HomeMy WebLinkAbout2019-07-24 e-packet@4:00Wednesday, July 24, 2019
4:00 PM
City of South San Francisco
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400 Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
Municipal Services Building, Council Chambers
33 Arroyo Drive, South San Francisco, CA
Special City Council
Special Meeting Agenda
July 24, 2019Special City Council Special Meeting Agenda
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Section 54956 of the Government Code of the State of
California, the City Council of the City of South San Francisco will hold a Special Meeting on Wednesday, July
24, 2019, at 4:00 p.m., in the City Council Chambers, Municipal Services Building, 33 Arroyo Drive, South
San Francisco, California.
Purpose of the meeting:
Call to Order.
Roll Call.
Agenda Review.
Public Comments - comments are limited to items on the Special Meeting Agenda.
PRESENTATIONS
Sexual Harassment and Abusive Conduct Prevention Training (AB 1825/AB 2053)
(Leah Lockhart, Human Resources Director and Camille Hamilton Pating, Meyers
Nave)
1.
Adjournment.
Page 2 City of South San Francisco Printed on 8/14/2019
City of South San Francisco
Legislation Text
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400
Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
File #:19-615 Agenda Date:7/24/2019
Version:1 Item #:1.
Sexual Harassment and Abusive Conduct Prevention Training (AB 1825/AB 2053) (Leah Lockhart, Human
Resources Director and Camille Hamilton Pating, Meyers Nave)
City of South San Francisco Printed on 8/14/2019Page 1 of 1
powered by Legistar™
Sexual Harassment & Abusive
Conduct Prevention Training
Camille Hamilton Pating
Chair, Workplace Investigations
Labor and Employment Practice Group
July 24, 2019
Objectives
•Identify Discriminatory Harassment and
Abusive Conduct (Bullying) after #MeToo
•Minimize Impacts of Harassment,
Bias and Bullying in Daily Interactions
Lessons Learned
Respect & Civility
Focus on Workplace Culture
•Hypotheticals/Discussions
2
•Commit to learning, not debating
•Use “I” Statements
•Respect Confidentiality
•“Oops” & “Ouch”
•Listen respectfully, without interrupting
•Avoid blame, speculation, inflammatory language
•Step up, Step back
•“Yes, and”
3
Guidelines: Talking About Harassment, Bullying & Bias
4
•“In 1997, I met a young girl who had been sexually
abused by her mother's boyfriend. I couldn’t find the
strength to say the words that were ringing in my
head over and over again as she tried to tell me what
she had endured…I couldn't even bring myself to
whisper...'me too.' "
-Tarana Burke (2006)
•“If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted,
write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet.”
-Alyssa Milano (October 15, 2017)
“#MeToo”
#MeToo –Revealing The Crisis
5
•Fear of retaliation, damage
to future employment
•Shame
•Won’t be believed
•Nothing will change
•Don’t want to be seen
as a complainer or “weak”
Lesson Learned #1: Silence is Critical
6
•“We’re not looking at the real problem. It isn’t that
someone doesn’t know a specific law; the problem is
the whole place just isn’t civil. There’s no feeling of
respect, courtesy or fairness [at work]. And it’s the little
things that people say and do, not just the big things.”
Lesson Learned #2: Non-Respectful Workplace
7
•“Employees [want to] address incivility and work
environments [that are] rude, harassing and bullying...
Respect is the number one complaint among
employees. They do not feel respected by colleagues,
bosses and the [organization] itself.”
8
Lesson Learned #3: Why Harassment Prevention
Training Didn’t Work…
Compliance vs.Building respectful,
inclusive workplace culture
Literal translations of law vs.Breaking
the silence/Failure to report
Didn’t address how to have honest
conversations about what’s not OK
Reactive vs.Proactive
9
Goals:
•Create a workplace of choice:
thriving, diverse, and inclusive
•Don’t just deal with problems
after they happen
•Employees are less likely to
resort to courts
•Harassment and discrimination
are unlikely to occur
A New Approach To Risk Management
Respect & Civility
Intent vs. Impact
When In Doubt, Ask #IsItOK?
