, your company is compelled to pay time and a half for excess time.

Independent Contactor Status: Employers frequently misclassify workers as independent contractors, and face penalties that could put them out of business.
Some examples of Employment Discrimination include:

Excluding potential employees during recruitment due to their background/demographics
Denying compensation and/or benefits to certain employees.
Unequal pay for equally-qualified employees in the same position.
Non uniformity in disability leave, maternity leave, or retirement options

Employers are also required to inform their employees about their EEOC and DFEH rights,and must not retaliate if they do file a discriminatory complaint.
When looking for an attorney that best suits your needs, it is important that they are offering the most practical and cost-effective solution to the dispute you may be involved in. An experienced attorney will be able to properly asses the risks you are facing and propose the best litigation options well before trial.Even while you are facing a legal case, as a business owner, there are other matters that need to be focused on to keep your business properly functioning.With the help of an employment litigation lawyer, you can be sure that the best approach to your case is being taken so that you can concentrate on the other important aspects in running your business.

The main goal for any business attorney is to effectively manage the strategy they will employ for the case, as well as achieve the desired goal that the business owner is aiming for. In some cases, it may be appropriate to negotiate a settlement with the plaintiff, while in others, it may be necessary to vigorously defend the business owner against the claims set forth by the employee. An expert attorney will have this strategy set out well in advance so that you, the business owner, are fully prepared on what to expect.

Going through a dispute with a current or past employee is something that no business owner wants to go through. Although it may be unavoidable in some instances,there are some preventative measures that you can take to ensure that you are following the best practices as set out by the labor board. First and foremost,having an employment handbook set in place is a necessity. However, having just any template handbook can still lead to problems. Having a business attorney custom draft your handbook specific to your business can make sure that all the policies you want to enforce are included. Enforcing an employee handbook is just the first step to avoiding legal troubles with an employee. For additional information about protecting your business from legal woes, contact an attorney at www.SmallBusinessLaw.Org.

Online Business is Better Than Employment

According to human resource experts, the things that cause stress to workers is physical fatigue, long working hours and emotional imbalance. Most employed people are burdened with unreasonable targets at work. But since employment lays a meal on their tables they take excess pressure to impress to ensure their job security.

Most of us even work for the sake of earning a living and yet we do not love our work. This results in us pursuing a career we are not compatible with and in the process we get frustrated with employment. For some, it can lead to confusion in that one ends up not knowing what they want to achieve in life.

But someone does not need to get frustrated; instead drastic steps can be taken to ensure you live your life to the fullest. Start a small business where you can plan your own diary and divert your energy to your own business venture. As the saying goes “time is money”, rather than spend time working for someone else, get others to work for you. Use other people’s resources like time, skills and talents to your own benefit.

Though it may call for total commitment and sacrifice, at the end of the day you’ll reap the benefits of your sweat. Since I resigned from my employment some five years ago I have never looked back. My online business is doing great and now I have a lot of free time in my hands. I don’t have to be present for my business to operate. The internet has completely revolutionized the mode of doing business. So don’t stick with a job you don’t love, start a small business online and see how things go.

Stephen is an Online Business Expert. He researches and studies on small business strategies. Website: Online Business Secrets for money making tips.

Employment Statistics Prove Positive For Social Workers

The realm of human welfare or social work has some particular specialties that include primarily children, family, education, public health, physical and psychological well-being and drug addiction. It has been seen that the scale of job prospects related to social welfare has only increased over the past years, this has even been validated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that a social worker had around 642,000 jobs in hand back in 2008. The graph has certainly aggravated presently.

Since majority of individuals working in the circle of social betterment has some concerns regarding the industry they wish to be associated with, it has even been evaluated that around 54% of individuals were then working in the health and human welfare industries while the remaining 31% worked in government sponsored agencies at various levels. With this entire report of job opportunities available for people working in the social development continuum, it explicitly indicates that job prospects are at no dearth, when it comes to looking for a stable and financially secure professional career.

The nature of a profession such as social welfare services is such that employees are assigned to work in cities as well as suburbs. It is expected for a social welfare employee to find a job in rural vicinities, as the space to exhibit their professional concerns and skills is more extensive as compared to an urban area, which is already quite developed. This indicates that social welfare is a profession, which comes with a lot of responsibilities and challenges.

