Employment Law

What Is a Furlough?

“Furlough” is not a term recognized in the practice of law or a legal term at all. Furloughs are generally referred to as mandatory, temporary, and unpaid time-off work and/or a reduction in hours/days that an employee may work. In other words, while you are not actively providing some or all job services during a furlough, you are still employed (albeit with less or no pay). As such, it does not trigger final paycheck and vacation payouts. It is essentially a temporary unpaid leave of absence or reduction in work. The key to a furlough is it is meant to be “temporary.” On the other hand, a “layoff” is a permanent job termination, triggering final pay requirements.

Many employers are opting for furloughs during the COVID-19 pandemic, which allows them to reduce labor costs without completely letting go of employees.

This post addresses issues pertaining to furloughs caused by COVID-19, where your employer furloughs you for business reasons (e.g., shortage of business and temporary closure) and does not address scenarios where you are forced to take time off because you have become sick from COVID-19 or need to stay home to care for your child.

Those issues are addressed in our post about paid family and sick leave you may be entitled to under the newly enacted Families First Coronavirus Response Act (“FFCRA”). If you are furloughed, the FFCRA does not provide paid family or sick leave. However, there are issues you should be aware of depending on whether you are an exempt (salary) employee versus non-exempt (hourly) employee.

Non-Exempt (Hourly) Employee: If you are an hourly (non-exempt) employee, generally, your employer may schedule you for fewer days or hours, and simply pay you the hours you work. But, if your employer requires you to report to the workplace (or call-in to determine whether you are going to work the day), your employer may likely owe you at least two hours of reporting time pay. Likewise, benefits such as health insurance will generally be governed by your employer’s policy. Insurance carriers will likely follow the policy; however, some carrier contracts may have other stipulations, e.g., how long an employee can stay on a plan if he or she is on leave or working reduced hours before he/she needs to go on COBRA. You will need to check with your supervisor or your employer’s Human Resources department to determine the answer to this issue. If you are furloughed because of COVID-19, you may be entitled to collect unemployment insurance, which our blog post here covers.

Exempt (Salary) Employees: Salary (exempt) employees must be paid the same minimum salary for each paid period. In California, to maintain exempt status, your employer must pay you a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment, which is currently set at $4,160 for large employers in California (26 employees or more). This amount may not be subject to deduction, except for specified circumstances initiated by you (the employee), and cannot be pro-rated for part-time work, or else exempt status is lost. If exempt status is lost, your employer will be responsible for ensuring you receive minimum wage and overtime premium pay for hours worked. Employers may, however, make a permanent cut to hours and/or days of work and/or the salary amount. Advance reductions in salaried employee pay to reflect long-term business needs does not destroy an employee’s exempt status. But day-to-day or short-term deductions from an employee’s salary would.

Some of the issues relating to furloughs, such as when COBRA is triggered and whether exempt status is retained, can be tricky.

It is best to consult with experienced employment lawyers who can counsel you depending on your circumstance. At Haeggquist & Eck, we can provide such counsel based on our attorneys’ decades of combined experience. We are among the preeminent employment law firms in San Diego and nationwide, and we are more than capable of helping you favorably resolve a dispute between you and your employer at this time.

If you need an attorney to help you assert your rights, reach out to Haeggquist & Eck, LLP online or by calling (619) 342-8000.

Essential Not Expendable

If you’re an essential worker during the COVID-19 pandemic, chances are you’re feeling wary and stressed about being at work. Your employer, however, is responsible for providing you with a safe working environment. Learn more about what that can mean for you and your rights during this time.

If you need legal assistance, reach out to Haeggquist & Eck, LLP online or call (619) 342-8000 and request your free initial consultation.

What Safety Protections Must Employers Provide For Essential Workers?

If you’re wondering about what your employer should provide to protect you at work during the COVID-19 pandemic, here’s the short answer:

Employers, even independent of COVID-19, are required to keep their employees safe. Required safety protections, however, vary depending on your specific employment situation.

First, determine if you are an “essential” worker. Please see our other post on this topic. Next, determine what protection your employer must provide. The answer to that question varies and is based on a number of factors such as the nature of your employer and your job, to name just a few, but with COVID-19, almost all employers need to provide employees with some form of personal protective equipment (“PPE”) and so-called “safe work practices.”

Now, here’s a more detailed answer:

What Additional PPE and Safe Work Practices Are Available to Essential Workers Due to COVID-19?

