Of course they can. They are the employer; they can do as they wish. Many companies discipline through e-mail to prevent any others from hearing in on the conversation. An added bonus is that you will not have to be embarrassed in front of your fellow workers. Only you and the employer will know what happened.
The employer is responsible for complying with OSHA regulations, but an employer can hold an employee accountable for failure to follow directions or established procedures intended to ensure compliance.
Being that he/she is the employer and you are the employee, you should follow his orders and not use garnish.
Sure can. It belongs to the company and not the employee.
An employer has to pay for the time spent by employees at any mandatory meeting. Whenever an employer is making use of your time, you are entitled to be paid for your time. To any employer who does not like the idea of paying an employee to attend a disciplinary meeting, my suggestion would be to keep the meeting short. It does not necessarily require a lengthy meeting to discipline people.
No, They can not
Certainly. The employer can threaten anything with no laibility. Some employer ACTS are prohibited if the employer is large enough to be subject to EEO laws [15+ employees]. If an employer offers sick leave, it may set any rules it wishes about who can use that gift.
An employer is a boss who employs an employee to work for them. It is not clear who owns the website (I assume the employer), and whose business is it that is being promoted (I assume the ex-employee is running a business on the side)?
An employer is a boss who employs an employee to work for them. It is not clear who owns the website (I assume the employer), and whose business is it that is being promoted (I assume the ex-employee is running a business on the side)?
That depends entirely on the circumstances.
An employer can refuse to give a reference for any reason.
Employee Lending Agreement(Download)___________________, referred to as PRIMARY EMPLOYER, and ___________________, referred to as TEMPORARY EMPLOYER, agree:PRIMARY EMPLOYER employs ______________ as systems analyst, referred to as EMPLOYEE, at a rate of $____(_______ &___/100 dollars) per ____. TEMPORARY EMPLOYER will employ EMPLOYEE from _____________ to _________________.During the period in which EMPLOYEE is lent, PRIMARY EMPLOYER shall continue to pay EMPLOYEE, and TEMPORARY EMPLOYER shall reimburse employer for the pay plus ___% percent for overhead and benefits. In addition, TEMPORARY EMPLOYER shall reimburse EMPLOYER for worker's compensation insurance on EMPLOYEE. In the event that state law or other regulation requires TEMPORARY EMPLOYER to provide worker's compensation the EMPLOYEE, said regulation shall control.Dated: __________________________________________Temporary Employer. Federal ID #:___________________Employer. Federal ID #:__________________Employee. Social Security #:Date:Employee Lending AgreementReview ListThis review list is provided to inform you about this document in question and assist you in its preparation. Employee lending has become a standard practice in many industries. It lets the Temporary Employer use Employees at will without having hiring, firing, and reporting requirements associated with it. This also keeps the temporary employees in a position as suppliers to the employer, who remains a customer.1. Make duplicate copies. Be sure to get the Federal ID and Social Security numbers so you are protected under this arrangement.
I don't know about in California but I heard that an employer is not allowed to tell anything about an ex employee unless used as a reference. If you just use the employer as a previous job all they are supposed to be allowed to verify is that you did work there and the dates. However if you put them down as a reference and a prospective employer calls them they can elaborate on your character as well.