SEX HARASSMENT CLASSES MAY BE WORKING
September 22, 2006
Editor's note: The following two stories are reprinted
from the San Francisco Chronicle's Labor Day 2006
edition.
Fifteen years ago this October, Anita Hill’s testimony
at the 1991 confirmation hearings of Supreme Court
Justice Clarence Thomas made sexual harassment a
household term. Hill’s testimony that Thomas had made
inappropriate sexual advances in the workplace triggered
a nationwide trend toward sexual harassment prevention
training.
That year, Congress also amended the Civil Rights Act to
provide for damages in employment discrimination cases.
This gave employers additional incentive to provide
training, as did two 1998 Supreme Court rulings that
showed companies could reduce their risk of liability by
providing a clear system for employee complaints.
Today, millions of Americans have completed courses in
the do’s and don’ts of workplace behavior. And in
California, the training -- which now also addresses
discrimination based on age, disability, race, religion
and national origin -- has been required for all
supervisors since 2005.
Though it may be too soon to gauge the absolute success
of the training, experts say it is one reason that
sexual harassment claims have declined in every type of
workplace, according to the U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, which has collected that data
since 1991. The most claims, 15,889, were filed in
fiscal year 1997. By 2005, claims had dropped to 12,679.
In addition to the training, another reason for the
decline is the heightened awareness of the cost of
sexual harassment cases.
“The increase in sexual harassment training since 1991
has benefited both employees and employers,” said Wendy
Bliss of the Society for Human Resource Management, a
national professional association. “Employees have
gained awareness of how sexual communications and
behaviors on the job, even if intended as harmless fun,
can be offensive to co-workers.”
Even in California’s agricultural sector, where women
have traditionally been more vulnerable to sexual
harassment and retaliation because so many don’t speak
English and are undocumented, claims have dropped 51
percent since 1997, according to the state’s Department
of Fair Employment and Housing.
But some experts are only cautiously optimistic about
the recent data showing a drop in claims. “The
statistics might be a hopeful indication that things
have improved,” said Professor Susan Bisom-Rapp,
director of the Center for Law and Social Justice at
Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego.
“Nonetheless, we need to look further before deciding
that substantive change on the ground accounts for the
statistical declines that we see.”
Still, many experts are convinced that training has been
the driver, helping both employers and employees
understand what kinds of behavior are illegal, and why.
For example, “it has been helpful to explain to men why
certain practices are hostile, unfair or interfere with
a woman’s ability to do her job,” said Cliff Palefsky, a
San Francisco employment attorney active in such cases.
“In the Bay Area, companies are now taking their
obligation to investigate and discipline perpetrators
much more seriously than in the past,” Palefsky said.
One motivation is that employers know the cost of
ineffective training can be exorbitant. In 1994, the
average harassment jury award was $141,000. Today, it’s
$1 million, according to a recent report by the
Insurance Coverage Litigation Reporter and Business
Wire.
The high price of litigation was illustrated in May,
when a Fresno County jury awarded $1.7 million to Janet
Orlando, a salesperson who was spanked in front of
co-workers as part of so-called team building exercises
at Alarm One, an alarm systems company.
The verdict may be appealed, but the size of the award
shows that judges and juries are willing to punish
companies that don’t take the training -- or an
employee’s complaint -- seriously. Alarm One supervisors
had undergone sexual harassment training; when Orlando
protested, her complaints were ignored. Now, two of her
supervisors must pay $50,000. The company will pay the
remainder.
“In California, a supervisor may be held personally
liable for his or her own acts of harassment that harm a
person,” said Janie Hickock Siess, assistant deputy
director of training for the California Department of
Fair Employment and Housing.
“When I tell people this during training, I frequently
see jaws drop!” Siess said. “But if you go to work and
engage in this unlawful conduct, you’re putting your own
assets at risk.”
Training also has helped victims of sexual harassment
understand that they are not at fault and that they have
the legal right to be protected against harassment.
At Stanford University, Laraine Zappert founded the
Sexual Harassment Policy Office in 1993. “The training
gives employees the sense that there is an office where
help is available, where they can consult ‘off the
record,’ and that is incredibly important,” Zappert
said.
Training also has a pre-emptive effect, since it helps
companies to solve problems before they escalate.
In the past, employees often filed claims directly with
a federal or state agency such as the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission or the California
Department of Fair Employment and Housing. Today, when a
worker calls a government agency, the caller is commonly
asked if he or she has first gone through their
company’s complaint system.
“We have seen an increase in internal complaints, which
is a good thing,” said Donna Rutter, a management-side
defense lawyer with the San Francisco firm of Curiale,
Dellaverson, Hirschfeld & Kraemer.
“If you’re an employer, you really want employees to
come to you,” Rutter said. “You don’t want them to go to
the government agencies or a plaintiff’s attorney.”
The national spokesman for one government agency agreed.
“The purpose of training is for employers to resolve
problems through their own complaint procedures and
policies, which helps to preserve a positive working
relationship,” said David Grinberg of the federal Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission.
Though sexual harassment claims have declined, jury
awards have increased for those that do make it to
court. This may be because government agencies and
plaintiff’s attorneys naturally take cases that look
winnable -- that is, cases where the employer had no
clear complaint system or where training was
substandard. It is just one more reason employers want
to nip problems in the bud.
“In 90 percent of these cases, when the violators are
clearly told the behavior is not tolerated, it will
stop. But when that message is not communicated, that’s
when the thing escalates,” said Garry Mathiason, a
partner in Littler Mendelson, an employment-law firm
with headquarters in San Francisco.
