HR Management & Compliance

Sexual Harassment: Recent EEOC Victories Underscore Need for Training and Vigilance

In recent weeks, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has announced a string of victories on behalf of employees in sexual harassment lawsuits. In one case, Specialty Restaurants Corp., based in Anaheim, agreed to pay $625,000 to settle a class action lawsuit charging that female workers were subjected to inappropriate touching, indecent and offensive comments, and other sexually harassing behavior by co-workers and supervisors. Specialty, which owns and operates restaurant and banquet facilities nationwide, will also adopt remedial measures in the workplace to ensure that employees are not sexually harassed going forward.

In another development, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers California, affirmed a jury verdict of over $1 million for farm worker Olivia Tamayo in a sexual harassment suit filed on her behalf by the EEOC against Coalinga-based Harris Farms, which is one of the largest integrated farming operations in the Central San Joaquin Valley. Tamayo, who had picked crops for Harris Farms for two decades, testified that her supervisor raped her on several occasions, threatened her life if she didn’t cooperate, and subjected her to repeated verbal sexual harassment and intimidation. And, Tamayo alleged, she was fired after she complained to Harris Farms. The verdict included a hefty $500,000 for punitive damages (although the court reduced that to $300,000 because of federal law damages limits).

Finally, the EEOC has secured a $375,000 settlement from American Industrial Sales Corp., a Rochester, NY-based distributor of highway and industrial safety products, in a lawsuit that alleged sexual harassment on behalf of 18 female employees, including four teenagers. The harassment included inappropriate touching, sexual advances, and vulgar sexual comments. In connection with the resolution, the EEOC stated its hopes that “this settlement encourages employers to take steps to prevent sexual harassment and take effective measures to remedy harassment when it occurs.” The agency also cautioned “companies to be mindful that teenage employees are especially vulnerable to workplace harassment because of their inexperience.”


Join us this fall in San Francisco for the California Employment Law Update conference, a 3-day event that will teach you everything you need to know about new laws and regulations, and your compliance obligations, for the year ahead—it’s one-stop shopping at its best.


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