Monday, November 27. 2006Can co-workers see my wages under Ohio's new minimum wage law?The main questions this week about Issue 2, Ohio's new minimum wage law center on the employer's duty to collect and provide employee wage information. Opponents of Issue 2 insisted that it would require employers to release confidential employee information to third parties. With Issue 2's passage, employers now want to know if they must really give one employee wage information to anyone who asks for it. The answer, I believe, will be "no." New Ohio wage information and reporting requirementsThe starting point is what Issue 2 has to say about the employer's new duty to provide employee wage information:
So, a plain reading of Issue 2's language says that an employer must collect the following information about each employee:
Having collected this information about "each employee," to whom and how much of it must an employer report to someone who asks for it? Issue 2 says that the employer must provide "such information" to the employee. It does not say the employer must give the information to a third party. This leaves the queston of whether "such information" mean the total database of wage information kept on all employees, or just the wage information of the employee who requests it? Right now, the answer is not clear. "Such information" should belong to the employeeIssue 2 allows Ohio's General Assembly to:
Clarifying what "such information" means is within the scope of implementing legislation. Therefore, the General Assembly will almost certainly answer this question. The problem for employers until the question is finally answered is how to respond to a request by an employee (or a union representing employees) for other employees' wage information. I think a prudent approach is to seek the consent of employees before releasing their information. If an employee does not consent, consult employment counsel on how to proceed without violating the rights of one employee over the other. Update: Rep. Seitz introduced House Bill 690 on November 29, 2006, which is proposed implementing legislation. HB 690 allows employers to obtain written authorization from employees before handing records to persons acting on their behalf. Thursday, November 9. 2006Ohio's new minimum wage lawOhio passed a new minimum wage law on November 7. Ohio's minimum wage is now indexed to inflation. It requires employers to keep significant employee payroll information and has very tough enforcement provisions. Here is a detailed analysis of Ohio's minimum wage law. Employers had better beware.
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