Earlier, it was believed that not all specialist areas of social betterment thrived in terms of job opportunities, and not all offered the same amount of professional working security. However, today, all areas of social work are increasing job opportunities, particularly by the private social welfare organizations. In fact, the increase of employment in this industry has been around 22% which is promising. This is likely to increase with the time owing to the aging child boomer populace which will, over the span of time, demand better health and social services.

Apart from the physical stability, mental & psychological stability and drug addiction are areas which are rapidly augmenting with job prospects. An increase of 20% has also been predicted by specialists as there is going to be a strong demand of services to counter such deteriorating circumstances.

Last but not the least, children and family along with education are areas that are actually excelling areas in the field of human welfare and betterment. In order to bring about a change, an anchor lies in the hand of social services, augmenting the protection for children and their families while at the same time, emphasizing on the local prevalence of education is what is going to instigate a progressive developmental scale in the society. Some of the specialized areas elaborated on indicate the fields that can be explored by social welfare employees to bring a progressive change in the society.

Employment Law – The Enforceability Of Post Employment Restraints Of Trade (vic.)

Employing highly intelligent and highly qualified employees in a range of sophisticated commercial businesses is a risky business for employers.

To acquire competitive business advantage in an increasingly globalized and networked world of pharmaceuticals, genetics, telecommunications, power supply and information technology requires the employment of highly qualified, well educated, experienced and clever employees.

Potential employers and employees are both well advised to seek legal assistance when drafting or accepting terms of employment. Due to the seniority of these employees, their employment contracts are less likely to be workplace agreements but more likely to be private , one-off, contracts of employment.

Often, employees in the pharmaceuticals, genetics, telecommunications, power supply and information technology industries will have access to secret and confidential information which is both price and market-sensitive. This information might be chemical formulae, scientific and technological data, chemical, electrical or manufacturing trade processes, hardware or software engineering designs, or a range of other sophisticated technological and scientific information. The potential employee will need access to this information to perform his or her anticipated role. When the employment relationship ends, however, the employer is faced with a double problem. First, the employee is leaving. Whether the departure is voluntary or involuntary, it will be an inconvenience and a disruption to the employer. Secondly, and more importantly long term, the departing employee will take with him or her, knowledge of the secret and confidential information which may be the very basis of the employer’s competitive advantage in a particular industry or market.

To minimise this long term disruption, employers often include restraint of trade clauses in employment contracts when employing people in these sensitive areas. Commonly, the restraint of trade will prevent the former employee from seeking employment with any competitor of the former employer in the particular market for a period of time.

In current times, where there is a shortage of trained staff, particularly in scientific and technological areas, the reason why an employee departs is generally because he or she has received a better offer from a competitor.
In deciding whether or not to enforce the restraint of trade clause against a departing employee, Victorian courts have to balance a number of competing factors.

First, neither Australian nor Victorian general law will restrain a former employee from seeking employment with a competitor. Any such restraint must be found in an enforceable clause in the contract of employment with the former employer. Employers, therefore, should always ensure that staff are employed pursuant to written contracts of employment which contain enforceable restraints of trade.

Secondly, Victorian courts will not allow employers to prevent former employees from conducting a living by practising the skills which may have taken many years to acquire through university courses or practical experience. However, this is only a general rule or starting point.

Thirdly, Victorian courts will not allow former employees to obtain an unfair springboard into a new career by abusing the trust of the former employer. Examples are where employees spend an entire weekend photocopying price lists, formulae, client contact details and other confidential information and then resign the following Monday morning to set up a competitive business the following Tuesday morning.

Essentially, Victorian courts perform a balancing act between the competing interests of the employee to be able to continue to gain a living on the one hand and the employer’s interests of being able to reasonably prevent the disclosure of confidential and secret trade-sensitive information to competitors when the employment relationship ceases.