The New Golden Rules
10
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Costs of Harassment & Abusive Conduct
•Workplace disruption
•Gossip/damaged reputations
•Lower morale
•Employee turnover
16623297
•Lost productivity/absenteeism
•Personal liability
•Workers’ comp claims
•$$$$$*
•Bad publicity
12
Social Media Backlash!
Every business decision, communication,
action or failure to act is subject to instant
judgment, often without an investigation.
13
AB 1825
•Codified at Cal Gov’t Code §12950.1(a)
•By January 1, 2020
–Employers of 5+ employees shall provide
–At least two hours of classroom or interactive training sexual
harassment training to all supervisory employees and at least
one hour of classroom or interactive training sexual harassment
training to all nonsupervisory employees
–Training must include practical examples aimed at instructing
supervisors to prevent harassment, discrimination and
retaliation
–Are Local Officials “Employees” subject to mandatory training
requirements?
Requirement for Harassment Prevention Training
14
Is Harassment Prevention Training Required?
15
AB 1661
•Basics of regulations
–Clarifies that local agency officials must complete at least 2 hours of sexual harassment prevention and correctionlike any other public employee.
–Local agency officials who receive any compensation must now receive sexual harassment prevention training.A local agency may require any of its employees to receive sexual harassment prevention training.
–A “local agency” for the purpose of this law includes cities, counties, special districts, and charter cities and counties.A “local agency official” means any member of the agency’s legislative body and any elected official of the agency.
AB 1661 Mandates Harassment Prevention Training
16
Sexual Harassment
What is Sexual Harassment? (Federal -EEOC)
17
Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors,
and other verbal, physical or visual conduct of a sexual
nature constitute unlawful harassment when:
•Submission is made an explicit or implicit term
or condition of employment
•Submission to or rejection used as the basis for employment
decisions affecting an individual; or
•Conduct unreasonably interferes with an individual’s work
performance or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive
working environment
18
What is Sexual Harassment? (State –FEHA)
•“[U]nwanted sexual advances, or visual, verbal or
physical conduct of a sexual nature.” Section 7291.1(f)
•Partial list of violations:
–Visual conduct: leering, making sexual gestures,
displaying of suggestive objects or pictures
–Verbal conduct: making or using derogatory
comments, epithets, slurs and jokes
–Verbal sexual advances or propositions
–Physical conduct: touching, assault, impeding
or blocking movements
19
•1 in 3 women between ages 18-34
report experiencing some form of
sexual harassment at work*
–81% experienced verbal harassment
–44% experienced unwanted touching
and sexual advances
–25% received unwanted texts or
emails of sexual nature, or offensive
comments through social media
How Common is Sexual Harassment ?
Source: Huffington Post 2015
*numbers are higher than 100% due to overlapping reports
•Federal
–Title VII
–ADA
–ADEA
–FMLA
20
•State
–FEHA
–CFRA
–PDL
The Broader Universe of Discrimination Laws
•Back pay
•Reinstatement
•Other injunctive relief
•Front pay
•Damages for emotional distress
•Other compensatory damages
•Attorney fees
•Punitive damages
NOTE: Supervisors may be individually liable
What Relief Can Court Provide?
21
Culture supports fear of:
•Retribution
•Harming future
career prospects
•Perception of weakness
or over-sensitivity
•Won’t be believed
or taken seriously
•Nothing will change
22
For lawyers who are sexually
harassed at work, there’s a
tremendous pressure not to
make a complaint against a
powerful attorney, “If they say
something about sexual
harassment, they’ve signed their
death warrant at that firm.”
Why Targeted Employees Don’t Complain
SSF POLICY AGAINST HARASSMENT,
DISCRIMINATION & RETALIATION
•Race
•Sex
•Color
•Religion or Creed
•National Origin
•Mental or Physical Disability
•Genetic Information
•Citizenship Status
•Marital Status
•Protected Medical Leaves
•Domestic Violence Victim
•Medical Condition
•Age
•Pregnancy
•Sexual Orientation
•Ancestry
•Gender Identity or Expression
•Political Affiliation or Belief
•Military or VeteranStatus
•*any other status protected by state or federal law
23
Harassment prohibited based on:
SB 396: What Is Gender Identity
24
•Gender Identity is a person's perception of having a
particular gender, which may or may not correspond
with their gender assigned at birth.
