Wednesday, December 29, 2010

How to Reduce Employment Practices Liability Claims

The recent recession saw a rise in employee lawsuits against their employers for such claims as age discrimination, sexual harassment, disability discrimination, racial discrimination, and retaliation—the latter being an up-and-coming growth industry for EPL lawyers.

While American firms were downsizing in 2010, the U.S, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission saw a record 99,922 discrimination claims filed in the fiscal year ending September 30. It was the highest number of cases brought in the agency’s 45-year history.

“There have been many layoffs and people felt unfairly persecuted so, based on that, this type of litigation is on the rise significantly,” says Chris Cavallaro, managing director of ARC Excess & Surplus in Garden City, New York, a wholesale insurance brokerage specializing in professional liability products and services. “And you’re going to see more of it if this economy keeps a heavy hand on the employment picture.”

Before a claimant can press a discrimination claim in federal court, they need to bring an action before the EEOC. But even if the claims wind up being ruled unfounded, EPL cases can be a drain on time and monetary resources for a small or mid-sized business. The average tally for a discrimination case exceeded $235,000, according to the EEOC.

What can a business do to protect itself against EPL lawsuits? The following guide will show how businesses can take out special insurance, called EPL insurance, to protect against employee claims, the types of claims covered under EPL insurance, and other steps legal experts recommend businesses take to protect against EPL claims.

What Is EPL Insurance?

EPL insurance policies protect businesses from the financial costs incurred from employment-related lawsuits filed for a range of reasons, from wrongful termination to harassment to discrimination and so on. More than half of claims are filed against small businesses, according to business insurer Munich RE. However, less than two percent of businesses with fewer than 50 employees purchase EPL insurance.

“It’s really the small employer that’s taking a harder look at this insurance these days, especially when you think about the cost of the insurance compared to the cost of cases and the rising number of cases,” says Cathy Paladino, employment practices liability product manager for Chubb Specialty Insurance. “Generally speaking, we tell small employers that they are more likely to have an EPL claim than they are to have a fire, statistically speaking.”

A recent Chubb survey found that 36 percent of private company executives understand the gravity of their exposure to EPL suits and 21 percent said they had an experience with an EPL suit in the last five years.

While every EPL policy is different, a company with $1 million in sales and 50 employees can likely get a policy for about $7,000 per year—$10,000 if they also take out coverage protecting directors and officers in the event of liability lawsuits against them personally, according to Cavallaro.

Dig Deeper: How to Determine Whether to Insure Directors and Officers

Leading Causes of EPL Claims

The leading charge filed in discrimination cases is an allegation of racial discrimination, at 36 percent of cases, according to EEOC figures from 2009. Gender-based discrimination was alleged in 30 percent of cases. Age-based claims made up 24 percent, and allegations from the disabled tallied 23 percent. In many cases, multiple allegations are made. One of the growing charges, according to the EEOC, is retaliation against employees for making discrimination claims, which can involve a job switch that the employee views as a demotion related to the initial claim.

“If you go to your supervisor and say you’ve been harassed by Joe, you can bring that claim to EEOC, but then if they decide to fire you or cut back your hours, that is the retaliation component,” says Tom Hams, Aon Risk Solutions’s EPL practice leader. “That retaliation component can survive much more than the allegation itself.” The employer may win on the allegation of whether or not you were discriminated against, but they may lose a case based on the retaliation claim for moving the complainant to a different job or office setting.

EPL policies often have a broad definition of actions that trigger the insurance, but usually the definitions include any written demands for monetary or non-monetary compensation, an administrative action or EEOC charge, a lawsuit or any type of formal statement that an employee—or ex-employee—has been harmed, experts say.

Dig Deeper: Do Employee Complaints Have to Be Written Down?

Protections Against EPL Lawsuits

In general, the more protections a small business puts in place against EPL claims and the better internal policies and procedures that are implemented, the lower the business’s premiums will be for EPL coverage and the more likely the business will be considered a candidate for coverage. It’s essential that businesses have a written employee handbook with strong anti-harassment and anti-discrimination policies, but other efforts can also pay off.

