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HIRING AND FIRING IN NEW JERSEY: A LEGAL
MINEFIELD By Thomas N. Ryan, Esq.
Lawsuits
arising from the workplace have proliferated not only in New
Jersey, but throughout the United States. The pitfalls facing
employers are many, and the potential damages to them are
great. This article offers employers some guidelines on how
to avoid the pitfalls - a partial list of do's and don'ts,
if you will.
Devoting the necessary time and attention to the hiring process
is one way that employers can avoid becoming defendants. Such
attention makes not only good legal sense but also good business
sense, because while tending to limit claims of employment
discrimination, it tends to result in hiring the most qualified
candidate and a corresponding reduction in turnover.
The New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (NJLAD) prohibits
discrimination on the basis of a variety of criteria. Included
are race, color, religion, gender, national origin, ancestry,
age, disability, marital status, familial status, sexual orientation,
atypical cellular or blood trait, genetic information, and
service in the armed forces. Individuals who meet any of the
above criteria are considered to be members of a protected
class. Claims of employment discrimination are monitored on
the federal level by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) and on the state level by the New Jersey Division on
Civil Rights (NJDCR).
In evaluating your hiring and selection procedures, be aware
that some procedures that appear neutral and benign may still
having an adverse impact upon members of a protected class.
Though not intending to discriminate, certain may adversely
impact members of a protected class, and are therefore, in
the eyes of the law, discriminatory. To steer clear of discrimination
in the hiring process, employers must validate the selection
procedure by showing the relationship between the criteria
used in hiring and job performance.
In few areas of the law is an ounce of prevention worth so
much. Because the laws governing employment are constantly
evolving, often confusing, and different among states and
between state and the federal government, employers should
consult a lawyer who specializes in labor and employment law.
RECRUITING,
INTERVIEWING AND TESTING - LEGALLY
Screen all newspaper ads, brochures and other solicitation
forms for discriminatory wording. Materials must be free of
language that could arguably constitute evidence of discrimination.
They should also be free from language that implies a fixed
duration of employment so that you don't inadvertently obligate
yourself to a condition of employment that you never intended.
Interviewers must know how to conduct an interview properly.
Never promise permanent employment. Never promise that termination
will be only "for cause." Inform candidates in the interview
that it is an "employment-at-will" position. Document each
interview.
Testing can be a valid means of evaluating job ability and
fitness. Such tests, however, are the subject of considerable
scrutiny by the EEOC and the NJDCR. To measure simple skills,
pre-employment tests should be professionally prepared so
as to ensure non- discriminatory results.
IMMIGRATION
REFORM AND CONTROL ACT
The NJDCR prohibits inquiries into whether an applicant is
now or intends to become a U.S. citizen. The Immigration Reform
and Control Act, however, prohibits the employment of "unauthorized
aliens" and penalizes employers who hire them. Once employees
are hired, they must complete INS Form I-9, and provide a
document establishing their identity and employment eligibility.
EMPLOYMENT
APPLICATIONS : TO ASK, OR NOT TO ASK?
Employment applications should include only questions that
are job-related and relevant to an applicant's qualifications.
Applicants should not be encouraged to answer questions that
are unrelated to the job for which the applicant is applying.
The EEOC suggests that employers consider the following three
questions in deciding whether to include a particular inquiry
on an employment application or in a job interview:
- Will
the question tend to eliminate minorities and women from
consideration?
- Is
the information necessary to judge the applicant's competence
to fill the job?
- Are
there alternative, non-discriminatory ways to secure relevant
information?
Changes in statutory and case law have severely restricted
what business owners or human resources managers can ask prospective
workers - seemingly to the point that there are more questions
that can't be asked than can. Review your applications and
interview questions with a critical eye, and better yet, run
them by an attorney proficient in the field.
In
general, age is deemed irrelevant in most hiring decisions
and, therefore, questions regarding date of birth are considered
improper. Such questioning may violate the federal Age Discrimination
Employment Act (ADEA) and/or the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination
(NJLAD). Questions about when applicants graduated from high
school - which may reveal their ages - are viewed as improper
for the same reason. If such information is required for health
insurance, pension or profit-sharing plans, this information
can be obtained after the person is hired.
Avoid
questions regarding race, religion, national origin, and ancestry,
both on applications and during interviews. Do not ask for
a photograph of the applicant. Questions about physical traits
and disabilities are also off limits, unless physical condition
is a legitimate job-related qualification. Avoid inquiries
about height, weight, and health. Employers are prohibited
from making inquiries into an applicant's medical history
and from requiring medical examinations prior to extending
an offer of employment. Employers are permitted, however,
to ask applicants about their ability to perform job-related
functions and have them describe or demonstrate how, with
or without reasonable accommodation, they will be able to
perform such tasks. Post-offer medical inquiries and examinations
are permitted if they are required of all new employees in
the same job classification, regardless of disability.
Sex
and marital or family status is also a taboo subject on job
applications and interviews, because such questioning gives
at least an appearance of sex discrimination. Again, if this
information is required for a legitimate reason, it can be
obtained after the applicant has been hired.
Even
questions about conviction records should generally be avoided,
according to the NJDCR, unless they are job-related. The NJDCR
recommends never asking about prior arrests. Because state
law prohibits employers from discharging, disciplining, or
refusing to hire workers whose wages have been subject to
garnishment, do not ask applicants whether they have been
the subject of garnishment proceedings.
