Showing posts with label Employment discrimination in Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Employment discrimination in Los Angeles. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

California Becomes 7th State to Forbid Employment Discrimination Against Victims of Domestic Violence

Employees in California who had been victims of domestic violence can now rejoice after Governor Jerry Brown  signed last October 11 Senate Bill 400, a bill that would provide them protections against employment discrimination.


Stop domestic violence!
Image: chetna-dfw.org

Effective at the start of 2014, the newly-signed bill makes it unlawful for covered California employers to discriminate or retaliate against, or wrongfully terminate employees who have been victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking. The legislation also requires employers to provide victims reasonable safety accommodations, including changing a work phone number and implementing a safety plan within the workplace, among others.

SB 400 was sponsored by Senators Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara), Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), and Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles). With the signing of the bill, California became just the seventh state to forbid workplace bias against victims of domestic abuse or sexual assault in any aspect of employment, following Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, New York, Oregon, and Rhode Island.

It can be remembered that the introduction of SB 400 in the legislature was primarily brought into the spotlight after an incident involving a California teacher named Carie Chatsworth. She was a second-grade teacher of 14 years at an elementary school in El Cajon when she was fired last April after her estranged husband who verbally and emotionally abused her for several years went to the school’s parking lot, causing the campus to go on a preventive lockdown.

The man was later arrested; however, Chatsworth later received a notice telling her that the events that transpired involving her former husband resulted in her contract to teach for the school to not be renewed.

Long before the bill was passed and was still being heard in the California Senate, Chatsworth testified before a Senate committee, explaining the need of victims “to be able to speak up about what is happening so they can get the help they need to leave their abusive situation.” Fortunately, the bill was passed, thanks to the all-out support from its sponsors, as well as civil rights groups.

Meanwhile, Los Angeles employment lawyers see this recent legislation as a great way to extend employment protections to employees working in California. With the passage of the bill, legal professionals believe that victims of domestic violence are no longer at risk of losing their jobs.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Filing Your Employment Discrimination Raps


Protect Your Rights
Have you been discriminated against lately but didn’t know what to do to go and file your claim? To help you fight for your rights, we have come up with a list of things you should remember when filing your discrimination complaint to the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).

·         Check if the incident you are about to file a complaint for will still be accepted by the EEOC. There is only a limited period of time where the EEOC will process you complaint. For employees of private firms, you have 180 days to come up with a complaint and file it to the agency. For federal employees on the other hand, you only have 45 days since the last day of the discrimination or harassment took place. However, there are a few exceptions where the EEOC offers a 300-day complaint filing timeframe.

·         Get as much pieces of evidence that you can have to prove the harassment or discrimination. Any document such as notarized written witness accounts, any correspondence with your employer, written records of alleged discrimination, and employment or personnel files that can support your case would do.

·         File the complaint the way you want it. You can call any local EEOC field office to ask if you can file the complaint and ask if they do take walk-ins. You can also mail your complaint to the EEOC office near you. Finally, you can also call them up on their toll-free hotline, 1-800-669-4000 to begin the process of filing over the phone. Wait for the EEOC’s return call within 10 days after you have formally filed your complaint.

·         Settle the dispute through the EEOC’s mediation process if it is requested. An impartial mediator will listen to you and your employer’s sides before they come up with a decision.

·         Be patient and wait for the EEOC’s decision. They’d try to attempt a settlement with your employer, but if there’s no success in that, you will then receive a Notice of Right to Sue. Only then you can press charges against your employer with the help of a Los Angeles employment discrimination lawyer.

Filing your complaint is easy; you just have to arm yourself with the right information to make sure that you are doing things right. Hopefully, this simple guide will help you with your employment discrimination woes.