Entries by EEO News

MORGAN STANLEY TO PAY $54 MILLION – EEONews

As part of the settlement, Morgan Stanley agreed to work on the following: management and employee training programs, anti-discrimination policies, complaint tracking, promotion and compensation analysis, exit interviews of female employees leaving the Company voluntarily and retention and promotion programs.

DESTRUCTION OF ELECTRONIC DATA – EEONews

Amy Wiginton filed a class action sexual harassment complaint. Her attorney asked her previous employer to preserve emails which allegedly evidenced sexual harassment. The Company preserved only the emails pertaining to Ms. Wiginton. Other emails were destroyed. The Magistrate Judge found the destruction of electronic evidence to be in bad faith and possibly sanctionable.

SEXUAL HARASSMENT CLAIM DISMISSED – EEONews

A server at a hotel restaurant filed a complaint for sexual harassment, among other things, after she was fired. Her complaint was dismissed because the hotel had an effective sexual-harassment reporting policy and the plaintiff unreasonably failed to take advantage of the hotelís corrective policy.

“BAREFOOT AND PREGNANT” – EEONews

The Seventh Circuit writes: “the parties appear to have simply collected the sum total of all the unpleasant events in Volovsek’s work history since 1992, dumped them in the legal mixing bowl of this lawsuit, set the Title VII-blender to puree and poured the resulting blob on the court.” One “barefoot and pregnant” comment stood […]

ABORTION RIGHTS ACTIVIST FIRED BY CATHOLIC SCHOOL – EEONews

The teacher was told that she must recant her position on abortion or be fired. After she was fired, she brought a sex discrimination and Pregnancy Discrimination Act claim. The Court dismissed the case because it did not want to become entangled in church doctrine in violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution.

SEX BET NOT UNLAWFUL – EEONews

At a trade show, a customer service coordinator learned that her co-worker bet a customer that the customer could not have intimate sexual contact with her. The court found that this one incident was not sufficiently egregious to constitute a hostile work environment. The court considered the fact that her co-worker lacked significant supervisory authority […]