Make your tax-deductible gift by December 31—every gift matched, up to $150,000!
In this moment, the future of our rights, our bodily autonomy, our freedom feels uncertain. What we do next will make a difference for decades to come.
Make your tax-deductible gift by December 31—every gift matched, up to $150,000!
In this moment, the future of our rights, our bodily autonomy, our freedom feels uncertain. What we do next will make a difference for decades to come.
Double your impact in the fight to defend and restore abortion rights and access, preserve access to affordable child care, secure equality in the workplace and in schools, and so much more. Make your matched year-end gift right now.
Every person deserves to be treated fairly and enjoy dignity and respect at work. Yet despite longstanding federal prohibitions against harassment and other forms of discrimination based on sex, race, color, religion, national origin, age, and disability, harassment in the workplace remains a widespread, persistent problem that denies equal opportunity, upends workers’ safety, negatively impacts workers’ physical and mental health, and undermines their economic security. Workplace harassment occurs across industries and affects workers from every community and at every career level. Women—especially Black women and other women of color—and LGBTQI+ workers are disproportionally affected by sex-based harassment at work, and sexual harassment, which often intersects with other forms of harassment and discrimination, is particularly common for women in low-paid jobs, in male-dominated fields, and in industries where workers have limited, or no, bargaining power in the workplace.
Our laws must be updated and strengthened to address this scourge, ensure accountability, and provide critically needed tools to prevent harassment from occurring in the first place. The Bringing an End to Harassment by Accountability and Rejecting Discrimination (BE HEARD) in the Workplace Act offers a landmark set of reforms to fully address – and prevent – all forms of unlawful workplace harassment and discrimination, including sexual assault. The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would extend protections against harassment and other forms of discrimination to all workers; remove barriers to access to justice, such as short statutes of limitations and restrictively interpreted legal standards; promote transparency and accountability; and require efforts to prevent workplace harassment and discrimination.
Protections against harassment and other forms of discrimination do not reflect the needs of modern workers. Too many working people have no federal protections against workplace discrimination and harassment, or unclear coverage under federal protections. Individuals who are not considered “employees,” such as independent contractors (including many people working in agriculture, hospitality, and care work, who may be misclassified by employers), unpaid interns, and others who work in nontraditional employment relationships, are generally not protected by federal law’s prohibitions on workplace discrimination and harassment. In addition, individuals working in small establishments with fewer than 15 employees, such as most domestic workers, are excluded from core federal civil rights protections against harassment or discrimination at work.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would close these gaps in existing law, ensuring that all working people have the right to work with safety and dignity, by:
While federal law prohibits workplace harassment and other forms of discrimination based on protected characteristics, it also creates barriers to challenging harassment and obtaining redress for harm, including short time limits for filing a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC); overly restrictive judicially-created legal standards that have led to too many workers’ claims being dismissed in the courts; and limits on remedies for those harmed by unlawful harassment. These barriers have made it difficult for individuals to pursue claims of workplace harassment and discrimination, hold employers accountable, and obtain fair compensation for the harm they have suffered.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would remedy these barriers to justice, by:
Currently, those working in the private sector or for state or local governments who wish to challenge workplace harassment and other forms of discrimination have only 180 days from the date of the harassment or discrimination to file a charge with the EEOC (or 300 days for those living in a state where there is an analogous state law against workplace discrimination); this is the required first step in bringing a workplace harassment or discrimination case. Federal employees have only 45 days from the date of the discriminatory act to initiate a complaint. These extraordinarily short statutes of limitations hamper the ability of individuals to challenge harassment and other forms of discrimination. For those who have experienced sexual assault or other egregious forms of harassment, the trauma experienced can make it difficult to immediately prepare a legal challenge. Fear of retaliation also makes it difficult for many individuals to take immediate legal action to protect their rights. The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would extend the statute of limitations for filing a charge to four years and ensure that those working for the federal government have the same amount of time to file a complaint as others.
Federal courts have interpreted anti-discrimination law to prohibit workplace harassment when submitting to the conduct becomes a condition of employment or continued employment (for example, when a woman is told she must sleep with her boss to keep her job) or when the harassing conduct is so severe or pervasive as to create an intimidating, hostile, or abusive work environment (typically called “hostile work environment” harassment). Congress intended for anti-discrimination law to reach a broad range of conduct that harms a worker’s ability to do her job. However, a number of lower court decisions have interpreted the hostile work environment standard very narrowly, so that conduct most people would find egregious is not considered “severe or pervasive.” For example, courts have found that each of the following incidents did not constitute “severe” or “pervasive” harassment, leaving workers without any redress under the law: a male co-worker forcing his hand under a female co-worker’s sweater and fondling her breast; a worker repeatedly making sexual comments towards another worker and suggesting she be spanked; and a supervisor calling a subordinate the N-word on two separate occasions.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would restore our civil rights laws as tools to prohibit a broad spectrum of egregious harassment, as Congress had intended. It would do so by requiring courts to consider a number of factors when determining whether illegal harassment has occurred, including: the frequency and duration of the conduct; the location where the conduct occurred; the number of individuals engaged in the conduct; whether the conduct is humiliating, degrading, or threatening; any power differential between the alleged harasser and the person allegedly harassed; and whether the conduct involves stereotypes about the protected class involved.
The Act would ensure our laws are responsive to the lived experiences of workers by clarifying that harassment can take a number of different forms, including physical, verbal, pictorial, or visual conduct, and that it can occur in person or by other means, such as electronically.
Additionally, it would make clear that workplace harassment is impermissible regardless of whether the victim acquiesced or otherwise submitted to or participated in the conduct; the complaining party is the target of harassment or a witness to harassment; the conduct occurred outside the workplace; or the conduct was additionally experienced by individuals outside the protected class involved. Moreover, the BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would clarify that harassment can harm workers, regardless of whether the conduct caused tangible injury or psychological injury, and regardless of whether the worker was able to continue to do their job.
Civil rights laws were intended to ensure that protected characteristics like sex, race, color, national origin, religion, age, and disability are not a basis for employer decision-making. They also prohibit employers from engaging in retaliation—adverse action against a worker for complaining about or opposing prohibited harassment or discrimination. In recent years, the Supreme Court has made it more difficult for workers to bring age discrimination claims and claims for retaliation related to sex, race, color, national origin, religion or disability, requiring workers to show not only that the employer was motivated by discrimination or retaliation, but that discrimination or retaliation was the decisive factor in how their employer treated them on the job.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would provide that those experiencing harassment or other forms of discrimination must only prove that discrimination or retaliation was a motivating factor, rather than the decisive factor, for the employer’s conduct, to obtain remedies provided by federal employment discrimination laws. For example, a worker would not have to prove that their complaint about harassment was the decisive factor behind their employer’s decision to fire them. Instead, the law would recognize that an employer is liable for discrimination and retaliation if an employment decision was made based on a protected characteristic, even if the employer was also motivated by additional, non-discriminatory reasons.
Employers have a heightened legal responsibility for harassment by supervisors because such harassment exploits the authority over subordinates that the employer has allowed the supervisor to exercise. As a result of this heightened obligation, workers have had relatively strong protections from supervisor harassment and employers have had strong incentives to prevent supervisor harassment and remedy it when it occurs.
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Vance v. Ball State University undermined protections for victims of supervisor harassment by reclassifying certain lower-level supervisors who direct an employee’s daily activities as co-workers if those lower-level supervisors do not have the power to take tangible employment actions like hiring and firing workers. Employers are only liable for harassment by co-workers when the employer’s negligence has allowed the harassment to occur. But there is a significant practical difference between these lower-level supervisors and an employee’s co-workers: supervisors with the authority to direct daily work activities wield a significant amount of power that they can use to wreak havoc in the lives of their subordinates, particularly in low-wage sectors. In such industries, lower-level supervisors can harass or retaliate against a worker by reducing hours, denying breaks, or assigning a worker to an undesirable shift, for example, which heightens their ability to use supervisory authority to harass their subordinates. The Vance decision creates an incentive for employers to concentrate the power to hire and fire in the hands of a few, while still delegating significant day-to-day authority to lower-level supervisors, in order to avoid being held directly liable for supervisors’ harassing conduct.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would ensure that employers can be held vicariously liable for harassment by supervisors with the authority to undertake or recommend tangible employment actions or with the authority to direct a subordinate’s daily work activities, regardless of whether they have the authority to hire and fire.
When workers win a discrimination lawsuit, they may be able to obtain several forms of relief, including monetary damages. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, or religion, and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability, provide for the recovery of compensatory and punitive damages. Compensatory damages compensate victims for out-of-pocket expenses caused by the harassment, like the costs of finding a new job and medical expenses, and for any emotional harm, while punitive damages may be awarded to punish an employer who acted maliciously or recklessly when engaging in harassment.
