EMPLOYER COMPLIANCE

Employer compliance

Make sense of the alphabet soup of employer regulations.

Ever-changing laws that vary by state and the size of your company can seem impossible to understand, much less enforce. We’ll help simplify it, so you can stay in front of regulations that impact your business.

Do any of these questions sound familiar?

  • Are you confused about your responsibilities or overwhelmed by the complexity related to the Affordable Care Act?
  • Are you confident that your employee handbook is compliant and up-to-date?
  • Are your I-9 documents in order?
  • Are you offering COBRA to your recently terminated employees (ex-employees)?
  • Do you have an appropriate EEO message in your handbook?
  • Do you have a plan in place if an employee were to file discrimination claims against you?
  • Are your exempt employees classified correctly?
  • Do you know when to pay overtime?
  • Are you protecting your employees’ sensitive information?
  • Are you verifying that your employees are eligible to work in the United States?
  • Did you know paying attention to your unemployment claims has a direct impact on your SUTA rate?
  • Are you prepared for your employees to take a leave of absence?
  • Do you know the do’s and don’ts of maintaining employee records?

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HR Compliance Consulting: Have An Open Door To Compliance

Your employees ARE aware of behaviors or activities that put your organization in a position of vulnerability, but without a confidential, anonymous and trustworthy means, employees may not come forward with that knowledge, leaving you in the dark.

 

Your success in preempting and managing risk often depends on the feedback from employees who are aware of non-compliant and unethical behaviors. Not only do our Vulnerability Studies help you to reduce risk, but they also help you promote a culture of compliance and rewarding ethical behavior.

 

The human resources (HR) function is at the center of most employers’ efforts to identify, hire and retain the people the organization needs to execute its strategy and achieve its goals.  But the HR function is a key player within the organization’s compliance structure as well.

 

There are numerous laws and regulations governing the employment relationship that HR professionals must understand and navigate in order to help ensure their organizations avoid costly fines and other penalties, including the potential harm to the organization’s reputation.

 

Common examples of the types of laws regulating the employer-employee relationship include: the Fair Labor Standards Act, which establishes the minimum wage and rights to overtime pay for certain workers; federal civil rights laws, which prohibit employers from considering race, gender, age, or other “protected” status when making hiring and firing decisions or otherwise setting the terms and conditions of employment; the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA),which grants certain employees the right to take up to twelve weeks of unpaid leave each year in specific circumstances, as well as the right to be restored to the same or equivalent position upon returning from such leave; and the Uniform Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA), which establishes certain rights and protections for employees who are called to active military duty.

 

In many organizations, the HR function also manages the various compensation and benefit programs, which are heavily regulated as well.  For private-sector organizations this means complying with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act’s (ERISA) reporting, disclosure, and fiduciary requirements, among other things.  This is a task made more difficult by frequent, significant changes to ERISA and other relevant laws.  The new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) is only the most recent example; it establishes more than two dozen new rules relating to employer-sponsored health benefits, including several that take effect beginning with the 2011 plan year.

Creating and Executing HR Compliance

Clearly, human resources (HR) compliance is essential for any organization to be successful in today’s legal environment. But achieving and maintaining compliance can be elusive goals for organizations that do not recognize the challenges and develop an effective strategy to meet them.

 

HR compliance should be treated as a process of defining both individual and group behaviors to ensure the organization’s applicable laws and policies are followed.  The HR function must hire and retain individuals that are knowledgeable about HR specific laws and can create policies and procedures in relation to these laws.  Just writing policies and procedures and placing them in a repository is not enough.  Once established, they must be effectively communicated throughout the organization.

 

This is most likely to happen in cases where HR compliance has been integrated with the organization’s overall business strategy, and the organization’s leadership has taken steps to ensure all employees understand the importance of HR compliance. Here are five basic principles organizations should follow to help achieve these goals:

 

  1. Hiring the Right Talent – Hiring the right talent within the HR function’s area of responsibilities (compensation, employee benefits, legal requirements, talent management) is one of the most important issues for organizations today.  The HR function must have the knowledge, skills and experience, or be able to access it through third-party relationships.
  2. Proper Education and Training – The talent in the HR function must be well versed in employment law and the regulatory/legal requirements that can affect an organization at anytime.  These laws and requirements are changing all the time and its imperative for the HR function to stay apprised of the latest information available.
  3. Create an Employee Handbook and Update it Regularly – An organization’s Employee Handbook is one of its most important documents.  The Employee Handbook is a communications tool that should clearly articulate the organization’s policies and procedures and how business should be conducted.  It is a best practice to have legal counsel review the handbook and any new policies and procedures before distribution.
  4. Conducting Scheduled HR Compliance Audits – Many HR functions are typically understaffed and overworked.  As noted, non-compliance can be the basis for financial and reputational risks for organizations.  Conducting scheduled HR compliance audits should be a part of an organization’s overall strategy to avoid any legal liabilities.
  5. Communicate, Communicate and Communicate – The HR function is a critical component of an organization.  Whether there are compliance issues or not, it is critical for the HR function leaders (CHRO, VP of HR, etc) to keep other executives up to speed on potential HR compliance risks and recommended remediation.

These steps will help the HR function take a large step to achieving its goal of maintaining HR compliance for the overall organization.

Wondering what type of HR policies and practises your company needs? We can help! Get a free consultation