Here are the TOP 10 STEPS public and private employers should consider taking to minimize the risk of whistleblower retaliation claims and build defenses where litigation is unavoidable.
1. Conduct focus groups & surveys
Develop an understanding of your
workforce’s beliefs about whistleblowing and attendant retaliation risks
through focus groups and surveys. Design questions that will expose
whether employees are apt to bypass internal compliance channels (or not
complain at all) and why. Focus groups should be diverse in terms of
age, length of service, race, responsibility and education.
2. Create and widely disseminate whistleblower protection policies with multiple avenues for reporting
Create and modernize policies on which
employees can rely. In addition to codes of conduct, promulgate simple
and straightforward whistle-blower protection policies. Include them in
employee handbooks and make them available through multiple other
channels. Ensure that they provide multiple reporting channels.
A substantial volume of whistleblower
complaints are made directly to managers, and managers’ responses tend
to vary and create risks. Managers need whistleblower-specific training on a regular basis to ensure that they respond appropriately to complaints.
4. Break down corporate silos so that HR, legal (employment counsel in particular) and compliance work together
As highlighted in our recent post
on the DOJ/SEC guidance regarding the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,
whistleblower claims often implicate employment retaliation issues,
performance management, discipline, investigations and critical
compliance issues. HR corporate labor and employment (legal) and
compliance functions should work hand-in-glove to ensure a fully
informed, comprehensive approach is taken with respect to all aspects of
the whistleblower response process.
Many whistleblowers head straight to the
government or an attorney when they feel isolated or ostracized for
complaining. Combat this risk by swiftly appointing a corporate
representative to serve as a liaison to the whistleblower.
Promptitude is critical to a successful
investigation, so employers should develop rapid response systems that
require investigations to be conducted shortly after a complaint is
lodged. Whistleblowers should be advised that certain information must
remain confidential, but that the company will provide the results of
the investigation to the extent practicable.
7. Oversee the evaluations of whistleblowers who remain employed, with an emphasis on objective metrics
To ensure whistleblowers are not subject to retribution, an HR professional and/or a supervisor – ideally, one who is unaware of the
whistleblower’s report – should review whistleblowers’ performance
evaluations by using objective metrics to the greatest extent possible.
Consider rewarding whistleblowers either
monetarily or otherwise for the benefit the complaint conferred upon the
company. A letter of commendation from an executive to the
whistleblower’s personnel file is a good start. So is a bonus, and/or
other recognition.
Show employees you are committed to
protecting whistleblowers and that you take their complaints seriously.
Consider providing generalized (anonymous) examples through an internal
blog, newsletter or intranet posting. Consider describing the general
nature of the complaint, some basics regarding the investigation, the
speed with which the matter was resolved, the benefit the complaint
conferred on the company and, if applicable, the benefit the
whistleblower received for reporting.
Dedicate one day each year to focusing on
the need for transparency, accountability and ethical and lawful
conduct. Invite outside speakers with expertise in corporate ethics,
deliver training on the code of conduct, whistleblower protection and
anti-retaliation policies, and hold sessions with employees focused on
your core values.
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