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Sexual Harassment FAQ
The following information was supplied to the Sexual
Harassment Prevention Training Institute by the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission.
Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act (Title VII) prohibits harassment of
an employee based on race, color, sex, religion, or national
origin. The Age
Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)
prohibits harassment of employees who are 40 or older on the
basis of age, and the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA)
prohibits harassment based on disability. All of the
anti-discrimination statutes enforced by the EEOC
prohibit retaliation
for complaining of discrimination or participating in
complaint proceedings.
The Supreme Court issued two major decisions in June of
1998 that explained when employers will be held legally
responsible for unlawful harassment by supervisors. The EEOC's
Guidance
on Employer Liability for Harassment by Supervisors
examines those decisions and provides practical guidance
regarding the duty of employers to prevent and correct
harassment and the duty of employees to avoid harassment by
using their employers' complaint procedures.
- Harassment violates federal law if it involves
discriminatory treatment based on race, color, sex (with
or without sexual conduct), religion, national origin,
age, disability, or because the employee opposed job
discrimination or participated in an investigation or
complaint proceeding under the EEO
statutes. Federal law does not prohibit simple teasing,
offhand comments, or isolated incidents that are not
extremely serious. The conduct must be sufficiently
frequent or severe to create a hostile work environment
or result in a "tangible employment action,"
such as hiring, firing, promotion, or demotion.
- No, it applies to all types of unlawful
harassment.
3. When is an employer legally responsible for
harassment by a supervisor?
- An employer is always responsible for harassment by a
supervisor that culminated in a tangible employment
action. If the harassment did not lead to a tangible
employment action, the employer is liable unless it
proves that: 1) it exercised reasonable care to prevent
and promptly correct any harassment; and 2) the
employee unreasonably failed to complain to management
or to avoid harm otherwise.
4. Who qualifies as a "supervisor"
for purposes of employer liability?
- An individual qualifies as an employee's
"supervisor" if the individual has the
authority to recommend tangible employment decisions
affecting the employee or if the individual has
the authority to direct the employee's daily work
activities.
- A "tangible employment action" means a
significant change in employment status. Examples
include hiring, firing, promotion, demotion, undesirable
reassignment, a decision causing a significant change in
benefits, compensation decisions, and work assignment.
6. How might harassment culminate in a tangible
employment action?
- This might occur if a supervisor fires or demotes a
subordinate because she rejects his sexual demands, or
promotes her because she submits to his sexual demands.
- Employers should establish, distribute to all
employees, and enforce a policy prohibiting harassment
and setting out a procedure for making complaints. In
most cases, the policy and procedure should be in
writing.
- Small businesses may be able to discharge their
responsibility to prevent and correct harassment through
less formal means. For example, if a business is
sufficiently small that the owner maintains regular
contact with all employees, the owner can tell the
employees at staff meetings that harassment is
prohibited, that employees should report such conduct
promptly, and that a complaint can be brought
"straight to the top." If the business
conducts a prompt, thorough, and impartial investigation
of any complaint that arises and undertakes swift and
appropriate corrective action, it will have fulfilled
its responsibility to "effectively prevent and
correct harassment."
8. What should an anti-harassment policy
say?
- An employer's anti-harassment policy should make clear
that the employer will not tolerate harassment based on
race, sex, religion, national origin, age, or
disability, or harassment based on opposition to
discrimination on participation in complaint
proceedings. The policy should also state that the
employer will not tolerate retaliation against anyone
who complains of harassment or who participates in an
investigation.
- The employer should encourage employees to report
harassment to management before it becomes severe or
pervasive.
- The employer should designate more than one individual
to take complaints, and should ensure that these
individuals are in accessible locations. The employer
also should instruct all of its supervisors to report
complaints of harassment to appropriate officials.
- The employer should assure employees that it will
protect the confidentiality of harassment complaints to
the extent possible.
10. Is a complaint procedure adequate if employees are
instructed to report harassment to their immediate
supervisors?
