Minimizing Risk While Maximizing Safety-Guidance for General Counsel
David Garber
Principal and Founder of Princeton Legal Search Group: the most trusted name in legal executive search
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As General Counsel, you have multiple roles. One as a member of the executive management team and if a public company, responsibility to the Board of Directors (and shareholders). Additionally, you may also manage a legal team. Now is the time to be planning and executing how employees at your organization and your legal team can safely return to the workplace.?As we have already seen,?“reopening” will not happen overnight and, in many cases, is happening in phases. Now is the time to gear up for or be ready to answer the legal questions that will inevitably arise as employees slowly start to return to the office.
It is understandable to be concerned about a possible increase in litigation that may result from reopening while the pandemic is still present.?Yet, if you take a careful approach that makes communication with employees the touchstone of your company’s post-COVID policies, then you will be able to effectively minimize litigation risk and maximize safety when opening the office doors. A dose of flexibility will be helpful too. No one has all of the answers, and there are no precedents.
We are going to touch upon some of the legal, and practical, aspects that you will likely face in the next few months.?We will discuss the need for clear communication with your workforce, the benefits of a phased approach, and various parts of an effective return-to-work policy to make the transition back to the workplace as smooth as possible.
It is hard to read a news story about businesses reopening without hearing some rather high-pitched warnings of a “boom” in litigation from employees, customers, or vendors in response to opening the workplace.?Fortunately, the reality will be far less dramatic, and there are things that you, as General Counsel, can do to minimize that litigation risk effectively, support your company’s business objectives and keep your team engaged.
One thing you can do is?communicate?with employees.?Fans of?The West Wing?television show may remember the quote “information breeds confidence, silence breeds fear.”?That quote carries a lot of weight in navigating this pandemic.
The more that employees and your legal team have information, the more they will feel that they are a part of the solution.?In turn, professionals will be motivated to keep themselves and their co-workers safe and healthy, rather than attack their employer with a lawsuit.?Silence or lack of clarity, on the other hand, will create fear.?No one has all the answers, and a supportive company culture and team approach will serve you and the organization well.
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So, here are a few fundamental strategies that should be incorporated when creating policies, which will ultimately make the reopening process much more manageable.
In short, once your post-pandemic reopening plan is in place, the first thing you should do is determine how you will communicate that message to everyone who is coming back to the workplace.?Then, of course, you want to make sure you have the policies to back that message up.
Many measures are at your disposal with regard to minimizing social contact while having employees return to the office.?This list, while not exhaustive, should help provide some ideas on possible best practices.
Congress passed two relevant laws at the beginning of the pandemic – the Coronavirus Aid, Response, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) and the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA).?Those laws include provisions about extended family and medical leave, and paid sick leave related to employees or their family members who are infected with the virus.?Those laws remain in effect until December 31, 2020.
Be prepared for employees to use the leave time available to them under those laws, especially if they are reluctant to come back to work right away.???The leave allowed under those laws could buy extra time for the employees before you need to worry about taking any adverse employment actions.
Conclusion
There is a great deal to consider when bringing employees back to work at your organization.?Try not to be paralyzed by the prospect of increased COVID-related litigation.?Rather, direct your efforts toward a smart, accessible, comprehensive plan so that if a lawsuit does come your way, you can minimize the company’s exposure because you followed through with your COVID health and safety plan.?Hopefully, the measures listed above can help you make your plan complete.