As of this writing, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has confirmed 109 cases of the H1N1 virus, commonly known as swine flu, in the United States. The World Health Organization has confirmed 331 cases of swine flu worldwide and has raised the pandemic threat level to Phase 5 on its six-step scale (Phase 5 designation essentially means that infections from the outbreak that originated in Mexico have been jumping from person to person with relative ease). This Client Alert outlines a few of the myriad legal issues that employers may face with regard to swine flu. As every situation is different, employers are strongly encouraged to seek the advice of counsel with respect to any questions related to these issues. We are, of course, available to provide a more detailed analysis as to any of the matters discussed below or to advise on any other questions that you may have on pandemic flu planning and its implications for the workplace.
Employment Policies
Tip of the Month: Best Practices for Compensation Audits
Recent changes in the legal and economic landscape have significantly heightened the risk that employers’ compensation systems will come under attack. Congress has passed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (“Ledbetter”), which effectively waives the statute of limitations for compensation discrimination claims under the majority of federal employment statutes. The law increases a plaintiff’s ability to recover for compensation discrimination, by placing into issue each and every decision impacting pay, starting from the date of initial hire, rather than just those decisions that occurred within statutory filing period. The law has made the issue of pay equity a hot button issue. Plaintiffs’ attorneys and government regulators are primed for attack.1
The Obama administration also has brought the specter of increased EEOC and OFCCP enforcement activity, as well as the possibility of additional proemployee legislation in the pay discrimination arena. Of note is the Paycheck Fairness Act (“PFA”), which, if passed in its current form, would substantially amend the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and make it significantly easier for employees to establish unlawful pay discrimination. The PFA broadens the categories of employees that plaintiffs can claim as comparators for purposes of showing pay inequity; it sharply curtails the affirmative defenses available to employers; it makes it easier for plaintiff’s attorneys to bring large class-action lawsuits, and it permits uncapped compensatory and punitive damages. It also allows the OFCCP to use a simplistic and often inaccurate “pay grade methodology” when identifying federal contractors unjustly investigated and make it more difficult for them to defend against agency audits.
Coupled with these legal developments have been a rash of company layoffs, rising unemployment, and an increasing number of employees and former employees who face difficult financial plights. All of these forces make employee compensation discrimination lawsuits more likely. Conducting internal audits to identify disparities in compensation that might be subject to legal challenge, and appropriately addressing such disparities, is one of the best ways to prevent pay discrimination lawsuits and to place your organization in the most favorable position should they occur. This Tip of the Month provides guidance for in-house counsel and human resources executives when undertaking such audits.
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1 For more information on the Ledbetter Act see our Client Alert about it.