SB 396: What is Gender Expression?
25
•Gender Expression
–The way in which a person expresses their gender
identity, typically through their appearance,
mannerisms, dress and behavior
–Usually reflects a person’s gender identity
[masculine or feminine] but this isn’t always
the case
–Separate and independent both from sexual
orientation and gender assigned at birth
SB 396: What is Gender Expression?
26
•For Men and Boys
–“typical” or masculine gender expression is manly,
“atypical” or feminine expression is effeminate
•For Women and Girls
–“typical” gender expression is called feminine,
atypical is tomboyish
•For Lesbian/Queer women
–masculine and feminine expression are called
butch and femme
SB 396: What is Transgender?
27
•Transgender people have a gender identity or gender
expression that differs from their assigned sex.
•Transgender people are sometimes called
transsexual if they desire medical assistance
to transition from one sex to another.
Work -Related Changes that May Happen
For Transgender Employees
28
•Some transgender people make or want to make
legal changes as part of their transition, like:
–changing their pronouns
–changing their name on paycheck, CDL,
other identity documents
–updating the gender marker on their
identity documents
–Not all transgender people need or want to change
their identity documents. If you have questions, ASK.
SB 396: Non-Binary Gender Expression
29
How To Be Respectful
Regarding Gender Expression
30
•Most people consider
themselves to be either
male or female gender.
•Most transgender
people have a male or
female gender identity
and should be treated
like any other man or
woman.
•People whose experience
of gender that is not
simply “male” or
“female” may describe
themselves as:
–Non-binary
–Genderqueer
–Gender fluid
–Agender
Speech (verbal): name calling, insults, epithets, derogatory comments, slurs, lewd propositioning [because of protected class status]. Includes sex-oriented comments about appearance, dress or physical features…stories or jokes that demean or mock protected characteristics, making explicit or implied job threats or promises.
Physical Acts: such as assault, interfering with work, impeding or blocking movements, unwelcome or offensive touching, pinching, grabbing, patting, any physical interference.
Visual Insults: such as staring or leering, derogatory posters, cartoons or drawings because of protected class status. This includes inappropriate emails, viewing pornography, displaying nude or scantily clad men or women; derogatory or obscene notes, letters, emails, or other literature.
Unwanted Sexual Advances: such as requests for sexual favors where Submission to or rejection of is made an explicit or implicit term or condition of employment, is used as the basis for employment decisions; or where conduct is intended or actually does unreasonably interfere with an individual’s work performance or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive working environment
31
SSF POLICY RE:
PROHIBITED DISCRIMINATION & HARASSMENT
32
Physical Conduct
•Blocking egress
•Leering, staring, “elevator eyes”
•Obscene/hostile gestures
•Physical assault
32
•Unwanted “massage”
•Bumping, patting,
grabbing, pinching,
touching, rubbing
Intent vs. Impact
33
Intent
No one knows
your intention –
your intent is
irrelevant.
“I didn’t mean
it the way you
took it.”
“If you were
offended,
I’m sorry.”
Impact
Focus on
consequences
of behavior for
recipient
34
Hypothetical 1: The Hugger
•City Manager Pamela
–Warm personality
–Enjoys engaging with staff and
the public
–Greets staff daily by giving hugs
to staffers, female and male
–Rationale: “I love my Team and
I’m just a hugger”
•Is Pamela’s behavior OK under
South San Francisco’s policy?
•Report the incident to HR Director (may do so
without resorting to formal Grievance Procedure)
•Report to Supervisor, any Supervisor or Manager
within the City
•Employees NOT required to report to Supervisor if
Supervisor is the subject of the complaint
•HR will investigate the incident and take corrective
action. Interim relief measures may be taken
•Retaliation is prohibited.
