Video Remote Interpretation for HR and Employee Onboarding
Human resources departments manage the full employee lifecycle — from hiring and onboarding to performance management, benefits enrollment, and workplace investigations. When employees or applicants have limited English proficiency, every HR interaction requires language access. Video remote interpretation (VRI) gives HR professionals real-time access to interpreters for face-to-face conversations that are too important for miscommunication.
Why HR Needs VRI
The LEP Workforce
Millions of workers in the U.S. have limited English proficiency:
Construction — 30%+ of workers in many markets are LEP
Agriculture — Significant portions of farm workers speak limited English
Food processing and manufacturing — High concentrations of LEP workers
Hospitality — Hotels, restaurants, and food service employ many LEP workers
Healthcare support — Home health aides, CNAs, and housekeeping staff
These workers have the same rights as English-speaking employees: to understand their employment terms, participate in workplace processes, and access benefits.
Legal Requirements
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act — Prohibits employment discrimination based on national origin. Failing to communicate effectively with LEP employees about their rights, benefits, and workplace processes can constitute national origin discrimination.
OSHA — The Occupational Safety and Health Administration requires that safety training be provided in a language workers understand. VRI supports safety training and incident reporting.
ADA — For LEP employees who are also Deaf or hard of hearing, VRI for sign language is often the most effective accommodation.
EEOC Guidance — The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has emphasized that employers must not create barriers based on language unless there is a legitimate business necessity.
State laws — Many states have additional requirements for workplace language access, particularly regarding safety training, wage notices, and workers' compensation.
HR Use Cases for VRI
Recruitment and Hiring
Job interviews — When interviewing LEP candidates:
Job offers — Explaining:
Compensation and benefits, Work schedule and overtime policies, At-will employment terms, Non-compete or non-disclosure agreements, and Background check consent
Document completion — Assisting with:
Onboarding
New employee onboarding sets the tone for the employment relationship. For LEP employees, VRI ensures they understand:
Company policies — Employee handbook review, code of conduct, attendance policies, dress code, technology use policies
Benefits enrollment — Health insurance (plan comparison, coverage levels, premiums, deductibles), dental and vision, retirement plans (401k, matching), life insurance, disability insurance, HSA/FSA accounts
Safety orientation — Workplace hazard identification, personal protective equipment (PPE) requirements, emergency procedures, reporting injuries, safety data sheets
Job training — Role-specific procedures, equipment operation, quality standards, production processes
Workplace culture — Anti-harassment policies, reporting mechanisms, open-door policies, employee assistance programs
VRI during onboarding ensures that LEP employees start their jobs informed, safe, and integrated into the workplace.
Performance Management
Performance reviews — Annual or periodic evaluations require two-way communication:
Performance improvement plans — PIPs have serious employment consequences. The employee must understand:
What performance issues exist, What specific changes are required, What the timeline is, and What the consequences of not improving are
VRI ensures the employee fully comprehends the PIP and can ask questions.
Coaching and feedback — Ongoing feedback sessions work through VRI, maintaining the personal connection that video provides.
Workplace Investigations
When HR investigates complaints — harassment, discrimination, theft, safety violations, workplace violence — communication must be accurate and documented:
Complainant interviews — The person filing the complaint must describe what happened in detail. VRI allows the investigator to see their emotional state and demeanor.
Respondent interviews — The accused employee must understand the allegations and have the opportunity to respond. Due process requires comprehension.
Witness interviews — Witnesses may be LEP. Their statements must be accurately interpreted and documented.
Findings and outcomes — The investigation results and any disciplinary action must be communicated clearly to all parties.
Using VRI (rather than OPI) for investigations is recommended because:
The investigator can observe non-verbal cues, The formal setting benefits from face-to-face communication, The visual record (documented via notes, not recording) is more thorough, and The process feels more respectful and serious than a phone call
Benefits Administration
Ongoing benefits communication through VRI:
Open enrollment — Annual benefits selection requires understanding complex plan options
Life event changes — Marriage, birth, divorce, or death triggers benefits changes
Leave management — FMLA, parental leave, short-term disability, personal leave
Workers' compensation — Injury reporting, treatment authorization, modified duty, return-to-work
Retirement planning — 401k contributions, vesting, loan provisions, distribution options
Termination and Separation
Employment terminations require careful communication:
Involuntary termination — Explaining the reason, effective date, final pay, and COBRA rights
Layoffs and RIFs — Explaining severance, WARN Act notices, and unemployment benefits
Resignation — Confirming resignation terms, last day procedures, and benefits continuation
Exit interviews — Gathering feedback from departing LEP employees
VRI ensures that terminated employees understand their rights and next steps, reducing the risk of wrongful termination claims based on miscommunication.
Union Relations
In unionized workplaces:
Collective bargaining sessions may include LEP union members, Grievance proceedings require the employee to understand and participate, Arbitration hearings need professional interpretation, and Union elections and information sessions should be accessible
Implementing VRI in HR
Equipment
HR office tablet — A dedicated tablet with the VRI app installed. Keep it charged and ready on the HR desk or conference room
Conference room setup — For IEP team-style meetings (investigations, terminations, benefits presentations), a larger screen in a conference room is appropriate
Manager access — Provide managers with VRI access on their smartphones or laptops for spontaneous conversations with LEP direct reports
Privacy
HR conversations are inherently sensitive. VRI must be conducted in:
Private offices with closed doors, Conference rooms that can't be overheard, and Never in open plan areas where other employees might hear
Documentation
Document the use of VRI in HR records:
Note the language and interpretation modality in personnel files, For investigations, document the interpreter's ID and the language used, For benefits enrollment, note that interpretation was provided, and Keep records for compliance purposes
Consistency
Use professional VRI for all substantive HR interactions with LEP employees. Don't:
Interpreters and Confidentiality
HR VRI interpreters must understand:
Employee confidentiality — Medical information, disciplinary history, compensation details are private
Investigation confidentiality — Investigation details must not be disclosed
No dual relationships — The interpreter cannot also be an employee of the same company
Neutral role — The interpreter interprets accurately for both sides, not advocating for either party
Mandatory reporting — If the interpreter hears about certain illegal activities (child abuse, workplace safety violations), they may have reporting obligations
Link Translations HR VRI
Link Translations provides video remote interpretation for human resources departments: