Using Proper Employee Termination Procedures
Whether your reasons for firing an employee are based on work performance, due to an economic layoff, or for another reason, following the proper termination procedures goes a long way in avoiding legal issues. Avoid firing someone on the spot, and use severance and release agreements to limit your liability.
Whatever your reasons are for terminating an employee, a wise employer will always follow the proper termination procedures. Despite the prevalence of employment-at-will laws, in reality, your right to fire is becoming more and more restricted because of the tremendous growth in federal and state laws that favor employees. What's more, these days workers who feel they have been unjustly discharged or forced to quit seem to be filing a multitude of employment-related suits.
The best way to "win" a lawsuit is to avoid it in the first place. By keeping in mind some basic management and interpersonal rules, you can go a long way toward diffusing the anger of a discharged employee — an employee who might otherwise vent his or her wrath in a courtroom. Many of these same rules are also useful in establishing your defense — that you had a good reason to fire your employee — if it turns out that the worker does sue you, after all. Protect yourself by laying the groundwork before firing a worker and by dealing with the worst case scenario--firing someone on the spot.
What To Do Before Firing For Misconduct or Poor Work
There are a number of steps you need to take before you fire somebody for insubordination, breaking a work rule or any other type of misconduct, or for simply performing poorly on the job. These steps include documenting the problem, using fair rules and procedures, and investigating the "last straw" incident thoroughly.
First, though, a word about what not to do: we recommend that you make a personal commitment that you will never fire an employee on the spot.
Why? Acting out of anger or frustration is a good way to get yourself in legal hot water. Employees who are fired in this way are the most likely to sue you or to cause other trouble for you and your business. If a worker does something so terrible that you must take immediate action, tell the worker that he or she is suspended, effective immediately, while you investigate (or cool down).
The safest way to fire someone, from a legal standpoint, is to be sure that you have a valid, nondiscriminatory business reason for the action, and that you have enough documentation to prove it. Your documentation must be created in the normal course of business, before you fire the person (except, of course, for a record of the actual termination discussion).
Don't get caught trying to reconstruct documentation (such as warnings or poor performance reviews) after the fact, when you should have been creating them all along. Also, the documentation process should not be used to "build a case" against one worker when other workers in similar situations did not have their actions documented. Selective documentation may be proof that a person was the victim of discrimination.
It's important to remember that workers (and courts) are more likely to perceive a firing as "fair" if your employees have had plenty of notice about what conduct and performance you expect from them. It's also important that workers receive regular feedback about their job performance, and that they are warned whenever you find that they are not living up to expectations.
For that reason, your ability to "fire right" depends on the groundwork you lay, starting as early as the first day you hire somebody. You need to:
- Establish fair work rules and policies. Your employees need to know what you expect of them in terms of workplace rules. Many companies create a company handbook (or hire a freelance writer to do it for them) that contains their key rules, and they give a copy to every new hire. If you're hiring just a few employees, you don't need to create a whole handbook, but you should give some thought to the kinds of reasonable rules your business requires.
- Enforce your rules fairly, using progressive disciplinary measures when necessary. You can have the most reasonable set of rules that's ever been written, but if you don't enforce your rules, they are useless. For legal purposes, you must apply your rules equally to all your employees, if you hope to rely on them.
- Establish a performance feedback system to let people know how they're doing. Discipline is not very effective for an employee who doesn't violate any rules but is incompetent or is not performing work to an acceptable level. Through regular performance reviews you can bring the worker up to par, or at least document your attempt to do so.
- Investigate the "last straw" incident thoroughly. Before you fire someone for misconduct, you should take the trouble to investigate as thoroughly as you can. In many cases the investigation can be accomplished in just a few hours, so don't ignore this important step. Sometimes, after investigating, you may decide not to fire the employee after all.
Mitigate the Damage If You Fire Someone on the Spot
If you do ignore all the expert advice and fire someone impetuously,
perhaps because you had an argument or you caught the worker in the act
of stealing or damaging property, what should you do? The answer depends
on the worker's previous history with your company.
If you have documentation to justify your actions. You
can start by going through the worker's file to see if you have enough
documentation (of previous violations of rules or of poor performance
reviews) to justify your action. If you do, you can heave a sigh of
relief because you'll have a defense ready in case the worker decides to
sue you.
What to do if there's little or no documentation to justify your actions.
If you have little or no documentation of any previous problems with
the worker, the safest course of action would be to call him or her, say
that you acted too quickly, and offer to reinstate the worker. If he or
she refuses, you have just transformed the firing into a voluntary
quit, so your possible liability has decreased dramatically. If the
worker agrees to come back, you'll naturally keep a watchful eye on him
or her. Hopefully things will improve; if not, be sure to document any
problems before you repeat your hasty conduct.
If you don't want to take the worker back, perhaps because his or her
conduct was so appalling that it would justify firing in itself, or
because you feel your ability to work together has been destroyed, you
should first gather and save any available evidence that supports your
version of what happened.
Then, after reviewing the evidence, you have a choice. You can sit
tight and hope the whole thing blows over, or you can try to work out a
deal with your ex-employee: you can agree to provide some severance
benefits to the worker, in exchange for a signed release form that
waives his or her right to sue you.
