It’s mandatory to keep sound document-retention policy these days! As an HR professional, you know that the sheer volume of paperwork that you contend with is overwhelming at best and uncontrollable at worst. What’s more, if just one imperative document is lost, misfiled, or accidentally damaged, your organization could end up on the wrong side of a lawsuit. And you’re the one who will have to clarify what happened. Keeping all the laws and recordkeeping requirements straight can seem like a full-time HR job. All HR functions have federal recordkeeping requirements – from recruitment and selection, to hiring and onboarding, to compensation and benefits, to employee relations (policy administration and disciplinary actions) and training. Why You Should Attend: Employers should know how long to keep or destroy employee records and documents. Each state and federal agency has a different set of requirements, often covering the same documents so it’s challenging for you to know what to keep and for how long. These issues, as well as new identity theft threats and updated technology, impact your recordkeeping practices in a big way. This webinar will guide you through those requirements so you understand how to ensure compliance and understand the consequences of noncompliance. The webinar will also outline record retention requirements and notification requirements for several federal laws. By following the requirements, your institution should be able to avoid the pitfalls in employment-related liabilities and problems, if and when auditors investigate your files. Objectives of the Presentation: Review the recordkeeping requirements of key employment laws to get familiar with the basic rules Is there a legal requirement for keeping this document? What laws come into play regarding your obligations to manage personnel records? In what form must a document be stored? Electronically? In its original paper form? How long should I keep this document if I think its usefulness is over – and how can I know that for sure? How to effectively weed out what you no longer need to retain — and why keeping everything can be just as dangerous as keeping nothing at all Best practices for backing up and destroying employment records so you don’t compromise any sensitive, personal data How to make your recordkeeping system easy to track and use, regardless of whether you keep a paper or electronic trail Tips for making a smooth paper to e-records filing system transition How to respond in the event the DOL, EEOC, or another federal or state agency comes knocking to investigate your recordkeeping practices Policies employees must follow, consequences of not following them, and documentation required to substantiate your actions Areas Covered in the Session : Introduction highlighting the importance of records and notices and discussion on retention, storage, and destruction of records Understanding of the new reporting requirements and compliance schedule Record retention systems that work best for compliance with changing requirements Discussion on other tasks that require complete and accurate documentation Understand notice requirements to be aware of what notices need to be posted and how to post them in compliance with the laws Case studies on documentation Overview of basic documents in several federal employment laws – Importance of documentation in defending Title VII cases What information does the government require you to keep for overtime cases How to use documentation to prove FLSA exemptions Documents and notification for FMLA and ADA leave Documentation in defend trade secrets act Who Should Attend: Payroll Departments Human resource recordkeeping and maintenance Compliance Officers CFOs Office Managers Company Presidents Employers and Business Owners Hiring Managers HR Managers/Supervisors Risk Managers Potential Managers Department Heads HR Professionals Employee Benefits Professionals


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