Employee Survival Guide® - The Law of Retaliation At Work: Blind Justice in the Workplace
Episode Date: June 16, 2022In this episode of the Employee Survival Guide®, Mark discusses the law of retaliation discrimination in a thoughtful and nonlegalist way. Mark will guide you through which actions are illegal and ...which are not. He will help you gain a better understanding of retaliation discrimination and how to prove it through self advocacy at work and by using an employment attorney.This episode was written by Chris Avcollie, edited by Matt Zako, and produced by Mark Carey.Listen to the Employee Survival Guide podcast latest episode here https://capclaw.com/employee-survival-guide-podcast/If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts.For more information, please contact Carey & Associates, P.C. at 475-242-8317, www.capclaw.com.The content of this website is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice nor create an attorney-client relationship. Carey & Associates, P.C. makes no warranty, express or implied, regarding the accuracy of the information contained on this website or to any website to which it is linked to.If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts. Leaving a review will inform other listeners you found the content on this podcast is important in the area of employment law in the United States. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Mark here and welcome to the next edition of the Employee Survival Guide, where
I tell you what your employer does not want you to know about and a lot more.
Today we're going to be talking about the law of retaliation at work, blind justice
in the workplace.
In the ancient world, the law of, quote, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, end quote, is the law of retaliation.
And it's embodied in the principle of reciprocal justice for injuries or damages.
While we associate this principle with a brutal or severe concept of justice, the law of retaliation was actually a progressive advance in that it introduced the concept that the punishment should fit the crime
or the harm done. This was preferable to the even more ancient principle of, quote, make one mistake,
lose your entire head, end quote, which ruled the even more ancient world. To our modern sensibilities,
both concepts seem draconian. In the American workplace, these most ancient concepts of retribution
are both alive and well. The practice of vicious and unbalanced workplace retaliation
by employers or co-workers for the actual or perceived conduct of employees is a daily reality.
According to the EEOC, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, retaliation is the
most frequently alleged basis of discrimination in the federal sector
and the most common discrimination finding in the federal sector cases, end quote.
Some data suggests approximately 45% of all complaints filed with the EOC are retaliation claims.
Some employees report incidents of retaliation, but most are too frightened to do so.
So how do we deal with the everyday injustice that is so pervasive and insidious?
Legal versus illegal retaliation.
As practicing employment attorneys, we hear firsthand about incidents of workplace retaliation so often they seem ubiquitous.
often they seem ubiquitous. Sometimes it seems as if there is an unspoken law requiring employers to seek harsh retribution for a host of common workplace behaviors and situations.
When someone is reporting an incident of retaliation, the first thing I need to determine
is whether the retaliation is legal or illegal. Yes, there is, in fact, a category of retaliatory
conduct that is perfectly legal. It should not be legal in any situation, in fact, a category of retaliatory conduct that is perfectly legal.
It should not be legal in any situation, in my opinion.
It should not be legal in any situation.
But the law, as usual, is several centuries behind the social relevance curve. Some retaliation, however, is clearly illegal now and therefore actionable.
Broadly, retaliation is defined as, quote,
the action of harming someone because they have harmed oneself.
Revenge, end quote.
Thus, in the workplace, any harmful action taken against an employee
because the employee committed an actual or perceived harm is retaliation.
For example, if an employee complains to a supervisor about sexual harassment
by a co-worker and the employer responds by transferring the complaining employee to a shift
which is less desirable and does not provide the same opportunities for overtime, that is
retaliation. Likewise, if an employee complains about the supervisor's tendency to talk too much
about safety issues at a staff meeting, and the supervisor
overhears and punishes the complaining employee by making the same undesirable shift transfer,
that also is retaliation. In the examples above, only one of the two scenarios constitutes illegal
retaliation, i.e. retaliation that is prohibited by law and thus legally actionable. The employee
who was punished for reporting sexual harassment has a valid claim for retaliation, while the employee who found safety training to
be unbearably boring does not. Thus, retaliation is illegal in the workplace when an employer takes
an adverse action against an employee for engaging in or exercising rights that are protected under
the law. Since Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and other laws
protect an employee's right to report sexual harassment,
the adverse action is illegal in that case.
