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Hostile Work Environment

Workplace bullying is on the rise across America. It can take the form of malicious gossip or defamation, quid pro quo sexual harassment, or offensive remarks. Many kinds of unwelcome conduct can generate a hostile work environment, but generally it is found when someone in a workplace engages in discriminatory harassment against one or more employees. The harassing person can be a coworker, supervisor, client, or even an independent contractor.

There is no federal “hostile work environment” law. Rather, hostile work environments are prohibited under various federal anti-discrimination laws, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA), and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA).

Discriminatory harassment based on race, genetics, age, sex, religion, national origin, or disability can create a hostile work environment, as can retaliation for complaining about discrimination on the basis of these protected characteristics. Certain states have enacted stronger protection through their anti-discrimination laws than what is offered by the federal government. For example, they may cover employees at smaller companies.

Standards for Harassment

Off-hand comments or mild irritations are not considered harassment. A coworker who is has a habit of slamming doors, or a supervisor who doesn’t take your ideas seriously, does not necessarily create a hostile work environment. Instead, actionable harassment must be so severe or pervasive that it interferes with an employee’s ability to perform his or her work and changes the terms and conditions of employment.

A hostile work environment can be harassment based on a person’s actual identity or a person’s perceived membership in a protected group. For example, if several coworkers direct verbal insults on a daily basis towards a man who wears a turban because they believe he is Iraqi, this could create a hostile workplace environment even if the man is actually from India. Similarly, if a businessman threatens to demote his secretary for refusing to sleep with him, this would likely create a hostile work environment.

The person who brings the claim must also reasonably believe that tolerating the hostile work environment is a condition of continuing to be employed. If the secretary in the above situation knows that a report to human relations likely would end the harassment, she is less likely to be able to maintain a claim.

Although the complainant must be an employee of the company, even a witness to severe harassment can complain about a hostile work environment. For example, if a coworker witnesses the harassment of the man believed to be Iraqi and suffers emotional distress as a result, he or she may be able to bring a claim alleging hostile work environment.

It is important to follow your employer’s anti-harassment policies as outlined in an employee handbook or other documentation. Otherwise your employer may raise what is called the Faragher-Ellerth defense to a Title VII claim. This defense is available if an employer can prove that it exercised reasonable care to promptly correct the harassing behavior and that the employee unreasonably failed to take advantage of preventive opportunities provided by the employer.

If your employer fails to take appropriate action in response to your claims related to a hostile workplace environment, you may file a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or the state department in charge of the type of harassment affecting you.

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