San Diego Employment Attorney
Terry J. Chapko
As unemployment continues to rise in today's economy, it is difficult to imagine a more upsetting experience than losing your job due to employment discrimination.
As an experienced Coronado California Employment attorney, my firm is dedicated to providing legal representation of the very highest quality to "ordinary people" who have been harmed.
Contact my firm today if you or a loved one needs legal assistance with any of the following matters:
- Wrongful Termination
- Harassment and Discrimination
- Violation of Family and Medical Leave Laws
- Wage and Hour Violations
- Unfair Competition and Trade Secret Litigation
- Labor Laws
- Employment Law
- Employee Rights
- Severance Agreements
- Whistleblower Claims
- Administrative Law
- Injunctions
- Workers' Compensation
As the firm's principle attorney, I am an experienced, aggressive, and relentless employee advocate who has opposed numerous large corporate defendants including Starbucks, SAIC, Ace Parking, and Longs Drugs. I have helped labor-violation victims throughout California obtain the compensation they deserve, and I can help you, too.
Verdicts and Settlements:
- Chau v. Starbucks Corporation. On March 20, 2008, a San Diego court awarded a class of all "baristas" who have worked for Starbucks Corporation in California since October of 2000 over $105 million dollars as a result of Starbucks illegal diversion of tips from baristas to supervisors. The class included over 120,000 current and former employees. The verdict was overturned on appeal on June 2, 2009 and is currently on appeal to the California Supreme Court.
- Does v. Doe Construction Company. Obtained $1,750,000 settlement in October 2008 for two women who alleged they were sexually harassed and then retaliated against for reporting the harassment.
- Aguirre v. Richard Heath & Associates, Inc. Class action for unpaid overtime and unreimbursed expenses filed in San Diego County settled for $500,000. Payments to class members were made in April 2008. The class consisted primarily of employees who spoke English as a second language and who had been told they did not qualify for overtime pay.
- Joanne Limneos v. SAIC. Female whistleblower awarded $500,000 in December 2007 after three-week arbitration in downtown San Diego. Established that San Diego's largest private employer had wrongfully terminated the plaintiff.
- Robb v. Starbucks Corporation. After three-week jury trial in San Diego Superior Court in September-October 2006, former male Starbucks employee, who alleged he was sexually harassed by his male boss, was awarded $257,500 in compensatory and punitive damages in addition to his attorneys' fees and costs.
If you or someone you know needs the help of an experienced San Diego Employment attorney, call The Law Office of Terry J. Chapko today at 866-928-1674, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule a free consultation.
Labor Laws:
Historically, labor laws have focused on such matters as eliminating unsafe workplace conditions, securing a living wage for employees, and eliminating, or at least, tempering the strife that often occurs between employee and employers. Since the appearance of organized labor, laws have established collective bargaining rights, and have sought to prevent either employers or employees, individually or through associations or unions, from engaging in unfair labor practices. It is well-established, by various statutes, that both sides to a labor dispute are legally required to engage in good faith collective bargaining. Modern labor laws also address such complex and often emotionally charged issues as strikes, picketing, mutual injunctive relief and lockouts.
Labor and Employment attorneys can help employers with the following:
- Reviewing client employee handbooks, manuals and policy statements
- Assisting with federal and state wage and hour law issues and claims
- Representing employers before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and state human rights agencies
- Providing advice on issues involving National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) representation and elections including campaign assistance
- Representing employers in unfair labor practice proceedings before the National Labor Relations Board and state labor agencies
- Providing representation for grievance and arbitration hearings under collective bargaining agreements
- Collective bargaining on behalf of clients including strategic planning and acting as spokesperson
- Counseling on issues related to strikes or lockouts and providing related litigation support
Employment Law:
Employment law is a well-established body of statutes and judicial decisions covering all rights and obligations within the employer-employee relationship, including current employees, job applicants and former employees. It covers a wide range of legal issues, ranging from employment discrimination and wrongful termination to matters involving wages and workplace safety. Many employment law issues are governed by applicable federal and state employment law, but a number of issues are determined according to basic contract law.
Employee Rights:
All employees have basic rights arising from both state and federal laws. Some of these rights include: the right not to be subjected to discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, skin color, gender, pregnancy, religious beliefs, disability, age, and in some places, marital status or sexual orientation; the right to a workplace free of harassment; the right to be paid at least the minimum wage as provided by federal or state law; the right to overtime wages as provided by federal or state law; the right to a safe workplace and the right to take leave to care for a personal or family member's serious illness, or following the birth or adoption of a child.
