Employee Behavior Outside of Work
LEARNING OUTCOMES
In general, state laws variously protect employee’s right to participate in political activities, to volunteer for civic organizations and to smoke or drink outside working hours. The laws also detail the circumstances under which an employer can restrict or modify policies based on lawful off-duty behavior.
CALIFORNIA STATE LAWFor example, California law, which applies to all employers, protects an employee’s right to engage in political activity and specifies that employers are prohibited from controlling or influencing political activities or affiliations or restricting employees participation in political activities. Illinois protects an employee’s right to off-duty use of lawful products but also allows employers to “offer, impose or implement a health, disability or life insurance policy that makes distinctions between employees for the type of coverage or price of coverage based on the employee’s use of lawful products, under certain circumstances.”
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PRACTICE QUESTION
Your facilities are non-smoking. One of your staff asked whether the company can extend that ban to employee’s off-duty behavior. You respond:
- The National Labor Relations Act prohibits employers from interfering with an employee’s off-duty behavior.
- Although state laws vary, they generally allow employers to apply codes of conduct to employees off-duty behavior.
- State laws, which vary by state, regulate an employer’s ability to control or discipline an employee’s off-duty behavior.
- The OSH Act allows employers to prohibit employees from smoking on work premises and off-duty.
Answer
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Correct. State laws regulate an employer’s ability to control or discipline an employee’s off-duty behavior. Although the laws vary, lawful behavior can not generally be prohibited or penalized.
LEARN MORE
Consider developing and working through relevant scenarios using SimplicityHR’s “Can you fire an employee for their off-duty behavior?” article as a prompt.
Employee Social Media Use
Employee use of social media may or may not be protected as “concerted activity” by the National Labor Relations Act. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) notes that an employee has “the right to act with co-workers to address work-related issues. Examples include: talking with one or more co-workers about your wages and benefits or other working conditions, circulating a petition asking for better hours, participating in a concerted refusal to work in unsafe conditions, openly talking about your pay and benefits, and joining with co-workers to talk directly to your employer, to a government agency, or to the media about problems in your workplace.”[1]
An employer “cannot discharge, discipline, or threaten [an employee] for, or coercively question you about,” this type of activity. However, making statements that are “egregiously offensive or knowingly and maliciously false,” or “publicly disparaging your employer’s products or services without relating your complaints to any labor controversy” is not protected concerted activity.
LEARN MORE
For perspective on what is protected and not protected activity, refer to the NLRB’s interactive map and summaries of recent cases: Protected Concerted Activity.
SimplicityHR reports that claims of wrongful termination (retaliation) due to online remarks is “the leading type of claim filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.”[2]
LEGISLATION TO WATCHHouse Rule 537—Social Networking Online Protection Act (SNOPA), introduced in the House on 02/06/2013 but parked at the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections since 4/23/2013.
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The California Peculiarities Employment Law Blog notes that using social media in hiring decisions can expose an employer to liability.[3] California’s AB 1844 prohibits employers from requesting an applicant’s log-in information, asking applicants to “friend” other employees, or asking an applicant’s “friends” to disclose what the applicant has posted on social media. Although employers are not specifically prohibited from accessing publicly available information, the author’s advise against it, noting it could be a “discrimination trap,” since social media reveals personal information that would be illegal to ask during the hiring process.
PRACTICE QUESTION
Your department maintains a HR Q&A discussion thread on the company’s intranet. One question asked was whether an employee can post negative comments about the company on social media. Your staff provided the following possible responses; which one would you advise them to use?
- An employer can discipline an employee for negative comments on social media.
- Negative comments on social media are grounds for immediate dismissal.
- An employer cannot discipline an employee if the comments represent concerted activity.
- An employee’s personal opinions are their own business.
Answer
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Correct. An employer cannot discipline an employee if the comments represent concerted activity. If the intent is to address work-related issues, the comments may be protected as concerted activity.
- "Concerted Activity." National Labor Relations Board. Accessed September 12, 2019. ↵
- "Can You Fire and Employee for Their Off-Duty Behavior?" Simplicity HR. Accessed September 12, 2019. ↵
- Lubeley, Aaron R. and Candace Bertoldi "She Posted What? Employers Face Increased Legal Scrutiny for Using Social Media in Hiring Decisions." Seyfarth Shaw. April 17, 2013. Accessed September 12, 2019. ↵
LICENSES AND ATTRIBUTIONS
- Employee Behavior Outside of Work. Authored by: Nina Burokas. Provided by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution