Legislative Updates

  • 05/28/2021 3:29 PM | Anonymous

    The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) updated its guidance and FAQs on workplace COVID-19 vaccination policies on May 28, stating that employers may request proof of vaccination status and offer incentives to encourage employees to receive the vaccine.

    Requesting proof that employees received a vaccination on their own is not a disability-related inquiry under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and therefore an employer may offer an incentive to employees to provide such proof, according to the EEOC. However, employers must consider reasonable accommodations for workers who decline to be vaccinated for religious or disability-related reasons.

    The EEOC also stated that if an employer administers the vaccination to its employees or contracts with a third party to administer the vaccinations, then any incentive the employer offers with the vaccination must not be so substantial as to be coercive.

  • 05/18/2021 1:16 PM | Anonymous

    On May 18, 2021, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued Notice 2021-31 which contains much anticipated guidance needed to implement the COBRA subsidy provisions included in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA). The guidance contains 86 questions and answers that address many issues that have arisen with respect to COBRA premium assistance under ARPA.

  • 05/14/2021 1:28 PM | Anonymous

    The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act in a 315-101 vote on May 14. The Senate will now consider the bill, which, if passed, will require employers to reasonably accommodate workers and job applicants who need accommodations due to pregnancy, childbirth and related medical conditions.

    Congress has been considering the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act since 2012 and even previously passed last year in the House. Meanwhile, 30 states have adopted their own versions of protections for pregnant employees.

    Read the bill here.

  • 05/12/2021 8:17 AM | Anonymous

    South Dakota is ending its transfer of the federal government's pandemic-related unemployment assistance programs ($300) effective the week ending June 26, citing a recovering economy.


  • 05/11/2021 9:33 AM | Anonymous

    Health savings account (HSA) contribution limits for 2022 are going up $50 for self-only coverage and $100 for family coverage, the IRS announced May 10, giving employers that sponsor high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) plenty of time to prepare for open enrollment season later this year.

    In Revenue Procedure 2021-25, the IRS confirmed HSA contribution limits effective for calendar year 2022, along with minimum deductible and maximum out-of-pocket expenses for the HDHPs with which HSAs are paired.

    Additionallly, on April 30, HHS released the Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters final rule for 2022, published in the May 5 Federal Register. According to an HHS press release, the annual payment notice makes regulatory changes in the individual and small-group health insurance markets, and outlines parameters and requirements issuers need to design plans and set rates for the upcoming plan year.

    The HHS's annual out-of-pocket limits are higher than those set by the IRS, but to qualify as an HSA-compatible HDHP, a plan must not exceed the IRS's lower out-of-pocket maximums.


  • 05/06/2021 8:13 AM | Anonymous

    The U.S. Department of Labor today announced the withdrawal – effective May 6 – of the “Independent Contractor Rule,” to maintain workers’ rights to the minimum wage and overtime compensation protections of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

    Read more here

  • 04/27/2021 4:19 PM | Anonymous

    President Joe Biden's imminent executive order requiring federal contractors to pay a $15 hourly minimum wage could put pressure on private sector employers to raise low-income workers' pay.

    According to a White House statement, the executive order hiking the wages of hundreds of thousands of employees who are working on federal contracts "will have impacts beyond federal contracting, as competitors in the same labor markets as federal contractors may increase wages, too, as they seek to compete for workers."

    The White House added, "Employers may seek to raise wages for workers earning above $15 as they try to recruit and retain talent."

    The executive order will require all federal agencies to incorporate a $15 minimum wage into new contract solicitations by January 2022 and into newly signed contracts by March 2022, the White House announced. The minimum hourly rate will then rise annually to keep pace with inflation.

    This order "will build on the Obama-Biden Executive Order 13658, issued in February 2014, requiring federal contractors to pay employees working on federal contracts $10.10 per hour, subsequently indexed to inflation," according to the White House statement.


  • 04/19/2021 11:11 AM | Anonymous

    The ARPA requires group health plans to provide, by May 31, notices to AEIs who are losing their health care coverage and are eligible for COBRA premium assistance. This notice may be provided separately or by using a revised COBRA election notice, such as the new model general notice (see link below). Employers can begin using the new notices immediately.

    The ARPA also requires that plans and issuers provide AEIs with a Notice of Expiration of Premium Assistance that explains the subsidy will expire soon for them—either because their COBRA eligibility has reached its maximum time limit or because the subsidy period is ending as of Sept. 30, the date of the expiration and that the individual may be eligible for coverage without any premium assistance.

    Download the model notices here.

  • 04/19/2021 10:52 AM | Anonymous

    The Tip Regulations Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) final rule (2020 Tip final rule) was published on December 30, 2020, with an effective date of March 1, 2021; however:

    • On February 26, 2021, the DOL issued a final rule delaying the effective date until April 30, 2021; and
    • On March 23, 2021, the Department announced two Notices of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRMs) for tipped workers as the effective date of the 2020 Tip final rule nears:
      • Tip Regulations Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA); Delay of Effective Date, which proposes to further extend, until December 31, 2021, the effective date of two portions of the 2020 Tip final rule related to the assessment of civil money penalties (CMPs) under the FLSA, and the portion addressing the FLSA tip credit’s application to tipped employees who perform tipped and non-tipped duties. The Department invites public comments on this NPRM for twenty (20) days following publication of the NPRM in the Federal Register (from March 25, 2021 through April 14, 2021).
      • Tip Regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA); Partial Withdrawal, which proposes to withdraw and re-propose the two portions of the 2020 Tip final rule addressing CMP assessments. This NPRM also seeks comments on whether to revise one other portion of the 2020 Tip final rule (addressing managers and supervisors who cannot keep employee’s tips) and asks how it might improve the recordkeeping requirements in the 2020 Tip final rule in a future rulemaking. The Department invites public comments on this NPRM for sixty (60) days following publication of the NPRM in the Federal Register (from March 25, 2021 through May 24, 2021).

    However, the following portions of the final rule will continue to take effect on April 30, 2021:

    • Employers that do not take a tip credit may implement mandatory “nontraditional” tip pools, which are tip pools that include employees who do not customarily and regularly receive tips;
    • New recordkeeping requirement for employers that do not take a tip credit but collect employees’ tips to operate a mandatory tip pool; and
    • Employers, regardless of whether they take a tip credit, are prohibited from keeping employees’ tips for any reason, which includes prohibiting managers and supervisors from keeping tips received by employees.

    Read more about the final rule on the DOL’s website.


  • 04/15/2021 10:56 AM | Anonymous

    On April 15, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 7) by a 217-210 vote. The legislation, if enacted, would require employers to prove that pay disparities between men and women are job-related, among other provisions. 

    Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., reintroduced the bill in January. It has been reintroduced many times since 1997 but has failed to pass both chambers of Congress. The bill would, among other provisions:

    • Require employers to show that pay disparities between men and women are job-related and consistent with business necessity.
    • Make it easier for plaintiffs to participate in class-action lawsuits that challenge systemic pay discrimination.
    • Strengthen the Equal Pay Act of 1963 (EPA) and provide greater remedies for prevailing plaintiffs.
    • Prohibit employers from asking job applicants about their salary history or relying on salary history to set compensation. But an employer could use a prospective employee's wage history if the employer makes a job offer and the applicant reveals his or her salary is more than the proposed salary. The employer could then increase the salary offer.
    • Prohibit employers from retaliating against workers who discuss their pay with co-workers. The National Labor Relations Act already gives employees the right to discuss their pay.

Sioux Empire SHRM is a 501(c)6 non-profit organization. | PO Box 1302 | Sioux Falls, SD 57101 | Chapter #217

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