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Employment Law UpdateThe federal appeals court with jurisdiction over Utah has upheld an Oklahoma law that requires employers to allow employees to keep guns in locked vehicles, even when on employer property. Specifically, the Oklahoma law prohibits any "person, property owner, tenant, employer or business from establishing any policy or rule that has the effect of prohibiting any person, except a convicted felon, from transporting and storing firearms in a locked vehicle on any property set aside for any vehicle." Several employers challenged the law when it was passed in 2004 by the Oklahoma legislature. The employers won the first round of the legal battle when an Oklahoma federal trial court judge ruled that the state law was trumped by the federal Occupational Safety Act. The appeals court reversed, however, principally because OSHA, in 2006, declined to adopt a standard on this issue and instead decided to defer to state and local authorities. The Utah Legislature is considering passage of a bill similar to Oklahoma's law. Seven other states (Minnesota, Alaska, Kentucky, Kansas, Georgia, Louisiana, and Florida) have similar laws on the books. Federal Legislative and other Updates Congressional Republicans have introduced a bill that would preserve the right of a secret ballot election in a union campaign. The bill is a response to the Employee Free Choice Act, which will allow unionization via a card signature system in lieu of a secret ballot. Finally, President Obama has begun the process of reversing a new federal "conscience" rule that allows health-care workers to refuse to provide care that violates their personal, moral, or religious beliefs. The rule set to be repealed allowed the federal government to cut off federal funds from health-care providers that did not accommodate employee beliefs when providing care. Worker's Comp and the Intent to Injure Standard The Utah Supreme Court recently issued a ruling allowing an employee to sue her employer for workplace injuries, outside the worker's compensation system. The case involves a woman injured by exposure to toxic gases after the employer allegedly failed to warn her of a previous similar incident. Typically, the worker's compensation system provides the exclusive remedy for such injuries. However, the Utah Supreme Court ruled this could be viewed as an intentional injury outside the system. This "intent to injure" standard focuses on whether an employer knew or expected that injury would result as a consequence of its actions. Bar Study on Employment Discrimination Claims in Court CommentsPowered by Comment Script
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