Because there is no law that protects an employee's right to complain about boring training classes,
the second example is not illegal retaliation.
Thus, the motivation for retaliation is key.
It is very important in assessing a retaliation. Thus, the motivation for retaliation is key. It is very important in
assessing a retaliation complaint to understand what the action was that triggered the retaliation.
It's what happened before the retaliation that matters most. While the reason or inciting action
for the retaliation is important, it actually makes no difference whether the reason for the
initial complaint by the employee was legit or not.
In other words, if the employee is punished for reporting what she thinks is illegal race discrimination,
the retaliation is illegal even if no actual illegal race discrimination was ever committed by the employer.
Thus, if the employee reports a discriminatory incident and the employer disciplines or fires the employee in response. The employee nevertheless
has a retaliation case. It does not matter that no discrimination occurred. Where the law protects
an employee's right to complain, help others to complain, or to report some act of misconduct,
either within or outside the organization, that action is regarded as, quote, protected activity, end quote.
For example, the EEO laws prohibit punishing Java applicants or employees for asserting their rights to be free from employment discrimination, including harassment. It is therefore a legal
retaliation to punish an employee for engaging in such protected activities. For example,
it is unlawful to retaliate against applicants or employees for
the following different scenarios. Number one, filing or being a witness to an EEO charge,
complaint, investigation, or a lawsuit. Two, reporting ethical violations. Three, communicating
with a supervisor or manager about employment discrimination, including harassment. Number four,
answering questions during an employer investigation of alleged harassment. Number four, answering questions during an employer
investigation of alleged harassment. Five, refusing to follow orders that would result
in discrimination. Six, refusing to commit illegal acts despite your employer's direction or request
to do so. Seven, requesting or taking a leave of absence under the Feminine Medical Leave Act.
Eight, whistleblowing or officially reporting against your employer in an effort to stop
illegal or unsafe practices. 9. Filing for Worker's Compensation Benefits.
10. Resisting sexual advances or intervening to protect others from those advances.
11. Requesting accommodation of a disability or for religious practice.
12. Asking managers or coworkers about salary information to uncover potentially discriminatory wages.
It is important to understand that an employee does not have to formally object to the misconduct
or discrimination to engage in valid protected activity.
It can be enough to raise the issue of discrimination or harassment
in any way that calls the employer's attention.
As long as the employer is on notice of the unlawful conduct,
the reporting employees protect her from retaliation.
The nature of the problem.
While the psychology of a retaliation scenario seems clear and simple,
i.e., quote, you did something I didn't like, so I'm going to do something you didn't like, the institutional dynamics involved are more complex.
The aspect that makes retaliation illegal is not the revenge part of it all.
The law is not concerned with whether there was some act of vengeance, the laws against certain forms of workplace retaliation are intended to combat the aspect of fear created by the retaliatory action.
The idea is if the workers are too afraid to report misconduct, the law in question cannot
be enforced. In a recent blog article, we address some sources of fear in the workplace.
Fear of retaliation by one's employer was one of the
primary sources of workplace fear. Fear is also the real point of retaliation, not revenge.
Many employees refuse to protect their rights at work for fear of retaliation.
This is really what the retaliatory employer wants. Retaliation is intended to create fears
of getting fired, demoted to a lower-paying position, or moved to an intolerable work environment.
These and other fears typically underlie an employee's reluctance to stand up for their rights.
The truth is that where the rights you are asserting are protected by law, retaliation is illegal.
Retaliation is defined by many courts by its fear-causing tendencies. Any negative action
taken by an employer which is severe enough that it might deter a reasonable employee from
exercising their legal rights is likely sufficient to support a legal claim of retaliation.
While a protected activity must precede the retaliatory act to make it legally actionable,
the primary concern is whether the adverse action
against the employee would tend to discourage others from making similar complaints. While the
motive for the retaliatory act matters, it is not the subjective motive of the employer, but the
effect the retaliatory actions would have on a reasonable employee, similarly situated to the complaining employee that matters the most.
Various forms of retaliation.
While most retaliation cases follow a familiar pattern,
the forms that retaliation can take are numerous.
While some methods of retaliation, like termination, are obvious,
many are more subtle, and some are even difficult to classify as retaliation at all.
Some common examples of workplace retaliation are, number one, demotion, losing a position,
title, status, job duties, or seniority privileges.
Two, termination, being separated involuntarily from the job.
Three, abuse, employer engages in verbal or physical abuse or verbal insults.
Four, increased scrutiny. Unusual and unwarranted examination of the employee's job duties, etc.
Five, punitive assignments. Being sent to perform undesirable tasks or assigning too much work for one employee. Six, changing conditions,
moving the employee's work situation or changing the employee's schedule to create a hardship.
Seven, performance targeting, unwarranted performance criticism including unjustified
performance improvement plans not imposed on other non-complaining employees. Eight,
salary reductions.
Receiving a cut in pay or reducing the regularly scheduled hours.
Exclusion is number nine.
Intentionally left out of meetings, training sessions, or social activities.
Ten, false discipline.
Being identified as committing misconduct or violating policies
which are not enforced against others.
Suspensions without good reason.
11. Threats.
Threaten to make or actually make reports to authorities,
such as reporting an employee to an immigration agency or police.
12. Defamation.
Publishing false negative information about the employee.
13. Third-party acts.
Take some action against friends or family members of the employee who may work at the employee. And 13, third-party acts. Take some action against friends or family members
of the employee who may work at the company. As you can see, there are many ways that an employer
can retaliate against an employee. Essentially, an employer action that has negative consequences
for the employee can potentially be actionable retaliation. If the negative action is severe
enough that it
might deter a reasonable employee from exercising their legal rights, it's probably illegal
retaliation. Now, how do we prove workplace retaliation? While identifying a retaliatory
scenario seems simple enough, proving a claim of illegal retaliation can be anything but.
In almost every case, the retaliating employer will make some attempt to justify its actions by stating a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for the
adverse action it took against the employee. Often, the most challenging part of the case
is proving that the actions taken by the employer were in fact illegitimate and based on retaliation.
To prove a case of illegal retaliation, four basic elements must generally be proven.
First, the employee has to prove that they took part in an illegally protected activity.
As explained above, all retaliation is not illegal.
Only retaliation that follows a legally protected activity is illegal.
An employee must demonstrate they made internal, within the company or organization,
or sometimes external, outside the company or organization, complaints in order to claim
actual retaliation. Next, the employee has to prove that the employer took adverse action
against them. Here, the employee must document or be able to prove that the employer did something
to them to affect the terms and conditions of their job. Where
termination is the retaliatory action, that proof is fairly easy to come by. However, when the
employer retaliates in a more subtle way, such as by berating or humiliating the employee in front
of co-workers, the employee must document the incident and enlist the aid of witnesses to prove
the retaliation. Third, the employee must prove
that the employer's retaliation was in response to the protected activity. This element often
involves proving that the employer's proffered legitimate reason for the retaliatory action
was in fact false or protectual. This can be tricky, where the employer has done a good job
of documenting performance and disciplinary issues against the employee in the past. However, where the employer has a weak documentation basis to support the legitimacy of
its actions, a court can and often will infer that the actions were in fact retaliatory. Finally,
the employee must show that they suffered some loss or damage as a result of the retaliation,
such as lost wages or benefits.
As with most workplace conflicts, the ability to make a credible claim often comes down to a battle of the documents. Documentation is a key to success in proving any misconduct at work,
most especially workplace retaliation. The ability to prove that a retaliatory action took place
often depends on the quality of the employee's documentation as compared to the employer's documentation. It is important to have documentation
to show a link between the complaint or other behavior that caused the retaliation and the
employer's retaliatory actions. It is, of course, advisable to document the specifics of a
retaliatory behavior. If the retaliation is a transfer to an undesirable shift, document all the facts related to the transfer.
Have others been transferred to the same shift in recent months?
Who was transferred?
And was that also a punishment?
Did the employer have to move someone out of that shift to make room for the reporting employee?
Had that change been requested by the other worker?
What is specifically undesirable about that shift? It is also important to document certain past
information. If the employer is claiming that the poor performance is the reason for the adverse
employment action, a record of prior good performance, such as emails or letters praising
the employee's work or positive performance evaluations and
bonuses awarded to you. Provide excellent evidence to show that the alleged performance issue is
simply a pretext for illegal retaliation. If a good performer suddenly becomes quote-unquote poor
after a complaint of harassment, the evidence will often be very clear. The timing of the relevant events
is also a big factor. As in the example, if the retaliatory actions begin immediately after the
employer learns of the protected activity, the link between the two will be evident.
Another set of facts that require careful documentation are the facts surrounding the
employer's explanation for the retaliatory acts. Ask probing questions about why the actions
are being taken and document the employer's actions carefully. Often the employer will
give a weak or nonsensical reason when an action is truly retaliatory. If the employer tries to
change the explanation for the retaliation later, perhaps after lawyers have become involved,
that documentation of the weak reason they gave at first will be
very important evidence of pretext. Try to get the reasons for any actions you suspect
might be retaliatory in writing, if only by email or memo. And you yourself can send the email to
your boss to document it for yourself. You don't have to wait for the boss to document it to you.
When the employer will not put things in writing,
take detailed notes, date them, and email them to yourself. Be sure to document the basis for
the initial complaint or report of protected activity. Even if there was no actual discrimination
or misconduct, document the good faith basis for the complaint. Always record the names and contact
information for any potential witnesses,
including co-workers, vendors, or customers, where appropriate. Further, documentation for the actual
complaint you made and the names of the persons to whom you complained will be important as well.
Finally, document the losses or damages you suffered as a result of the employer's retaliatory
conduct. Collecting pay stubs, income statements, benefit documents
will help prove the damages incurred from loss of wages
or overtime as a result of the retaliation.
Evidence of medical treatment for any conditions
that may have been caused by the retaliation
will also be important.
Now, context matters most.
In the landmark harassment case of OnCal
versus Sundowner Offshore Services in 1998,
the United States Supreme Court pointed out that not every workplace problem is a matter of
harassment or retaliation. Whether or not a workplace event is actual depends upon
the constellation of surrounding circumstances, expectations, and relationships. In retaliation
cases, our courts look at the
context and the particular circumstances relevant to each situation to determine whether the alleged
retaliatory action had or was likely to have a chilling effect on employee reports of illegal
conduct. And finally, in closing, I, after many, many years of doing this, I have seen retaliation
cases. And the good ones always get settled. They
pop out and they smell of like a rotting fish. It's just a – you just can see the cause effect
in the absence of any internal legal counsel trying to manage them. And look for the close of
– the proximity of time between the complaint being made internally to a manager, to HR,
whatever, and how quickly the adverse
action that happens afterwards. The longer that nexus of time stretching into one, two, three,
four, five months, the more likely it is the employer can squeeze into it or kind of develop
a fact-based, although false, narrative that you had performance problems
after the complaint.
Those cases really don't ever survive summary judgment in front of a court and are likely
to settle.
So take these thoughts into consideration when you're experiencing retaliation and follow
them to the letter, if you may, and you might discover that you have an actual claim that you can bring to an attorney, an employment attorney.
Hope you find these comments and information helpful.
Hope you enjoyed this week's episode of the Employee Survival Guide.
Please rate us if you can and review us to help others find us.
And have a great week.
Be good.