Misconduct and Unemployment Benefits

In a rare appellate decision regarding unemployment benefits, the Iowa Court of Appeals upheld denial of a former Casey's employee's unemployment benefits. The facts in this case are uninteresting: the employee removed discarded soup from the garbage and took it home to feed her dog. This violated a written policy that had been provided and explained to the employee. The employee was terminated.

Generally, misconduct serious enough to justify denial of unemployment benefits is a series of infractions after repeated warnings or one major infraction of an employer's policies. Here, the infraction appears to be minor--one-time removal of $10.00 worth of discarded soup. However, the court focused not on the amount of soup or its status as garbage but on the employee's intentional disregard of rules that she either was aware of or should have been aware of.  It was the obvious intentional disregard that amounted to misconduct in the court's opinion.

 

I rarely advise employers to contest unemployment benefits, but this case does have some take away for employers who choose to contest employee's benefits.

 

1.      Have written policies and provide the policies to your employees. Casey's had a written handbook that was provided to all employees. Employees were required to sign receipt of the handbook and expected them to read the handbook. The policy about wasted foods was clearly stated in the handbook.

2.      Explain important policies to your employees. Casey's held a training meeting that specifically explained its policy regarding wasted foods.

3.      Be consistent in your enforcement. While the facts do not indicate whether Casey's terminated all employees for similar infractions, it's a good idea to be consistent in enforcement. Consistency creates expectations for employees. I would guess if the testimony had shown that Casey's had a written policy, explained the written policy, but never, rarely or even inconsistently enforced the written policy the employee would have received benefits.

The Law fought the Bike Lanes, and the Bike Lanes Won

Earlier I blogged about a bike lane in Prospect Park West in Brooklyn that had come under some legal fire.  The plaintiffs were a number of disgruntled residents who filed a mandamus action against the City, arguing that the installation of a bike lane was aribtrary or unfair.

On Tuesday, August 16, 2011, the Court ruled in favor of the City, but on a technical and procedural statute of limitations issue, and not on whether the installation of the bike lane was arbitrary or unfair. 

 

The Often Overlooked Protected Class: Transgender Employees

Transgender individuals are a protected class under the Iowa Civil Rights Act and, although, not specifically identified under federal law may be protected under Title VII's prohibition of "sex" discrimination. Thus, it is important for Iowa employers to be familiar with transgender issues and steps that can be taken to prevent discrimination.

Transgender or gender identity disorder is not the same as homosexuality or sexual orientation. Transgender is when a person's gender identity doesn't match his or her genetic sex. Individuals may attend counseling and sex reassignment therapy, hormone replacement therapy and possibly gender reassignment surgery. These different treatments may result in an employee representing himself or herself as the gender corresponding to their identity, becoming more masculine or feminine and ultimately changing his or her gender completely.

 

Employers must be careful to prevent discrimination based on nonconformity with gender stereotypes. This duty applies to all employees, regardless of their status as transgender. Female employees may not be discriminated, harassed or retaliated against because they are not "feminine" enough. Similarly, male employees may not be discriminated, harassed or retaliated against for not being "masculine". Additionally, employers may be required to allow transgender individuals to "cross-dress", reference employees with appropriate pronouns, allow use of a restroom that corresponds with gender identity, or provide time off for medical appointments.

 

While transgender employees may not be prevalent in your workplace, it is important that you understand their rights and your obligations before a problem arises.

More Wage & Hour Problems

Here is another example of the importance of complying with wage and hour laws:

Lawsuit Claims Iowa Workers Owed Millions