Employee Survival Guide® - Employee Apathy About Their Rights and Deceptive Employer Practices
Episode Date: August 27, 2021In this episode of the Employee Survival Guide, Mark discusses how employees have little knowledge and information about their employment rights and it is not their fault. Mark examines the employer&a...pos;s role to maintain constant control and providing limited information about employment rights to protect employees. Mark argues that employers treat employees like opponents by using manipulative employment practices, including forced arbitration, noncompetition agreements, employment at will. Employers need to spend more money and energy helping employees not setting them up for failure.Listen to the Employee Survival Guide podcast latest episode here https://capclaw.com/employee-survival-guide-podcast/If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts.For more information, please contact Carey & Associates, P.C. at 475-242-8317, www.capclaw.com.The content of this website is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice nor create an attorney-client relationship. Carey & Associates, P.C. makes no warranty, express or implied, regarding the accuracy of the information contained on this website or to any website to which it is linked to.Tags: Employee ApathyIf you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts. Leaving a review will inform other listeners you found the content on this podcast is important in the area of employment law in the United States. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com.
Transcript
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Hey, it's Mark here, and welcome to the next edition of the Employee Survival Guide, where
we tell you everything your employer does not want you to know about, and much more.
Today's episode, we're talking about employee apathy, about their employment rights, and
deceptive employer practices.
We all work, but we are not all equal in terms of our knowledge of working.
In fact, there is a complete absence of accessible information related to a general internet
search for the following phrase,
employee knowledge of employment rights, or any similar search terms.
Why is that?
And I'm excluding from this search any legal sites like ours at capclaw.com from this search.
What forces are at play here?
Is this the result of a concerted employer, human resource community, lobbyists to conceal information from the masses?
Simple answer, yeah.
There are 157 million working Americans, and there are no businesses or websites marketing to this population to aid them in understanding their employment rights and benefits.
Sites like Glassdoor, Indeed, LinkedIn, ZipRecruiter, Monster, etc. do not serve up information about employee rights and benefits.
Why is that?
In contrast, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of websites providing consulting services to employers from everything to payroll, consulting, dealing with employee apathy, risk management, human resource functions, and training.
And the latest is unconscious bias training.
There are two forces at play here.
After many years of handling employment cases, I have a unique and comprehensive understanding
about all things considered employment. I discovered that employees are apathetic
regarding learning about employment rights at all, mostly due to fear of challenging their employers
and the presumption that employment laws are only for the understanding of management teams, human resource departments, lawyers, and judges.
Similarly, having dealt with hundreds of employers, I have concluded that employers, defense counsel, and employer lobby groups
have worked diligently to keep employees in check and, most importantly, in the dark about their rights.
Why? Simply to control employees.
You see, knowledge is power, but here the knowledge is only possessed by employers.
See the imbalance?
Do you feel the same way?
Employee apathy about their legal rights.
The type of employee apathy I'm referring to here is not the typical employee apathy you often hear about.
For example, reengaging employees to do the work they were hired for.
and hear about. For example, re-engaging employees to do the work they were hired for.
What I have seen from clients over the years is a lack of working knowledge of employment laws to provide internal guidance and protection against their employers. We typically see clients rush in
after an emergency at work, like receiving a PIP, what's called a performance improvement plan,
or a severance package upon termination. The clients are desperate for answers in what their legal rights are when faced with these situations.
I'm not shaming or faulting apathetic employees here because employers actually cause the apathy
in the first place. How are employers creating apathetic employees? Concerned employer
disinformation. Employers maintain employee apathy by controlling everything about your
employment, including the information employees are provided. Think of the bland information your
employer provides about employment rights on the internal HR portals or contained in the
employee handbooks. The content is written for defense purposes only and is reactionary rather
than concerted employee-focused attention and advice giving.
Reactionary because employers were previously sued, lost, or settled,
and have shored up their employment defenses through HR content.
Employers missed the mark.
They view employees as only essential for for-profit reasons
but treat employees as opponents in every other regard.
This oppositional attitude is beginning to wane.
Employers are deeply worried. Employees should speak up for themselves and demand to be treated
more fairly. Employers should trust employees more than they currently do. Also tenuous is the
siren call for more diversity and inclusion by employers in response to racial social tensions
last summer. We all knew and now know, this is just a marketing event
for most companies to get in line with the movements and nothing to do with leveling
the playing field with employees of any race, age, disability, gender, etc.
After litigating far too many employment cases, I came to the realization that employers do not
care about employees, only controlling them and bolstering profit margins. Employers,
both large and small, seek to limit the amount of employment law information they want employees to know about.
