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Employment Law

Employee represents herself? Prepare for long legal slog

02/03/2020
Sometimes, litigious employees decide to act as their own attorneys. Don’t assume this will make it easy for you to win in court. If anything, when a past or current employee decides to represent herself, the case may end up taking longer and costing more.

Encourage staff who witness harassment to report it

02/03/2020
Since the #MeToo movement became influential in 2017, the EEOC has focused on encouraging so-called bystander reporting of workplace sexual harassment. But a recent case highlights what happens when a bystander takes reporting harassment seriously and finds himself fired.

Broad arbitration agreement can cover even unusual claims

02/03/2020
Challenging the legality of a specific arbitration agreement is one way employees might try to get out of it. When that fails, their attorneys may try to come up with a novel claim that doesn’t seem to fit neatly into the agreement. Fortunately, they rarely succeed.

Short-lived, minor illness doesn’t qualify as disability under FEHA

02/03/2020
The California Fair Employment and Housing Act outlaws disability discrimination. It includes definitions of disability, including physical disabilities that affect the digestive system if the condition limits a major life activity. But that doesn’t mean that every minor or transient digestive upset qualifies for protection, as the following case shows.

Judges know work can be unpleasant—and they’re willing to cut you some slack

02/03/2020
Not every complaint of unfair or unpleasant treatment at work justifies a lawsuit. Rest assured that judges are often willing to defer to employer decisions unless there’s solid proof of biased behavior.

‘Bye, Felicia’ comment not discriminatory

02/03/2020
Unless disrespect crosses the line into racial, sexual, religious or other harassment based on a protected characteristic, misbehavior won’t support a lawsuit.

Employees have more time to file FEHA bias charges

02/03/2020
Employees who want to file discrimination, harassment or retaliation charges against their employers under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act now have more time to do so.

#MeToo 2.0: High-profile cases continue

01/30/2020
Employee activism in the light of perceived mishandling of internal harassment complaints has prompted another round of high-profile firings. Here are some recent examples.

2019 EEOC charges continue steep decline since 2016

01/30/2020
EEOC charges fell to 72,675 in Fiscal Year 2019, according to just-released statistics. That marks the third straight year of declining EEOC charges, with a 20% reduction since FY2016.

Steer clear of assumptions about disability

01/30/2020
The EEOC is aggressively going after employers that single out disabled workers based on unfounded assumptions about the kind of work they can and cannot do.