Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fire you for that, too. FWIW.
And, you would have committed a violation of federal labor law.
Not in an at-will state. I can fire whoever I want for disparaging her employer on social media. Hell, I can fire her for picking her nose. You can sue, but you'd lose.
Wrong. The NLRA applies in all 50 states. There is no such thing as an "at-will" state.
Yes, you could fire her for picking her nose, but you cannot fire her for complaining about her working conditions along with other co-workers.
You are right that you could fire her for "disparaging her employer" but it is a fine line between disparagement and talking about working conditions with her co-workers.
If I were you, I would consult an attorney before firing any employees. The NLRB has focused a lot of attention on social media cases recently.
OP wasn't engaging in conversation on Facebook. She made a status and a couples coworkers "liked" the post. Didn't even put an "I agree!"
I haven't researched the issue of "likes," but if I represented the OP, I would argue that other co-workers "liking" her posts was enough to be "concerted" activity. I'm sure there are cases that discuss this. And who knows what other facts there may be that the OP has not shared.
Anonymous wrote:PP, there is at least one NLRB case on the issue of "likes" being concerted (they are, and it's the same as engaging in a conversation).
Anonymous wrote:This is whole thread seems weird - like it was a "planted" question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fire you for that, too. FWIW.
And, you would have committed a violation of federal labor law.
Not in an at-will state. I can fire whoever I want for disparaging her employer on social media. Hell, I can fire her for picking her nose. You can sue, but you'd lose.
Wrong. The NLRA applies in all 50 states. There is no such thing as an "at-will" state.
Yes, you could fire her for picking her nose, but you cannot fire her for complaining about her working conditions along with other co-workers.
You are right that you could fire her for "disparaging her employer" but it is a fine line between disparagement and talking about working conditions with her co-workers.
If I were you, I would consult an attorney before firing any employees. The NLRB has focused a lot of attention on social media cases recently.
OP wasn't engaging in conversation on Facebook. She made a status and a couples coworkers "liked" the post. Didn't even put an "I agree!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm did you post/write it on work premises/time?
Hmmm....does your employer allow you to use the internet or social media on work time for any other non-work reason? If yes, then it cannot discriminate because you were using social media to engage in protected, concerted activity vs. posting about your family's BBQ this weekend.
And if no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fire you for that, too. FWIW.
And, you would have committed a violation of federal labor law.
Not in an at-will state. I can fire whoever I want for disparaging her employer on social media. Hell, I can fire her for picking her nose. You can sue, but you'd lose.
Wrong. The NLRA applies in all 50 states. There is no such thing as an "at-will" state.
Yes, you could fire her for picking her nose, but you cannot fire her for complaining about her working conditions along with other co-workers.
You are right that you could fire her for "disparaging her employer" but it is a fine line between disparagement and talking about working conditions with her co-workers.
If I were you, I would consult an attorney before firing any employees. The NLRB has focused a lot of attention on social media cases recently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fire you for that, too. FWIW.
And, you would have committed a violation of federal labor law.
Not in an at-will state. I can fire whoever I want for disparaging her employer on social media. Hell, I can fire her for picking her nose. You can sue, but you'd lose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm did you post/write it on work premises/time?
Hmmm....does your employer allow you to use the internet or social media on work time for any other non-work reason? If yes, then it cannot discriminate because you were using social media to engage in protected, concerted activity vs. posting about your family's BBQ this weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm did you post/write it on work premises/time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fire you for that, too. FWIW.
And, you would have committed a violation of federal labor law.