Corporate Harassment
People who are subjected to sexual
harassment on the job are too often left to confront their abusers on their
own.
Those with means can hire high-powered legal help, as Gretchen Carlson did in her lawsuit against 21st Century Fox that resulted in a $20 million settlement. Other survivors of abuse may not get justice.
Those with means can hire high-powered legal help, as Gretchen Carlson did in her lawsuit against 21st Century Fox that resulted in a $20 million settlement. Other survivors of abuse may not get justice.
A new initiative by Fight for $15 is
making the fight against workplace harassment a collective rather than an
individual struggle. In a bold new initiative for the labor movement, the
campaign recently organized work stoppages at McDonald’s fast-food outlets in
ten cities to protest harassment and to highlight complaints filed earlier this
year with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
This will not be the first time the
EEOC has heard reports about such practices at McDonald’s. In 2010, for
example, the company had to pay $50,000 to settle allegations of
harassment by an assistant store manager in New Jersey who was reported to have
touched and spanked a teenage worker.
For years, the company failed to
take adequate action to deal with repeated instances in which female workers
were falsely accused of stealing customer property and strip-searched by
managers in response to phone calls from individuals pretending to be law
enforcement officers.
In 2007 McDonald’s had to pay $6.1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a young worker in Kentucky who was also molested.
In 2007 McDonald’s had to pay $6.1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a young worker in Kentucky who was also molested.
The decision of a state appeals court upholding the damage award noted that similar incidents had occurred more than 30 times at McDonald’s outlets.
The ruling went on to say: “McDonald’s corporate legal department was fully aware of these hoaxes and had documented them. The evidence supports the reasonable conclusion that McDonald’s corporate management made a conscious decision not to train or warn store managers or employees about the calls.”
Corporate decisions not to take
steps to protect workers were also behind many of the more than 275 cases
documented in Violation Tracker in which
corporations paid to settle sexual harassment allegations brought with the
involvement of the EEOC. These cases together have yielded $132 million in
penalties.
The tally goes back to 2000, but
cases continue to the present. Among the most recent ones are the $3.75 million
harassment settlement signed by Koch Foods
involving poultry workers in Mississippi who also alleged racial and national
origin discrimination as well as the $3.5 million settlement by outsourcing company
Alorica in connection with allegations that a group of customer service
representatives in California were subjected to a sexually hostile work
environment.
To supplement the EEOC actions I’m
in the process of collecting data for Violation Tracker on class action and
individual lawsuits brought by workers separate from the agency. These will
cover harassment claims as well as cases involving discrimination by employers
based on gender, race, national origin, religion, sexual orientation,
disability and age discrimination. I’ve already tallied more than $1 billion in
settlements and verdicts involving the largest corporations.
It’s great that the MeToo and the
Fight for $15 movements are highlighting the continuing problems of harassment
on the job. I look forward to the day when there will not be so many such cases
to document.
Note: The latest update to Violation
Tracker has just been posted.