President Obama has issued
yet another executive order that will impose
additional labor compliance requirements on companies that choose to do
business with the federal government. Entitled “Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces,” the new Order
requires contractors and subcontractors to disclose their own labor law
violations and requires federal agencies to exclude from federal contracting
those companies with a history of poor labor law compliance.
The Order, which seems to follow from a report issued by the Senate HELP Committee last
December, targets the following areas:
- Disclosure of Labor Law Violations: The Order requires that contractors seeking to procure a contract valued in excess of $500,000 must disclose whether whether an administrative merits determination, arbitral award, or civil judgment was rendered against it in the previous three year period. This new disclosure requirement applies to violations of many different labor laws and Executive Orders, including the National Labor Relations Act.
- “Paycheck Transparency”: Contractors must provide their employees with information regarding that employee’s hours worked, overtime hours, pay, and any additions or deductions to that employee’s paycheck. Contractors must also include in their contracts with subcontractors a requirement that the subcontractor make the same paycheck disclosures.
- Limiting arbitration agreements: While D.R. Horton has already severely limited an employer’s ability to make use of mandatory arbitration agreements (at least according to the NLRB), the Order limits the ability of certain contractors to arbitrate claims brought by employees pursuant to Title VII. Covered contractors are now also prohibited from compelling an employee to arbitrate claims arising from a sexual harassment or assault unless the employee agrees to arbitration after the dispute arises. However, the limits placed on mandatory arbitration agreements do not apply to employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement.
It is likely that it will
take some time before employers and labor watchers get a clear picture as to an
employer’s actual obligations stemming from the President’s Order.
Nevertheless, in conjunction with the President’s other recent executive orders
establishing a $10.10 minimum wage for employees of contractors and addressing
discrimination against LGBT employees of contractors, federal contractors will
have significant new compliance obligations to digest as new regulations are
issued over the next year.
Source: Labor
Relations Today
No comments:
Post a Comment