However, the amounts a worker can receive are limited under current federal law based on the size of the employer. For a worker succeeding in a harassment case against an employer with 15-100 employees, for example, the worker can recover no more than $50,000, no matter how severe the harassment or how culpable the employer.
Even for employers with more than 500 employees, damages are capped at $300,000. These caps have not been adjusted since they were enacted in 1991, more than a quarter century ago. In other words, even if a worker endured rape on the job and suffered from significant physical and emotional trauma and expense, if her employer had only 75 employees, she would not be permitted to recover more than $50,000 if she won her Title VII sexual harassment claim. This would be the case regardless of what out-of-pocket costs she had incurred or how profoundly she had been harmed psychologically, physically, and emotionally.
Under other federal laws that protect workers from discrimination, including the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, which prohibits age discrimination in employment, and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which protects federal employees from disability discrimination, it is unclear whether compensatory and punitive damages are available at all.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would eliminate limits on the compensatory and punitive damages workers can recover under federal employment discrimination laws; clarify that both private sector and federal workers can recover damages for age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967; and make clear that federal workers can recover monetary damages for discrimination on the basis of disability under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
Harassment and other forms of discrimination thrive in the shadows, and those with the least power at work are the most vulnerable. For too long, working people have been afraid to report violations because they fear jeopardizing their safety, jobs, financial security, and career prospects. Moreover, in many instances, employers prohibit workers from discussing or reporting harassment or other forms of discrimination by requiring workers to sign confidentiality provisions in employment contracts or settlement agreements, or by forcing workers to resolve claims through private arbitration, which often includes confidentiality requirements, instead of in court. In recent years, Congress has taken steps to address these practices in cases of sexual harassment by passing the Speak Out Act, which blocks enforcement of pre-dispute nondisclosure and non-disparagement agreements in sexual harassment and sexual assault cases, and the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act, which prohibits forced arbitration of sexual harassment disputes. Although these are important steps, neither law explicitly addresses other forms of harassment or discrimination. Broader protections are needed to ensure that workers who experience any form of harassment or discrimination are not silenced, and that employers and individual offenders cannot evade accountability.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would promote transparency and accountability in the workplace by:
Many individuals, particularly those working in low-wage jobs, lack access to legal services to help them challenge workplace harassment and other forms of discrimination. The opportunity to consult with an attorney to learn about legal rights and options and to enforce those rights is an essential component of access to justice for those facing harassment and other forms of discrimination on the job.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would address this need by:
Our institutions must be equipped to properly address and remedy workplace harassment once it has occurred, but the ultimate goal of any reform should be to ensure that harassment and discrimination do not occur in the first place. Unfortunately, many prevention efforts to date have focused on compliance, rather than culture change: some employers simply do the bare minimum to try to avoid legal liability, without seeking to make changes to truly ensure safe and equitable workplaces for all. Employers must shift away from this compliance-focused approach towards an evidence-based prevention model that reforms workplace culture.
Additionally, we must address workplace structures that devalue workers. This includes ensuring that all workers are entitled to one fair minimum wage, including tipped workers. The federal tipped minimum cash wage of $2.13 an hour, which has been frozen since 1991, allows harassment and discrimination to thrive in the service and hospitality industries. Workers in the restaurant industry in particular report that reliance on tips to reach any minimally adequate wage often results in being forced to tolerate sexual and other forms of harassment and inappropriate behavior from customers, which in turn can create a workplace culture that encourages harassment by coworkers and supervisors as well.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act would reshape workplace culture and prevent harassment and discrimination, including by:
* * *
As a country, we have long owed working people cultural and institutional change to ensure that everyone can thrive in safe and respectful workplaces. For many years, workers, survivors, and advocates have been calling for such change, but our laws continue to fall short. It is time for Congress to deliver powerful and lasting reform to meet the courage of the individuals who have spoken out and demanded the right to be free from violence, harassment, and other forms of discrimination in the workplace.
The BE HEARD in the Workplace Act is a bold solution and a direct response to many of the concerns highlighted by workers – including the need to extend existing federal civil rights protections to all workers; reform short statutes of limitations, limits on recovery, and narrowly interpreted legal standards that have prevented workers from achieving justice; end the culture of secrecy around harassment and discrimination that has protected serial harassers; and invest in legal services and robust prevention efforts.
Each of these reforms is essential to creating the better world we seek, where every individual may work with equality, safety, and dignity.