Skill v1.0.0
currentTrusted Publisher100/100version: "1.0.0" name: hiring-review description: > Review an offer letter and any restrictive covenants — jurisdiction check included. Substantive rules (covenant enforceability, pay-transparency, salary-history limits, exemption criteria) are researched per hire, not stored. Use when the user says "review this offer", "can we use a non-compete here", "check this offer letter", "hiring in [state]", or attaches an offer. argument-hint: "[offer letter file, or describe the hire]"
/hiring-review
- Load
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md→ jurisdictional footprint, hiring review triggers, restrictive covenant policy. - Use the workflow below.
- Check: jurisdiction, classification, restrictive covenants, background check compliance.
- Flag anything that hits the jurisdiction-specific escalation table.
Matter context
Matter context. Check ## Matter workspaces in the practice-level CLAUDE.md. If Enabled is ✗ (the default for in-house users), skip the rest of this paragraph — skills use practice-level context and the matter machinery is invisible. If enabled and there is no active matter, ask: "Which matter is this for? Run /employment-legal:matter-workspace switch <slug> or say practice-level." Load the active matter's matter.md for matter-specific context and overrides. Write outputs to the matter folder at ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/matters/<matter-slug>/. Never read another matter's files unless Cross-matter context is on.
Purpose
Offer letters are mostly boilerplate until they're not. The jurisdiction check and the restrictive-covenant check are where this skill earns its keep. The skill does not state the law — every jurisdiction-specific rule is researched and cited at the time of review.
Load context
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md → jurisdictional footprint, hiring review triggers, restrictive covenant policy, offer letter template location.
Output header
Prepend the work-product header from ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md → ## Outputs (it differs by user role — see ## Who's using this).
Workflow
Step 1: Jurisdiction
Where will this person work? Not where HQ is — where they are.
If remote: their home state/country governs. If hybrid: usually their home state, but check the offer letter's choice-of-law clause (may or may not hold up).
Check the jurisdiction table in ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md for this state/country. If it's not in the table — new jurisdiction — flag that: "First hire in [state]. The jurisdiction table doesn't cover this. Research needed before offer goes out."
Step 2: Classification
Exempt or non-exempt? The offer should say, and the role should support it.
| Test | Check | |
|---|---|---|
| Salary basis | Paid a fixed salary regardless of hours? | |
| Salary level | Above the applicable federal and state thresholds? | |
| Duties test | Does the role actually involve the exempt duties? |
Research before calling exemption. Identify the currently operativesalary thresholds (federal and state — several states index annually andseveral have tiered thresholds by employer size) and the applicable dutiestest(s) for the role. Cite primary sources. Verify currency.
If the offer says exempt but the role description does not support the exempt duties — flag it. Misclassification is expensive.
Step 3: Restrictive covenants
If the offer includes a non-compete, customer non-solicit, employee non-solicit, or confidentiality/IP assignment:
Research enforceability before advising. For the employee's jurisdiction,identify the currently operative rules on each restrictive covenant in theoffer. Non-compete enforceability in particular has shifted in multiplestates in recent years through legislation, agency action, and litigation —do not rely on prior memory of which states permit non-competes. Note:- The specific type of covenant (non-compete, customer non-solicit, employeenon-solicit, confidentiality/trade-secret, IP assignment) — each has itsown rules.- Any salary or income threshold that conditions enforceability.- Any notice, consideration, or garden-leave requirements.- Any industry-specific carve-outs (e.g., healthcare, broadcasting).- Duration and geographic-scope reasonableness tests.- Choice-of-law and choice-of-forum enforceability for out-of-state covenants.Cite primary sources. Verify currency.
Per ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md restrictive covenant policy: does this hire even get one? Some companies use them selectively. Apply the house policy first, then research overlays from the jurisdiction.
No silent supplement. If a research query to the configured legal research tool returns few or no results for the jurisdiction's exemption thresholds, restrictive-covenant rules, pay-transparency law, or any other item you're researching, report what was found and stop. Do NOT fill the gap from web search or model knowledge without asking. Say: "The search returned [N] results from [tool]. Coverage appears thin for [jurisdiction / topic]. Options: (1) broaden the search query, (2) try a different research tool, (3) search the web — results will be tagged[web search — verify]and should be checked against a primary source before relying, or (4) flag as unverified and stop. Which would you like?" A lawyer decides whether to accept lower-confidence sources.Source attribution. Tag every citation in the review with where it came from:[Westlaw],[CourtListener], or the MCP tool name for citations retrieved from a legal research connector;[web search — verify]for web-search citations;[model knowledge — verify]for citations recalled from training data;[user provided]for citations the user supplied. Citations taggedverifycarry higher fabrication risk and should be checked first. Never strip or collapse the tags.
Step 4: Jurisdiction-specific requirements
Check the ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md table for this jurisdiction. Common categories to research for each hire:
- Pay transparency — does the jurisdiction require a salary range in the
posting? If so, is this offer within the posted range? Research the current rule (including any recent amendments or new enforcement guidance).
- Ban-the-box — does the jurisdiction or locality restrict the timing or
scope of criminal-history inquiries?
- Salary-history limits — is the jurisdiction one that restricts asking
about or relying on prior salary? Research current rules and recent amendments.
