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Litigation Cases Employment Law Basics

admin 2016.01.14 21:44 Views : 927

       

Asserting Your Rights

If you believe you have been harassed or discriminated against at work, your best strategy is to talk to an experienced employment lawyer right away. A lawyer can review the facts of your situation and assess how strong your claims are. If you decide to take action, a lawyer can help you negotiate a settlement with your employer, file a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and file a lawsuit. Age Discrimination.

Age Discrimination

As the Baby Boomers get older, age discrimination claims have grown more common. In the past few years, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) -- the federal agency that interprets and enforces antidiscrimination laws -- has received more than 20,000 charges of age discrimination per year. Age discrimination is prohibited by the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). Unlike other discrimination laws, the ADEA doesn't ban "reverse" discrimination. Discrimination is prohibited only against those who are at least 40 years old; younger workers aren't protected. 

This section covers the ADEA and age discrimination. It also includes articles on the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, an amendment to the ADEA that prohibits age discrimination in benefits and regulates waivers of the right to sue an employer for age discrimination. 

Discrimination and Harassment

Federal law prohibits employers from making job decisions based on an employee's or applicant's race, skin color, national origin, sex, religion, disability, genetic information, or age (if the person is at least 40 years old). These laws generally apply only to employers with at least 15 employees (the Age Discrimination in Employment Act applies only to employers with at least 20 employees). Almost every state also has laws prohibiting discrimination, and some of these laws apply to smaller employers or cover additional characteristics, such as sexual orientation and marital status.

The intent of these laws is to create equal employment opportunity for everyone, without regard to traits that have led to unfair mistreatment in the past. Unfortunately, the work of these laws is unfinished: Almost 100,000 charges of discrimination were filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2010 alone, the highest number since the agency opened its doors. This section explains the laws that prohibit discrimination, as well as what to do if your rights have been violated. It also covers harassment and retaliation.

Harassment

Harassment is defined as offensive, unwelcome conduct, based on the victim's protected characteristic (such as sex or religion), that is so severe or pervasive that it affects the terms and conditions of employment. This might take the form of "quid pro quo" harassment, in which the victim's job opportunities are conditioned on putting up with the harassment. ("If you want that raise, you'll agree to go out with me.") Or, it might take the form of hostile environment harassment, in which the workplace is poisoned by biased comments, lewd behavior, and other inappropriate behavior.

National Origin

Discrimination on the basis of national origin is prohibited by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the major federal antidiscrimination law. Employers subject to Title VII may not make employment decisions based on birthplace, ancestry, culture, native language, surname, or other characteristics that are closely associated with someone's country of origin.

Special rules apply to language requirements. The languages people are comfortable speaking, accents, and fluency are all closely related to national origin. At the same time, however, the law recognizes that an employer may have a legitimate need to make sure customers can understand employees and employees can speak to each other in a common language, for example.

Race Discrimination

Employment discrimination on the basis of race still happens more often than anyone wants to believe: In 2010, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission received more than 35,000 charges of race discrimination. It exacts a very high price, both from its victims and from the companies where it occurs. 

An employer commits race discrimination when it makes job decisions based on race or when it adopts seemingly neutral job policies that disproportionately affect members of a particular race. Race discrimination in private employment is prohibited by two federal laws: Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866. The articles in this section cover both laws, as well as the process for bringing a race discrimination lawsuit and the remedies available to successful litigants. 

Religious Discrimination

Religious discrimination occurs when employees or applicants are treated differently because of their religious beliefs (or lack thereof). Favoritism -- by which an employer favors those who share his or her religious beliefs -- is also prohibited. And, employers are legally required to reasonably accommodate their employees' religious practices and beliefs, unless doing so would impose more than a minimal cost or burden on the business. 

Retaliation

In recent years, more than a third of the charges filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission have included an allegation that the employee was retaliated against for asserting his or her rights. In a retaliation case, the employee claims that the employer took a negative job action (such as firing or demoting the employee) because the employee complained of harassment or discrimination. Even if the underlying complaint turns out to be unfounded, the employee can still win a retaliation claim by showing that something negative happened because of the complaint. 

Without protection from retaliation, the laws prohibiting harassment and discrimination would be very difficult to enforce. After all, if an employee could be fired for making a complaint, very few employees would be willing to report problems. Judges and juries alike seem to recognize this. Juries often slam employers found guilty of retaliation with high damage awards. And the Supreme Court has issued a series of decisions in retaliation cases that side with employees. 

Sex Discrimination

Sex discrimination happens when an employer treats employees or applicants differently because of their gender. Pregnancy discrimination is a form of sex discrimination, as is sexual harassment.

Outright sex discrimination used to be more common in the past, with advertisements for a "Gal Friday," signs posted saying "Men Only Need Apply," and pregnant employees being forced out of their jobs once they were "showing." These days, sex discrimination is more likely to take the form of stereotyping based on gender roles -- that women should (or will want to) stay home with their children, or that men are more likely to be assertive, for example.

Sexual Orientation Discrimination

Currently, no federal law prohibits private employers from discriminating based on sexual orientation. That could change in the future, if Congress passed the Employment Nondiscrimination Act (ENDA), a bill that's been introduced in nearly every Congressional session for the last 15 years. Polls consistently show that a majority of voters support providing these job protections to gay, lesbian, and transgender employees and applicants.

