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WORKPLACE RETALIATION: DON

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In California, TORTIOUS retaliatory discharge. Tort damages available ... Not every legal right gives rise to a claim for TORTIOUS retaliatory discharge. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WORKPLACE RETALIATION: DON


1
WORKPLACE RETALIATION DONT SHOOT THE
COMPLAINER
  • Colleen M. Regan, Esq.
  • McGuireWoods, LLP
  • Los Angeles, CA

2
Workplace Retaliation
  • What is it?
  • How does it occur?
  • The employees perspective
  • The employers perspective
  • Recent cases

3
To retaliate
  • Get even
  • Get back at
  • Take revenge for a perceived wrong
  • Avenge
  • To return like for like, especially evil for
    evil

4
Legal retaliation
  • Generally, employers can control workplace
    conduct
  • Adverse employment action (e.g., discipline) is
    the expected consequence for bad behavior

5
ILLEGAL Retaliation in Employment
  • An employee suffers
  • -- illegal retaliation
  • when he or she is
  • -- harmed
  • as a consequence of exercising a
  • -- legally protected right

6
ILLEGAL Retaliation in Employment
  • Violate a work rule, expect to be punished
  • Engage in protected conduct, you cannot legally
    be punished

7
ILLEGAL Retaliation in Employment
  • Unlawful retaliation occurs when an employer
    takes a punitive or
  • adverse action
  • against an employee
  • in response to
  • the employee engaging in
  • protected activity

8
General Areas of Protected Activity
  • Expressing concerns about issues in the workplace
  • Participation in or cooperation with
    investigations of workplace issues
  • Personal life and conduct

9
PROTECTED ACTIVITY (PA)
  • An employee engages in protected activity when
    he or she
  • Opposes illegal activity by employer or makes a
    good faith complaint against employer,
  • Participates in an investigation concerning
    alleged illegal activity, or
  • Asserts a protected right.

10
Opposes illegal activity
  • An employee is protected if he/she, for example
  • Objects to what the employee believes to be
    illegal conduct, for example
  • Discrimination or harassment
  • Improper pay practices
  • Violation of health and safety laws
  • Fraud or illegal cover up
  • Illegal pollution
  • Agitates for compliance with safety laws
  • Refuses to work in violation of wage and hour
    laws

11
Makes a complaint
  • An employee is protected if he/she, for example
  • Files a discrimination or harassment charge
  • (internally or publicly)
  • Seeks workers compensation benefits
  • Files a wage claim
  • Calls OSHA to report a safety violation
  • Becomes a whistleblower

12
Participates in an investigation
  • An employee is protected, for example, if he/she
  • Is interviewed in an investigation
  • Gives a statement
  • Testifies
  • Assists or sides with a complaining employee
  • Participates in any way in a court or
    administrative proceeding

13
Asserts a protected right
  • An employee is protected if he/she exercises any
    legal right or duty that the employer has no
    right to interfere with, for example
  • Takes a legally mandated leave of absence (e.g.,
    FMLA)
  • Requests a reasonable accommodation for a
    disability (ADA)
  • Takes time off to vote or serve as a juror
  • Participates in union organizing activity
  • Takes mandatory meal and rest breaks

14
ADVERSE ACTION (AA)
  • A negative change in a term or condition of
    employment, for example
  • Firing or demotion
  • Reduction in benefits
  • Change in shift or hours of work
  • Negative evaluation or review
  • Additional or fewer job responsibilities
  • Unfair reprimands
  • Withdrawal of support

15
ADVERSE ACTION (AA)
  • Does not necessarily have to be conduct affecting
    the employees work life can be conduct that
    would cause a reasonable employee to refrain from
    engaging in the PA
  • Has the likely effect of restraining the exercise
    of PA, and causes harm

16
AA in RESPONSE to PA
  • Employee has to prove causal connection
  • AA would not have happened but for PA
  • Proved directly
  • manager admits he or she was retaliating
  • Proved indirectly
  • Circumstances suggest retaliatory motive

17
How do you prove motive?
  • Managers will rarely admit they are retaliating
  • Look at circumstantial evidence
  • Closeness in time between PA and AA
  • Inconsistent management actions
  • Evidence that management is lying or covering up
  • Inconsistent reasons given by management

18
Retaliatory motive
  • Does retaliation have to be the only motivating
    factor?
  • NO
  • usually, just a motivating factor in deciding
    to take AA against the employee

19
Burden shifting analysis
  • If employee proves
  • AA
  • In response to
  • PA
  • Burden shifts to employer to show
  • Legitimate, nondiscriminatory business reason for
    the AA
  • Burden shifts back to employee to prove
  • Supposed business reason is just a pretext

20
Employers Defenses
  • No causation
  • The PA had nothing to do with the decision to
    impose AA (no causation)
  • It was going to happen anyway, whether or not the
    employee engaged in PA
  • Employee was already scheduled for demotion poor
    performance review already written etc.