Training supervisors in HR procedures and policies is a good place to start, whether that training involves discharge procedures for employees who are being terminated or procedures for how to handle and prevent harassment or discrimination in the workplace. “It’s a good idea for the employer to periodically institute seminars for management staff in general on topics such as sexual harassment,” says Irving M. Geslewitz, an attorney with Much Shelist Denenberg Ament and Rubenstein, P.C., in Chicago, who has extensive experience representing employers from a broad spectrum of industries in all aspects of modern employment law. “Things like that can help obtain a lower premium rate and make a business a better candidate for coverage.”

Geslewitz says the following steps are important for businesses to take in order to protect themselves against EPL claims.

Distribute an employee handbook. Generally speaking, it’s not as important how long or detailed it is as what topics are in there, Geslewitz says. The handbook should contain the business’s equal employment opportunity policy. It should also provide employees with an internal mechanism to complain about discrimination or harassment “so maybe you can head off a lawsuit at the pass,” he says. If the employee doesn’t use that procedure, your business may be able to use that as part of its defense, saying that the employee didn’t exhaust internal channels for seeking resolution to the problem.Develop a code of ethics policy. This policy tells employees that they shouldn’t do certain things, like giving kickbacks and engaging in other ethical violations. Geslewitz says this reduces the employer’s exposure to punitive damages, which may not be covered by EPL insurance policies anyway, if the business is sued over the actions of an employee.Include an anti-retaliation provision. In light of the new rise in claims of retaliation, Geslewitz recommends including a statement saying that it’s the policy of the business not to retaliate against employees over accusations of discrimination or harassment.Institute handbook auditing procedures. Having an audit procedure in place under which the handbook is periodically updated to keep up with changes in the law is also important and can help in the defense of a business.

An employer considering an EPL insurance policy should be asking certain questions to make sure the policy will protect them, such as what kind of claims will be covered and what kind won’t, Geslewitz says. In addition, look at the policy limits and deductibles. In general, the lower the deductible and the broader the scope of coverage, the more expensive the policy will be. Another issue is whether the policy allows your business to choose the lawyer who will represent you in the case of a claim. Most policies specify that the insurance company gets to choose legal representation and, Geslewitz says, if you have a preferred attorney for such matters you may want to look for a policy that allows you some choice in selection.

Dig Deeper: What to Include in an Employee Handbook

-----

Recommended Resources

When Can You Legally Fire Employees?

National Human Resources Association

Society for Human Resource Management

Preventing Lawsuits for Wrongful Termination

25 Ways to Prevent Workplace Violence during Terminations



DIGITAL CHINA HOLDINGS DIRECTV GROUP ELPIDA MEMORY EMC FIDELITY NATIONAL INFORMATION SVCS

Can Haley Recover?

LEVEL 3 COMMUNICATIONS LAWSON SOFTWARE LAND SOFTWARE LAM RESEARCH L1 IDENTITY SOLUTIONS

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Question For The Week

by Conor Friedersdorf What book, album, film or magazine article has made the biggest impact on your life or how you see the world? Why? E-mail responses to conor.friedersdorf@gmail.com with "insight" in the subject line.


Email this Article Add to digg Add to Reddit Add to Twitter Add to del.icio.us Add to StumbleUpon Add to Facebook

ANIXTER INTERNATIONAL APPLE COMPUTER APPLIED MATERIALS ARIAN SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT ARROW ELECTRONICS

Getting Green Products on More Retail Shelves

I am an investor in an "eco start-up" based here in Austin. The company, Blue Avocado, creates green consumer products dubbed "hot products for a cool planet." They launched in 2008 with a set of stylish, responsibly produced, reusable bags for activities such as errands, grocery shopping and toting your lunch. So far, they've had pretty good success penetrating the mid-size retail market, gaining distribution through stores like Whole Foods, Sur La Table, and The Container Store.

But, the break they've been looking for is shelf space in big retail. To have any shot at reaching their goal of getting more than one million people to stop using plastic bags, they need scale—the kind of scale that comes at 20,000 square feet of retail space and thousands of customers per day.

