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Connecticut’s Minimum Wage on the Rise Again

It’s déjà vu for Connecticut employers.  The Connecticut General Assembly and Governor Malloy have approved the second minimum wage hike in less than a year.  Just ten months ago, legislation was passed to increase the minimum wage to $8.70 on January 1, 2014, and $9.00 on January 1, 2015.  The new legislation changes the 2015 […]

Improper Employer Investigations Can Prove Costly

A recent article in the New York Times highlighted the issues that arise when employer investigations produce false information and/or confessions.  Usually, these situations occur because the person conducting the investigation is employing a technique that is not tailored to the work environment or is using a best practice that is outdated due to changes in […]

Labor Board Rules School Bus Owner/Operators Are Not Employees of School Board

In a case of first impression, the State Board of Labor Relations has ruled that owner/operator bus drivers in Newtown are independent contractors and not employees of the School Board.  Newtown Board of Education SBLR Dec. No. 4668 (2013). In an effort to thwart the school district’s efforts to end an 80 year old system of local […]

Termination of Superintendent

In what is one of, if not the first decision of its type in Connecticut, an independent hearing officer has ruled that the Groton Board of Education had grounds to terminate Paul Kadri its Superintendent of Schools.   As in most districts, Kadri was under contract which provided for grounds for termination similar to those […]

Trumbull Cops Agree To Defined Contribution Plan

While significant inroads have been made in implementing defined contribution plans for new hires in Connecticut municipal negotiations, police and fire unions have continued to resist such changes, citing, among other things, the greater likelihood a cop or firefighter may become disabled on the job than other municipal workers.  Nonetheless, while still in the minority, […]

DOT Drug and Alcohol Testing – Don’t Go it Alone!

Employers of persons who operate a commercial motor vehicle that requires a commercial driver’s license (“CDL”) should know that they are subject to the United States Department of Transportation (“DOT”), Federal Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (“FMCSA”) regulations.  The regulations, commonly known as “Part 40,” require commercial motor vehicle operators to be tested for drugs […]

Board Abandons Well Established Precedent – Holds that Employers Can No Longer Cease Deducting Union Dues Upon Contract Expiration

Since 1962, employers with a dues checkoff provision in a collective bargaining agreement have been permitted to cease deducting dues from employee paychecks and remitting them to the union upon contract expiration. As of last month, however, employers can no longer relieve themselves of the burden of collecting and remitting dues upon contract expiration. In […]

Accounting for the Value of Employer-Provided Lodging

While both the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and Connecticut law permit an employer to include the reasonable value/cost of lodging provided to an employee as part of such employee’s wages towards the minimum wage, employers need to pay close attention to the differences between federal and state law.  Under the FLSA, an employer may […]