With no end in sight to the pandemic and in the face of rising cases of COVID-19, more governments and businesses are looking for ways to safely manage the reopening that allows work to continue. In a recent article featured in Legal Management, the Magazine of the Association of Legal Administrators, Sascha Mehlhase, Vice President of Product and Innovation ABC Legal Services discusses best practices for navigating new liabilities and risks during this “reopening”.
Mehlhase warns that every business should assess the drawbacks of implementing a liability waiver in the workplace and outlines four overarching concerns. First, forcing employees to sign a waiver could reflect negatively on the business, discouraging the faith an employee has that the employer cares for their welfare. With tensions already high, Mehlhase suggests that this could lead to bad publicity and cause public and worker opinion of the business to sour. Second, this style of waiver undermines the balance of power in the workplace, pressuring employees when they are already dealing with a great deal of stress.
Third, waivers can provide a false sense of security for employers, as they do not protect against all instances. Mehlhase warns that employers with waivers can still face repercussions for behavior deemed “willful, intentional and negligent.” He notes that in California, there have been several instances where employees contracting the virus on the job have gotten worker-related injury compensation. Finally, OSHA standards must be recognized and followed - and waivers cannot dismiss new regulations from that organization.
The article continues with an outline of some of the litigation (or legal proceedings) around business liability and the novel coronavirus. Mehlhase underscores the precariousness of the situation, pointing both to a Politico article that ponders why more litigation around the virus hasn’t occurred and an article in The Wall Street Journal that examines the initial cases against businesses - their onset delayed by a waiting period for that type of claim.
Mehlhase reminds his audience that in such tumultuous times, fear and uncertainty are equally alive in the consciousness of the employer, the employee and the public. He closes the article, urging businesses to implement measures to ensure employee safety and when in doubt, to consider consulting a legal professional.
ABC Legal is the nation’s leading service of process and court filing company and is the official process server to the U.S. Department of Justice. Docketly is a subsidiary of ABC Legal, providing appearance counsel on a digital, custom-built platform that smoothly integrates with our applications and services. ABC Legal’s applications are cloud-based and compatible for use on desktop, browser, and smartphones. Our solutions and digital approach ensure process server partners, law firm customers, and their clients save valuable time and resources when serving legal notices safely and with maximum compliance, control, and transparency. ABC Legal is based in Seattle, WA, with more than 2,000 process servers throughout the U.S., as well as internationally in more than 75 countries. To learn more about ABC Legal, our solutions, and subsidiary company Docketly, visit www.abclegal.com.