Colorado Employment Law
Employment
law is the body of law that defines the rights and obligations within
the relationship between employer and employee. This employer-employee
relationship can be between employer and potential employees, current
employees, or former employees. Employment law consists of numerous
Federal and state statutes as well as judicial decisions that regulate a
variety of situations, including discrimination, wrongful termination,
and sexual harassment.
Every employee has basic rights in the
workplace. Those rights include the right to be free from
discrimination, the right to a safe work environment, the right to
privacy, the right to fair wages, and the right to contest an unfair
discharge from employment. These rights extend to those applying for job
positions and formal employees as well. Every employer has an
obligation to adhere to these national and state employment laws. As
with employee rights, employer obligations extend, not only to hired
employees, but to job applicants as well.
Since the Civil Rights
Movement of the 1960s, federal and state governments have enacted a
number of laws that prohibit an employer from discriminating against
employees on almost all grounds, aside from the quality of the
employee's work or the nature of his or her personality.
seek to prevent discrimination based on race, color, religion, gender,
national origin, disability, and age by employers. A growing body of law
also seeks to prevent employment discrimination based on sexual
orientation. Discriminatory practices include but are not limited to
bias in hiring and firing, compensation, promotion, job assignment,
recruitment, and various types of harassment. The United States
Constitution and many state constitutions provide additional protection
when the employer is a governmental body. Almost every state has
antidiscrimination laws that mirror the protections found under federal
law. Some state statutes and local ordinances also have more expansive
protection than federal law. For example, some state law prohibits
discrimination based on marital status or weight.
Below is a
general overview of the federal laws regarding employment discrimination
and employment law generally. Since employment laws vary greatly from
state to state, it is important to understand the employment laws within
your state.
Employment Discrimination
arises mostly out of the Title VII section of the Civil Rights Act of
1964. It prohibits an employer with 15 or more employees from
discriminating on the basis of race, national origin, gender, or
religion during almost any aspect of employment, including interviewing,
hiring, assignments, promotion, training, pay, title, hours, vacation,
benefits, retirement plans, and other terms of employment. Title VII
also protects employees and employers from sexual harassment in the
workplace.
refers to any unwelcome sexual conduct, including sexual advances or
requests for sexual favors, when submitting to or rejecting such conduct
unreasonably interferes with an employee’s ability to work or when the
conduct creates a hostile or intimidating work environment.
Wrongful Termination
generally refers to an unreasonable employment discharge. Most
employees, except those working under certain contracts, are considered
by the law to be at-will employees. The at-will doctrine, adopted by all
50 United States, gives at-will employees the right to quit their jobs
for almost any reason. It also gives employers of at-will employees the
right to fire those employees for almost any reason. Many states have
started to work around the at-will doctrine, in order to provide
remedies for certain wrongful termination lawsuits. For example, some
state and federal laws prohibit employers from terminating any employee
for discriminatory reasons. Other areas in which wrongful termination
may be claimed are when one is fired in violation of employment
agreements, when one is fired in violation of labor laws, or when one is
fired in retaliation for having done something against the employer’s
wishes.
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)
The
ADEA protects hired employees and job applicants who are 40 years of
age or older from being discriminated against because of their age. It
prohibits employers with 20 or more employees, as well as employment
agencies, labor unions and governments from age discrimination with
respect to almost all aspects of employment: interviewing, hiring,
assignments, promotion, training, compensation, title, hours, vacation,
benefits, retirement plans, and other terms of employment.