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THE RETALIATION CLAIM. A Legal Minefield For Employers. Retaliation Claims. A favorite new employee claim EEOC filings up dramatically Included in 1/3 of all discrimination suits A “high risk” exposure for employers. Understanding the Retaliation Claim. “10 Questions”.
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THE RETALIATION CLAIM A Legal Minefield For Employers
Retaliation Claims • A favorite new employee claim • EEOC filings up dramatically • Included in 1/3 of all discrimination suits • A “high risk” exposure for employers
Understanding the Retaliation Claim “10 Questions”
1. “Retaliation” Law – What Is It About? Protection for an employee who complains about or opposes illegal employer activities
2. Retaliation Claims – What Legal Basis? • Federal law • Title VII, Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Other Civil Rights Laws – ADA, ADEA, FLSA, FMLA, OSHA • Federal Claims Act and Whistleblower Protection Act • First amendment, U.S. Constitution
2. Legal Basis (cont) • State law • Workers’ Compensation Laws • Whistleblower Statutes • Miscellaneous Laws • Statutory “right to complain” • Focus of discussion – Title VII
3. What Are Protected Activities? • “Participation” activities • Filing a claim with EEOC or in court • Assisting with EEOC or court proceeding(providing information or testimony) • Advising another employee re rights • Narrow (covers few activities) but deep (absolute) protection
4. Any Activities Protected Beyond Filing Claim/Suit? • “Opposition” activities • Protesting/complaining about discrimination • Refusing to carry out unlawful order • Opposition to activity of co-worker • Opposing discrimination outside workplace • Broad (covers many activities) but shallow (less absolute) protection
EMPLOYER ACTION Alleged act of discrimination EMPLOYEE RESPONSE Participation Opposition
5. What Employer Actions Amount to Retaliation? • “Ultimate actions” only • Position of several circuits • Involves hiring, promoting, firing, determining compensation • “Employer-friendly” position
5. Employer Actions - Retaliation? (cont) • “Material adverse change in employment terms” • Rule for most circuits • May involvedemotion, reprimand, negative job evaluation or reference, refusal to grant normal benefits or office privileges, disadvantageous transfer, harassment, countersuit • More “employee friendly” position
5. Employer Actions – Retaliation? (cont) • EEOC position: any action that may deter employee from exercising rights • Most “employee-friendly” position • Few courts have adopted • Some (few) types of unfavorable treatment fall short of retaliation
EMPLOYER ACTION Alleged act of discrimination EMPLOYER RESPONSE Adverse Action EMPLOYEE RESPONSE Participation Opposition RETALIATION
6. Discrimination Claim Fails – Status of Retaliation Claim? • Judicial view: retaliation claim may still succeed - “right to be wrong” • A not infrequent outcome • Evidentiary and “human nature” differences in two types of claims
7. What About the “Preemptive Strike” Employee Strategy? • Applies only to “opposition” claims • Strategy: Anticipating adverse action, employee presses discrimination claim; then cries “retaliation” when adverse action administered by employer • The legal reality: • Employee must have good faith belief that discrimination occurred; and • This belief must be objectively reasonable
8. Are There Limits on anEmployee’s Opposition Activities? • Illegal conduct not protected • Lawful but “objectionable” actions • Violation of policy • Disruptive activities • Communication with external parties • Usually protected • “Loyalty” argument by employer • Judicial rule of “reasonableness” applied
9. Who Can Claim Protection from Retaliation? • The victim • A protesting employee who is not a victim • A protesting employee who is not in a protected class • A protesting employee who is related to or associated with the victim • A former employee
10. How to Avoid Liability? • Have clear anti-retaliation policy • Inform and train work force about policy • Follow a “zero tolerance” approach for retaliatory actions • Understand breadth of “protected activities” and “adverse action” under the law
10. How to Avoid Liability? (cont) • Forward all discrimination complaints to HR for proper management and monitoring • Handle retaliation complaint as separate grievance • Endeavor to carry on “business as usual” in dealing with complaining employee
10. How to Avoid Liability? (cont) • Follow common sense guidelines • Check for unquestioned non-retaliatory reason • Be consistent with institutional and departmental policy • Be consistent with treatment of other employees • Be consistent with past treatment of employee • Scrutinize timing
10. How to Avoid Liability? (cont) • Document • Carefully evaluate continuation of internal grievance process after external claim filed • Always consult HR and legal personnel
“You cannot get ahead while you are getting even.” Dick Armey • “Mankind must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression, and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love.” Martin Luther King