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Articles Posted in Discrimination and Unlawful Harassment

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After the Supreme Court raised the bar for religious accommodations, an appellate court smacked a defendant with it

I’m speaking figuratively, of course. Taxpayer dollars do not support judges bruising and battering litigants who appear in court. However, the defendant is probably still smarting from this recent Fifth Circuit decision, in which the court overturned a lower court ruling dismissing the plaintiff’s claims that the defendant failed to…

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Here are five signs that your employee’s retaliation lawsuit ain’t all it’s cracked up to be

An employee who claims retaliation in federal court must demonstrate they suffered treatment was “materially adverse,” i.e., something that could reasonably have dissuaded a reasonable worker from participating in a protected activity, like complaining about discrimination. Last night, I read a decision from a federal judge in New York weighing…

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An accused sexual harasser thought he had smoking-gun evidence of race discrimination. As it turns out, however…

…the plaintiff missed the mark. Badly. On the plus side, I get a blog post out of it. Direct vs. Circumstantial Evidence When employees lose their jobs and claim discrimination, there are two types of evidence they can use to prove their case: direct and circumstantial. Direct evidence of discrimination…

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EEOC: Hey, employer! You refused to accommodate an injured desk clerk with a stool. A simple stool.

Of all the hills on which an employer should plant its flag to defend, this is not the one. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires an employer to provide reasonable accommodation to qualified individuals with disabilities, except when such accommodation would cause an undue hardship. The undue hardship burden is…

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The EEOC has released its updated enforcement playbook. And I have a copy.

Want to see it? Check out the Strategic Enforcement Plan (SEP) for Fiscal Years 2024 –2028 that the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) released yesterday. It contains the EEOC’s subject matter priorities for the next several years. But, if your attention span for these things isn’t tip-top, I can…

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Can we fire an employee who complains about discrimination and is dead wrong?

I mean, sure. It’s a free country. This isn’t Communist Russia. But if your company is concerned about a subsequent retaliation claim, read on. Today’s lesson comes courtesy of this Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals decision. The plaintiffs brought gender discrimination (equal pay) and retaliation claims after the defendants terminated…

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The EEOC and DOL are teaming up to enforce federal employment law

Chances are, if one of your employees complained externally about discrimination, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was all up in your company’s business. Perhaps your business has had the not-so-good fortune of undergoing a Fair Labor Standards Act or Family and Medical Leave Act audit from the U.S. Department…

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No, getting fired after telling a supervisor you are pregnant is not retaliation. Or is it?

No, it isn’t. I know this because, among other things, I read this Fifth Circuit decision last night after the Philadelphia Eagles beat the New England Patriots. The plaintiff, a pharmacy technician, was pregnant when her employer hired her. Then, she chose to disclose her pregnancy to her supervisor a…

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The employee who claimed she was drugged, raped, and blackmailed by a supervisor LOST her discrimination lawsuit. HOW?!?

From recent memory, I can’t recall a case with more egregious allegations of sexual harassment. One of the plaintiffs in this Fifth Circuit decision I read last night alleged that soon after a staffing company placed her with a new employer, a female supervisor began sexually harassing her, culminating with…