BarbriSFCourseDetails

Course Details

This CLE course will provide practical guidance on drafting severance and confidentiality agreements that will withstand heightened SEC, EEOC, NLRB, and OSHA scrutiny.

Faculty

Description

Federal agencies continue to target provisions of employer confidentiality and severance agreements that they believe are overly broad or restrictive.

The SEC has banned severance agreements that prohibit employees from contacting regulators or accepting whistleblower awards in exchange for receiving severance payments or other post-employment benefits.

Additionally, the EEOC has scrutinized and will continue to be critical of clauses that prohibit employees from cooperating with others filing a charge of discrimination or lawsuit. Similarly, OSHA will not approve settlement agreements that prohibit or restrict employees from participating in protected activity.

Adding to the pressure, the NLRB has determined that certain non-disparagement and confidentiality provisions in severance agreements are unlawful and most employee noncompetition covenants, including those in severance agreements, violate Section 8 of the NLRA.

In light of federal agency scrutiny, employment and corporate counsel must guide employers in drafting severance and confidentiality provisions that will withstand the heightened enforcement standards and decrease the likelihood of litigation.

Our distinguished panel will discuss recent SEC settlements, EEOC requirements, and NLRB and OSHA developments. The panel will discuss strategies for drafting enforceable agreements.

Outline

  1. SEC challenges to severance agreements
  2. EEOC and OSHA requirements and legal framework for severance agreements
  3. NLRB requirements and legal framework
    1. Confidentiality provisions
    2. Employee behavior and conduct policies
    3. Non-disparagement provisions
    4. Noncompetition provisions
  4. Status of the FTC noncompete ban
  5. Drafting best practices

Benefits

The panel will review these and other key issues:

  • What should employers do to avoid or withstand SEC challenges to severance agreements?
  • How can counsel to employers respond to the EEOC's concern with non-cooperation, confidentiality, or non-disparagement provisions?
  • How must confidentiality and severance agreements be updated given the NLRB's recent activity?
  • What confidentiality provisions run afoul of OSHA's position on confidentiality provisions?
  • What internal process changes can companies make to effect similar results as nondisclosure agreements?