"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"
Friday, June 29, 2012
CREATIVE CAREER PATH AMBIGUITY: BE ADAPTABLE
TARGET AN UNMET NEED. FOCUS ON "NEEDS" NOT JUST "PRODUCTS/SERVICES."
LOOK TO YOUR UNIQUE STRENGTHS TO ANSWER: AND CAN I FILL THAT NEED BETTER/FASTER THAN MY PEERS/COMPETITORS?
STEP BACK OR SIDEWAYS IN ORDER TO GROW--I.E., RE-EVALUATE YOUR APPROACHES & PATTERNS--ARE THEY WORKING?
LET YOUR STRATEGY EMERGE--GO WITH THE FLOW AND BE FLEXIBLE--IN AN UNCERTAIN ENVIRONMENT, YOU CAN'T SEE FAR DOWN THE ROAD, BUT THAT'S OK.
"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"
Social Media to see my complete social "pink slip" wardrobe.
"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"
Tuesday, June 05, 2012
A Solo Employment Lawyer Does Some Heavy Macro-Economic Lifting.
What does the European financial crisis have to do with
employment law? That is somewhat
like asking what does unemployment have to do with employment law. The issues remain the same, but the
volume and context will change.
Here’s a novice's view of economics involving only three
dominoes: 1) the European Central
Bank does not intervene in the next 3 to 6 months to aggressively free up money
in the European markets so Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and France
can manage their debt; 2) the European Union collapses; and 3) the world moves
into a 5 year economic depression.
An extreme and far-fetched scenario? Irrelevant to your personal bread and butter issues? “No” to both questions.
Last week, even as he floated bonds on the open market, the
Treasury Minister of Spain said Spain was shut out of the private money markets
by high interest rates—in effect, the premium attached to the high risk Spain
would default on its debt. Spain
is Europe’s fourth largest economy.
Spain and Greece have lousy histories overall of repaying their “sovereign
debt,” that is, government owned debt that it sells to foreign investors to be
repaid in U.S. currency.
This “going to market” approach won’t work for countries
like Greece, Italy and Spain, where investors see that the electorate, fat on
social programs, rebel against new austerity programs. Logically, foreign investors see the
risk is too high.
We are now at an economic cross-roads. In the window of about 3 to 6 months,
the European Central Bank, together with the International Monetary Fund and
the European Commission, will take the necessary aggressive interventionist
steps to increase the influx of euros into the monetary system and to guarantee
deposits in member banks, or the European Union will not just fail, it will
disintegrate. I know, this sounds
like “the sky is falling!” but in the ripple effect of the economy, ask how
many of your personal acquaintances have remained long term unemployed and how
many have been “upside down” for how long, and still living in their homes even
as the banks carry the inventory of defaulted mortgages?
The European Debt Crisis has been a “continuous crisis” for
nearly three years. The current
phase is just that—a worsening of the continuing situation. There have been 5 new governments
elected in Europe in 18 months.
Portugal’s will be the sixth this month. Each new government is elected make the electorate “feel
better,” that is, relieve them of the hardships of economic austerity
measures.
So there’s the set-up to a bad joke: Socialist governments are being elected
in a time when strong capitalistic measures are needed. Add to the mix that after three years of squeamish intervention, time is about to run out. If the European Union does not manage the crisis now, its
reason for being will cease. It
was to be a unified, central economy.
If it cannot perform that function for its member states, the members
will leave the Union, or be ejected.
Multiply “Spain” by 12 to 18, to see the impact just one year.
Pulling the economic levers requires a strong and committed
central banking authority given the freedom to act quickly without a continuous
meeting of European leaders. That
mechanism is in place through the Central European Bank, that should act now to
provide quick liquidity to the system, while setting austerity measures that
are no so severe as to cause political uprisings. There will be plenty of personal economic pain to spread
over the next several generations.
Last month’s U.S. economic news was dismal, with indicators
we are going the wrong direction in the so-called “recovery.” The U.S. Treasury and Fed are again
saying more intervention is needed. At the same time, we are about to be hit with major tax
increases at the end of this year.
All this spells
increasing unemployment, more layoffs, and more risk to the “marginal” that
they will be selected for layoff because of their age, gender, religion,
medical history, disability, race or national origin. Layoffs are legitimate economic responses to hard economic
times, but they are also covers for the practice of “cleaning house” of persons
in “protected categories.” I can live without the extra business.