How to Handle Economic Layoffs
When economic reasons demand that you eliminate an employee's job,
either temporarily or permanently, you automatically have a sound
business reason for the discharge. Few courts will question your
judgment in this regard. But if you decide to lay off some but not all
of your workers, you must be sure that your selection process does not discriminate on the basis of age, sex, or race, or violate some other public policy.
Who will stay and who will go? In most small
businesses, if it becomes necessary to lay off anyone, the decision will
be based on the desire to keep the business going. Obviously, those
whose jobs are most essential to the business will be kept, and those
whose jobs are least essential (or whose tasks can be taken over by a
remaining worker or the owner) will be let go. In some cases, workers
who are family members or close friends of the owner will be kept, while
"outsiders" will be let go. Neither of these two strategies is likely
to cause you any legal problems provided that your business is small
enough to escape coverage by the major civil rights laws.
Seniority or merit? Laying people off in order of
seniority (that is, keeping the people with the greatest length of
service) is most likely to be seen as fair by your employees. It's also
the easiest to defend in court. Generally, if you use this method, you
won't have to provide any other evidence as to why certain workers were
chosen for layoff.
Given the choice, however, most employers would prefer to keep their
best workers and lay off those who are less productive, regardless of
seniority. If you have done regular performance reviews you can eliminate the positions of those employees whose performance
has been documented as less-than-satisfactory. If there is no
documentation, you cannot eliminate that person's position for purely
merit reasons without facing possible liability.
Also, if you are choosing between two or more equally qualified
candidates for layoff, you should be prepared to show that the
"downsized" workers reflect the demographic mix (race, gender, and age)
of your workforce as much as possible.
Situations Appropriate for Releases and Severance Agreements
Whenever you are involved in firing or laying off a worker, there is the
possibility that the laid-off employee will take legal action against
you. To avoid this threat, you can negotiate a severance agreement with
the employee. As part of the agreement, the worker will sign a release
stating that he or she gives up some or all rights to sue you.
Although employee releases have many uses, they are most often used when
you lack proper documentation to fire, but you want to cut off an
employment relationship and avoid the possibility of a lawsuit. They can
also be used to offer early retirement to a worker, or when you are
seeking to end an employment contract early by "buying out" the worker.
To be effective, the release must be:
- in writing
- signed by the employee who is waiving the right to sue
- a knowing and voluntary waiver
- supported by adequate consideration (This means that you must
give the employee something of value in return, something that he or she
would not receive without signing the release.)
Make sure that the release can be read easily (this means that the
typeface should be large enough and the language used can be understood
by the employee). The release should specifically refer to employment
laws involved in the waiver of rights. Your object is to be sure that
the employee can't claim he or she didn't know what the document said.
Under no circumstances should you trick the employee or make it seem
that he or she had no choice about signing it.
Here are a few tips to increase the chances that your release will be "iron-clad" if challenged in court:
-
Allow the employee time to think about
signing it. The more time the employee has, the more likely that a court
will not believe that the employee was forced to sign the release.
-
Encourage the employee to review the document with an attorney of his or her choice before signing it.
-
Allow the employee a period of several days to change his or her mind after the release is signed.
-
Allow the employee to negotiate the
terms and conditions of the release (for example, let him or her
substitute different benefits for the ones you offered). That way, a
court will be more likely to believe that the document was signed
willingly.
Like all contracts, in order to be valid, a waiver must be supported by
"adequate consideration." That means you must give the worker something
of value in exchange for the waiver, beyond what you are required to do
by law. If you have always given severance pay to workers you laid off,
you must give the employee something more than your normal severance pay in exchange for the waiver.
Courts tend to like to see some dollars changing hands, so you might
consider offering a lump-sum payment of at least two weeks' pay.
However, you can also offer terms like an agreement not to contest
payment of unemployment benefits, or an agreement that you will provide a
satisfactory job reference if requested by any prospective employers.
These things take little or nothing from your bank account, but can be
valuable to the worker.
Releases Under Age Discrimination Law
If the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act applies to you
(generally, if you have 20 or more employees during 20 or more weeks in
the year) and if the worker is more than 40 years old, there are special
rules that apply. These rules are designed to make sure that the
release was signed "knowingly and voluntarily."
- The waiver must be written in language that can be understood by the average worker to which it applies.
- The waiver must specifically mention rights and claims under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act.
- The waiver may not waive rights or claims that may arise after the date it is signed.
- The waiver must be in exchange for valuable consideration in
addition to what the individual would already be entitled to receive.
- The individual must be advised in writing to consult with an attorney before signing the waiver.
- Generally, the individual must be given at least 21 days to
consider the agreement, but if the waiver is requested in connection
with an exit incentive or other employment termination program offered
to a group of employees, each worker must be given at least 45 days to
consider the agreement.
- The individual must be given at least seven days after signing
the waiver to change his or her mind and revoke it, and the waiver may
not become effective until the seven-day period has expired.
Early retirement or exit incentives. There are a few other requirements if the waiver is requested as part of
any exit incentive or other employment termination program offered to a
class of employees. If you are offering such a program to a group of
employees, the individuals must be informed in writing about:
- whom the program covers
- what are the eligibility requirements
- what are the time limits for the program
- what are the job titles and ages of all individuals eligible or selected for the program
- what are the ages of all individuals in the same job classification who are not selected for the program
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