To help provide a framework of resources you may wish to consider for PPE protections, we outline below a few of the key laws and regulations where PPE protections may be found, and also provide information on some of the more recent COVID-19 specific guidance that has been provided (in some cases, mandated) by governmental and regulatory authorities.

As a starting point, at the federal level, although the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) admits the OSHA Act of 1970 (“OSHA Act”) does not specifically address COVID-19, it points to pre-existing provisions containing PPE requirements to offer protections to some workers. To help provide further information, OSHA issued a document entitled, “Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for COVID-19” (the “OSHA Guidance”).

In addition to covering certain PPE protections, the OSHA Guidance covers a variety of measures to help protect workers, including infectious disease preparedness and response plans. Currently, a bill has been introduced (H.R. 6139, proposing the “COVID–19 Health Care Worker Protection Act of 2020”) seeking to mandate an emergency temporary OSHA standard to add additional PPE protections for healthcare workers in view of the extreme dangers presented by COVID-19. We are hopeful that more legislation, at both the federal and state level, is introduced to help protect workers in all fields, and not just for health purposes, but for financial reasons as well. A helpful website to track legislation is linked here. We have also issued separate posts about various new legislation here.

Similarly, at the state level, California’s pre-existing Aerosol Transmissible Disease (“ATD”) Standard provides protections useful for dealing with COVID-19. The ATD Standard is designed to prevent worker illness from infectious diseases that can be transmitted by inhaling air that contains viruses, bacteria, or other disease organisms.

To assist you with understanding how the ATD provides COVID-19 protection, California’s Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Occupational Safety and Health (“Cal/OSHA”), published online guidance concerning the ATD Standard and COVID-19 (the “Cal/OSHA Guidance”). As you will see in the Cal/OSHA Guidance, only a limited list of employers are subject to the ATD Standard, such as certain healthcare related entities, laboratories, correctional facilities, homeless shelters, drug treatment programs, and other locations that Cal/OSHA notifies in writing that they must comply with the ATD Standard.

The Cal/OSHA Guidance also outlines requirements employers must follow when an illness such as COVID-19 presents a “significant risk” of exposure in the workplace. These requirements include the implementation of an Injury and Illness Prevention Program designed to prevent or reduce infection hazards, and training employees on COVID-19 infection prevention methods. Other protections, of course, apply to all employers, such as providing washing facilities. Notably, the Cal/OSHA Guidance outlines requirements whereby an employer must assess if hazards from COVID-19 are present in the workplace that necessitate providing PPE. If such a hazard is identified, the employer is to provide properly fitting PPE.

In addition, to the extent an employer is not required to comply with the ATD Standard, Cal/OSHA recommends that the employer follow current guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (the “CDC”) for COVID-19. Although the CDC is not currently requiring masks for all essential workers at all times, it continues to release guidance periodically to address this unfolding pandemic. For example, on April 8, 2020, the CDC issued updated guidelines for essential workers (the “CDC Guidance”). The CDC Guidance is principally designed to keep essential workers on the job.

Per the CDC Guidance, essential workers who have been exposed to COVID-19 may go back to work if they are asymptomatic and adhere to certain requirements, such as taking their temperature before going to work, wearing a face mask at all times for at least 14 days after they were exposed to COVID-19, and practicing social distancing at work as much as possible. (Workers may or may not find that to be an improvement from staying home for a 14-day period after exposure).

Perhaps some of the most striking recent changes have come, for many essential workers (such as those in the grocery and food service industries), at the local government level. Recently, the County of San Diego ordered (“April 9 CSD Order”) that workers in contact with the public in restaurants or other essential business that serve food, such as grocery stores, pharmacies, convenience stores, gas stations, banks, or public transportation, wear a face covering.

On the issues of safe work practices, we have all seen social distancing and sanitation measures addressed at every level: federal, state, and local. Often, it is at the state and local level where the most stringent guidance is provided. For example, in the County of San Diego, “essential” businesses are now required to publish a COVID-19 plan (a “Social Distancing and Sanitation Protocol”) and undertake mandatory sanitation practices. Essential businesses in San Diego County must provide hand sanitizer and other disinfecting products, set schedules for sanitization efforts, ensure measures to distance workers from one another and from the public, and a host of other requirements. Requirements for sanitation and social distancing are also covered in the April 9 CSD Order.

We encourage employees to monitor all current guidance offered by federal, state and local regulatory authorities concerning workplace safety at all times, but especially during COVID-19.

Finally, you should also be aware that OSHA, for example, requires employers, under certain facts, to report cases of COVID-19 in their employees as a workplace injury. Knowing that you are working in an environment with existing COVID-19 cases is a key part of being able to adequately protect yourself.

