HR Monthly Round Up - September 2024
Welcome, everyone! In the next few minutes, we’ll review the latest HR news. Let’s get started.
The New York Retail Worker Safety Act was signed into law September 4 and takes effect next March. Any business with at least ten retail employees in New York must comply by implementing related policies and training.
Then, effective January 1, 2027, retail employers with 500 employees or more nationwide must provide employees in their New York locations with access to a silent alarm, such as a panic button.
In other news, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission recently filed its first Pregnant Workers Fairness Act lawsuit against an employer. The employer allegedly denied a pregnant employee’s accommodation request to transfer to a role that did not require lying on her stomach.
According to the suit, the company forced her to take unpaid leave or return to her position without any modifications even though it could have provided changes like it did for non-pregnant workers with similar limitations. The agency alleges the denial forced the employee to resign when nearly eight months pregnant and claims the company unlawfully required medical documentation. Whether this case settles or proceeds to trial remains to be seen.
In poster news, Massachusetts recently became the fifth state to add an electronic posting component to its labor law poster requirements. The state made a mandatory change to its workers’ compensation Notice to Employees in late July, and employers need to display the updated posting in a visible location in the workplace.
If no such location exists, such as for remote workers, a letter from the state’s Department of Industrial Relations says that employers must either distribute the notice electronically or mail a copy to workers.
The trend toward requiring electronic display of labor law posters continues to grow, and employers should be aware of which states require some or all labor law postings to be shared electronically so they can comply with all posting requirements.
In addition to Massachusetts, four other states require one or more labor law postings to be electronically available. These states are Colorado, Illinois, New York, and Oregon.
That’s all the HR news we have time for today. For more information on these topics, click the content links in the transcript below. Thanks for watching. See you next month!