Pub. 3 2024-2025 Issue 1

Your employee handbook has something in common with the products you sell: neither lasts forever, and both will eventually need an update. Think about when that new car rolled off the lot with that new car smell. It was equipped with the latest technology and state-of-the-art safety features, but as years passed, technology and safety features improved and became the new state-of-the-art. What may have been the best at one time no longer was. When that time comes, the choice becomes whether to stick with a vehicle that subjects you to risks and is no longer state-of-the-art or to trade it in for something that is. The same holds true for your employee handbook. Like a new vehicle, your current employee handbook may have been state-of-the-art when it was drafted. In fact, it still may have lots of miles left if you drafted or revised it within the last 18 months. On the other hand, if the closest you have come to revising your handbook in the last few years is to add that project to your “To Do” list, it’s probably time to trade it in. So how do you know if your handbook needs an update (other than it currently has policies mentioning pagers and BlackBerry phones)? Using this article as your check engine light, the following are some examples of policies that may be overdue for service: • Accommodations Policy: Do you have an accommodations policy that addresses possible accommodations needs for disabilities, religious reasons and pregnancy? If so, does your policy address the obligations created by the relatively new Pregnant Worker Fairness Act (PWFA)? The PWFA became effective in 2023 and the EEOC finalized enforcement regulations in June 2024, less than two months ago. This law requires most employers to provide reasonable accommodations to qualified employees and applicants with known limitations related to, affected by, or arising out of pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions unless the accommodation will cause an undue hardship. This law requires employers to analyze the accommodation needs of eligible applicants and employees in much the same manner as ADA accommodation needs are considered. • Lactation Break Policy: Do you have a lactation break policy for nursing mothers? If so, is your policy consistent with both state and federal law requirements? Again, the new pregnancy law also includes requirements for lactation accommodations. • EEO Policy: In recent years, court decisions across the country have expanded the list of characteristics now protected by law. Your EEO policy should reflect these changes. • No-Harassment Policy: The expanded list of protected characteristics also impacts your no-harassment policy, as demonstrated by the EEOC’s updated enforcement guidance on workplace harassment issued on April 29, 2024. This guidance, updated for the first time in 25 years, greatly expands the list of characteristics the agency considers protected by the law and the types of conduct that may constitute unlawful harassment. By way of example, the new guidance states that conduct that may be harassment includes comments about hair and clothing and accents, misgendering, denial of bathroom usage consistent with gender identity, conduct between persons in the same protected category, and electronic communications to or between employees even when not on working time. Although not the law, these guidelines set forth the EEOC’s position on these issues and likely the position some courts will take. • Remote Work Policy: Although few dealership positions lend themselves to remote work, adopting a remote work policy should be considered in today’s environment. Setting forth remote work guidelines can reduce risks should a situation arise where an employee requests to work remotely or remote work is a possible reasonable accommodation. • Misconduct Policy: Surely your dealership can prohibit your workers from making profane comments about each other, right? You can require employees to behave in a professional manner at all times and prohibit them from recording anyone else during work hours, right? Not necessarily. A broad new standard from the National Labor Relations Board that came into effect in 2023 and impacts both unionized and non-unionized workplaces. The new standard 37 THE GENERATOR

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