Menu
Oct 11, 2012

Sustainability: An Idea Whose Time Has Come

In 1987, the World Commission on Environment and Development issued the Brundtland Report, which added a new term to the environmental and business vernacular: “sustainability.” Sustainability was a concept that encouraged companies to operate in a way that demonstrates parallel care for the ecosystem and the people within. As a result, environmentalists cautioned business executives worldwide that, in order to survive, each organization needed to find ways to encourage business development that “meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.” Fast forward 20 years, and shareholders, employees and customers alike… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Employer Liability for Child Pornography

Not so long ago, “forward-thinking” employers began to embrace the Internet as one of the best work-related tools since the fax machine. They viewed the Internet as an effective means for increasing productivity by providing quick access to readily available resources and information. Early on, employer concerns with Internet usage were limited to relatively innocuous issues — employees shopping online or visiting their favorite sports or news Web sites. Times have changed, and, in recent years, employers are learning the hard way that employee use or abuse of a company’s Internet system can lead to significant liability. Today, the stakes… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Sex Discrimination, Gender Identity and Title VII: No Limits, or New Boundaries?

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination in employment “because of … sex.”1 Webster’s Dictionary defines “sex” as “either of two divisions of organisms distinguished respectively as male or female.” Likewise, courts have interpreted Title VII’s prohibition against sex discrimination to mean discrimination against men because they are men and women because they are women. That relatively straightforward idea typically has conjured up some traditional and distinctive images when discussing sex discrimination: a male manager subjecting a female employee to some type of unwanted sexual advance; a woman forced to endure sexual jokes and jeers from… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Expanding Rights under the “Retaliation” Provision of Title VII

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (the “Act”) prohibits an employer from retaliating against an employee who has “made a charge, testified, assisted or participated in” any charge of unlawful discrimination under the Act.1 To prove retaliation, a plaintiff has to show, among other elements, that he or she suffered an “adverse employment action.” Until recently, federal courts were split as to the definition of that term. Some courts held, for example, that it had to be an “ultimate employment decision” such as hiring, terminating, promoting or compensating,2 while others held that it was any “materially adverse… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Today’s Employee, Tomorrow’s Defendant?

Your company may be employing thieves. Crooks. Turncoats. Benedict Arnolds. Well, maybe that’s an exaggeration, but virtually every employer doing business in America today faces the threat of its employees walking out the door and taking the company’s confidential information, business leads, clients and other core business assets with them. Some may take this information and use it to start a competing company. Some may seek to exploit it by going to work for an established competitor. A few may want to take, or delete, your company’s important information for nothing more than spite or revenge. Regardless of motivation, these… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Union Organizing Tactics

Union membership has been in decline for years. Fifty years ago, approximately 35 percent of the American work force belonged to a union. Today, unions represent less than eight percent of American workers in the private sector and 12.5 percent of all workers. To reverse this trend, unions are engaging in increasingly aggressive efforts to boost their membership. Two union-organizing tactics that pose a potential threat to employers are card checks and salting. Card Checks Rather than employing traditional, statutorily authorized secret ballot elections supervised by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), more and more unions have been pushing hard… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Coming Home: The DOL’s New Regulations

More than 500,000 members of the National Guard and Reserve have been called to active duty since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the most since World War II. Of these individuals, approximately 400,000 have completed their duty and either have returned, or are attempting to return, to civilian employment. As servicemembers return to civilian employment, employers do not always welcome them with open arms. In a recent study conducted by the U.S. Department of Defense, approximately 15 percent of the returning servicemembers who participated in the study reported having problems returning to work. Numerous Web sites are dedicated to… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Audit-Proof Your Tip Reporting

Food and beverage employers and employees will soon have the option to participate in a streamlined program that will permit them to become “audit-proof” with respect to the amount of tips they report as wages. Beginning January 1, 2007, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will implement a new voluntary tip-reporting program for food and beverage establishments, to be called the Attributed Tip Income Program (ATIP). ATIP will continue for a pilot period of three calendar years and will terminate on December 31, 2009, unless the IRS issues guidance extending the term. Participating employers and employees each can become “audit-proof” with… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Open For Business: SGR Opens European Office

Effective January 1, 2006, Smith, Gambrell & Russell, LLP opened its first office outside the United States, in Frankfurt, Germany. The Frankfurt office is a natural outgrowth of SGR’s active international practice that, for many years, has represented clients from around the world, but particularly from western Europe, in pursuing business opportunities in the United States. Earlier this summer, Trust The Leaders (TTL) sat down with Hans-Michael Kraus, the head of SGR’s international practice group, and Stefan Tiessen, who now manages and practices out of SGR’s Frankfurt office, to discuss the impetus behind the opening of the European office and… Read more


Oct 11, 2012

Is Atlanta “the Next Miami?”

For the metropolitan Atlanta area, becoming “the next Miami” doesn’t involve beautiful, sandy beaches, cool ocean breezes or palm trees in winter. What it does entail is the possibility that a multitude of factors, from globalization to the price of a home in the suburbs of Duluth, are converging to give Atlanta a stellar opportunity to become a center of trading and economic activity for the Americas and a hub for international business. Over the past 200 years, the world’s trade and investment streams have flowed east-west, either above the equator or below, with very little crossover. This meant that… Read more