60 Minutes Video on USERRA

Reservists' Rocky Return To Job Market. Excerpt: With the Pentagon relying so heavily on the National Guard and Reserve to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan – 650,000 have been called for active duty since 9/11 – the least you'd expect…

Reservists’ Rocky Return To Job Market. Excerpt:

With the Pentagon relying so heavily on the National Guard and Reserve to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan – 650,000 have been called for active duty since 9/11 – the least you’d expect is that after they serve, they get their old civilian jobs back.

There’s a law, called USERRA (Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act), that says their employers have to take them back at the same pay.

But what 60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl found is that despite the law, thousands of guards and reservists come home to find themselves demoted or penalized, or out of a job completely.

The Workforce Prof Blog has comments on the video:

A primary focus was on USERRA’s costs to employers given the frequent and long tours of active duty that many Reservists now face in Iraq. There’s the normal share of simply bad employers, but also an example of an employer that continually went beyond the call of duty in supporting its employees who were called up. That employer, while continuing that support, was frank about the growing burdens on losing its employees so frequently and for unknown periods of time. The employer argued that if the military wanted to ensure its personnel enjoyed employment benefits, it should help pay the costs. An interesting idea that would normally seem to be a stretch, but sounds more reasonable given what employers have had to face the last several years.

The story also emphasized that these costs to employers hurt military employees’ opportunities. One commentator quoted a senior HR official who said point-blank that he wouldn’t hire an active Reservist. When pointed out that such an action was illegal, the official said that he could also find a reason not to hire someone.

Supreme Court Justice Alito’s Love for the Phillies

Being a Phillies fan myself, I enjoyed this story from Law.com about Supreme Court Justice Samuel AlitoJr.: "Sitting Down With Justice Alito, the Supreme Phillies Fan." Excerpt: Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr. has turned his desk at the Court…

Being a Phillies fan myself, I enjoyed this story from Law.com about Supreme Court Justice Samuel AlitoJr.: “Sitting Down With Justice Alito, the Supreme Phillies Fan.” Excerpt:

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr. has turned his desk at the Court into a mini-shrine to the Philadelphia Phillies.

There’s a Phillies towel, the front page of Thursday’s Philadelphia Inquirer with a headline proclaiming “CHAMPS!” and a baseball hat marking the team’s playoff win. The World Series hat, he says, “is on the way.” . . .

He watched the Series games on television, but was “living and dying with every pitch.” Does he yell at the television? “There’s a lot of emotion, but I’m very quiet.”

The Importance of the Health-Care Debate in Arizona

From the Wall Street Journal, "As Arizona Goes: A Proposition that could change the health-care debate." Excerpt: On Tuesday Arizonans will vote on a ballot initiative that could resonate in the national debate over the future of health care. Proposition…

From the Wall Street Journal, “As Arizona Goes: A Proposition that could change the health-care debate.” Excerpt:

On Tuesday Arizonans will vote on a ballot initiative that could resonate in the national debate over the future of health care. Proposition 101, the Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act, has set off a storm of opposition, though its language hardly seems controversial. It reads that “no law shall be passed that restricts a person’s freedom of choice of private heath care systems or private plans of any type.” Also: “No law shall interfere with a person’s right to pay directly for lawful medical services . . .”

Proposition 101’s fate is up in the air because its opponents, led by the Governor, are spending about four times more than supporters. They are doing so in the belief that if health-care choice passes in Arizona, it will spread to other states. It is ironic the groups opposing the rights of Arizona citizens to choose their own health care purport to back a “patient bill of rights.” In what way is the freedom to choose one’s care not a fundamental patient right?

More 401(k) Discussion

From Financial Week: 401(k) plans could be facing total revamp: Lawmakers, candidates calling for rethink of DC plans; die early, lose half your assets? Excerpt:

“It’s going to be difficult because people like their 401(k) plans,” said Bill Sweetnam, a partner with the Groom Law Group, Washington.

The prospects for Ms. Ghilarducci’s proposal are considered dim by some lobbyists. For starters, while the existing retirement system in the U.S. is voluntary for employers, Ms. Ghilarducci’s proposal would require participation. In addition, while investments under existing retirement plans are managed by private-sector money managers, investments in Ms. Ghilarducci’s plan would be managed by the federal government.

“It’s a non-starter,” Paul Schott Stevens, president and chief executive officer of the mutual fund industry’s Investment Company Institute, Washington, said of Ms. Ghilarducci’s plan. “It’s puzzling in the (financial) course we are in now that the committee would give currency to that proposal.”

“We believe the current employer-sponsored system is a good one that should be built on,” added Jan Jacobson, senior counsel, retirement policy, American Benefits Council, Washington.

“It (Ms. Ghilarducci’s proposal) is subsidized by workers who die early and forfeit their assets,” added Ed Ferrigno, vice president of Washington affairs, Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of America, Chicago. “I don’t think there’s any prospect for her exact version.

“There may be some elements in it that may end up being considered.”

“There isn’t anybody out there who is serious that is supporting that kind (Ms. Ghilarducci’s) of plan,” added Mark Ugoretz, president of the ERISA Industry Committee, a Washington-based group representing employers.