Close

Articles Posted in Discrimination and Unlawful Harassment

Updated:

THIS action fell just short of possible discrimination and retaliation. (Whew!)

The plaintiff in this action has worked as a human resource specialist. She claimed that, beginning in 2019, her male supervisor made unwelcome sexual comments to her, and, when she reported those comments to his direct supervisor, they were ignored. So the plaintiff says she filed an Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) complaint.…

Updated:

Today is Equal Pay Day. And here’s why, for the 14th time, the reintroduced Paycheck Fairness Act won’t pass.

In recent years, many states have passed equal pay laws. At the federal level, well… For U.S. Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-CT-03), last week marked the fourteenth time (according to Wikipedia) that she had introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act. The measure is designed to combat the wage disparity woman face compared to…

Updated:

The time an employee rejected a $100 discrimination settlement and turned it into $495,000!

You practice long enough as an employment lawyer, and you accrue stories upon stories to share with others. But, this one I’m about to tell you tops most. This story should have been unremarkable. It involves an employee with workers’ compensation and discrimination claims against his former employer. The employer…

Updated:

ADA accommodation requests in Hawaii work the same way as in the other 49 states.

The plaintiff in the case I read last night worked in Hawaii as a customer service representative. She was a clinically obese woman with a long history of diabetes and hypertension, resulting in physical limitations related to neuropathy in her hands and feet. However, her job involved sitting at a desk, taking…

Updated:

“You have done nothing wrong. I am just following orders in building a new, younger team for the CEO.”

If you’re 67 years old, you work in human resources, and you happen to hear those words from the company’s U.S. president, it may be time to dust off the old resume. Or contact the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The HR Manager for a Swiss-based national manufacturer did the latter.…

Posted in: Age
Updated:

PRO-TIP: If you want to arbitrate employment claims, have an arbitration agreement.

A client embroiled in an employment dispute with a former employee once asked me if we could force the employee into arbitration. So, I asked the client for a copy of the arbitration agreement that the individual had signed. After an uncomfortably long pause, I went back to drafting the…

Updated:

The EEOC isn’t the only federal agency safeguarding complaints about race bias at work

Last week, the National Labor Relations Board made headlines when it concluded that nondisparagement and confidentiality provisions in severance agreements that businesses give to rank-and-file employees are unlawful. Yesterday, the Board made headlines again by releasing this Advice Memo in which it concluded that employees who engage in group discussions about issues of…

Updated:

No job description? No problem. See why this employer had no duty to accommodate.

The Americans with Disabilities Act bars employers from firing someone because they have a disability. It also requires employers to provide workplace accommodations to otherwise “qualified” individuals with actual disabilities unless going so would create an undue hardship. Someone who is “qualified” can perform the job’s essential functions with or…