21
Employees Perspective
  • Employees know they have rights and want to enjoy
    them
  • Employees want to be treated fairly
  • Employees want their co-employees to be treated
    fairly

22
Employees Perspective
  • May be bothered or concerned by a perceived wrong
  • Unfair discrimination or harassment
  • Safety violation
  • May want to take advantage of a legal right
  • Seek accommodation for a disability
  • Take FMLA leave

23
Employees Perspective
  • May fear retaliation if complains or assists
    complainer
  • If experiences AA, likely to feel injured,
    disappointed and angry
  • May file charge or lawsuit to protest or correct
    AA

24
Employers Perspective
  • Most employers want to treat employees fairly and
    legally
  • May be unaware of conduct employee is complaining
    about
  • May be unaware that retaliation is unlawful

25
Employers Perspective
  • Who likes complaints?
  • Once a discrimination or harassment claim is
    made, it must be investigated
  • Time-consuming
  • Distracting
  • Expensive

26
Employers Perspective
  • Employer (manager) may feel betrayed by
    complaining employee, particularly if the
    complaint turns out to be groundless, i.e., there
    was no discrimination or harassment, or safety
    violation, occurring
  • Thus, the urge to get even, and return like
    for like

27
What Should Employers Do?
  • Establish a policy against retaliation
  • Educate managers about law of retaliation
  • Give employees permission to express complaints
  • Be cautious about imposing AA soon after PA
  • Keep accurate and complete documentation

28
Examples of unlawful workplace retaliation
  • Dr. Smith sends a letter to the managers of the
    clinic where he works, complaining that there are
    not enough supplies and the treatment rooms are
    not kept clean. Management of the clinic fires
    Dr. Smith.

29
Examples of unlawful workplace retaliation
  • Dr. Smith sends a letter to the managers of the
    clinic where he works, complaining that there are
    not enough supplies and the treatment rooms are
    not kept clean. Management of the clinic
    transfers Dr. Smith to another clinic twenty
    miles further from his home.

30
Examples of unlawful workplace retaliation
  • Jane tells her supervisor that she believes a
    co-worker is being unfairly treated on account of
    his race. The complaint is investigated and no
    discrimination is found. Jane receives a written
    reprimand for having brought a false charge.
    This contributes to Jane not getting an expected
    promotion. Jane sues, claiming she suffered
    retaliation for having reported her suspicion of
    discrimination.

31
Examples of unlawful workplace retaliation
  • Store manager, Alice, is performing poorly at her
    job. Company officials meet and decide to
    terminate her. Several days later, the furnace
    at the store malfunctions, releasing noxious
    fumes. Alice becomes ill, leaves the store and
    files a claim with OSHA. Upon her return to
    work, she is fired.

32
Examples of unlawful workplace retaliation
  • Frank complains that his supervisor is sexually
    harassing him. In response, the company changes
    Franks schedule so that he works the night
    shift, rather than the day shift. Frank thus
    avoids the harassing supervisor, but Frank
    prefers to work the day shift so he can spend
    evenings with his family.

33
RECENT CASES
  • Burlington Northern Santa Fe RR v. White, June
    22, 2006 U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Title VII if AA would prevent a reasonable
    employee from pursuing the PA, it is sufficiently
    severe to state a claim
  • Changed the standard in several circuits

34
RECENT CASES
  • Yanowitz v. LOreal USA, Inc., 36 Cal. 4th 1028
    (2005).
  • FEHA (California) Even though employee did not
    complain about the conduct, the employer should
    have known that the employee was objecting to
    what she perceived to be illegal discrimination

35
RECENT CASES
  • Washington v. Illinois Dept. of Revenue, 420 F.3d
    658 (7th Cir. 2005)
  • Flextime critical to employee with a child with a
    disability
  • Wright v. CompUSA, Inc., 352 F.3d 472 (1st Cir.
    2003)
  • Employee with ADD requested accommodation and was
    fired had a viable claim that he was fired in
    retaliation for requesting accommodation.
  • Immigration cases
  • Even undocumented workers have a right to be free
    of retaliation for complaining of illegal wage
    payments

36
In California, TORTIOUS retaliatory discharge
  • Tort damages available
  • Termination in violation of
  • A statute or regulation
  • Public policy
  • For exercising legal rights, e.g.,
  • Discussing compensation
  • Complaining of smoking in the workplace
  • Engaging in political activities
  • Refusing to sign a non-compete agreement

37
In California, TORTIOUS retaliatory discharge
  • Not every legal right gives rise to a claim for
    TORTIOUS retaliatory discharge. The following do
    not.
  • Exercising First Amendment rights over employer
    objections (e.g., newspaper reporter)
  • Asserting Fifth Amendment during internal
    investigation
  • Preparing to work for a competitor
  • Right to be free from libel

38
How to eliminate workplace retaliation
  • Education of supervisors goes a long way to
    prevent unnecessary claims
  • Communication engenders trust
  • Thank you for joining us!
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