It
may seem that employers are barred from asking prospective
employees almost everything. Here's one area of inquiry that
is legal - the use of illegal drugs. Employers can ask applicants
whether they use such drugs, and also whether they will agree
to be bound by the company's drug policies and submit to drug
testing. You may not, however, discriminate against people
for their use - or non-use - of legal tobacco, unless you
have a rational, job-related reason to do so. New Jersey has
a "Smokers Rights Law" that protects smokers from job discrimination
but does not restrict employers from prohibiting smoking on
company premises.
CREATING
CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT
An
employment application can be utilized to confirm conditions
of employment. Prospective employees who sign the application
acknowledge their consent to these conditions. The following
statements are conditions of employment that may be included
in an employment application:
- I
hereby declare the information provided by me in this
application as true and complete, and I understand that
falsification of this information is grounds for refusal
to hire, or, if hired, termination.
- I
authorize you to request, receive and verify all information
given in this application.
- I
further acknowledge that if I am employed by the employer,
my employment will be at-will, and may be terminated with
or without cause at any time by me or by the employer.
THE
PRE-EMPLOYMENT PHYSICAL - WHEN, WHY AND HOW?
The
ADA and the NJLAD prohibit pre-offer medical examinations
and medical history questionnaires. The employer may ask applicants
questions regarding their ability to perform job-related functions,
but nothing beyond that as it relates to their health. An
employer is permitted to make an offer of employment contingent
on the results of a medical examination or information revealed
on a medical history questionnaire - but only if that exam
or questionnaire follows a "conditional offer of employment."
The use of post-offer medical examinations must meet certain
requirements, including:
- Requiring
all new employees in the same job category to submit to
medical examinations, regardless of disability.
- Maintaining
medical information on separate forms and in files separate
from the regular personnel file.
- Maintaining
the confidentiality of medical records.
When
using pre-employment, post-offer physical examinations, employers
should be able to demonstrate that:
-
There
is a relationship between the medical examination and
the essential functions of the job in question.
-
The
company acted in good faith in seeking and using an informed
medical opinion about an applicant's health status.
-
The
examination reveals a physical impairment that would prevent
the prospective employee from performing the job even
with a reasonable accommodation.
-
Refusal
to employ a person who cannot pass a physical does not
reflect bias against the applicant in particular or against
"disabled" individuals in general.
Once
employment begins, the ADA bars employers from requiring a
medical examination and from making medical inquiries of employees
unless such examinations or inquiries are job-related and
necessary to conduct business.
DRUG
TESTING OF APPLICANTS
In
private, non-union employment, there are generally no restrictions
on drug testing of applicants. In fact, employers are required
to test applicants for, and employees in, certain transportation
positions. Legal problems in drug testing can be reduced by
establishing a written policy, using qualified labs with chain
of custody for collected specimens, and corroborative testing
of results using gas chromatography/mask spectrometry. Tests
for illegal drugs are not considered medical examinations.
Testing of employees for illegal drug use is not prohibited
by statute in New Jersey. However, the New Jersey Supreme
Court has limited random drug tests to employees who work
in safety-sensitive positions.
CREDIT
AND BACKGROUND CHECKS
Recent changes in the law impose new obligations on employers
when they rely on credit and background checks as a hiring
tool. Amendments to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) impose
notice and disclosure obligations on employers who seek information
about an applicant's or employee's credit history, criminal
background, medical history, workers' compensation history,
or motor vehicle record.
Employers are required to notify prospective and current employees
at the outset if they intend to use a credit check. The notification
must be in writing and contained in a document that consists
only of the notification. Such information should be kept
strictly confidential by the employer. Employers that decline
to hire based even in part on credit information must provide
unsuccessful applicants with notice of both the adverse action
and of their right to obtain a free copy of their report from
the consumer reporting agency within 60 days. Unsuccessful
applicants also have the right to the identity of the consumer
reporting agency that provided the credit information and
to dispute the accuracy or completeness of the information.
For an adverse employment decision to be within the law it
must have been made by the prospective employer, not by the
consumer reporting agency.
NEGLIGENT
HIRING
The
number of negligent hiring lawsuits being filed against employers
is rapidly increasing and usually arises when a third party
is injured by an unfit employee who has been hired by an employer.
Ordinarily, the third party claims that the employer failed
to conduct a thorough background check on the employee and
that, if there had been such an investigation, the employee
would have never been hired.
To
prevail in New Jersey, the third party in such an action must
show that the employer knew or had reason to know of the unfitness,
incompetence, or dangerous attributes of the employee; that
the employer could reasonably have foreseen that those qualities
created risk of harm to other persons; and the employee's
unfitness directly caused injury.
Employers
should carefully review all information provided by a job
applicant. Pay special attention to gaps between jobs and
the failure of an applicant to answer certain questions. Obtain
a consent and release to gather information from former employers,
and even if the former employers have a policy against releasing
personnel information, it can be demonstrated that, at the
very least, an effort was made to obtain it. Contact personal
references provided by the applicant. Verify prior residences
given by an applicant to make sure that none has been omitted
or changed. Document the information that was obtained and
what efforts were made to obtain additional information.
Thomas
N. Ryan is a partner at Laddey, Clark & Ryan and maintains
a specialty in labor and employment law. For more information
on him and his practice, click on the Our Attorneys section
of this website.
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