Subject: GEA Newsletter #03 Jan 30, 2023

 Newsletter #03 January 30, 2023

TRAINING UPDATES


Employment Law and HR Legal Updates

Monthly Webinars


GEA will be partnering with Constangy, Brooks, Smith & Prophete, LLP to provide monthly Human Resources and employment legal update webinars for 2023. The first webinar will be Jan. 31st use the link below to register for this webinar.


Last Tuesday of each month

11:00 am EST


GEA Members - Free

Non-Members - $50.00




Free Webinar

Employee Retention Tax Credit (ERTC)



GEA is partnering with Brett Virgin, GEA Board Member to bring you this webinar. These changes allow organizations to receive refundable tax credits for retaining employees during the pandemic. Join us to learn how this program can help your business. 


Here are some of the main points:

  • You may be eligible to receive a tax credit of up to $33,000 per employee.

  • There are ways to qualify for the ERTC other than using revenue reduction tests.

  • Regardless of receiving PPP loans, organizations may still be able to receive a sizable tax credit.


In addition, by going through Brett and the GEA, you may be eligible for a discount.


Date: February 16th

Time: 11:00 am EST


 Click Here to Register for ERTC webinar



Spaces still available for this series!!


Virtual Workshops 
This workshop series will be held virtually. All workshops will be held online from 9:00 am – 3:30 pm, with a break between 11:30 am and 1:00 pm. Materials will be provided in PDF format by email after registration.

Dates:

02/15/2023 Leadership I
03/22/2023 Leadership II
04/26/2023 Leadership III
05/03/2023 Leadership IV
06/07/2023 Leadership V
07/12/2023 Leadership VI


Visit Website for Overview and Pricing


EMPLOYMENT LAW NEWS


Constangy.com News & Analysis

FY 2024 H-1B cap season has begun: What you need to know

1.23.23


The annual H-1B cap season has begun for Fiscal Year 2024. Once again, there will be a two-step process – the registration step and then, if the registration is selected in the H-1B cap lottery, the petition step. Now is the time to start getting ready for the registration process and to review any potential H-1B petition issues.


Attorneys generally review for issues relevant to the petition during the registration step – for example, issues related to H-1B specialty occupations or job title.


This will be the fourth year that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has used the electronic registration tool as part of the H-1B lottery process. The 2019 regulations introduced this electronic registration process, requiring employers first to file registrations seeking the opportunity to file H-1B Petitions for the beneficiaries in the selected registrations. Last year, almost 500,000 registrations were filed for the 85,000 H-1B cap visas available (20,000 slots are allocated to persons with advanced degrees from eligible public or nonprofit institutions of higher education)....Continue Reading >>



SHRM.org EMPLOYMENT LAW

Long COVID-19 Poses Compliance Risks for Employers

By Allen Smith, J.D. January 26, 2023


As the COVID-19 pandemic persists, the probability of employees developing long COVID-19 increases. Employers may face some compliance risks when that happens, particularly regarding the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Medical certification and documentation require careful thought, as there aren't standard procedures for diagnosing the condition.


Symptoms, Treatments and Prevention


The most common symptoms of long COVID are difficulty concentrating, fatigue, shortness of breath, chest pain, rapid heart rate, loss of sense of smell and taste, anxiety, and depression, said Dr. Jeff Levin-Scherz, managing director and population health leader with WTW in Belmont, Mass...Continue Reading >>


Constangy.com Blog

SCOTUS will review religious accommodation standard

BY ROBIN SHEA ON 1.27.23
POSTED IN REASONABLE ACCOMMODATIONRELIGION


"Undue hardship" defense is likely to become tougher.


The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the undue hardship standard in religious accommodation cases. We expect the standard to become more difficult for employers to meet.


Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination based on religion (among many other things) and since 1972 also requires employers to make reasonable accommodations for employees' religious beliefs or practices. In the 1977 case of Trans World Airlines v. Hardison, the Supreme Court said that undue hardship would be found -- and the employer excused from accommodation -- if the proposed religious accommodation would involve more than a de minimis cost or inconvenience.


