i got written up at work today for “not smiling” and in their rule book it mentions smiling at customers, representing the company in a positive manner, etc., and about a half hour of research has led me to believe that my employer is violating federal law as the nlrb ruled that your employer can’t force you to act happy/smile/be positive at work

i know it’s small but still fuck them

  • RonaldMcReagan [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    You might, but the costs of pursuing an action (money/stress wise) are almost guaranteed to outweigh any monetary benefit. I'd say it's not worth bothering over unless they use it as part of a reason to fire you, then the benefit of suing increases.

    • 100th [none/use name]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Have you ever sued any one?

      I can tell you from experience

      It requires almost no work/stress if you have a competent lawyer. Most lawyers that sense they can get a settlement take a cut off the settlement.

      • RonaldMcReagan [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        I'll concede that it's worth asking a lawyer before making a decision.

        I just question whether the amount of money that op may get, is worth any potential fallout.

        And yeah, I have experience working in law firms, just not as a lawyer yet.