What Happens If My Employer Tries to Prevent Me From Reporting PPE Violations Or Fires Me Because I Complain About A Lack of PPE?

Depending on your employment situation, various legal remedies exist if your employer prevents you from reporting a lack of PPE or takes any adverse employment action against you because you complain or request protection. For example, several states have so-called “whistleblower” laws to protect employees. In addition, if you face any adverse employment action for demanding PPE or other protections, you may have claims for retaliation, wrongful termination, and other employer misconduct. Reports are surfacing of employees at Amazon and other grocery/delivery businesses, as well as staff at hospitals and medical facilities (doctors, nurses, and other health professionals) facing a host of adverse employment actions for striking (see post), protesting, complaining, or refusing to work without adequate PPE.

What Happens If I Become Ill or Die Because My Employer Failed to Protect Me?

The media is beginning to report on the unfortunate COVID-19 related deaths (or severe physical injuries) of many essential workers. If you pass away due to the illness, a wrongful death claim may exist depending on the circumstances. In the event of serious bodily harm or injury, there are a host of claims that may be available to you. Feel free to contact us if you have questions.

To schedule your free initial consultation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

If Your Employer Says You Are an ‘Essential Worker,’ Do You Have To Go To Work? What about Your Health & Safety?

Since Governor Newsom’s March 19, 2020 shelter-in-place order, most Californians have been staying home to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 and to flatten the curve of its rapid spread. But there are exceptions for “essential workers” who supply or support functions critical to public health and safety, the economy, and national security. So, what if you provide services to an essential business? Do you have to go to work? Generally, yes, you must report to work; however, just because you are “essential” does not mean you essentially give up your right to your health and safety in the workplace.

Have You Properly Been Classified as an “Essential Worker”?

To determine whether your job is essential, consult the State Public Health Care Officer’s extensive list of Essential Critical Infrastructure Workers, briefly defined as follows:

  • Healthcare/Public Health Sector, including health care providers, public health workers, caregivers, hospital, veterinary, and laboratory personnel, workers in other medical facilities like blood banks, hospices, and outpatient clinics, those responsible for health care data transmission and storage, and workers involved in the manufacture and distribution of medical equipment, pharmaceuticals, vaccines, personal protective equipment, sanitization and cleaning supplies, and personal care and hygiene products.
  • Emergency Services Sector, including law enforcement, first responders, fire fighters, 911 call center employees, child and adult protective services employees, private security, animal control, and employees needed to maintain essential public works like bridges, water and sewer mains, and traffic lights, and to maintain safety and sanitation in residences such as plumbers, electricians, and exterminators.
  • Food and Agriculture Sector, including workers in retail food, beverage, cannabis, and dietary supplement stores and markets, food banks, pharmacies, restaurants providing carry-out, employees supporting all aspects of food manufacture, supply, processing, packaging, distribution, and transportation, farm, animal agriculture, and forest product workers, and workers essential for government assistance programs.
  • Energy Sector, including workers involved in the production, refining, storage, and distribution of electricity, oil, and natural gas such as utility workers, technicians, and engineers in these segments, call center employees dealing with outages and leaks, and retail gas station and truck stop employees.
  • Water and Wastewater Sector, including all workers needed to operate and maintain drinking water and wastewater/drainage such as at water authorities, treatment facilities, collection facilities, and with chemical disinfectant suppliers.
  • Transportation and Logistics Sector, including all workers needed to support the subsectors of aviation (airlines, helicopters, airports, and landing strips), highway and motor carrier (roadways, bridges, and tunnels), maritime transportation systems (coastline, ports, and waterways), mass transit and passenger rail (buses, trolleys, subways, taxis, and truck drivers), pipeline systems (carrying gases and chemicals), freight rail (railroads), and postal and shipping (mail, courier, and delivery services).
  • Communications and Information Technology Sector, including all workers supporting cable, telephone, and satellite providers, radio, television, and media services, network operations and information technology, cloud computing services, and cybersecurity.
  • Other Community-Based Government Operations and Essential Functions, including public benefit government employees, some court employees, workers supporting schools for the purposes of distance learning and providing school meals, construction workers, commercial retailers that supply essential sectors (such as pet supply, auto supplies and repair, and hardware and home improvement), workers supporting the entertainment industry, laundromat and laundry services, animal care facilities, and hotel workers at hotels used for COVID-19 mitigation.
  • Critical Manufacturing Sector, including all workers necessary for the manufacture of materials and supplies needed for essential sectors such as medical supplies, metals, machinery, electrical equipment, and transportation equipment.
  • Hazardous Materials Sector, including workers at nuclear facilities, handling medical waste, and providing hazardous waste cleanup.
  • Financial Services Sector including all workers needed to process financial transactions and services such as investments, credit and financing, banking and lending, and insurance services, and to provide consumer access to these financial services.
  • Chemical Sector, including all workers involved in the conversion of raw materials and chemicals into industrial and consumer goods such as hand sanitizers, pharmaceuticals, textiles, paper goods, plastic packaging, cleaning and medical solutions, and including those involved in their supply, production, transportation, and facilities operation and maintenance.
  • Defense Industrial Base Sector, including workers required for national security and who work for companies, and their subcontractors, performing under contracts with the Department of Defense such as aerospace, mechanical, and software engineers, manufacturing and production workers, information technology and security personnel, intelligence support, and aircraft and weapon system mechanics.

