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Sexual Harassment;. Danger Zone. Michael Burke EE Blaise Corbett EE Greg Decker EE Adrienne Goodman CE Bryan Smith EE University at Buffalo School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Senior Seminar. Sexual Harassment is not what you may think. What Sexual Harassment IS:
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Sexual Harassment; Danger Zone Michael Burke EE Blaise Corbett EE Greg Decker EE Adrienne Goodman CE Bryan Smith EE University at Buffalo School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Senior Seminar
Sexual Harassment is not what you may think... What Sexual Harassment IS: • Unwelcome Sexual Advances • Requests for Sexual Favors • Verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature • Touching • Leering • Sexually charged words • Lewd Gestures • Invasion of “Personal Space” These MAY constitute illegal harassment if: • Submission or rejection of advances influences employment • The conditions in the workplace create a “Hostile Work Environment”
Sexual Harassment is not what you may think... • WhatSexualHarassmentisNOT: • Compliments • General Profanity • Isolated instances of merely crude behavior Bottom Line: Fear of a sexual harassment lawsuit is no reason to avoid all human contact. BUT BE CAREFUL! What may not be harassment to one person may be harassment to another.
What Is Sexual Harassment? The Law: Sexual Harassment is a form of sex discrimination that violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VII “prohibits discrimination on the basis of race and sex with respect to the compensation, terms, conditions or privileges of employment.” What Does That Mean? Simply put, employment, or employee benefits are not to be linked in any way to a person’s gender, race or creed.
What is Sexual Harassment? • Quid Pro Quo • Employment is contingent upon submission to sexual advances, or • Retaliation against sexual harassment complaints • Hostile Work Environment • Harassment does not affect employment per se • Conditions of the working environment are altered such that they have a detrimental effect on the victim
Hostile Work Environment These pictures could be construed as sexual harassment, constituting a hostile work environment.
What is the Employer’s Responsibility? • Communicate the Law to ALL employees. • Sponsor Sexual Harassment Training Program • Create Policy that goes Beyond the Law • Create a hierarchy that employees can use to report incidents • Make it clear that Sexual Harassment will NOT be tolerated Sexual Harassment Training Seminar
What is the Supervisor’s Responsibility? • Be familiar with the law, and company policy • Make sure that you adhere to both • Be Watchful • Pay attention to how employees interact • Be aware of events or behaviors that my constitute harassment • Talk to your employees about sexual harassment • Be Proactive • Take action, according to policy, when a subordinate reports sexual harassment • Make sure the legal department is aware of all claims • Train your employees • Conduct training programs • Discuss sexual harassment in staff meetings
What is the Employee’s Responsibility? • Understand • Know company policy and the law • Adhere to policy and the law • Be careful • Be Watchful • Pay attention to coworkers- avoid inadvertent offense • Look for subtle forms of harassment • Report any instances • Be active • Confront Harassers directly • If confrontation fails, file a grievance • Document ALL instances- detail Detail DETAIL!
What can You do?Practical Advice for Engineers • Be courteous • Pleasantries are always allowed • Remember, jokes that end with “If they weren’t watermelons, what were they?” aren’t funny to everyone. • Reference the Golden Rule • Think! • Don’t tweak “brittle” people for sport • Try to avoid loaded words; you’re intelligent enough to express displeasure without the “F” word • Ask yourself (or others): Am I offending anyone? • Be Professional • Keep your personal life personal, and your professional life professional • Treat other employees, above and below you, with respect
The Koppaphil EquationA way for Engineers to know Where d = proximity Sx = innuendo Ah = Obnoxious Quotient I = intent V = perception And: Where u = stink factor of cologne Sp = Amount of cologne (ml) Pu = B.O. R = Reason for contact t = time of contact(s) l = distance to victim(m) And w = # of loaded words used in conversation Tn = Tone of speech
Infintiy 1 0.9 0.8 0.05 0.1 0.5 0.5 1 1 0.01 0.5 0.5 Proximity d The R factor. The numbers in the figure indicate what number to use for R Note that when R is infinity, proximity d goes to zero. R is related to l exponentially R = constant * exp(l)
Proximity d Some typical values of u. Values subject to individual preference. Exception: No Cologne is zero no matter what one’s preference is.
But, Seriously, What Have We Learned? • Sexual Harassment comes in two forms • Quid Pro Quo • Hostile Work Environment • Everyone is responsible for preventing it • Prevention can boil down to seven letters: RESPECT
For More Information: Check out these websites: • Zero Tolerance Inc. • http://www.zt-inc.com • Employer Publications • http://www.employerpublications.com • Fair Measures • http://www.fairmeasures.com/print/report/index2.html • New Jersey Chamber of Commerce* • http://njchamber.gti.net/Harassment/super/1001s.htm