- Required offer-letter or onboarding notices — some jurisdictions require
specific notices at offer or hire (wage-notice statutes, sick-leave notices, etc.). Research what is currently required and whether a template exists.
Cite primary sources. Verify currency.
Step 5: Offer letter content
Read the letter. Check:
Employment-at-will is US-only. "At-will" means either party can terminate without cause or notice (subject to statutory exceptions). This concept does not exist outside the US:
- US (most states): At-will is the default. Offer letters often include "at-will" language to defeat implied-contract arguments. Check that it's present if US.
- Montana: Not at-will — Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act requires cause after probation.
- UK: No at-will. Employees have statutory protections from day 1 (unfair dismissal after 2 years of service, automatic unfair dismissal for protected reasons from day 1). The offer letter must contain the written statement of particulars (ERA 1996 s.1): pay, hours, notice period, holidays, pension, disciplinary/grievance procedures.
- EU: No at-will. Termination requires cause, notice, and often works council consultation or collective redundancy procedures. The offer letter requirements vary by member state but notice periods and written particulars are standard.
- Australia: No at-will. Fair Work Act minimum notice periods, unfair dismissal protections, NES.
- Canada: No at-will. Common law reasonable notice (can be months), ESA minimums, wrongful dismissal exposure.
- Singapore, other APAC: No at-will. Employment Act and contract-based protections.
Check for at-will language ONLY if the jurisdiction is US. For non-US jurisdictions, check instead for: notice period (and whether it meets statutory minimum), the written-statement particulars the jurisdiction requires, probation period terms, and any jurisdiction-specific mandatory clauses.
Never recommend adding at-will language to a non-US offer letter. It's legally meaningless, it can conflict with mandatory statutory terms, and it signals to the employee's lawyer that the employer didn't understand the jurisdiction.
- At-will language present and not undermined elsewhere (US only — see above)
- Contingencies clear (background check, reference, I-9 if US / right-to-work verification for the applicable jurisdiction)
- Start date, title, salary, reporting structure stated
- Equity terms (if any) consistent with the plan
- Integration clause so the letter is the whole deal
- For non-US: notice period meets statutory minimum, jurisdiction's required written-statement particulars included, probation period compliant with local rules
Output
Jurisdiction assumption. This review applies the rules of the employee's work jurisdiction identified in Step 1. Enforceability of restrictive covenants, exemption thresholds, pay-transparency obligations, salary-history limits, and required notices vary materially by state and locality, and several have shifted recently. If the candidate's work location changes, or the role spans jurisdictions, this review may not apply as written.
[WORK-PRODUCT HEADER — per plugin config ## Outputs — differs by role; see `## Who's using this`]## Hiring Review: [Candidate] — [Role] — [Jurisdiction]**Overall:** [Clear to send | Changes needed | Escalate]### Jurisdiction: [State/Country][Jurisdiction table entry. Any auto-escalate triggers that fire.]### Classification[Exempt/non-exempt call, grounded in researched thresholds and duties test.Any flags.]### Restrictive covenants[If any. Enforceability call per researched jurisdiction rules, with pinpointcites and currency note. Suggested changes.]### Jurisdiction-specific requirements[Pay transparency, notices, salary-history rules, etc. — each researched andcited, or flagged as needing research.]### Offer letter[Any issues with the letter itself]### Action items-[ ] [specific change needed before sending]
Consequential-action gate (make an offer)
Before producing a "Clear to send" recommendation or a final offer letter for signature: Read ## Who's using this in ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/employment-legal/CLAUDE.md. If the Role is Non-lawyer:
Making an offer has legal consequences — the letter is a contract, and restrictive covenants, classification, and jurisdiction-specific terms are difficult to reset once sent. Have you reviewed this offer with an attorney? If yes, proceed. If no, here's a brief to bring to them:- Candidate, role, jurisdiction (where they'll actually work)- Classification call (exempt/non-exempt) and why- Restrictive covenants in the offer and the enforceability analysis- Jurisdiction-specific requirements that apply (pay transparency, wage notices, salary-history rules)- Open questions and what's unresolved- What could go wrong (misclassification liability, unenforceable non-compete, missing required notice, conflicting at-will language)- What to ask the attorney (is this the right form for this jurisdiction; can we use our standard non-compete here; what notices need to go with the letter)If you need to find an attorney, solicitor, barrister, or other authorised legal professional: contact your professional regulator (state bar in the US, SRA/Bar Standards Board in England & Wales, Law Society in Scotland/NI/Ireland/Canada/Australia, or your jurisdiction's equivalent) for a referral service.
Do not produce a "Clear to send" output past this gate without an explicit yes. A marked-DRAFT flagged for attorney review is fine.
Close with the next-steps decision tree
End with the next-steps decision tree per CLAUDE.md ## Outputs. Customize the options to what this skill just produced — the five default branches (draft the X, escalate, get more facts, watch and wait, something else) are a starting point, not a lock-in. The tree is the output; the lawyer picks.
What this skill does not do
- Draft the offer letter — reviews it.
- Make the hire decision — checks the paperwork.
- State restrictive-covenant or exemption rules from memory — every
jurisdiction-specific call is based on researched, cited sources verified for currency.
- Research a new jurisdiction in depth on its own — flags that research is
needed, and uses wage-hour-qa or outside counsel to fill in.