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Are you being harassed at work?
If your boss is a creep, he or she is worse than a poor excuse for a human being. He or she may be breaking the law – and exposing your employer to serious financial liability. (We’re talking about settlements worth millions of dollars 1, depending on the extent of the creepiness, and what steps, if any, your employer has taken to prevent such behavior.)
Sadly, there are plenty of creeps out there – but luckily, there are also many brave women and men who have taken action to stop them. Which means there’s a body of law which defines “workplace harassment” – and spells out your options and remedies if it’s happening to you.
As described at StrategicHR.com , a website for human resource managers, harassment may be:
Verbal: Sexual innuendoes or other suggestive comments; racial or ethnic slurs; jokes or teasing about sex, age, religion, disability or gender-specific traits; repeated requests for dates, sexual advances or propositions; comments about a person’s body or dress, excessive flattery or questioning of a personal nature; abusive language or insults; or threats.
Visual: Leering or staring in a sexual manner; whistling or hooting; suggestive or insulting looks; vulgar sounds or gestures; offensive or hateful pictures, posters, calendars, cartoons or obscene email; excessive attention in the form of love letters or gifts; offensive or derogatory written material.
Physical: Inappropriate touching of the body (e.g., brushing, patting, hugging, pinching or shoulder rubs); kissing or inappropriate display of body parts; coerced acts of a sexual nature; physically blocking another individual’s movement; assault; exclusionary or demeaning actions or activities based on age, ethnicity, sex or race.
In most cases, to meet the legal definition of harassment, the behavior must be persistent: a one-time stupid comment or action probably isn’t illegal. To prove that the behavior is objectionable, you should object – the first time it happens, and any time afterwards.
What to do if you are being harassed:
Article: “Top 25 Workplace Harassment, Bias Settlements,” at InsuranceJournal.com
Government agency: U.S. Equal Opportunity Employment Commission
Harassment is when your boss (or a co-worker) says or does something to you because of your:
1In one recent, especially egregious case, nurse Ani Chopourian was awarded $163 million after being repeatedly harassed, then fired from Mercy General Hospital in California. The hospital is appealing the decision.
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