HR Monthly Round Up - February 2025
Welcome, everyone! In the next few minutes, we’ll review the latest HR news. Let’s get started.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion programs are under scrutiny, due to recent executive orders. Employers should make sure their policies comply with federal civil rights laws by not prioritizing race or sex over individual merit and aptitude during the hiring process or any other employment actions. Employers must keep in mind that state and local discrimination laws still apply.
Promoting tolerance and respect in a diverse workforce is not the target of these orders, as long as it doesn't result in preferential treatment based on membership in a protected class.
In other news, the acting chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission issued a memo addressing how the EEOC plans to approach gender identity discrimination in the workplace. The agency will implement narrower definitions and policies.
These changes may suggest the agency will handle incoming claims differently than they have for the past few years. Many states have their own gender identity protections and privacy laws that employers must still follow, regardless of EEOC policy changes.
And, finally, a recent opinion letter by the U.S. Department of Labor sheds light on overlapping leave laws. Under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act, employers may require, or employees may choose to use, accrued paid leave (like vacation time) when taking unpaid FMLA leave. This is referred to as substituting paid leave.
When employees get money from a state paid family and medical leave program, employers may not require that employees use their company paid leave since the leave is not unpaid. The bottom line is employers that have employees in states with paid leave laws should be careful of how they administer state and federal leave programs.
That’s all the HR news we have time for today. Thanks for watching. See you next month!