Under California law, an employee is presumed to be “at-will” employee unless agreed otherwise. Cal. Labor Code section 2922. “At will” means that an employee can be terminated for any reason, no reason, or arbitrary reason, as long as it’s not an unlawful reason (such as discriminatory or retaliatory discharge,…
San Francisco Employment Law Firm Blog
Can a temporary condition be a protected disability under FEHA?
Employers often argue that because a worker’s health condition is temporary and passing, the condition can’t possibly be considered a disability under California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). The assume, relying mostly on intuition, that the concept of disability necessarily entails some kind of permanent impairment. The courts, however,…
Location of Worksite under FMLA
The FMLA provides that employee are eligible for FMLA leave if they have worked at least 12 months for an employer, worked 1,250 hours during the 12 months immediately prior to requesting leave, and work at a location that has 50 employees within 75 miles. This requirement, however, creates uncertainty…
Wrongful Termination Evidence in Your Personnel File
An employee’s personnel file contains some of the most valuable information to a claim for discrimination, retaliation, harassment and wrongful termination. One of the powerful ways in which the personnel file can be used is when the employer argues that the worker was terminated for poor performance. If that worker’s…
Why workplace sexual harassment still takes place in California
Having been working on sexual harassment and discrimination claims for a while now, I am puzzled as to why these kinds of violations still take place, considering the amount of training, warnings and other kinds of “cover up” that most if not all companies are concerned about creating. Thus, I…
Pregnancy Disability Leave Law (PDLL), CFRA and FMLA
The California Pregnancy Disability Leave LAW (PDLL) is part of California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). It requires employers to provide an employee up to four months of leave for disability due to an employee’s pregnancy, childbirth or related medical condition. PDLL v. CFRA and FMLA FMLA (Family Medical…
For California Employers: How being too nice to your employees can backfire
You are a manager or a director at a manufacturing plant or a sophisticated technology company in San Francisco, Sillicon Valley, or elsewhere in California. You take great pride in your work, and you are rewarded with generous compensation and real prospects for promotion. One of your duties is supervising…
FMLA / CFRA Leave and Employer’s IME
Under the law, where the employee’s FMLA/CFRA certification is unclear about his health condition and his/her ability to return to work, an employer’s policy may lawfully require an independent medical examination (IME) to determine the employee’s fitness to return to work. For example, in one case, an employee who was…
May Employer force an Employee to make Purchases
Yesterday, I have been approached by a long-time employee of the local manufacturing company in the Sacramento area. The employer had a side business (running poker gaming facility) which the employee also regularly attended. When the employee decided to play poker elsewhere, his employer terminated him, telling him that “they…
Another Arbitration Agreement is Struck Down
On January 7, 2009, the Contra Costa Superior Court issued an order in a race discrimination and whistleblower retaliation case, finding unconscionable and unenforceable the arbitration agreement that Countrywide Home Loans company requires its employees to sign as a condition of employment. The court found two unconscionable provision in the…