- No, because the supervisor may be the one committing
harassment or may not be impartial. It is advisable for
an employer to designate at least one official outside
an employee's chain of command to take complaints, to
assure that the complaint will be handled impartially.
11. How should an employer investigate
a harassment complaint?
- An employer should conduct a prompt, thorough, and
impartial investigation. The alleged harasser should not
have any direct or indirect control over the
investigation.
- The investigator should interview the employee who
complained of harassment, the alleged harasser, and
others who could reasonably be expected to have relevant
information. The Guidance provides examples of specific
questions that may be appropriate to ask.
- Before completing the investigation, the employer
should take steps to make sure that harassment does not
continue. If the parties have to be separated, then the
separation should not burden the employee who has
complained of harassment. An involuntary transfer of the
complainant could constitute unlawful retaliation. Other
examples of interim measures are making scheduling
changes to avoid contact between the parties or placing
the alleged harasser on non-disciplinary leave with pay
pending the conclusion of the investigation.
- If an employer determines that harassment occurred, it
should take immediate measures to stop the harassment
and ensure that it does not recur. Disciplinary measures
should be proportional to the seriousness of the
offense. The employer also should correct the effects of
the harassment by, for example, restoring leave taken
because of the harassment and expunging negative
evaluations in the employee's personnel file that arose
from the harassment.
13. Are there other
measures that employers should take to prevent and
correct harassment?
- An employer should correct harassment that is clearly
unwelcome regardless of whether a complaint is filed.
For example, if there is graffiti in the workplace
containing racial or sexual epithets, management should
not wait for a complaint before erasing it.
- An employer should ensure that its supervisors and
managers understand their responsibilities under the
organization's anti-harassment policy and complaint
procedures.
- An employer should screen applicants for supervisory
jobs to see if they have a history of engaging in
harassment. If so, and the employer hires such a
candidate, it must take steps to monitor actions taken
by that individual in order to prevent harassment.
- An employer should keep records of harassment
complaints and check those records when a complaint of
harassment is made to reveal any patterns of harassment
by the same individuals.
14. Does an employee who is harassed by his or her
supervisor have any responsibilities?
- Yes. The employee must take reasonable steps to avoid
harm from the harassment. Usually, the employee will
exercise this responsibility by using the employer's
complaint procedure.
15. Is an employer legally responsible for its
supervisor's harassment if the employee
failed to use the employer's complaint procedure
- No, unless the harassment resulted in a tangible
employment action or unless it was reasonable for the
employee not to complain to management. An employee's
failure to complain would be reasonable, for example, if
he or she had a legitimate fear of retaliation. The
employer must prove that the employee acted
unreasonably.
16. If an employee complains to management about
harassment, should he or she wait for management to complete
the investigation before filing
a charge with EEOC?
- It may make sense to wait to see if management
corrects the harassment before filing a charge. However,
if management does not act promptly to investigate the
complaint and undertake corrective action, then it may
be appropriate to file a charge. The deadline for filing
an EEOC
charge is either 180 or 300 days after the last date of
alleged harassment, depending on the state in which the
allegation arises. This deadline is not
extended because of an employer's internal investigation
of the complaint.
Further guidance on harassment can be found in the 1999
Guidance on Employer Liability for Unlawful Harassment by
Supervisors; the 1980 Guidelines on Sexual Harassment;
the 1990
Policy Statement on Current Issues in Sexual Harassment;
the 1990
Policy Statement on Sexual Favoritism; and the 1994
Enforcement Guidance on Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc..
These can all be found on EEOC's
web site (www.eeoc.gov). They are also available by calling
the EEOC's
Publications Distribution Center (800-669-3362 or TTY
800-800-3302), or by writing to EEOC's
Office of Communications and Legislative Affairs, 1801 L
St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20507.
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Sexual Harassment Information::
Sexual Harassment
Training Seminars::
Participants will learn to identify, take action and
prevent potential
sexual harassment issues before they occur.
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