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1 SEXUAL HARASSMENT TRAINING By : Erika Grubbs Winston & Cashatt, Lawyers 601 W. Riverside, Ste 1900 250 Northwest Blvd, Ste 206 Spokane, WA 99201 Coeur.

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Presentation on theme: "1 SEXUAL HARASSMENT TRAINING By : Erika Grubbs Winston & Cashatt, Lawyers 601 W. Riverside, Ste 1900 250 Northwest Blvd, Ste 206 Spokane, WA 99201 Coeur."— Presentation transcript:

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2 1 SEXUAL HARASSMENT TRAINING By : Erika Grubbs Winston & Cashatt, Lawyers 601 W. Riverside, Ste 1900 250 Northwest Blvd, Ste 206 Spokane, WA 99201 Coeur d’Alene, Idaho 83814 (509) 838-6131ebg@winstoncashatt.com (208) 667-2103

3 2 INTRODUCTION: *SEXUAL HARASSMENT *LEGAL ISSUE *RISK MANAGEMENT ISSUE *MANAGEMENT ISSUE

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5 4 SEXUAL HARASSMENT DEFINED: *”Know it when you see it” *Acts and Words *Case by case analysis

6 5 WHAT IS SEXUAL HARASSMENT? (Title VII of the Civil Rights Act) Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature constitute “sexual harassment” when: 1.Submission to such conduct is made explicitly or implicitly a condition of an individual’s employment: 2.Submission to or rejection of such conduct is used as a basis for an employment decision affecting the employee; or 3.The harassment has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with the employee’s work performance or creating an environment which is intimidating, hostile or offensive to the employee.

7 6 SEXUAL HARASSMENT (STATE) DEFINITION: “SEXUAL HARASSMENT” refers to behavior of a sexual nature which is unwelcome and personally offensive to its recipients. Sexual harassment is a form of employee/employer misconduct which is demeaning to another person and undermines the integrity of the employment relationship.

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9 8 WHAT IS SEXUAL HARASSMENT? (cont.) Irrelevant whether or not conduct is motivated by sexual desire. Issue: Are members of different sexes treated differently? (Can be males too!)

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11 10 GENERAL RULE CONSIDER WHETHER YOU WOULD WANT YOUR WIFE OR DAUGHTER SUBJECTED TO THE COMPLAINED OF TREATMENT

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13 12 IS IT SEXUAL HARASSMENT?  Unwanted and unwelcome.  Interferes with your performance at work or school; creates intimidating or hostile environment.  Could be dangerous.  Causes uncomfortable feelings.  Designed to make victim feel powerless. Negatively influences work performance.  Sexual in nature.

14 13 “UNWELCOME” TITLE VII does not prohibit all conduct of a sexual nature…it only forbids unwelcome conduct which becomes a term or condition of employment. 1.Acquiescence in sexual conduct may not mean that the conduct is welcome. 2.The charging party need not have confronted her offending supervisor where she feared retaliation, so long as her actions and comments demonstrated that the conduct was unwelcome. 3.Standard – Plaintiff can not prevail if s/he unreasonably refused to take advantage of corrective measures.

15 14 QUID PRO QUO: Occurs when submission to unwelcome sexual conduct is made a term or condition of an individual’s employment.

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17 16 HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT:  The day-to-day working environment is polluted with verbal or physical abuses.  Unwelcome sexual conduct unreasonably interferes with job performance or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive work environment.  FACTORS CONSIDERED: Frequency of the conduct. Offensive utterances. The more severe the conduct, the less pervasive it must be. Environment

18 17 HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT—Factors Considered: (Cont’d) Did the conduct occur in view of others? Consequences of conduct upon plaintiff Plaintiff’s unreasonable delay in reporting harassment

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20 19 CASE LAW:  Employers must take timely and effective action to prevent sexual harassment.  Employers and managers may be held personally liable for damages due to harassment.  A “reasonable woman” standard MAY be used by the court to identify sexual harassment.  Ellison v Brady (1991) Unless the conduct is quite severe, isolated incidents of sexual conduct or statements do not create a hostile environment. BUT, they do create an obligation on the part of a concerned employer to prevent a recurrent of the offensive act or statement.

21 20 CASE LAW (continued): Fuller v. Oakland (1995) Once the employer knows or reasonably should know of sexually harassing conduct, the employer has an affirmative duty to take steps to prevent a recurrence of that conduct. If the steps fail and the conduct reoccurs, the employer may be held liable. You must investigate even if complainant asks you not to! Investigations must be...

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23 22 APPROPRIATE REMEDIAL CORRECTIVE ACTION? Severity of conduct Pervasiveness of conduct Likelihood for conduct to be repeated Courts will 2 nd guess you … especially if the conduct did continue.

24 23 WHAT SHOULD WE NOT DO: Ignore a complaint or problem Deviate from or ignore your policy Discuss with the violator over coffee Put the victim and perp. in a room to “sort it out” Punish/Retaliate against the victim Accept recantations blindly Half hearted investigations “Oh, that’s just Joe” Pass investigation “up the chain” without legal

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26 ELEMENTS OF RETALIATION Plaintiff filed a charge of harassment or engaged in other protected activity Plaintiff’s employer subsequently took adverse employment action against the plaintiff The adverse action was causally linked to the plaintiff’s protected activity

27 Once this prima facie showing is made by the plaintiff, the burden shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its actions If the employer meets that burden, the presumption of retaliation disappears

28 27 RETALIATION EXAMPLES Unwanted/undeserved lower performance reviews Transfers, duty changes, taking away or denying privileges Discipline/discharge Ridicule/blaming for work problems Continuing/escalating the prohibited conduct

29 28 Threats Ostracism/exclusion in a way that creates an intimidating, stressful environment

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31 30 DAMAGES – WHAT IF WE MESS IT UP??? $3 Million – Female deputy harassed by co-workers. Co-workers were fired, but remaining deputies gave her the cold shoulder. $1.5 Million – Female security officer harassed by co-workers. $50 K – Female jail employee harassed by inmates & fired because she complained. Sergeant & Captain of police department allowed sexually offensive working conditions. $165 K against Captain $230 K against City

32 31 CASE LAW EXAMPLES :  Language  Hugs  Workplace Romance  Graffiti, Emails, Notes, Cartoons  Same Sex Discrimination  Gender Stereotyping  Name Calling, Rumors Against One Person  Demeaning Comments  Blocking Movement  Touching  Leering, Sexual Gestures  Criminal Touching  Flirting  Quid Pro Quo  Centerfolds  Comments Made to 3 rd Persons

33 32 BE PROACTIVE  Policy Manual  Prohibits Sexual Harassment  Employee Discipline for Violation of Policy

34 33 REMEDIES:  Self Help—Ask to Stop  Supervisor  Formal Complaint per County Policy  Employee Discipline  EEOC/IHRC  Lawsuit—Damages, Costs, Attorney Fees  Personal Liability  What do most victims want?

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36 35 The 10:00 PM News Approach


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