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From Roo to you!

spring cleaning hr records

11/7/2014

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Human Resources and Finance tend to be magnets for paperwork; some are valuable and some just add clutter.  State and federal record retention requirements vary and some people are afraid to throw out anything.  However, keeping records too long (a/k/a forever) or keeping them in the wrong file can hurt more than help.  Whether your recorders are paper-based or electronic, take some time for spring cleaning.
Throw Away

Keeping records beyond their usefulness adds to clutter, confusion regarding current revision levels, and potential exposure to fines for non-compliance.  A few of my colleagues have suffered through several months of audits in the past year, and an auditor will cite you for something that is not 100% compliant whether you are required to keep the document or not.  

Suggested record retention guidelines include:

Recruiting and Selection 

One year

Payroll records Three years

Federal Taxes (FICA) paid Four years

Benefits Information Six years

Drug and Alcohol Testing Five years

OSHA logs Five years

Leave of absence records Three years

Legal issues / disputes One year following final disposition

I-9 Three years from hire or one year post termination

Dust Off

Spring is a great time to start fresh and update policies, practices and procedures in your organization.  Internal policies and practices change frequently, as do state and federal regulations.  Take an hour or two to review your employee handbook and supervisory manuals to determine what needs updating.  

If you haven’t updated your handbook in a while, you probably need to update the following:

Employee Classifications (part time / full time / temporary, exemption status, independent contractor vs. employee)

Background Screenings procedure and evaluation criteria – be sure your plan reflects recent “Ban the Box” legislation

Networking and social media policies – set clear rules for how and when employees are permitted to represent the organization and when they need to make it clear they are expressing personal opinions

Benefits – make sure plan documents are updated to reflect same sex marriage (in Minnesota) and plan documents reflect the new Affordable Care Coverage requirements for 2015 renewals (for employers with 50 + full time employees)

I-9 forms – the federal form was updated last fall.  Make sure you are using the current form 

Organize

Keeping employment related records in the wrong place also exposes the employer to fines and liability.  If all records are kept in one personnel folder supervisors may have access to records they should not see, or auditors may gain access to documents that are outside the scope of the audit.  Organizations should maintain separate files for separate types of records:

Personnel file:  application, wage and status changes, performance reviews, disciplinary actions and recognition documents.  Employees and supervisors have access to this file.

Confidential file:  benefits information, medical and FMLA-related.  Only HR and employees have access to this file.

Training file:  training records if you are subject to ISO, FDA, NADCAP or other outside audits.  If you are not, training records can be kept in the regular personnel file. HR, supervisors, employees and auditors have access to this file

Individual files.  Some records should be kept separate from all other types of employee records.  These include:

I-9s

Workers’ Compensation

Background screenings

Drug and Alcohol testing

Equal Employment Opportunity / Affirmative Action data

Litigation files

Not sure where to start?  Roo can help you create the structure, or complete the entire audit and update for you.  Call Kelly at 763.228.8496 or email today.
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