Pregnancy Discrimination

Pregnancy discrimination is a form of sex discrimination, made illegal by Title VII. Employers may not discriminate against employees because of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions in any aspect of employment, from hiring to firing. 

Employers must treat pregnant employees who are temporarily unable to work due to pregnancy just as they treat other employees who are temporarily disabled -- no better and no worse. If an employer provides disability leave to employees with serious illnesses, for example, it must provide the same leave to an employee who is temporarily disabled by pregnancy. 

No. Subject Date Views
181 FLSA Status - 어떻게 Exempt인지 Non Exempt인지 구분하나요? 단계별 test를 해보세요. 2013.11.25 1079
180 Money: It’s Not All Employees Want 2012.08.09 1071
179 CA State - New Hire Requirement - Effective as of 1/1/2012 2012.01.15 1052
178 미국내 회사들의 평균 Holiday는 얼마나 주고 있는것일까? 2011.11.30 1052
177 $7 Billion Lost in payroll tax revenue - President Obama's 2010 Budget estimated for independent contractor misclassification 2012.03.10 1046
176 Litigation Cases - Misclassification (Overtime을 주지 않는 salary로 구분한 경우의 법적 소송건) 2011.11.28 1037
175 Age Discrimination 2012.08.04 1036
174 Multi-Million Dollar Overtime Laws Class Action Has July Court Date 2012.07.07 1029
173 Unpaid Lunch Break & Paid Smoke Breaks? 2011.11.30 997
172 Misclassification-15 Billion in 2001 - IRS now coming to collect - 안전하신가요? 2012.01.05 974
171 Employee vs Independent Contractor - EDD Guideline 2012.03.10 964
170 FedEx’s Legal Problems Over Misclassified Workers Continues - $27 million settlement 2012.03.10 958
169 Sexual Harassment- Complaint Procedures 2011.12.31 949
168 FLSA Status-직원 급여를 Hourly로 혹은 Salary로 주는것은 회사 재량일까? 2011.11.28 931
» Employment Law Basics 2016.01.14 927
166 Rate Your Vacation - 우리회사의 Vacation은 좋은 편인가? Benchmarking해보셔요! 2011.11.30 919
165 Newly Hired or Promoted Managers - sexual harassment 주시고 계신가요? 2013.11.25 912
164 Sexual Harassment- Key Elements of Investigation Procedures 2011.12.31 896
163 Misclassification의 경우 Penalty는 얼마나 될까? 2011.11.28 889
162 Examples of a hostile work environment 2011.12.28 887
161 Interview Question-Candidates may be asked - 인터뷰시 물어봐도 되는 질문들 2011.12.06 861
160 Employee Benefits in US provided by DOL Bureau of Labor Statistics 2011.11.30 858
159 Employee vs Independent Contractor - IRS Guideline 2012.03.10 845
158 4 Overtime Traps to Avoid 2012.07.07 832
157 Wrongful Termination Lawsuits on the Rise 2012.07.07 824
156 Interview Question-Candidates should not be asked - 인터뷰시 하면 안되는 질문들!! 2011.12.06 779
155 Travel Time Policy - good example 2 - may be good for your company too. 2012.01.22 777
154 Litigation Cases (Overtime을 주지 않는 salary로 잘못 구분한 경우의 법적 소송건- 2) 2011.11.28 771
153 Common Interviewing Mistakes -인터뷰할 때 가장 범하기 쉬운 실수 5가지!! 2011.12.06 764
152 California Overtime Violations FAQ - I work part time and am paid a monthly salary. Does that exclude me from overtime? 2012.07.07 762
151 Litigation Cases - Misclassification (스타벅스의 OT관련 법적소송건- 3) 2011.11.28 752
150 What is Protected Class? 2011.12.27 751
149 Litigation Cases - Misclassification (Overtime을 주지 않는 salary로 구분한 경우의 법적 소송건) 2011.11.28 749
148 EEOC’s Definition of Sexual Harassment 2011.12.27 734
147 이런 Benefit이 있다면? 2011.11.30 733
146 Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) 2012.01.08 732
145 Rate Your Vacation - 우리회사의 Vacation은 좋은 편인가? Benchmarking해보셔요! 2011.11.30 732
144 California Overtime Violations FAQ - what does exemption or being exempt mean? 2012.07.07 732
143 Sexual Harassment - What is the big deal? 2011.12.26 727
142 미국내 회사들의 평균 Holiday는 얼마나 주고 있는것일까? 2011.11.30 710
141 California Overtime Violations FAQ - Can I file an overtime complaint against my current employer? 2012.07.07 708
140 California Overtime Violations FAQ - signed up a statement as exempt and supervisor told no overtime. Is that right? 2012.07.07 706
139 California Overtime Violations FAQ - What can I do if my employer doens't pay me my overtime wages? 2012.07.07 705
138 Pay Notices Required to be Provided New Employees as of 1/1/2012 2011.12.18 704
137 Unpaid Lunch Break & Paid Smoke Breaks? 2011.11.30 702
136 이런 Benefit이 있다면? 2011.11.30 696
135 California Overtime Violations FAQ - Does travel time count as overtime? 2012.07.07 678
134 Types of Sexual Harassment - Quid Pro Quo/ Hostile Work environment 2011.12.27 677
133 Travel Time Policy - Good point about the PAY RATE during transiting time 2012.01.22 676
132 CA State - New Hire Requirement - Effective as of 1/1/2012 2012.01.15 674