Unfortunately, things are moving slowly. Why? Big retailers don't work well with early stage companies. They get nervous if you've been in business for less than three years or if your sales are lower than $10 million. They won't buy new products unless they're sure their customers want them, but often, ironically, customers don't know they want those products until they see them on the shelves. The net effect in this case is that eco start-ups are often shut out and big retailers don't carry the best, most innovative green merchandise. The consequences for our planet are millions more tons of carbon emitted, countless resources unnecessarily used, tons of excess waste dumped, and millions of people left outside of the green revolution.

This problem is intensified when it comes to consumer products, which make up both the bulk of household discretionary spending and as much as 20 percent of landfill waste. Most Americans purchase their consumer products in big retail but the green choices currently available to them are few. Some retailers are making strides in specific categories, such as food and personal care. For example, Walmart now carries most of the major green brands including Stonyfield, Tom's of Maine, Burt's Bees, and Seventh Generation. Several big grocery stores, like Kroger and Safeway, have launched their own line of organics. But, as a share of what goes into each customer's cart, the number of green products remains small.

In this quandary is the glimmer of an opportunity—an idea—that was shared with me by Amy George, Blue Avocado's founder and "Chief Ozone Officer," that could not only drastically accelerate our progress toward a sustainable future but would also support small and growing businesses such as theirs.

The idea is this: What if, instead of focusing their environmental sustainability programs internally on things like the energy footprint of stores or corporate recycling initiatives, big retailers instead leveraged their key asset—their relationship with millions of customers—and focused their environmental strategy externally on helping customers to reduce their own carbon footprints? This subtle change in philosophy would result in a radically different approach to both buying and merchandising of products. Imagine, for example, if at every checkout customers were told not just the total cost of what they purchased but also the total carbon footprint? Would you think twice about whether your dog really needs another rubber chicken toy?

If big retailers sourced, compared and selected products according to which had the lowest overall environmental impact, they would not likely find the winners among their usual suppliers. To be able to find and introduce dozens of new green products every quarter, they'd have to engage the eco start-ups. These companies, like Blue Avocado, are not just recasting the same old products now in a "recycled" version; instead, they are innovating from scratch, starting with the product's design, materials, and construction, and expanding into shipping, packaging, functionality and integration into the customer's lifestyle. The net result is not just an incremental improvement in carbon footprint, but a product that fosters environmental sustainability at every stage of its lifecycle.

At the same time, motivated by this new strategy, big retailers might start to harness the time and attention captured in their retail space to educate and engage their customers. Imagine, for example, if next to a product's price was a second number indicating its environmental impact score? Or Amy George imagines a simple icon, like a leaf, that would designate the sustainable products. As Whole Foods has shown with their new animal welfare ratings for meat products, large retail players have the power to create entirely new types of product ratings and labeling. Strategic product placement and merchandizing would also wield tremendous influence over the purchasing decisions of customers. Big retailers could actually create and accelerate the demand for more and better green consumer products

This type of transformation in thinking requires leadership. It requires big retailers to take on new risks and to develop a different type of thinking about environmental sustainability. Instead of driving green innovation through decrees to current suppliers like "reduce energy use by 20 percent" or "eliminate packaging by 10 percent," under this new approach, big retailers would foster innovation by setting a vision for top products and then engaging those companies that produce the best in class. The current approach yields little beyond incremental product improvements that are fundamentally driven by cost-cutting and supply-chain squeezing. A new model would yield both substantial—potentially transformational—product innovation, plus small business development and job creation in a value-driven approach.

For eco start-ups, the result would be an opportunity to get a foot (or at least a big toe) in the purchasing door where they would be judged not just on pricing but on the environmental impact of their products and how much they are able to improve the life and wellbeing of the customer. For the retailers, this is an opportunity to build a deeper relationship with customers—to focus not just on competitive pricing and brand loyalty but also on a sense of partnership and concern for long-term well-being. It is the opportunity to migrate toward a new type of value creation: one that focuses not on squeezing out costs but on creating higher utility. It's a mindset that will not only boost our economy but that will help us to protect our planet.



