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4 not-so-nice holiday compliance pitfalls for HR to avoid

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4 not-so-nice holiday compliance pitfalls for HR to avoid

Employers should think through how to handle inappropriate gifts, alcohol and workplace decorations in advance, attorney Jonathan Segal said.

December brings with it a mixture of emotions both positive and negative, particularly for HR departments, Jonathan Segal, partner and managing principal at Duane Morris said during a Nov. 21 virtual event.

“It’s often said that it’s the most wonderful time of the year, but not necessarily for those who are in HR,” Segal said.

That’s in part because of the potential for misconduct at company-sponsored holiday parties, which have rebounded in popularity during the post-pandemic era. But there are many other issues to keep tabs on, from wage-and-hour classification of seasonal bonuses to ensuring respectful use of decorations. Segal’s presentation covered a variety of best practices for HR to consider.

1. Allowing inappropriate gift-giving

Employers might want to circulate a reminder to employees not to give anything sexual, suggestive or that violates an organizations’ harassment policies. Segal recalled one instance in which a client’s employee gifted a Victoria’s Secret item to a secretary. “I wish we’d reminded him,” Segal said. Prohibitions could also extend to political gifts, even if employers are wary about curtailing political speech at work.

Segal added that employers should make clear that employees must avoid gifts to politicians that could create a conflict of interest without prior approval from a general counsel or chief compliance officer, even if such gifts are not intended as bribes.

Gifted alcohol can be a bit trickier to manage. Segal said employers may not want to tell employees to throw away a bottle of wine they received from a colleague, but instead, they can instruct them not to drink it at work and take it home the same day they receive it.

“And I think we can all agree — I don’t know if you need to add it — but when it comes to weed, none in the workplace, never appropriate as a gift,” Segal added. “That includes edibles.”

2. Excluding certain holiday payments from overtime calculations

The Fair Labor Standards Act does provide exceptions for sums paid as gifts, which do not need to be included in an employee’s regular pay rate for overtime calculation purposes. In order for the payments to be excludable, though, employees must not have a contractual or legal right to them, Segal said, and they cannot be measured by or dependent on hours worked.

Such payments also cannot be so substantial that they are considered part of the employee’s wages, he added. Bonuses calculated based on categories such as production or efficiency are therefore not excludable, Segal said, and neither are sums that equal an entire month’s worth of pay.

Source: https://www.hrdive.com/news/holiday-party-compliance-pitfalls-for-hr-to-avoid/735576/

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