Can the Boss Listen in on Telephone Calls?It's Your wife on Line two." "I'll be at the three thirty meeting in just a minute. I have to make a quick call home to see if my children are back home from school." "I'll meet you for dinner at 7:30." We all get an occasional personal call at work from time to time. In many work places, the employer permits employees to make or receive personal phone calls so long as it does not interfere with work. In some jobs, however, employers discourage or strictly prohibit personal calls. Employees running production machines in a factory , for example, generally are not permitted to make or receive personal calls while on the job. Likewise, employees who deal with the public should not be making personal calls while on duty. We all know how irritating this can be. Employers often complain about employee abuse of the telephone while on the job. One employer response is to monitor or listen in on employee telephone calls. In fact, employer monitoring of employee telephone calls has been a common practice in the telecommunications and telemarketing industries for years.
But, there are strict rules under law which limit the monitoring of telephone calls. A liquor store employee, for example, won a privacy invasion law suit and received a large cash award because her employer monitored telephone calls in a manner that violated the law. A federal law, referred to as the "wire tap law," prohibits the interception of wire or telephone communications and makes such action a criminal offense. However, the law permits an employer to monitor business calls on an extension phone so long as the employee is informed that monitoring will occur and the monitoring is done for a business purpose in the ordinary course of business. So When can an employer monitor employee telephone calls? Here are some telephone tips to help respect an employees privacy on the job and to keep an employer out of legal trouble.
While an employer may feel that there is justification to monitor employee
telephone calls, remember to be sensitive to an employee's expectation of
privacy on the job. Consult a processional for advice on balancing these
conflicting needs to avoid unnecessary employee relations problems or possible
legal claims. |
February 2000 © KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE
Reprinted with permission