·
Federal
employees: Most federal
employees and applicants for federal jobs are protected against retaliation
for any disclosure of information they reasonably believe shows any violation
of any law, rule, or regulation, or gross mismanagement, a gross waste
of funds, an abuse of authority, or a substantial and specific danger to public
health or safety.
·
Employees
of publicly-traded corporations: Sarbanes-Oxley is probably the most famous whistleblower
law. It protects employees of publicly-traded corporations from retaliation for
reporting violations of SEC rules and federal laws regarding fraud against
shareholders.
·
Employees
of government contractors: The False Claims Act enables a private citizen to file a lawsuit in
on behalf of the U.S. Government for fraud by contractors and other businesses
that use federal funds. If you win, you can get big bucks because you get a
percentage of the recovery, but there are lots of loopholes so get good legal
advice. This law prohibits an employer from retaliating against an employee for
attempting to report fraud against Medicare, Medicaid, FDA, GSA, HUD, USDA,
U.S. Postal Service, NIH and the military, but not the IRS.
· State
Whistleblower Laws: Some states have whistleblower protection laws for
most employees, government or private, and others offer whistleblower
protection to government, but not private employees. Some states have no
whistleblower protections. Senator Rubio’s home state of Florida, for example,
has a whistleblower law that protects employees who object to or refuse to
participate in illegal activities.
·
Laws With Built-In Protection: Some laws build in whistleblower
protections for anyone who reports or objects to breaking them. Laws that have
built-in protections against retaliation include federal and state
anti-discrimination laws, Fair Labor Standards Act and state wage/overtime laws, Occupational Safety & Health
Act, Surface Transportation Assistance Act, Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response
Act, International Safety Container Act, Energy Reorganization Act of 1974,
Clean Air Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Federal Water Pollution Control Act,
Toxic Substances Control Act, Solid Waste Disposal Act, Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, Wendell H. Ford
Aviation Investment and Reform Act, Pipeline Safety Improvement Act, Federal
Railroad Safety Act, National Transit Systems Security Act, Consumer Product
Safety Improvement Act, and Affordable Care Act.
·
Concerted action to improve working
conditions: The National
Labor Relations Act protects most non-government, non-supervisory employees
from being retaliated against if they get together to discuss or to try to
improve the terms and conditions of their employment. This is one law that
might actually help you, assuming you aren’t a supervisor, if you want to
complain that your boss is a jerk, about bullying, or about other activity that
isn’t illegal.
There are different deadlines for taking legal action under
each of these laws, and some are pretty short, so don’t wait too long if you
think you were retaliated against. Talk to an employee-side employment lawyer
if you are in doubt about your rights.
I'd also add this:
if your boss is asking you to break the law, it’s time to start looking for
another job and get the heck out of there.
There is definately a great deal to know about this subject. I like all of the points you've made.
ReplyDeletejantakhoj.com