Last night, I read about a black female educator and school administrator who claimed that her employer agreed to pay for her to attend a training session but later reneged, instead offering to pay for her to attend in two years. So, she paid for it herself. And then she…
Articles Posted in Sex
Did you know that a bird — a macaw, specifically — can create a hostile work environment?
Last year, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued a long-term care facility claiming that certain White patients/residents repeatedly directed offensive racial slurs at black nurses and nurse assistants, including “n—-r,” “coon,” “monkey,” and “Black b—–s.” One patient repeatedly told Black employees to “go back to Africa,” followed Black employees…
The person who promoted me later demoted me. That’s sexist, the plaintiff claimed.
Unfortunately for the plaintiff, a federal judge disagreed. The plaintiff began her employment with the defendant as corporate counsel. After a few years of positive performance reviews and raises, the plaintiff was promoted to Acting General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer on a 12-month trial basis. The trial did not…
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…
Could denying vacation requests be grounds for a . . . discrimination claim?!?
Many of you accumulate vacation days at work throughout the year. So did the plaintiff in this recent federal court decision. She alleged that when her employer denied her requests to use her unused, accrued vacation in 2018 and 2019, it discriminated against her based on her sex, seemingly because…
Does Title VII only cover ultimate employment decisions? Another federal appellate court doesn’t think so.
Imagine a business that gives its employees two days off each week. There’s nothing abnormal about that. However, the company uses a sex-based policy to determine which two days an employee can pick. Only men can select full weekends off—women cannot. Instead, female employees can pick either two weekdays off…
How do judges resolve “he-said/she-said” in discrimination cases?
TL;DR: They don’t. Here’s a longer explanation. There comes a time in most discrimination lawsuits when a defendant-employer will file a motion for summary judgment. By filing that motion, the movant is telling the court that there are no material facts in dispute and, if the court applies the well-settled…
Can labor unions be sued for sexual harassment? (Spoiler alert: Yes, and they are costly!)
When most people think of federal anti-discrimination laws like Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, they associate them with employees suing employers for things like discrimination, retaliation, and hostile work environments. But Title VII covers more than just employers. For example, Title VII outlaws any employment practice…
Oh, man! A guy accused TWICE of touching women inappropriately claimed sex discrimination.
For every unicorn $25.6 million jury verdict you may read about online, thousands of discrimination cases fall well short of that mark. Way more never have a shot at making it to trial. And some don’t even have sufficient facts on the face of the complaint, which, if true, would establish…
Can employees use their religion as an excuse not to work with LGBTQ coworkers?
Last week, the Supreme Court unanimously agreed that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires an employer that denies a religious accommodation to show that the burden of granting an accommodation would result in substantial increased costs in relation to the conduct of its particular business. The next day, the…