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Articles Posted in Discrimination and Unlawful Harassment

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Will your business be ready for how recent events in Israel will undoubtedly impact your workplace?

On Saturday, the Palestinian militant group Hamas carried out a surprise attack in Israel that reportedly left over 900 dead. Israel has since responded with a declaration of war. What does this Middle East conflict have to do with employment law? You have Jewish employees. Antisemitism is rising, and the…

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Talent acquisition specialist fired after video surfaces of her xenophobic rant on a train

According to reports, a pharmaceutical company fired one of its senior talent acquisition specialists last week after she appeared in a viral video on a New Jersey Transit train calling a small group of German men “f—ing immigrants and telling them to “get the f— out of our country.” An…

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Might you need to modify work schedules for disabled employees to make their commute safer?

A little over five years ago, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued an employer for disability discrimination. It claimed that the company, which temporarily granted a request to allow an employee with night blindness to work an earlier shift to avoid an evening commute, should have agreed to extend…

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EEOC sues “Bark If You’re Dirty” pet store for sexual harassment and sex discrimination. Because of course.

I enjoy blogging about employment law. But occasionally, perhaps after a long day, I wish some of these blog posts would write themselves. Last night, I got my wish. As an email subscriber to the press releases from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, I’ve noticed an unusual amount of…

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At long last, the EEOC has proposed new workplace harassment guidance.

Finally, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has voted to issue new guidance on workplace harassment. Here is a copy of its proposed “Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace.” It’s been a long time coming. This Law360 report notes that this new guidance is the first voted document the EEOC…

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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…