But you may say that employers provide an appropriate level of employment information for all employees to consume, understand, and adhere to.
Yes, I know there's a poster about employment rights next to the copier, but did you read it?
Yes, I know there's an employment manual, but did you read that too?
Your employer and now some states require your attendance with company-sponsored seminars,
training on sexual harassment, and other forms of discrimination. Did you turn the volume down
when listening to the recording enough just to hear the code to submit to the vendor or HR?
Yes, I thought so. What is the motivation by employers to limit or conceal employment information from employees?
Again, employers seek to maintain a command-and-control work environment.
In other words, the less information employees are provided about employment laws and their employment rights, the more control employers have.
Employees spend considerable amounts of time of their lives working, gathering information and experience building individual
careers. But even as employees work endlessly, they never seem to gather a working knowledge
of employment law and their employment rights such laws plainly seek to protect. It is truly
a dysfunctional relationship wherein employers don't talk about employment law issues openly,
hoping the issues just disappear under the rug somehow. Sound familiar? If the opposite were true, I would have no reason to write this article.
Employers have a direct incentive to keep employees in the dark regarding employment laws and regulations.
The less employees know about their employment rights, the more control and human resource departments have over employees and the workplace in general.
The more control, the more risk employers take with employees, oftentimes illegally.
And that's where I come in.
Ask yourself this question.
When was the last time your employer spent time with you explaining what your employment rights are
and how you can protect yourself against the employer?
This type of communication never happens in any company.
Why?
Management concluded it always needs to be in control over employees,
and this ideology has roots going back hundreds of years.
But now this management tactic appears outdated, antithetical to employee rights and current social thinking.
New Emerging Employee Attitudes
Employee attitudes are changing dramatically in wake of the COVID-19 work-from-home strategy employed by many companies and the cultural unrest of the summer of 2020.
Employees feel more productive when they have flexibility to define their day around personal
and business needs. These employees are collectively being heard by management,
and our near-term work-life future may very well involve some form of hybrid work-from-home
environment. Employees argue they are more productive working in this hybrid model,
and many employers agree.
Employers should listen more closely to employees and discover what their employees really want.
Employees want more control of their daily lives.
Instead, the unbridled 8-10 hour work days of the past.
In a few cases, some employers are exploring the 4-day work week under the conclusion that more time off will make employees more efficient and loyal.
work week under the conclusion that more time off will make employees more efficient and loyal.
Although social consciousness has substantially increased regarding equality and diversity,
employee attitudes related to job discrimination and employment rights in general has remained stalled and neutral for the past 30 years. Honestly, employees are not at fault here.
Employers have created a default management practice, a phrase I like to use often because
no one does. There is a conservative management practice propagated by consulting companies and employer-side defense attorneys to run operations with a firm management control ideology.
challenges to management decision-making, the so-called pro-trialatory animus,
an overuse of non-competition and forced arbitration agreements,
and the perpetual use of the implement-at-will rule.
Where are we headed?
I predict our current stressful times and political climate will result in dramatic improvements in our workplaces.
Employers now realize they cannot continue to treat employees just as widgets.
It must create ways to garner employee trust and create a fairer working environment. For example, Amazon just snuffed out a union attempt by convincing employees the company can do more than what the union would provide on their behalf.
Employers must treat employees as co-eagles in the workplace instead of as opponents.
Employers must remove the oppressive employment at will rule and replace it with the
determination for cause rule, which are the same rules used in union organized shops without the
union dues. Employers must remove the forced arbitration like Google did in 2019, enforce
confidentiality settlement agreements, and make all employment matters externally transparent,
i.e. less dysfunction. Yes, I am talking about
you, Bridgewater Associates and General Electric. Finally, employers must protect their coveted
employees by providing objective and neutral educational information about employee rights.
Instead of using Employment Defense Council to give employment law seminars to employees,
employers should hire plaintiff employment lawyers to speak to employees about their employment rights. Are employers concerned employees will discover information management
did not want them to know about? Of course, that's the point. The culmination of less secrecy,
more education, will directly result in less inequality, less racism, less ageism,
less discrimination across every employment category. Employees will feel more protected
than opposed, more trusted and loyal to their employer's mission. Why hasn't this happened
sooner? Employers keep getting the same old default management advice and are too scared to
take the risk to do the right thing. There. I just saved employers millions in consulting fees if
they would just only accept my free suggestions.
If you'd like more information about this article, please contact our firm, Cary & Associates, PC, on the web at capclaw.com.
Have a great week. Talk to you soon.