ARROW ELECTRONICS ASML HOLDING ASUSTEK COMPUTER ATandT AUTODESK

Hardware Accelerated Holidays

The IE9 team have put together two HTML5 sites. The first is called Santa's Workshop, a site that lets the speed of your browser define how many elves can help pack Santa's bag, and HTML5 Blizzard, which shows you how many snowflakes can be animated at 60FPS. The site uses CSS3, HTML5 canvas, WOFF fonts, and SVG. So go install IE 9 beta and give these a try.

SYNTEL SYNTAXBRILLIAN SYNOPSYS SYNNEX SYMANTEC

The Dread Shower

XILINX WESTERN DIGITAL VOLT INFORMATION SCIENCES VISHAY INTERTECHNOLOGY VIRGIN MEDIA

Nintendo 3DS dating sim has facial recognition

The forthcoming Nintendo 3DS version of Japanese 'love sim' Project LovePlus is to make use of facial recognition tech in the shape of a 'boyfriend lock' button.

PLP

Project LovePlus is a pretty popular DS game over in Japan, with the next version set to make use of the 3DS's front- and rear-facing cameras.

Who hell you?

The game will use the 3DS's front-facing camera to implement what is being referred to as a 'boyfriend lock' feature.

That's right! Konami is genuinely calling this feature the "Boyfriend Lock," and hopes it will allow players to feel closer to their virtual girlfriends.

This means that if anybody else picks up your Project LovePlus 3DS game, your imaginary girlfriend will not recognise their faces and will ask them things such as "who the hell are you!?" and so on?

Publisher and developer Konami has no current plans to release the game in the UK, so it looks like you might have to look to the import market next easter if you are really that desperate to obtain a new virtual girlfriend to live inside your new Nintendo 3DS.



DIGITAL CHINA HOLDINGS DIRECTV GROUP ELPIDA MEMORY EMC FIDELITY NATIONAL INFORMATION SVCS

The Atlantic Archives: The Ads

by Conor Friedersdorf Here's one that caught my eye, published in the November 1936 magazine: The most powerful man in America! Who is he? You and I. Our friends. Our neighbors. In other words, Mr. Average Citizen! The only trouble...


Email this Article Add to digg Add to Reddit Add to Twitter Add to del.icio.us Add to StumbleUpon Add to Facebook

EMC ELECTRONICS FOR IMAGING ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC ARTS ECLIPSYS

VLC media player to land on Android phones in 2011

The popular software VLC Media Player will be landing on Android handsets soon - but only if you have Android 2.3 Gingerbread.


VLC Media player has grown immensely popular with its ability to play all kinds of file formats, with no hassle of switching between media players.

The software has already been released for the Apple iPhone and iPod Touch, as well as landing on the Apple iPad, and will soon make an appearance on Android blowers.

A beta version is slated to release from early 2011 onwards, but its minimum system requirements would be Android 2.3 Gingerbread, so it's currently not looking at being mass-market.

So Android users will have to wait for their phones to get the coveted Android 2.3 Gingerbread update until they can play anything they like on their phones.


What media player do you currently use on your Android phones? Let us know on T3's Twitter and Facebook pages and stay tuned in for latest tech updates.


Via: UberGizmo

 

 


Posted by Devina Divecha

EMS TECHNOLOGIES EMC ELECTRONICS FOR IMAGING ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC ARTS

Odd Lie Watch

by Chris Bodenner Dish readers remain vigilant. One writes: I'm sure you've seen this already, but it's just too much not to share: On last night's episode of Sarah Palin's Alaska, the former governor tried to explain how it was...


Email this Article Add to digg Add to Reddit Add to Twitter Add to del.icio.us Add to StumbleUpon Add to Facebook

TRIQUINT SEMICONDUCTOR TRIMBLE NAVIGATION LIMITED TRIDENT MICROSYSTEMS TRANSACTION SYSTEMS ARCHITECTS TOTAL SYSTEM SERVICES