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GENERAL RECORDKEEPING REQUIREMENTS

 

Most Texas and federal laws have recordkeeping requirements for employers. The requirements center around three main duties:

  1. The basic duty to keep certain kinds of records;

  2. The duty to keep records in a certain form and readily available for inspection (in most cases, electronic records are permissible, as long as they can be printed out in easily readable and usable format upon a government or court request); and

  3. The duty to keep the records for a specified period of time.

This brief article will focus on the third set of requirements, i.e., how long employers should maintain records under various laws.

 

Statutory Requirements

 

Common Law Requirements

 

There are no common law requirements as such for how long employers should keep certain kinds of records. However, there is a practical aspect to the issue: each common law cause of action is subject to a specific statute of limitations, meaning that there is a time limit within which such a cause of action must be brought, or else it is "time-barred". The most common causes of action in the category of common law include defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, breach of contract, fraud, tortious interference with an employment relationship, and invasion of privacy. The statutes of limitation vary widely and range from one to four years under Texas law.

 

How to Deal With So Many Time Limits

 

Clearly, there are many different recordkeeping requirements for different situations. Employers can rightly wonder whether they can be in good shape under one requirement, but out of compliance under another law. For that reason, most employment law attorneys advise their clients to keep all employment-related records for at least seven years following the date of an employee's work separation. Doing that will exhaust all possible statutes of limitation for various common law causes of action in Texas, and will keep an employer safe under federal and Texas statutes as well. The only exception is fairly easy to remember: if any employees are exposed to hazardous materials, keep the documentation relating to the exposure for at least thirty (30) years following the employee's work separation.

 

Conclusion

 

While some employers view the recordkeeping requirements as a bothersome hassle, the fact is that for an employer that complies with the laws, the records are the company's best friend in a claim or lawsuit situation. Properly-maintained records increase an employer's credibility and help the employer prove that it complied with state and federal laws with respect to its employees.

 

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