Preparing for 2024: What Employers Need to Know Now
October 12, 2023 @ 9:00 am – 12:00 pm
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — Laws surrounding labor & employment are constantly changing and 2023 has been no exception. To learn more about the major issues and developments your company needs to address now for 2024, you’re invited to join Foster Swift Collins & Smith’s Fall 2023 Labor & Employment Law Update. Below are the details of this webinar along with some short articles to give you a preview of what is to come.
Agenda and Presenters
When: Thursday, October 12 from 9:00-11:30 am; an optional 30-minute Q&A session to follow.
Cost: Free
Registration: https://bit.ly/2023LawUpdate
What to Expect:
- Unemployment Insurance Matters: Amanda Afton Martin will explain the importance of preparing for an unemployment insurance hearing and its impact on an employer’s unemployment tax. You will learn what to expect before appearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) and why it is valuable to seek legal counsel to represent you.
- Employee Misclassification: Mike Blum will explore the always evolving dilemma of misclassification and what constitutes an employee or an independent contractor. Mike will look at classification on the federal vs. state level and discuss the status of new tests proposed or implemented by various agencies, including the:
- IRS common law test,
- the DOL’s ABC test,
- the NLRB’s new independent contractor standard, and
- the consequences of misclassification under the workers’ compensation law.
- Mike will also discuss the implications improper classification has on Gig workers, which include independently employed or subcontract workers and staff agency employees. Due to the significant potential liability, being proactive about correctly classifying your employees is crucial.
- Drug Testing: Should you test your employees for marijuana? Mark Koerner will discuss cases involving drug testing employees along with what you should include in your policy to cover all your basics. Mark will also review the recent Department of Transportation’s (DOT) final rule to amend regulations, allowing oral fluid testing for employees in the transportation industry. This development is set to streamline the drug testing process.
- Noncompete Developments: A topic that is on every company’s mind, Karl Butterer will delve into the NLRB’s recent decision to make nearly all noncompetes unlawful. This segment will also explore non-solicitation agreements, separation contracts, confidentiality clause enforcement and how it affects nonunionized workforces. Karl will also take a look at the Thryv decision and its implications in which the NLRB held that the employer violated the NLRA by unilaterally laying off six employees in violation of the statutory duty to bargain.
- Employers’ Use of AI: Tony Dalimonte will discuss an area that is transforming how employers review and hire potential candidates, using generative artificial intelligence (AI) to streamline applicant screening. However, there are a number of potential legal dilemmas that can arise and Tony will delve into what you should discuss with your legal counsel prior to implementing generative AI software.
- Workplace Monitoring: Cliff Hammond will examine the scrutiny of workplace monitoring and its lawfulness under certain circumstances. What can employers keep track of? Are they allowed to keep tabs on employees’ whereabouts using GPS? Tracking of keystrokes?
In addition, Cliff will also examine:
– Religious discrimination and what reasonable accommodations employes can make.
– Are non-disparagement clauses enforceable?
– Revisit what has changed in the workplace in the wake of COVID.
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