Show Under federal law and Department of Labor (DOL) policy, harassment based on race (including dress and grooming), color, ancestry, national origin (including ethnicity, accent, and use of a language other than English), religion or religious creed (including reasonable accommodation of religious beliefs or practices), physical or mental disability (including reasonable accommodation of physical or mental disability), genetic information, sex (including pregnancy, childbirth, lactation, abortion, and related medical conditions and procedures), sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, intersex conditions, age, parental status, marital status, political affiliation or any other prohibited factor, and/or retaliation for engaging in protected Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) activity (e.g., filing or participating in a complaint or otherwise opposing discrimination, including harassment; requesting a reasonable accommodation) is prohibited. The Department of Labor does not permit harassing conduct by anyone in the workplace, including co-workers, contractors and customers. This fact sheet primary discusses prohibited conduct under federal law – that it, "actionable" harassment or hostile work environment for which people may file Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) complaints and seek "make-whole" relief. Under the EEO complaint process, petty slights, annoyances, and isolated incidents (unless extremely serious) will not rise to the level of harassment or hostile work environment. To be unlawful, the conduct must create a work environment that would be intimidating, hostile, or offensive to a reasonable person. However, the intent of the Department of Labor's Harassing Conduct Policy is to provide a process for addressing incidents of unwelcome conduct long before they become severe and pervasive enough to create a hostile work environment under the law. The Harassing Conduct Policy seeks to discover and remedy, in particular, "minor" violations so that harassment does not spread or escalate and rise to the level of a legal violation. The Department will not wait for a pattern of harassing behavior to emerge. Rather, the Department will endeavor to act before the harassing conduct is so severe and pervasive as to constitute an unlawful hostile work environment. The Harassing Conduct Policy is referenced at the end of this fact sheet. Overall, DOL policies and procedures promote prompt recognition, reporting, and remedying of harassing workplace conduct with the goal of eliminating such conduct quickly and effectively, even in cases in which the reported conduct may not be severe and pervasive so as to constitute a violation of federal law.1 This fact sheet provides a brief explanation of workplace harassment, how to recognize it, and both the responsibilities of an employee who has witnessed or been subjected to workplace harassment and the agency that has been put on notice of allegations of workplace harassment. Two basic types of unlawful harassmentProhibited workplace harassment may take either of two forms. It may entail "quid pro quo" harassment, which occurs in cases in which employment decisions or treatment are based on submission to or rejection of unwelcome conduct, typically conduct of a sexual nature. Workplace harassment may also consist of offensive conduct based on one or more of the protected groups above that is so severe or pervasive that it creates a hostile or offensive work environment or when it results in an adverse employment decision (such as being fired or demoted). Quid Pro Quo Harassment — "This for That"Quid pro quo harassment generally results in a tangible employment decision based upon an individual's acceptance or rejection of unwelcome sexual advances or requests for sexual favors, but it can also result from unwelcome conduct that is of a religious nature. This kind of harassment is generally committed by someone who can effectively make or recommend formal employment decisions (such as termination, demotion, or denial of promotion) that will affect the victim. Examples:
Hostile Work Environment HarassmentA hostile environment can result from the unwelcome conduct of supervisors, co-workers, customers, contractors, or anyone else with whom the victim interacts on the job, and the unwelcome conduct renders the workplace atmosphere intimidating, hostile, or offensive. Examples of behaviors that may contribute to an unlawful hostile environment include:
When harassing conduct violates the lawFirst, unlawful harassing conduct must be unwelcome and based on the victim's protected status. Second, the conduct must be:
Whether an instance or a pattern of harassing conduct is severe or pervasive is determined on a case-by-case basis, with consideration paid to the following factors:
Each factor is considered, but none are required or dispositive. Hostile work environment cases are often difficult to recognize, because the particular facts of each situation determine whether offensive conduct has crossed the line from "ordinary tribulations of the workplace, such as the sporadic use of abusive language... and occasional teasing,"2 to unlawful harassment. Resources and Responsibilities — What to do if you witness or are subjected to harassmentUnder the Harassing Conduct Policy — The Department has determined that the most effective way to limit harassing conduct is to treat it as misconduct, even if it does not rise to the level of harassment actionable under the law. The goal of the Policy is to eliminate harassment before it becomes severe and pervasive enough to violate the law. Therefore, for the purposes of the Harassing Conduct Policy, harassing conduct is defined more broadly as "any unwelcome verbal or physical conduct based on any characteristic protected by law when: (1) the behavior can reasonably be considered to adversely affect the work environment; or (2) an employment decision affecting the employee is based upon the employee's acceptance or rejection of such conduct." Conduct that "adversely affects the work environment," even though it may not be "severe or pervasive" as required under federal law, is prohibited by the Harassing Conduct Policy. It is the responsibility of every DOL employee to promptly report harassing conduct to anyone in your supervisory chain; or to your Agency Workplace Equality Compliance Office (WECO) in the National Office; or for regional employees, to the Regional Administrator, OASAM. Management must take prompt, remedial action to investigate and eliminate any harassing conduct. All information will be maintained on a confidential basis to the greatest extent possible. The Department cannot correct harassing conduct if a supervisor, manager or other Department official does not become aware of it. When an employee unreasonably fails to report harassing conduct, the Department has the right to raise this as a defense against a suit for harassment. Under the EEO Process — The Department's Harassing Conduct Policy is not intended to replace an employee's EEO rights. An employee may pursue claims of harassing conduct through both avenues simultaneously. To learn more about your EEO rights, please contact an EEO Counselor or visit CRC's web page at https://www.dol.gov/agencies/oasam/centers-offices/civil-rights-center. Contact the Civil Rights Center at 202-693-6500; TTY 7-1-1 within 45 days of the alleged discriminatory event in order to preserve your right to file an EEO complaint. Any questions on this guidance should also be addressed to the Department of Labor's Civil Rights Center. Not a DOL employee?Please visit http://www.dol.gov/agencies/oasam/programs/crc/external-enforc-complaints to learn more about filing a complaint with the Civil Rights Center or contact the Civil Rights Center at 202-693-6500; TTY 7-1-1. To file a complaint against a private employer, please visit the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's (EEOC) website at: https://www.eeoc.gov/filing-charge-discrimination. Footnotes 1The Department of Labor's Policy & Procedures for Preventing & Eliminating Harassing Conduct in the Workplace (Harassing Conduct Policy) is contained in DLMS 6 — Chapter 300. 2Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S. 775, 788 (1998). |