The DOL steps into the 21st century
Taking note of the telework surge, the DOL has outlined when and how you may use electronic posters to comply with federal posting requirements for remote employees.
If you have some remote workers, you are encouraged to use electronic postings. Hard-copy posters must still be displayed in your physical locations, even when electronic postings are available.
If your entire workforce is exclusively remote, electronic posting alone meets posting requirements if:
- Employees usually get information from the employer electronically, and
- Employees have readily available access to electronic postings at all times.
Accessibility issues
In order to take advantage of this opportunity, you need to make sure workers can easily access the posters by ensuring the following:
- Employees do not need to ask for permission to view a file or access a computer.
- Employees have been told how to access posters electronically.
- Employees can easily determine which postings apply to them.
To meet these requirements, electronic posters may be placed on an internal or external website, shared network drive, or in a file system that is always accessible to employees.
Information about how to access the posters may be included in an employee handbook.
To make them easily accessible, you may consider offering a link on an intranet home page that appears when an employee logs in to the computer system. To help employees understand which postings apply, you may group them as federal postings (which apply to all covered workers) and by state. Postings that apply to employees who are working on federal contracts may be grouped together as well.
To ensure compliance with all posting laws, employers with remote workers should make electronic postings available and display hard-copy posters in a physical workplace.
This guidance applies to federal posters from the DOL, but don’t forget your state and local posters!