Employment Discrimination:
Discrimination generally occurs when an employee is intentionally treated differently because of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, gender, age, and in some states, sexual orientation. Employment discrimination claims may be prosecuted under various state and federal statutes. Even if the employee’s evidence is sufficient to show discrimination, an employer may be able to justify a particular job action by demonstrating that such treatment arose out of business necessity, or that a legitimate job qualification required consideration of factors that had an unintentional discriminatory effect. When the employer makes such a legitimate justification, the employee must show that discrimination, not the employer’s justification, was the true reason for the action.
Age Discrimination:
It is unlawful for an employer, employment agency or labor union to discriminate in employment on the basis of age. This includes refusing to hire an individual or firing an employee. It also includes an individual’s compensation, the terms, conditions, and privileges of his or her employment, and all employee benefits.
Disability Discrimination:
Both the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 protect individuals with disabilities from employment discrimination. An individual with a disability is defined as someone who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity, has a record of having such a physical or mental impairment, or is regarded as having such impairment. The term is broadly defined to include any physiological, mental or psychologically-based impairment, but it does not include mere physical characteristics or cultural, environmental, or economic impairment—the impairment must cause a substantial limitation to a major life activity. Temporary conditions, such as a broken arm or the flu, would not be considered substantial limitations amounting to a disability entitled to statutory protection.
Wrongful Termination:
Termination of employment cannot be classified as "Wrongful Termination" unless it is in violation of some fundamental public policy, as set forth in a state or federal statute, regulation or constitutional provision. Examples of Wrongful Termination include situations where:
- An employee is discharged for failure to comply with an order to perform an act that violates some law, ordinance or regulation, or
- An employee is discharged in retaliation for complaints about conduct by the employer that he or she believes to be unlawful, e.g., failure to pay overtime, or failure to comply with safety regulations.
Sexual Harassment:
Sexual harassment is any unwanted and unwelcome sexual behavior. It involves a broad range of conduct, including such verbal harassment as derogatory comments, explicit sexual comments and descriptions of sexual exploits, leering or requesting sexual favors. The term also describes physical harassment, ranging from inappropriate touching to outright sexual assault. In order to be classified as illegal the conduct in question must be both unwelcome and offensive to the victim.
Sexual harassment is a form of sexual discrimination, prohibited in employment settings under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title IX of the 1972 Education Act makes sexual harassment in schools or other educational settings unlawful. The Federal Fair Housing Act also provides protection against sexual harassment, and most states have enacted legislation making it unlawful.
Overtime Compensation:
Under both State and Federal law employers are required to pay additional compensation to eligible employees who work more than forty hours during any seven-day period. For every hour over forty hours in any given workweek the employer must pay the eligible employee at least one and one-half times the employee's ordinary hourly rate.
Severance Agreements:
A severance agreement is a form of settlement agreement under which an aggrieved employee agrees to accept an agreed sum of money in exchange for, among other things, abandoning all claims against the employer. Where it can be negotiated, a severance agreement saves money and aggravation for both sides. Severance agreements commonly include such provisions as "mutual non-disclosure of terms," an agreement that the employee will not compete against the employer, and that neither the employer nor the employee will make negative comments about the other.
Trade Secrets Agreements:
Employment contracts frequently contain provisions for the protection of the employer’s “trade secrets”. These may range from customer data of one kind or another, to company designs, or even “secret recipes”. Typically, the Trade Secrets clause of an employment contract will provide for “liquidated” damages in the event of disclosure of the information. Liquidated damages are a set dollar figure agreed-upon in advance, to be paid in the event the contract clause is violated.
Non-competition Agreements:
Non-competition agreements are provisions contained within an employment contract which restrict the activities of an employee after leaving the service of the company. Courts treat non-competition agreements with suspicion—with an eye toward preventing unnecessary and unreasonable interference with a person’s livelihood after severance of the employer/employee relationship.
The Courts will often decline to enforce “unreasonable” non-competition agreements. A non-competition clause in the agreement under which a used car lot employs an auto mechanic will likely be summarily rejected by the court as unreasonable. The agreement must be reasonable in duration. A non-competition agreement barring the sales manager of a used car lot from engaging in the used car business for the rest of his or her life, or for 50 years, would probably be denied enforcement, while one with a 2-year term might well be enforced. Non-competition agreements must be reasonable in the area covered. If the agreement precludes the sales manager from engaging in the used car business anywhere in North America, it will almost certainly be denied enforcement as unreasonable. If the area is limited to San Diego, for example, or even to California, it would probably withstand court scrutiny.