Let’ s pray the E.U. acts decisively for the good of all in the next few
months.
"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"
Monday, June 04, 2012
Is this a "Winn"-Win or a "Cash" Out?
As the population ages, there's a growing industry of
caretakers who will be working in the homes of the elderly. These persons will
often spend nearly all of the 24-hour day in the home of the client. The
question arises: are these caretakers entitled to overtime in excess of 8 hours
per working day?
The California Court of Appeal in the case of Cash v. Winn 2012 DJDAR 6267 (Decided
May 14, 2012), held that caretakers are exempt from the overtime laws even when
they provide some services which appeared to be “medical services”. The
plaintiff in the Cash case was not a
registered nurse. This point is important because registered nurses as a class
are entitled to overtime. On the other hand, IWC wage order no. 15–2001,
codified as CCR Title 8, Sec. 11150, exempts from overtime those workers who
perform work as “personal attendants.” Thus the issue was framed: if a “personal
attendant” provides medical services, is the person no longer a “personal
attendant” within the meaning of the IWC Wage Order?
The trial court gave a jury instruction that a “personal
attendant” is no longer a “personal attendant” within the IWC order if the
employee does ANY work that “requires the
regular administration of healthcare services such as the taking of
temperatures or pulse or respiratory rate ... regardless of the amount of time
such duties take ...”
The testimony by the “personal attendant” was that she took
her client’s “vital signs”, tested her for blood sugar levels, and tested her
oxygen intake. Even so, the evidence was that these “medical” activities were
only a few minutes each day generally, and that the vast majority of the
“personal attendant’s” time was spent performing classical caretaker duties
such as dressing, assisting with walking, transporting, cleaning, feeding, and
so forth.
Finding that performing some medical like functions did not
remove the overtime exemption for a “personal attendant”, the court noted that
the purpose behind the IWC order was to make home healthcare cost affordable to
the elderly and their families. Checking that a client take her medications,
adjusting her oxygen levels, or administering blood sugar level tests, do not
“per se” invalidate the exemption.
This legislative intent produces an unusual situation: a
licensed professional nurse performing medical functions at a client’s home
will be permitted to earn overtime. One cannot help but feel that the nursing
lobby was successful on this point. On the other hand, an untrained person
performing menial tasks is exempted from overtime. This outcome reminds me of
the adage that legislation is like a sausage: you don't want to know what goes
into it.
"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"
Another Low Impact CRASH Test for LASC Pilot
When I first wrote about the CRASH program last year with its first launching, I thought it would be a more dominant feature of the LA Superior Court. It seems to be occasional and brief, running one to two weeks at a time, and not at all for several months between sessions. It is after all a pilot program, and its success will determine its future. This long delayed second phase and its short new duration makes one wonder whether the pilot will get the go-ahead for a "full season" run.
The Central District in Downtown Los Angeles is again trying
out the single referee assisted settlement hearing, or “CRASH” program. The 47 member court is giving the settlement program its second run.
This year the program will run for 5 days. The program is limited to employment law cases, and uses the services of a volunteer plaintiff's attorney and a volunteer defense attorney acting as mediators for each case. Currently there are about 145 active cases in the program. This number of cases is hardly significant given the 79,125 "general jurisdiction" lawsuits filed in Los Angeles Superior Court in the last 12 months. Still, the program is getting positive reviews from participating attorneys.
This year the program will run for 5 days. The program is limited to employment law cases, and uses the services of a volunteer plaintiff's attorney and a volunteer defense attorney acting as mediators for each case. Currently there are about 145 active cases in the program. This number of cases is hardly significant given the 79,125 "general jurisdiction" lawsuits filed in Los Angeles Superior Court in the last 12 months. Still, the program is getting positive reviews from participating attorneys.
Judge Rex Hesseman, as quoted in the Los Angeles daily
Journal June 4, 2012, said of employment law cases: “I think it's fair to say they have a
disproportionate number of discovery disputes which often need judicial
involvement.” Also quoted in the same journal article, Los Angeles Superior
Court judge Mary Ann Murphy said employment law cases tend to have more
witnesses once the case reaches trial.
Attribution:
Los Angeles Daily Journal, Monday, June 4, 2012, page 5.
"If the pink slip doesn't fit, get redressed!"