This list is subject to change by the California Department of Public Health.

There is much less clarity regarding non-essential workers, presumably encompassing any workers who do not neatly fit within the above list. California’s Coronavirus (COVID-19) Response FAQs webpage states that businesses such as dine-in restaurants, bars and nightclubs, entertainment venues, gyms and fitness studios, public events and gatherings, convention centers, and hair and nail salons are closed while the stay-at-home order is in effect. Clothing retailers and department stores are also non-essential as they do not, unlike stores like Walmart and Target, sell food or other essential supplies such as cleaning and personal hygiene products. Ultimately, it is the California Department of Public Health’s call.

If My Job Falls Within a Critical Sector, Do I Have to Report to Work? What About My Health and Safety?

If your job falls within one of the enumerated categories, you will generally be required to report to work – that is, assuming you have not been impacted by COVID-19 and have not opted to take Paid Sick Leave or Paid Family Leave, as discussed in our March 19, 2020 blog, or any other leave to which you are entitled. Your employer, however, is required under the Division of Occupational Safety and Health (“Cal/OSHA”) regulations to protect you from exposure to COVID-19.

To start, there are numerous disease-prevention protections already required of employers such as providing washing facilities that have an adequate supply of suitable cleansing agents, water, and single-use towels or blowers, having an Injury and Illness Prevention Program (“IIPP”) to protect employees from workplace hazards including infectious diseases, and providing personal protective equipment if an infectious disease is identified as a workplace hazard. Because COVID-19 is so widespread, most workplaces will have to consider it a hazard.

For workers in the Healthcare/Public Health Sector, correctional facilities, homeless shelters, and drug treatment programs, your employer is likely required under Cal/OSHA’s Aerosol Transmissible Diseases (“ATD”) standard to reduce your risk of infection through screening procedures, implementation of an exposure control and/or biosafety plan, taking isolation precautions, and, in some cases, requiring N95 respirators or air-purifying respirators. Consult Cal/OSHA’s Safety & Health Fact Sheet regarding ATDs and The California Workplace Guide to ATDs for more information.

For other sectors not subject to ATD standards, Cal/OSHA has released Interim Guidelines for General Industry with recommended precautions (from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [“CDC”]).

Some of these Cal/OSHA guidelines are as follows:

  • Actively encouraging sick employees to stay home and immediately sending home any employees with acute respiratory illness symptoms;
  • Providing information and training to employees on cough and sneeze etiquettehand hygiene, avoiding close contact with sick persons, avoiding touching eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands, and avoiding sharing personal items with co-workers;
  • Providing tissues, no-touch disposal trash cans, and hand sanitizer for use by employees;
  • Performing routine environmental cleaning of shared workplace equipment and furniture; and
  • Advising employees to check CDC’s Traveler’s Health Notices prior to travel.

Cal/OSHA has also released more specific guidance for Agricultural Employees (also in Spanish), Childcare Workers, and Skilled Nursing and Long-Term Care Facilities.

What Can I Do if My Employer is Failing to Take Appropriate Precautions to Protect Me from Exposure to COVID-19?

If you are an essential employee and your employer is not taking proper precautions, if you have been exposed to COVID-19 at work because of your employer’s failures, or if you believe your employer is wrongfully claiming it is an essential business, you may be able to hold them legally accountable for violating your rights.

The employment law attorneys of Haeggquist & Eck, LLP will work with you to learn about your situation and seek fair and just compensation if your employer is breaking the law.

Contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 to learn more about how we may be able to support your claim.

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