Social Media Means
Photo: Arian Fdez
In general, employers have the power to fire employees for any lawful reason–including for what they post on social media.
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Read More »In contrast, employees have less protections when they make misleading claims about their employer or its products. The difference here can be seen in a case involving two employees at an ambulance company: The first employee posted on a colleague’s Facebook page that he was “sorry to hear” that she had been fired and that she “may think about getting a lawyer.” The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) found this post protected because it was aimed at improving working conditions by expressing support for and encouraging the employee to consider legal representation. Therefore, the NLRB held the employer violated the law when it fired the employee for his post. A second employee at the ambulance company posted on his own Facebook page suggesting that one of the company’s ambulances was broken down and unsafe. The company investigated the matter and found that the ambulance was not broken down. The company fired the employee, and the NLRB upheld the firing because it found that the employee’s untrue statements about the employer’s ambulance were unprotected. Employees also generally lack protection when discussing matters unrelated to work, such as personal views on topics in the news. For example, CBS fired an employee for posting that she had no sympathy for the victims of a mass shooting at a country music concert in Las Vegas because “country music fans are often republican gun toters.” Some states have enacted laws that prohibit political discrimination, which could apply to protect employees who voice their political views on social media. Whether these protections apply will depend on what state the employee works. Employers may also discipline employees for overly offensive speech that inhibits the employer’s ability to comply with laws against discrimination. For example, Google recently fired an employee for stating on an internal messaging platform that women are underrepresented in tech because of inherent biological differences between men and women. The employee brought a claim with the NLRB, which dismissed the claim reasoning that the employee’s speech was unprotected because of its offensive nature and because Google had a responsibility to protect its female employees from a hostile work environment where sex discrimination is tolerated.
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