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16 results for Juffras, Diane M.
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Record #:
19800
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This bulletin outlines the factors school board officials need to know in determining whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor.
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School Law Bulletin (NoCar K 23 C33), Vol. 39 Issue 2, Spr 2008, p1-22, f
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Record #:
20686
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This bulletin summarizes the obligations of North Carolina public employers when employees leave to serve in the United States Armed Forces during a military mobilization.
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Public Personnel Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 25, Oct 2001, p1-8, f
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Record #:
20687
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The United States Supreme Court decided a record number of employment law cases in its 2001-2002 term. This Public Personnel Bulletin is the first of two that will discuss those decisions, and it focuses on four Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) cases.
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Public Personnel Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 26, Aug 2002, p1-11, f
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Record #:
20688
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This Public Personnel Law Bulletin is the second of two discussing the employment law decisions issued by the United States Supreme Court during its 2001-2002 term. Part I discussed four Americans with Disabilities Act cases. This bulletin discusses six cases covering a range of personnel law issues.
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Public Personnel Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 27, Sept 2002, p1-11, f
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Record #:
20698
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Smallpox vaccination cannot be a job requirement for any employee--it is purely voluntary. The NC Workers' Compensation Act does not explicitly include and does not explicitly exclude complications resulting from smallpox vaccination received in the course of employment. This Bulletin provides guidance to managers who must answer employees' question about the vaccination.
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Record #:
20699
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New Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) regulations governing overtime pay exemptions for executive, administrative, professional, and computer employees will go into effect soon. This bulletin examines how the new regulations would affect state and local government employers in North Carolina.
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Public Personnel Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 29, June 2003, p1-10, f
Record #:
20700
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Personnel costs represent a substantial and increasing share of the budget for the employer. As state and local governments and their agencies prepare budgets for the coming year, they must take a fresh look at employee and retiree benefits. This bulletin uses an imaginary city to discuss the legal issues that North Carolina public employers should consider before reducing employee benefits.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 30, May 2004, p1-22, f
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Record #:
20701
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The new Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) regulations governing overtime pay exemptions for executive, administrative, professional, and computer employees becomes effective August 23, 2004. This bulletin examines how the new regulations are likely to affect state and local government employers in North Carolina.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 31, June 2004, p1-23, f
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Record #:
20702
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This bulletin examines the advantages and risks of government employers using independent contractors to perform work traditionally done by regular employees. The advantages to the employer are that the independent contractor receives no overtime pay, no benefits, no withholding, no FICA contributions, and no workers' compensation.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 32, May 2005, p1-27, f
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Record #:
20703
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This bulletin discusses each of the features necessary to make an early retirement incentive program comply with the Age Discrimination in Employment Act.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 33, June 2006, p1-15, f
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Record #:
20704
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This bulletin discusses the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's final rule permitting employers to coordinate their retiree health benefit plans with eligibility for Medicare. Published on December 26, 2007, the rule answers, at least for now, a difficult question: Is it unlawful age discrimination to reduce a retiree's health benefits when the retiree becomes eligible for Medicare? The answer is no. As issued in its final form, the rule permits employers to offer retiree health benefits that may change, be reduced, or even be eliminated when a participant becomes eligible for Medicare. The rule is set out in the bulletin.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 34, Mar 2006, p1-4, f
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Record #:
20711
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Many private companies in North Carolina--Lowe's Companies, Progress Energy, BB&T, and others--offer domestic partner benefits. The public sector employers are slower in granting this. In 2009, only 19 states offered them to state employees--North Carolina was not one of them. This bulletin explains the law governing the ability of North Carolina local government employers to offer domestic partner benefits.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 37, Nov 2009, p1-27, f
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Record #:
20712
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This bulletin discusses the legal issues that North Carolina public employers should consider before they use the Internet to conduct or supplement background checks of prospective employees.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 38, Oct 2010, p1-22, f
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Record #:
20713
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On May 8, 2012, North Carolina voters approved an amendment to the North Carolina Constitution making marriage between a man and a woman the only \"domestic\" union that can receive legal recognition in the state. Some units of government in North Carolina have, before the adoption of Amendment One, extended some kinds of employee benefits - notably health insurance - to unmarried domestic partners. The question arises with the adoption of Amendment One whether this extension of benefits by public employers is now unlawful. This bulletin looks at law the courts will have to apply to determine whether Amendment One extends to employee benefit plans.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 39, June 2012, p1-34, f
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Record #:
21552
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This bulletin explains changes in employee wellness programs effective January 1, 2014. HIPAA nondiscrimination rules have changed, but ADA, GINA, and N.C. laws remain the same.
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Public Employment Law Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7835 .A519), Vol. Issue 40, Jan 2014, p1-13, f
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