HR News and Information
Listen Up! a blog (updated weekly) by Jim Potts

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Potts & Associates provide training for California's Mandated Sexual Harassment Training Law
AB 1825, Reyes.   Sexual harassment:   training and education.

Existing law makes certain specified employment practices unlawful, including the harassment of an employee directly by the employer or indirectly by agents of the employer with the employer's knowledge.   Existing law further requires every employer to act to ensure a workplace free of sexual harassment by implementing certain minimum requirements, including posting sexual harassment information posters at the workplace and obtaining and making available an information sheet on sexual harassment.
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Workforce Diversity

The United States used to be called a “melting pot” in which each newcomer was blended, more or less successfully, into the dominant culture. A more appropriate terminology has been introduced. Now the U.S. is perhaps more accurately seen as a “salad bowl”, in which many ingredients retain their unique and distinctive qualities, while contributing in their own special way.
by Jim Potts
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Interviewing & Hiring: Some things to consider

Employers are always faced with replacing employees. The problem is most employers do not train their managers how to make the proper selection from the candidates presented. This process actually begins by having a proper job description in place and by correctly placing an ad based upon the job description.
by Maria Raygoza
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Supreme Court Rules ADA's Direct Threat Defense Applies To Job That Poses Risks To Employee

In Chevron U.S.A. v. Echazabal, No. 00-1406, 2002 U.S. LEXIS 4202 (S. Ct. June 10, 2002), the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously held that an employer does not violate the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) when it refuses to hire a disabled worker on the grounds that the job would pose a direct threat to the employee's own health. In so ruling, the Court reversed the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit which had held that while an employer could exclude a worker who posed a direct threat to others in the workplace, it could not exclude a worker who posed a threat only to his/her own health or safety.
submitted by Art Silbergeld, Proskauer Rose LLP
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