Richard D. Alaniz is senior partner at Alaniz
and Schraeder, a national labor and employment firm based in Houston. He has
been at the forefront of labor and employment law for over thirty years,
including stints with the U.S. Department of Labor and the National Labor
Relations Board. He is a prolific writer on labor and employment law and
conducts frequent seminars to client companies and trade associations across
the country. For more information, call Alaniz at 281-833-2200.
It’s hard to believe, but the year is closing and the holidays are approaching, which, in addition to closing the books and a few final deals, for many company means planning the annual holiday party.
Disability claims are always challenging for employers, but this is especially the case when pregnant workers suffer complications that leave them unable to perform their normal job duties.
Along with underfunded corporate and public pensions, many union pensions are massively in the red. For employers who have union workers who participate in these types of multi-employer pension plans, the growing liability involved with withdrawing from pension funds presents a serious issue.
Providing hourly employees with unpaid meal breaks may seem like a straightforward thing to do, and it is done in thousands of workplaces on a daily basis.
The job requirements have appeared all around the country. One ad, placed by a Texas electronics company looking for an engineer, stated that the company would not “consider/review anyone NOT currently employed regardless of the reason.”