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| Friday, Aug. 29, 2008 |
Courts and state legislatures have carved out other exceptions to the employment-at-will doctrine based on public policy considerations. For example, in some states, workers may be protected from discharge who:
A detailed analysis of some of these important subjects follows.
Whistleblowing
The law generally protects workers who expose abuses of authority through "whistleblower" statutes, which are in force in some states. Michigan, for example, has enacted a Whistleblower's Protection Act which protects employees from retaliation (defined as discharge, threats, or discrimination against an employee regarding the em- ployee's compensation, terms, conditions, locations, or privileges of employment) after they report suspected violations of laws or regulations. This statute provides specific remedies, including injunc- tive relief or actual damages or both, reinstatement, back wages, fringe benefits, seniority rights, or any combinations of these remedies. Costs of litigation, including reasonable attorney fees and witness fees, are also mandated under the law. Some other states have even stricter laws with greater penalty provisions.
People who work for federal agencies are also protected from being fired for whistleblowing. In one case, a nurse was dismissed after reporting abuses of patients at a Veterans Administration Medical Center. She sought reinstatement and damages before a federal review panel, which ordered that she be reinstated and awarded her $7,500 in back pay.
The following actual cases illustrate examples of irings that were found to be illegal in this area:
For an employee's conduct to constitute protected activity, the majority of whistleblower statutes require that the employee have a reasonable belief that the employer's conduct violated a law, regulation or ordinance. Most statutes also require some proof that the employee intended to, or did report the violation.
TIP: The biggest potential for violations in this area occurs with safety-related claims made by disgruntled employees. Under numerous federal laws, including The Clean Air Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Solid Waste Disposal Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, Water Pollution Control Act, Occupational Safety and Health Act, Asbestos School Hazard Detection and Control Act, and most federal discrimination laws, employees are permitted to come forward and report alleged violations affecting public safety. In addition, more than half the states protect reporting of actions that are contrary to the health, safety, welfare and environmental laws.
To protect your company in this area, all employers should remember the following:
Counsel Comment #129: Remind workers in writing that problems sometimes arise and that the company should always be notified and given a reasonable period of time to correct its mistakes before news of a violation is leaked to an outside agency. Such a strategy can help your company defend itself from charges that it fired a worker illegally and that it violated a public safety law or ruling.
Most courts assign to the employee the initial burden of proof of establishing that he or she was unlawfully discharged in retaliation for reporting an employer's unlawful conduct. Companies can defeat such a claim by demonstrating that the company did nothing wrong or that the individual was fired for a legitimate reason, such as poor work performance or a business reorganization.
Counsel Comment #130: A competent labor attorney can analyze potential
damages and determine the best way to avoid exposure in this area. When an employer
learns that one of its employees has reported alleged improprieties concerning
the employer, the first reaction might be that such disloyal and damaging conduct
warrants immediate discipline, up to and including termination. Always control
such an impulse until after you have spoken at length with counsel and have
received the green light. Confer with counsel before the decision to fire has
been made, not after.