EEOC Report: Workplace Discrimination and Harassment Prevention Not Working - Workplaces Fail To Implement Systemic Changes
  • CODE : SUST-0064
  • Duration : 120 Minutes
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Dr. Susan Strauss is a national and international speaker, trainer, consultant and a recognized expert on workplace and school harassment and bullying. She conducts harassment and bullying investigations and functions as an expert witness in harassment and bullying lawsuits. Her clients are from business, education, healthcare, law, and government organizations from both the public and private sector.

Dr. Strauss  also provides organizational, management, and employee development by conducting training, coaching, and facilitating workshops. She has been the Director of Training and Development and consults with a variety of organizations and industries, both large and small.

Susan has also been the director of Wellness and has consulted with organizations to help them design, develop, implement and evaluate their Wellness programs.

Susan has a doctorate in organizational leadership. She is a registered nurse, has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and counseling, a master’s degree in community health, and professional certificate in training and development.  She has been involved in the harassment and bullying arena since 1985.






This webinar has been approved for 2.00 HR (General) recertification credit hours toward aPHR™, aPHRi™, PHR®, PHRca®, SPHR®, GPHR®, PHRi™, and SPHRi™ recertification through HR Certification Institute® (HRCI®). Please make note of the activity ID number on your recertification application form. For more information about certification or recertification, please visit the HR Certification Institute website at www.hrci.org

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You have been in Human Resources or management for years. Your plate is full - too much to do and to know in your increasingly stressful job. You are expected to stay current in discrimination and harassment case law for all the federal and state-protected classes. Are you current? It seems like an unending responsibility. You remember hearing something in the news about a change in the pregnancy law, but can’t remember what it was. You know that the American Disabilities Act and Title VII have expanded with something called an accommodation meeting, but what does that require? You heard that a company was required to pay a plaintiff an additional $1,000,000 because the company didn’t do harassment training - could that be true? You have a company wellness program and have heard that employees are suing for discrimination based on the incentives offered to those who take part in the program. And it still isn’t clear as to whether you can personally be sued for the misconduct. States have added antidiscrimination laws related to how employees wear their hair. The #MeToo movement is making great strides in organizations. Your website now has to be available for disabled clients and the public to navigate.

Learning Objectives

  • To review protected class discrimination and harassment
  • To identify the EEOC’s 2016 findings
  • To update information on new discrimination and harassment court decisions related to Age, Genetics, Disability, Pregnancy, Care giving, Gender and State and Federal Laws
  • To discuss the Affirmative Defense (AD) and your responsibility to reduce liability via AD
  • To differentiate between bullying and protected class harassment
  • To explore HR and management’s legal and ethical responsibilities in the prevention and intervention of bullying and harassment
  • To describe the legal requirement of conducting an accommodation meeting

Areas Covered

  • Review of the legal elements of discrimination and harassment law
  • List of protected classes  (for example, in MN there are 15 including state and federal laws)
  • Specific requirements for compliance with GINA, ADAAA, and the PDA with the discussion of recent legal cases for each
  • In-depth discussion of the need for “accommodations” for ADA, religion, and pregnancy
  • Steps of an Accommodation Meeting and follow-up
  • Discussion of the Nexus of Bullying and Harassment
  • What these changes in case law mean for employers
  • Training and policy requirements

Who Should Attend

  • HR Specialists
  • HR Managers
  • Directors, managers, and supervisors of any department

Why Should You Attend

It is almost impossible for managers and HR professionals to stay current in the ever-evolving civil rights case law due to their busy workload. As a result, discrimination and harassment may go unrecognized and allowed to continue creating a hostile work environment for employees resulting in absenteeism, turnover, loss of productivity, physical and emotional health consequences to the target and witnesses of the abuse. Failure of managers and HR professionals to recognize discrimination and harassment creates liability for the organization and costly lawsuits.

Topic Background

Civil rights laws are continuously changing with each lawsuit that goes to court. Ever since the 1964 Civil Rights law was passed by congress, the laws have evolved, expanded, become more detailed, and provided challenges for employers to ensure a fair and equitable workplace. Within the last two years, there have been major changes in the current civil rights laws enacted to minimize or eliminate discrimination and harassment of “protected classes” in the workforce. Some of those changes have been via federal law and some enacted from State laws. With these changes comes an increased risk of liability for organizations if they are not kept abreast of the laws’ mandates to protect workers from discrimination and harassment.

  • $200.00



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