Read today, the Hardison majority opinion (written by Justice Byron "Whizzer" White) seems dated, and even quaint. The Court expressed concern that a robust reasonable accommodation obligation would result in "preferential treatment" for religious adherents, which was unfair to their co-workers. The dissent -- by Justice Thurgood Marshall, joined by Justice William Brennan -- took a much more "modern" view of the reasonable accommodation obligation. Their view did not prevail.


But a lot changed after 1977.


In 1990, Congress enacted the Americans with Disabilities Act (which first took effect in 1992), which required reasonable accommodation for individuals with disabilities. The ADA had a reasonable accommodation standard much like that espoused by Justices Marshall and Brennan, including a requirement that "undue hardship" involve a "significant difficulty or expense," taking into account the size of the employer, its financial resources, the nature of the business, and the like. In other words, the hardship had to be significantly more than "de minimis" to be "undue." Reasonable accommodation requirements in the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (1994), and the Affordable Care Act (2010) had the same undue hardship standard as the ADA.


As a result, our federal laws have two very different "undue hardship" standards: One (religion) that is pretty easy for employers to satisfy; and three others (the ADA, USERRA, and the ACA) that are almost impossible, at least if you're a large employer. 


In 2020, the Supreme Court refused to review a case involving religious accommodation. Although they agreed with the refusal, Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Clarence Thomas said that they thought the Hardison undue hardship standard should be reviewed when an appropriate case came along. Then, in 2021, the Supreme Court again refused to review another religious accommodation case (Small v. Memphis Light, Gas & Water), and this time Justice Gorsuch dissented (joined by Justice Alito). Justice Gorsuch really let the Hardison decision have it: 


  • "Hardison's de minimis cost test does not appear in [Title VII]. The Court announced that standard in a single sentence with little explanation or supporting analysis. Neither party before the Court had even argued for the rule. . . . Justice Marshall highlighted all these problems at the time, noting in dissent that the de minimis cost test cannot be reconciled with the "plain words" of Title VII, defies "simple English usage," and "effectively nullif[ies]" the statute's promise."


(Second set of brackets in original.)


Which brings us to 2023. The Court has now agreed to review Groff v. DeJoy, a case in which a Christian postal worker in Pennsylvania requested not to work at all on Sundays for religious reasons. (The post office was making Sunday deliveries for Amazon.) Mr. Groff's bosses made some attempts at accommodation, but the attempts were not successful. Either Mr. Groff was left on the Sunday schedule and disciplined for not working, or his co-workers were overworked trying to cover for him. Mr. Groff eventually resigned, and then he sued and lost, and lost again on appeal. However, the fact that the Supreme Court now intends to review the case -- viewed in light of the strong anti-Hardison language in Justice Gorsuch's dissent in Small, as well as the current makeup of the Court -- does not bode well for the "de minimis" undue hardship standard.


In other words, it appears that the Court may adopt an "ADA" undue hardship standard to apply in religious accommodation cases, meaning that the employer refusing to accommodate would have to show that it would face "significant difficulty or expense," taking into account its size and financial resources, and other factors. The Court will also decide whether a finding of undue hardship can be based only on the burden that the religious accommodation creates for co-workers.


Tags: ACAADAAffordable Care ActAmericans with Disabilities ActByron "Whizzer" WhiteClarence ThomasGroff v. DeJoyNeil GorsuchReligious AccommodationSamuel AlitoSCOTUSSmall v. Memphis Light, Gas & WaterSupreme CourtThurgood MarshallTrans World Airlines v. HardisonUndue HardshipUniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights ActUSERRAWilliam Brennan


HRDive.com Article

EEOC updates guidance on ADA and hearing

disabilities

The announcement follows several recent legal actions alleging disability discrimination against individuals with hearing impairments.


Published Jan. 26, 2023

Ryan Golden / Senior Reporter


The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission published Tuesday an updated Americans with Disabilities Act guidance containing information about how the law applies to job applicants and employees who are deaf, hard of hearing or have other hearing conditions.


EEOC said in a press release that the document answers questions about pre- and post-job offer inquiries; technologies that may enable free or low-cost reasonable accommodation; safety concerns; and new and updated scenarios of potential discrimination that address technologies such as videoconferencing software.


The guidance explains, for example, that an employer that uses videoconferencing may need to provide a service that translates voice into text at real-time speeds as an ADA accommodation....Read More >>>


Georgia Employers' Association

Phone: 478-722-8282


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