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Inside this Issue:
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DOL ISSUES NEW PROPOSED FMLA RULES
The Department of Labor
(DOL), on February 11, 2008, proposed an overhaul of the
rules and regulations of the Family and Medical Leave
Act of 1993 (FMLA). The proposed regulations are not
law, however, employers would do well to familiarize
themselves with the proposed regulations,
The DOL proposes restructuring
and reorganizing several sections of the regulations and
rewording the titles of the regulatory provisions so that they
are statements rather than questions. The DOL also proposes a
number of substantive revisions, including amending language
in the regulations to clarify that employees may independently
settle FMLA claims without the approval of the DOL or a court,
in response to the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Taylor v.
Progress Energy.
The DOL also proposes
eliminating language in the regulations stating that an
employee who does not receive proper notice of his or her FMLA
rights will be deemed to be eligible for FMLA leave. The DOL
states that it believes this provision is invalid in light of
the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Ragsdale v. Wolverine
World Wide, Inc., 535 U.S. 81 (2002), in which the Court
held that any categorical penalty for a violation of notice
and designation provisions in the regulations exceeds the
Department’s statutory authority.
Some of
the other proposals include:
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2008 Iowa Employment, Training &
Benefits Conference
This one-day premier conference will feature many powerful and informative concurrent sessions.
These sessions will be presented by leading human resource and training consultants, attorneys and benefit consultants on the most critical employment issues likely to affect Iowa employers in 2008.
2008 Iowa Employment, Training & Benefits Conference
Wednesday, April 23rd
8:00 a.m. – 4:05 p.m.
Prairie Meadows Conference Center, Altoona
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New OSHA Rule May Require Employers to Pay for Personal Protective Equipment
Many Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA) standards require
employers to provide their employees with protective
equipment, including personal protective equipment (PPE).
These requirements address PPE of many kinds: hard hats,
gloves, goggles, safety shoes, safety glasses, welding
helmets, goggles and so forth. The provisions in OSHA
standards that require PPE generally state, that the
employer is to provide such PPE. However, some of these
provisions do not specify that the employer is to
provide such PPE at no cost to the employee. In this
rulemaking, OSHA is requiring employers to pay for the
PPE provided, with exceptions for specific items. The
rule does not require employers to provide PPE where
none has been required before. Instead, the rule merely
stipulates that the employer must pay for required PPE,
except in the limited cases specified in the standard.
This final rule becomes effective on February 13, 2008.
The final rule must be implemented by May 15, 2008.
This OSHA action requires
employers pay...
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Approaching Deadlines for Human
Resource/Payroll Professionals
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Latest Department of Labor Numbers
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