Whistleblower Claims:
Whistleblower Claims involve employer retaliation, sometimes to the extent of Wrongful Termination, against an employee who reports the improper or unlawful conduct of another employee or of management itself to government authorities. It is illegal for an employer to retaliate against a “whistleblower.”
Administrative Law:
Administrative Law is a system of justice outside the judicial system that is designed to bring resolution to conflicts arising within a detailed and technical structure of regulations. Administrative Law Courts have a reputation for resolving issues with greater speed and efficiency than the judicial system. Final Administrative Law decisions can be challenged in the Courts, but not until all administrative remedies have been exhausted. Final Administrative Law decisions can also be converted to Court Judgments and then enforced by any of the traditional remedies available for the enforcement of civil judgments.
Injunctions:
Injunctions are a type of Court Order that either requires or prohibits specified conduct or behavior. Injunctions are remedies frequently used in employment cases. They involve such situations as injunctions requiring striking public employees to return to work, or injunctions requiring someone to stop engaging in an unlawful employment practice. Willful failure to comply with an injunction can lead to a citation for contempt of court, and can result in significant money sanctions or even time in jail for the purpose of coercing compliance.
If you or someone you know needs the help of an experienced San Diego Employment attorney, call The Law Office of Terry J. Chapko today at 866-928-1674, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule a free consultation.
If you or someone you know needs the help of an experienced San Diego Employment attorney, call Terry J. Chapko today at 866-928-1674, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule a free consultation.
ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:
The Law Office of Terry J. Chapko
1111 Orange Ave, Suite A
Coronado, CA 92118
Phone: 866-928-1674
Hours: M-F, 8:00AM-5:00PM
Services provided after-hours
MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:
Attorney Terry J. Chapko
- Jurisdictions Attorney is Licensed in: California
- Date Admitted to the Bar: 1995
- Colleges Attended, Degree & Year Graduated: Grinnell College (Grinnell, Iowa), B.A. Economics, 1988; Northwestern University, J.D., 1995
- Professional Memberships & Achievements: California Employment Lawyers Association (CELA); State Bar of California; San Diego County Bar Association; Consumer Attorneys of San Diego (CASD); Named 2009 San Diego Super Lawyer
- Mehserle murder trial to be moved to L.A. (San Francisco Chronicle)
The former BART police officer accused of murdering an unarmed train rider early New Year's Day will be tried in downtown Los Angeles, a judge ruled Thursday. Judge Morris Jacobson's decision, after an hour and a half of arguments in Alameda County Superior... - National Digest (The Capital)
CLEVELAND (AP) — Police are expanding their search of a convicted rapist’s neighborhood and his neatly kept home, where 10 bodies have been found in the basement, buried in the backyard, in an upstairs living room and in a crawl space. - New police chief named at UCSB (Santa Barbara Daily Sound)
The UC Santa Barbara Police Department is under new leadership after university officials selected a police chief after reviewing more than 100 applicants. - 2009 candidate capsules: Saratoga Springs City Council (The Saratogian)
Below are brief capsules of candidates in Saratoga Springs city races. Information was supplied by each candidate, and as a result the exact format of answers may differ from capsule to capsule. - Orem man sentenced to 30 months prison for tax evasion (Provo Daily Herald)
An Orem man who was accused by the U.S. Justice Department of promoting bogus tax scams that cost the U.S. Treasury more than $135 million and siphoning $20 million from investors nationwide, was sent - Amazon Defense Coalition: American Who Shot Secret Videos for Chevron in Ecuador Is Convicted Drug Trafficker (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
WASHINGTON----Wayne Hansen, the American businessman who helped make the secret videos being used by Chevron in an attempt to taint an environmental trial where the company faces a $27 billion liability, is a convicted felon who was charged with conspiring to import more than 275,000 pounds of marijuana from Colombia to the United States, according to a search of public records. - Amazon Defense Coalition: Chevron Admits Its Lawyers Present at Key Meeting with Ecuador Man Who Taped Video Scandal (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
WASHINGTON----In a stunning admission, Chevron’s top outside counsel on the Ecuador environmental case has publicly conceded that the company’s own lawyers met with a Chevron contractor regarding his secret video recordings just days before he taped a critical meeting in Ecuador about a purported bribe that the company is trying to use to taint a trial where it faces a $27.3 billion ... - Free legal help for Coloradans (9 News Denver)
DENVER - Attorneys in Colorado volunteer by providing legal information at a variety of legal clinics and programs.
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