Cutting Edge July 2020

Cutting Edge,

The Cutting Edge
News and Ideas to Keep Your Business on the Cutting Edge
July 2020
  • Taking the Helm-Leading your Crew Through Troubled Waters
  • Dave Rosenberg’s Keynote Presentation on leading through troubled times.
  • New HR Regulations…Let’s Ride the Choppy Waters Together
  • HR expert Dawn Stastny guides you through the ever changing HR regulations.
  • Coming Through the Storm Stronger: A Panel on Current Conditions & What Will Stay With Us
  • Lessons learned from trusted peers in the industry.
Panelists:
  • Van Isley - CEO of Professional Builders Supply, LLC- Morrisville, NC
  • Roger Bates - CFO of Tindell’s- Knoxville, TN
  • Dick Jennings - Owner of Jennings Builders Supply- Cashiers, NC
  • Tim Huff - CFO of The Building Center- Boston, MA
  • Facilitator: Ruth Kellick- Grubbs
  • Navigating Forward in Rough Economic Waters
  • Dr. Ed Seifried’s economic update in light of COVID-19.
 
New Products and 1:1 meetings with vendors!
Maybe you’ve been able find education and training through our on-line training program and webinars, but learning about new products and building relationships with vendors is best done in person…or is it? We are super excited about our Virtual Exhibition Hall where you’ll find pictures of new products, videos to delve deeper and live attendants to ask questions of and get to know. We may not be able to re-create the candy dishes at each booth but we plan to have cash prizes for the most “interactive” among us. The Exhibit Hall will be open 30 minutes before each education session, so log in early and see what’s new on the horizon of building materials!
 
Networking with peers
If you’re a regular attendee at BMSA trade shows, you know how beneficial and fun it is to meet people who walk in your shoes every day. The platform we’re using for our Virtual Summer Conference allows you to connect with your long standing business partners & friends as well as meeting new ones!
 
The day will come when we will again meet on the beach, sun-burned and covered in sand, but for now we hope you’ll join us as we “pivot” to 
Virtually Riding the Waves of Change!
Go to www.mybmsa.org for conference registration materials
Eligible for E(expanded)
FMLA or FMLA?
Question:
One of our employees has advised that her mother sustained an injury at home and fractured her spine, which is unfortunately fairly serious and has rendered her temporarily (hopefully) partially paralyzed. The employee’s mother is in the hospital and is scheduled for surgery, and the employee will need to care for her. The employee has inquired as to what forms of leave she may be permitted to take and what the status of these would be, whether paid or unpaid. This employee is eligible for regular FMLA, which does not involve any financial benefit other than continuation of health insurance. My question is whether the employee can twist this into a COVID-19-related FMLA leave and thus be eligible for compensation at 2/3 her regular rate of pay, or use COVID-19 and the need to provide continuing health care for her mother into a reason for being eligible for state unemployment insurance.
Answer:
The maximum period of leave an employee can take under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), including any such leave as may be taken under the expanded FMLA (EFMLA) provisions provided by the new federal Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), is still 12 weeks. The Department of Labor addresses this as follows in its Frequently Asked Questions page at question 45 as follows:
"May I take leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act over the next 12 months if I used some or all of my expanded family and medical leave under the Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act?"
It depends. You may take a total of 12 workweeks of leave during a 12-month period under the FMLA, including the Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act. If you take some, but not all 12, workweeks of your expanded family and medical leave by December 31, 2020, you may take the remaining portion of FMLA leave for a serious medical condition, as long as the total time taken does not exceed 12 workweeks in the 12-month period. Please note that expanded family and medical leave is available only until December 31, 2020; after that, you may only take FMLA leave. . . . For example, assume you take four weeks of Expanded Family and Medical Leave in April 2020 to care for your child whose school is closed due to a COVID-19 related reason. These four weeks count against your entitlement to 12 weeks of FMLA leave in a 12-month period. If you are eligible for preexisting FMLA leave and need to take such leave in August 2020 because you need surgery, you would be entitled to take up to eight weeks of FMLA leave. However, you are entitled to paid sick leave under the Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act regardless of how much leave you have taken under the FMLA. Paid sick leave is not a form of FMLA leave and therefore does not count toward the 12 workweeks in the 12-month period cap. But please note that if you take paid sick leave concurrently with the first two weeks of expanded family and medical leave, which may otherwise be unpaid, then those two weeks do count towards the 12 workweeks in the 12-month period."
Click here to see the full answer.
(Source: Federated Insurance HR Question of the Month, June 2020)
Toolbox Talks
BMSA's most requested safety service!!
BMSA's Toolbox Talk Safety Program is an annual subscription that includes everything you need to conduct a year's worth of safety meetings:
  • 12 Industry specific, 1-page handouts
  • Manager instruction/resource page for regulatory support
  • Sign in sheets to satisfy documentation requirements
  • 3-Ring binder to keep it all together
Special 2020 Introductory Offer: $199
Annual renewals $225
(2021 pricing: $250/yr)
Call to Action: Urge Your Representative to Sign the OSHA Crane Rule Letter
NLBMDA has been working over the last several years to repeal the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration’s (OSHA) 2016 Letter of Interpretation (LOI) regarding the Crane and Derricks in
Construction Standard exemption for material delivery.
Unfortunately, OSHA has been unresponsive to NLBMDA’s numerous formal requests to withdraw the 2016 LOI. As a result, NLBMDA has decided to engage Congress for assistance and is partnering with Rep. Ron Wright (R-TX), member of the House Education and Labor Committee, to send a letter to OSHA from the House of Representatives demanding that they rescind the LOI. The letter is now open for signatures and can be signed by any representative in the House through July 17.
Today, NLBMDA is asking all of its members to reach out to the legislative staff of their respective
representatives to request that they join Rep. Wright in signing the letter. Below you will find detailed
information on how to contact your representative’s office including outreach instructions, staff email
addresses, a copy of the letter and a one-page issue brief:
The letter is supported by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and all of NLBMDA’s federated state and regional associations. For any questions, please contact Kevin McKenney at kevin@dealer.org or Alex McIntyre at alex@dealer.org.