Donft leave employees guessing as to whatfs acceptable under the summer dress code
By Allen Smith, J.D.
Jun 12, 2017 - SHRM
Summer dress code policies should encourage workers to
wear comfortable clothing, which will boost morale, but should also include
specific examples of what's inappropriate to make sure employees don't offend
others or lose clients.
"A summer dress code policy should strive to strike a
balance between employee comfort, health and safety, and business needs," said
Seth Neulight, an attorney with Nixon Peabody in San Francisco. People use
clothing "as a means of personal expression or self-identity," he noted. So, "it
is not enough to require that employees use good judgment or state that they may
dress in business casual attire." Rather, any policy should clearly define key
terms using gender-neutral language and specific examples.
He listed the following examples of appropriate summer
attire:
- Short-sleeved shirts.
- T-shirts (solid color only).
- Tennis shoes.
- Jeans (clean and not torn).
- Midthigh-length shorts.
Neulight said the following are inappropriate:
- Tank top shirts.
- T-shirts with logos.
- Swimsuits.
- Cutoff or ripped shorts.
- Flip-flops or open-toed sandals or shoes.
Most organizations permit jeans and denim dresses
year-round, said Philippe Weiss, an attorney and managing director with Seyfarth
Shaw at Work in Chicago, which provides compliance strategy and communications
training. Overly revealing or overly snug clothes should be avoided, he
said.
Depending on the industry and type of business,
employees in client-facing positions may be expected to dress differently than
those in back-office administrative jobs, Neulight noted.
In addition, employees in potentially hazardous
conditions such as manufacturing may have specific dress requirements
imposed by occupational safety and health laws. These statutes require certain
classes of workers to wear personal protective equipment, reflective clothing
and/or steel-toed safety boots.
Infringement of Dress Codes
When there are summer dress code violations,
conversations about the infractions can be awkward. "If an employee is not just
'too casual' but is actually exposing too much flesh, then the employer might
want to start with a discreet conversation with the individual—hopefully by a
supervisor or manager of the same sex as the employee, because that can be a
very embarrassing conversation—with some clear-cut guidelines about how to avoid
issues in the future," said Robin Shea, an attorney with Constangy, Brooks,
Smith & Prophete in Winston-Salem, N.C.
The supervisor or manager may specify during the
conversation, for example, that "necklines must be no lower than 1 1/2 inches
below the neck" or "skirts must be no shorter than 1 inch above the knee."
On a first offense, the employee simply might be asked
why the violation occurred. The question is whether the employee thought what he
or she wore was in compliance or just didn't give it any thought, explained
Christine Walters, J.D., SHRM-SCP, an independent consultant with FiveL Co. in
Westminster, Md. "A second violation may likely warrant some level of corrective
action," she said.
The dress code policy should state that the company
reserves the right to request that employees who violate the policy's standards
will be sent home to change their attire, Neulight said. The changing time can
be unpaid for hourly, nonexempt employees.
But if an exempt employee is sent home, he or she
still must be paid his or her guaranteed minimum salary for that day, "so you
are effectively paying for the time the employee spends to go home, change and
return to work," Walters said.
Floating Casual Day or Casual Friday
Having a casual-dress policy for an entire season
might not be a good fit for some organizations. They instead might try having a
floating casual day or casual Fridays.
With a floating casual day, employees may choose which
day of the week they want to dress casually. "The nice thing about choice of the
day is it gives people the opportunity to use their judgment," Weiss said. And
the employer can address violations of the dress policy incrementally rather
than all at once if just one day a week is designated as the casual day, he
added.
However, Shea said that "letting each employee decide
which day will be casual strikes me as impractical and chaotic for supervisors.
I think it is more practical to simply designate a day of the week for casual
attire—traditionally, Fridays."
If the employer has a summer work schedule with
Fridays off, the casual day could be moved to Thursday or Monday for the summer,
Shea said. "I like the idea of having it tied to the weekend because I think
psychologically it is a nice extension of the weekend to be able to dress
casually at the end of the workweek. Of course, if employees do not work a
Monday-Friday schedule, the employer could consider having it be the day before
the individual employee's 'weekend' begins."