“People rail against the legal system, but with sexual
harassment, it has been an extraordinary deterrent,”
Palefsky said. “When employers saw the $3 million final
verdict in the Baker & McKenzie case, it changed how
business was done.”
That 1994 case took place in the Palo Alto office of one
of the world’s largest law firms, Baker & McKenzie. A
jury awarded a record $7 million verdict (later reduced
to $3 million) to a woman who claimed to have been
repeatedly sexually harassed and humiliated by her boss.
The jury found that multiple complaints had been filed
against the harasser in his previous post, and that
those who complained suffered retaliation.
The case threw a floodlight on the importance of
training all employees, including top management and
high-performance rainmakers.
After the verdict, the New York Times published an
impassioned editorial: “If that judgment conveys its
intended meaning, law firms and other enterprises across
the country will bolt from their complacency and rectify
the mistreatment of women in the workplace.”
Today, Baker & McKenzie has 3,300 employees in 70 cities
in 38 countries, all of whom receive training. “Whether
training protects you in a lawsuit or not is
irrelevant,” said Edward Zulkey, the firm’s general
counsel. “It’s a vehicle by which you make people aware
of the right thing to do.”
Still, some people feel constrained by the more cautious
atmosphere in the workplace. They complain about walking
on eggshells and fearing a lawsuit if they so much as
compliment a co-worker.
“You can’t say anything at work anymore,” is a common
refrain, to which Fresno civil rights attorney William
Smith has a succinct response.
“Hogwash,” said Smith, who has represented plaintiffs in
sexual harassment cases for nearly 30 years. “Just ask
your daughter -- or your spouse -- if they think they
should have to tolerate uninvited touching or suggestive
comments at work.”
In the end, training is just good business.
“An environment where harassment is not acceptable helps
to build trust,” said Mathiason of Littler Mendelson.
“And the increase in trust means you can keep and
attract better employees. You have more productivity,
higher profits. The gain is far greater than the cost.”
California Law
The California Fair Employment and Housing Act defines
sexual harassment as harassment based on sex or of a
sexual nature, gender harassment and harassment based on
pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.
The definition of sexual harassment includes many forms
of offensive behavior, including harassment of a person
of the same gender as the harasser. The following is a
partial list of types of sexual harassment:
·
Unwanted sexual advances
·
Offering employment benefits in exchange for sexual
favors
·
Actual or threatened retaliation
·
Leering; making sexual gestures; or displaying sexually
suggestive objects, pictures, cartoons or posters
·
Making or using derogatory comments, epithets, slurs or
jokes
·
Sexual comments including graphic comments about an
individual’s body; sexually degrading words used to
describe an individual; or suggestive or obscene
letters, notes or invitations
·
Physical touching or assault, as well as impeding or
blocking movements
Source: California Department of Fair Employment &
Housing
Federal Law
Sexual harassment is a form of sex discrimination that
violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors,
and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature
constitutes sexual harassment when submission to or
rejection of this conduct explicitly or implicitly
affects an individual’s employment, unreasonably
interferes with an individual’s work performance or
creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive work
environment. Sexual harassment can occur in a variety of
circumstances, including but not limited to the
following:
·
The victim as well as the harasser may be a woman or a
man. The victim does not have to be of the opposite sex.
·
The harasser can be the victim’s supervisor, an agent of
the employer, a supervisor in an another area, a
co-worker or a nonemployee.
·
The victim does not have to be the person harassed but
could be anyone affected by the offensive conduct.
·
Unlawful sexual harassment may occur without economic
injury to or discharge of the victim.
·
The harasser’s conduct must be unwelcome.
Source: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
CALIFORNIA WORKPLACES
UNDER STRICT REGULATIONS
“You don’t have to chase someone around a desk to be
guilty of harassment,” said Sarah Reyes, a former state
assemblywoman from Fresno. To clarify what constitutes
sexual harassment, Reyes wrote AB1825, which requires
all California companies with 50 employees or more to
provide sexual harassment prevention training. That bill
became law in 2005.
To comply with the law, corporations have relied on
human relations departments or in-house counsel. Large
and small companies also often hire outside trainers for
live, on-site training sessions. But many companies,
seeking a less expensive or more flexible means of
training, have purchased computer-based programs or have
required their employees to participate in online
seminars.
The potential weaknesses of these programs will be
addressed by new regulations, which were proposed in
June by the California Fair Employment and Housing
Commission. They are expected to be added to the law
this fall.
The regulations are intended to standardize the quality
of the training and to ensure that computer programs are
interactive, requiring an employee to remain engaged for
a full two hours and to respond at least every 15
minutes.
Along with these interactivity requirements, the
proposed modifications to the law address out-of-state
employers -- whose supervisors must be trained in state
law if they oversee even one California employee -- and
present heightened requirements for trainers and
training programs.
The proposed guidelines were posted for public comment
for three weeks in July on the commission’s Web site (www.fehc.ca.gov).
The final version must include responses to every public
comment.
“It results in a lot of paper, but the process produces
good regulations,” said Ann Noel of the Fair Employment
and Housing Commission, who spearheaded the new
regulations.
“Ultimately, we will end up with regulations that can be
used as a model for other states.”
Resources
Federal
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
San Francisco District
(415) 356-5100
(800) 669-4000
Web site:
www.eeoc.gov
U.S. Department of Labor
Civil Rights Center
(202) 693-6502
Web site:
www.dol.gov
State
California Department of Fair Employment and Housing
(916) 445-5523
(800) 884-1684
Web site:
www.dfeh.ca.gov
California Fair Employment and Housing Commission
(415) 557-2325
Web site:
www.fehc.ca.gov/pub/act.asp
For information on AB1825 regulations:
www.fehc.ca.gov/pub/harassment_training.asp