The Only HR Solution Just for Churches & Ministries
Home About Us Ongoing
Schedule a Call
HR Audit Staff Handbook Staff Lifestyle Agreement Operations Manual I-9 Audit Compensation Audit & Analysis HR Foundations Package Exit Interview Service Consulting Speaking
Harassment Prevention Training HR Ministry Professional Certification
Blog Webinars Ministry Guides Toolkits Labor Law Cheat Sheets Mandated Reporting & AB 506 Join the Team
HomeAbout Us One Time HR Audit Staff Handbook Staff Lifestyle Agreement Operations Manual I-9 Audit Compensation Audit & Analysis HR Foundations Package Exit Interview Service Consulting Speaking Online Harassment Prevention Training HR Ministry Professional Certification Ongoing Resources Blog Webinars Ministry Guides Toolkits Labor Law Cheat Sheets Mandated Reporting & AB 506 Join the Team
The Only HR Solution Just for Churches & Ministries
The Only HR Solution Just for Churches & Ministries
Schedule a Call

Q. "An employee posted something highly offensive on a personal social media account but lists our company as their employer. How do I respond?"

Answer:

This one is complicated. If you have a social media policy for your Staff Handbook you should enforce it accordingly. If not, we definitely recommend creating a social media policy to include in your Staff Handbook. The policy should prohibit this type of behavior and will give you a clear and concrete standard to which you can hold employees accountable. 


In the present situation, you are caught between policies and laws that prohibit discrimination and harassment and laws that protect an employee’s speech (NLRA and Title VII religious protections).


If the employee made no threats, statements about co-workers, and isn't a supervisor, it may be best to let it go until you have a social media policy in place.


If you do address it, we suggest a meeting with the employee (and a third party witness) to explain the reaction and ask them to make the page (or post) private. Make it clear this is voluntary, you’re not disciplining them or discouraging free expression, but are concerned these views may be misinterpreted as the organization's views based on their identification as your employee.


If the employee’s post is harassing, identifying, or disparaging co-workers or constituents or if the language itself is hate-speech, you have more cause to intervene with disciplinary action. If you do decide to take disciplinary action or terminate, we recommend you involve legal counsel.

 

Think you might need some more help?

CLICK TO SCHEDULE A QUICK CHAT
HR Ministry SolutionJuly 17, 2023staff handbook, social media, offensive, offended, offense, account, discrimination, NLRA, Title VII, employee, post, page, harassment, disciplinary
Facebook0 Twitter LinkedIn0 Pinterest0 0 Likes
Previous

Why An Exit Interview is the Key to Your Interns’ Success

HR Ministry SolutionJuly 19, 2023exit, interview, intern, internship, summer, bundle, feedback, evaluation, celebrate, offboard, offboarding, program
Next

Q. "Can I provide feedback on an employee's or potential employee's clothing?"

HR Ministry SolutionJuly 12, 2023employee, clothing, dress code, disciple, dress, clothes, environment, hazard, safety, discrimination, culture, business casual, appearance, interview, formal, attire, piercings, tattoo, applicant, policy, staff handbook

Weekly Snapshots

Sign up for weekly snapshots of up to date HR policy and information.

Name *
Thank you!
HR On Call Online
10601-G Tierrasanta Blvd. #386,
San Diego, CA, 92124,
United States
877-377-4767 hello@hrministrysolutions.com
Hours
Contact Us