Avoiding Employee Problems: Tips For Hospitality Industry Employers
October 21, 2004
James M. "Jim" Norman- Ft Lauderdale
Being an employer in the hospitality industry is filled with exciting
opportunities and wonderful challenges to not only run a profitable enterprise,
but also provide employment and advancement opportunities for a broad range of
employees. However, those opportunities also provide the basis for potential
legal risks. Many of the “line” employees in the hospitality industry are not
in high paying positions, and come from outside the United States with no or
very little understanding of our employment and legal systems. Compensation and
money are constantly of concern. This concern may be amplified by ideas formed
from information from other line employees, family members, television and the
Internet. This can lead to the belief that employers are easy targets for
lawsuits. There is a massive amount of information available that talks about
protected categories under federal or state law and workplace discrimination.
Most employers are capable of knowing how to comply with the law, and are
motivated to do so for solid business reasons that go right to the employer’s
bottom line. On the other hand, it is easy to see how some employees might
interpret what they hear and see to mean that they have a case against their
employer. Employees often do not understand that merely being in a protected
class is not sufficient to prove a case, or that treatment they consider unfair
is neither discriminatory or unlawful.
Unfortunately, as we hear from many employers, employees can find a lawyer to
represent them against the employer, or they simply proceed without a lawyer.
Even when employees lose their lawsuits, defending against these cases can be
costly to any employer and can consume hundreds of hours of employee time that
would be much better spent focused on the job rather than on litigation.
Although considering every employee a lawsuit waiting to happen would
overburden the hospitality industry beyond belief, certain precautions can help
prevent future lawsuits and make it much easier to get the lawsuits that are
filed dismissed before trial or settled for less than the cost of defense.
Human resource professionals, managers and supervisors must consistently follow
procedures, however, or these precautions will not be worth the paper they are
printed on.
Here are 10 suggestions to help avoid employee trouble:
1. Be sure you have a strong and clear written anti-discrimination and
anti-harassment policy. Distribute the policy statement to every employee, and
have each employee sign it, with a signed copy placed in each employee’s
personnel file. That anti-harassment policy should cover, in addition to sexual
harassment, harassment because of race, national origin, religion, age,
disability and every other status protected under federal and state law. For
example, some states or localities also protect against discrimination because
of other factors such as marital status and sexual orientation. The policy
should be worded simply enough for all employees to understand. Consider using
versions in other languages tailored to the employee population.
2. Train every management employee on enforcement of the employer’s
anti-discrimination and anti-harassment policies. Keep written records of who
attends training sessions. Train non-management employees on how to report
discrimination and harassment. Train everyone on the policy against
retaliation. Training is generally required by the courts for the employer to
mount a successful defense of a claim of discrimination or harassment, and it is
worth repeating all training on a regular basis. All new employee orientations
should include training about the employer’s anti-discrimination and
anti-harassment policies..
3. Be sure all job descriptions are current and that performance is evaluated
regularly against those job descriptions. That is, be sure you assess
performance based on job-related requirements. Such generalities as “attitude”
should be more specifically defined and are irrelevant. For example, a more
objective way to address “attitude” is the way an employee treats co-workers and
guests.
4. Honest evaluations are essential. Evaluation inflation does not help
anyone, least of all the employee who needs to know where he or she stands. The
work place is not Lake Woebegone, and all employees are not “above average.”
Not everyone is an outstanding employee. Most are average, and some are
definitely below average. A unjustified glowing appraisal is singularly
unhelpful and may be used to establish discrimination if you need to terminate
employment based on poor performance. An employee who is not performing up to
standard should be told what is needed to achieve standard, how to correct the
problem, and how much time he or she has to correct the problem.
5. Document, document, document! This is the hardest lesson for managers to
learn, but the lack of documentation can leave an employer defenseless.
Managers and supervisors should be trained to document all problems properly.
The problem should be described in concrete language so that anyone can
understand what has happened. The employee should receive a copy of the
write-up and be asked to sign a copy for the file, indicating receipt and the
opportunity to discuss the contents. The employee should be told that signing
the write-up is not an indication of agreement and the employee should be given
the opportunity to write a rebuttal to be included in the file. There is then
no possibility of an employee successfully claiming not to have received the
write-up.
6. If you have a new employee who appears to be a problem very early in his
or her employment, terminate the employment before the end of the usual
probationary or introductory period. There is no need to wait until the 90th day
when it is obvious from the 30th day
that it is not working out. Hoping for real improvement and extending the
probationary period is usually asking for trouble.
7. When there is a recommendation for discipline, be sure you can articulate
the reason in writing before that discipline is imposed. If not, perhaps there
is inadequate justification for the recommendation. Also be sure the discipline
has been consistently applied without regard to race, gender, age, national
origin, religion, disability or any other protected class.
8. Before imposing any serious discipline, especially suspension or
termination, consult human resources professionals and/or legal counsel. They
can help facilitate the process and make sure there is consistency. It is also
useful to have someone from human resources participate in imposing the
discipline.
9. Never say “I’m sorry” when terminating employment. The employee will
interpret that phrase as an admission of unfair treatment. Help the employee
retain dignity by wishing him or her well and saying that, although this
situation did not work out, he or she can perhaps find a situation more fitting.
10. Be totally consistent in your reason for terminating an employee. Tell
the employee the precise truth, put the same reason on the separation notice
form used in your local jurisdiction, and tell the EEOC the same thing if a
charge is filed. Inconsistency almost always leads to trouble if there is
litigation, as it can be used to show that your reason is merely a pretext for
discrimination or wrongful termination. Not telling the employee the reason for
the termination is an open invitation for that employee to visit a lawyer, a
visit which almost always leads to litigation or threats of litigation.
11. Treat every employee fairly and with respect at all times. A happy
employee is far less likely to sue than one who is chronically disgruntled. The
employee who blames all of his or her problems on someone else is the employee
who will not take responsibility for his or her own actions. An hour spent
interviewing an employee before hiring can save countless problems later on.
12. Don’t ignore a problem and hope it will just go away. It won’t. It will
almost certainly come back to haunt you at some point. And don’t try to goad an
employee into quitting. That practice is unfair, is perceived to be unfair, and
will ultimately boomerang on the employer. If a case gets to a jury, that jury
will be far more concerned with the perception of fairness than with what the
judge instructs it as to the law. If the employer’s version of the facts do not
pass the “red face” test, the jury will find liability most of the time.
Thus, the perception of fairness is all-important in the work place. Good
communication with employees is the key to avoiding problems, as is honesty in
that communication. Following these tips will not guarantee an end to all
employee-generated work place problems, but it will help decrease the number and
the ultimate cost. Following these tips will also help create a more productive
work place, and help both the employee and the employer meet their goals.
For more information, e-mail Jim Norman at
jim.norman@hklaw.com,
respectively, or call toll free, 1-888-688-8500.