The sorts of factors courts have taken into account are as follows. First, Victorian courts will look to see whether the restraint of trade is reasonable or is too restrictive. Any restraint which tries to prevent an employee from working not only in the particular business of the former employer but any other associated or ancillary business is likely to be struck down. Likewise, a restraint which seeks to prevent an employee from working for an excessively lengthy period (generally more than 12 months) is also highly likely to be struck down and declared unenforceable. To overcome these problems, lawyers draft restraint of trade clauses to have a “waterfall” effect. The clause contains a number of alternatives, for example, starting from a very wide restraint and then proceeding to an increasingly narrow restraint in terms of future employment activities or in terms of length of time. Each one of the alternatives is severable from the contract if declared unenforceable by a court. Accordingly, a court might reject a restraint which provided for former employee X not to be employed in any pharmaceutical industry within South East Asia including Australia. The court, on the other hand, may be prepared to enforce a restraint which prevented employee X from being employed in the field of molecular genetic artificial-blood technology in either Melbourne or in Sydney for a period of one year. Such a restraint is far more precise and reasonably protects the former employer’s confidential information whilst allowing the employee to seek employment in the general field of molecular genetics.

A court must also be satisfied that an employer’s fears are genuine. For instance, is the information really secret and confidential? If the information is only knowledge which an employee would obtain through the repetitive working of his or her ordinary job, courts are less likely to regard this as secret or confidential information. Other sorts of information which are publicly available (even such as client contact details and price lists) may also not qualify. If there is no secret or confidential information, then there can be no restraint of trade.

Courts will also look to see whether the employee was specifically compensated for the restraint when first employed. If an employee received a specific additional sum as a hiring incentive for a longer than normal restraint of trade, courts are more likely to be persuaded that the restraint, when ultimately applied, is reasonable. The employee has accepted the restraint when first employed and has received a specific benefit for it.

Another factor which courts will examine is the seniority of the former employee. The more senior, the more likely it may be that the now departed employee may be capable of encouraging other staff to follow him or her and more capable of influencing former clients to switch allegiance. Alternatively, if the former employee was not employed in a managerial position and was only employed at either a junior or specific technical level, courts may be less worried about wholesale client or staff defections which would need to be prevented by the restraint of trade clause.

Until recently, courts seemed reluctant to enforce restraints of trade for more than 3-6 months. However, recent New South Wales Supreme Court authorities seem to be swinging the pendulum back in favour of employers where the balancing exercise outlined above suggests that the restraint of trade does need to be enforced to reasonably protect the former employer’s market and confidential information interests. For instance, Brereton, J., in John Fairfax Publications Pty Ltd v. Bert & Ors [2006] N.S.W.S.C. 995 upheld a restraint of trade for 12 months in relation to a former employee who had been employed at a senior level. The same judge, in Cactus Imaging Pty Ltd v. Peters [2006] N.S.W.S.C. 17 (18 July 2006) also enforced a restraint of trade for 12 months in a situation where the former employee operated in a restrictive market or oligopoly.

This is a complex area of law. Contracts of employment generally and restraints of trade particularly need to be carefully drafted to have their intended legal effect.

Employers and employees need to be carefully advised on the range of tactics available in post employment scenarios.

Citation Employment Law Over 300,000 Working Days Lost Due to Disputes Last Year

Disputes with your workforce are both time consuming and costly, not to mention potentially damaging to your business, reputation and productivity.

Having procedures in place to deal with conflicts which may arise with employees will help minimise any cost and potential damage to your business. Conflicts should be addressed and resolved as quickly and amicably as possible.

New figures reveal the number of working days lost through industrial disputes in the UK has rocketed in recent months.

According to the Office for National Statistics, around 374,000 working days were lost during the 12 months leading up to October 2009, with 90 separate stoppages occurring mainly in the public sector.

-Employment disputes and conflicts have a huge impact on small to medium sized businesses, not only financial but they are increasingly more damaging to staff morale and productivity. Creating a culture with open dialogue and issuing employee handbooks and contracts of employment are all steps Citation advise its clients take to create a happy workforce and limit the potential for disputes,- says Andrea O’Hare, Head of Personnel and Employment Law at Citation.

In recent months all organisations have been directly affected by the postal workers’ strikes. These account for the majority of the days lost in 2009, although there were also disputes involving council and transport workers that led to industrial action last year. It is estimated that around 200,000 workers took industrial action during the 12-month period, including 177,000 in October alone at the height of the postal dispute.

Citation can help you limit the soaring solicitor’s fees you are faced with when dealing with an employee dispute. Citation gives you the confidence your business needs to limit any associated damage and follow the correct procedures.

For further information on how we can help contact our Personnel and Employment specialists on 01625 415 500 or e-mail .

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