35
SSF POLICYCOMPLAINT & INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
•Human Resources or designee will investigate the
incident
•Complaint will be kept as confidential to the extent
possible
•Allegations against an elected or appointed official
shall be handled per policy or as appropriate
following consultation with City Attorney
•Allegations against HR Director shall be handled by
Assistant City Manager per policy or as appropriate
following consultation with City Attorney
36
SSF POLICYCOMPLAINT & INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
•Is reporting of harassment MANDATORY
–YES for Supervisors/Managers only
•Is reporting of harassment MANDATORY
for employees
NO, but it is Strongly Encouraged
37
SSF POLICYSEXUAL HARASSMENT COMPLAINT PROCEDURE
38
Supervisor’s Role
Take all complaints seriously
Notify and get guidance from HR
Document everything
Respect confidentiality
38
RESPONDING
TO HARASSMENT
PLAN
ACTION
Quid pro quo
Types of Harassment
39
40
Quid Pro Quo: “This for That”
Federal statute:
•Submission is made an
explicit or implicit term or
condition of employment
•Submission to or rejection
is used as the basis for
employment decisions
affecting an individual
41
Quid Pro Quo: “This for That”
•How do the participants
experience the conduct?
•Consensual conduct is not
harassment
•Harassment arises from
lack of consent
Hypo 2: Relationship Quid Pro Quo?
42
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Best Practice Takeaway
•Supervisors and direct
reports should NOT be in
dating relationships
•If a relationship develops,
the Supervisor should
immediately disclose to HR.
•Necessary reporting
adjustments will be made.
•Must not be in a direct supervisory relationship
or otherwise pose difficulties for supervision,
security, safety or morale.
•If a relationship develops between employees in
a direct supervisory relationship, City will
attempt reassignment.
•If no suitable reassignment is available, one of
the employees must terminate employment.
44
GENERAL PRACTICE: WORKPLACE DATING
45
Takeaway: Best Practices
•Report at the first indication of
coercive, questionable behavior.
•Even if conduct doesn’t rise
to quid pro quo, training or
corrective action may be
appropriate.
•Always alert Human Resources.
HOSTILE
WORK ENVIRONMENT
Types of Harassment
46
47
Types of Harassment
•Conduct is based on sex or
protected status
•Severe or pervasive enough
to create an environment
that a reasonable person
would find abusive
•Unwelcome conduct
•Perception of abusive
environment by victim
48
Objective Standard
•Considered abusive by “reasonable person”
in the same position as victim
•Law doesn’t create a “general civility code”
Oncale v. Sundowner, 523 U.S. 75 (1997)
•Consider social context
49
Best Practice: Conduct Based On Sex
•DO consider context in displaying
visual items, sending emails and
messages at work
•DO keep conversations at work
especially about subordinates
and co-workers professional
•DON’T make sexualized comments
about appearance, clothing and
body parts
•DO consider whether off-duty
conduct violates policy or has a
“nexus” to work
•When in doubt, consult City Attorney or
Human Resources
50
Severe or Pervasive Conduct
•Look at totality of circumstances
•Frequency of conduct
•Period of time over whichconduct occurred
•Context in which conduct occurred
•Whether conduct is physically threatening
•Whether conduct unreasonably interferedwith employee’s work performance
51
Severe or Pervasive Conduct
•Must be severe OR pervasive enough
–“to alter the conditions of employment”
•Single incident may qualify if severe
–including physical violence or threat thereof
•Not “occasional, isolated, sporadic, or trivial”
51
52
Who Can Make A Claim of Sexual Harassment?
•All Genders
•Opposite gender and same sex interactions
•Employees who observed the conduct (Third Parties)
•Contractors/Vendors
•Volunteers/Interns
•Members of the public
53
Third Party Harassment
•Employees and persons who perceive
offensive conduct
*conversations
*media
*jokes
*music
*physical items
•Sexual favoritism
54
Is this Sexual Harassment?
•Is this conduct of a sexual nature?
•Is this conduct directed at a particular gender?
•How often is this sort of behavior happening?
•Is this conduct offensive to persons who witnessed it?
•Is the person to whom it was directed offended?
•Does the employee have to tolerate that type of
conduct in order to keep his or her job?
What Is Workplace Bullying
…and Why Should Employers Care?
5555
56
•“Abusive conduct” is conduct in the workplace,
perpetrated with malice, that a reasonable person
would find hostile, offensive, and unrelated to an
employer’s legitimate business interests.
•Like harassment, AB 2053 provides that a single act
is not abusive “unless especially severe and
egregious.”
Abusive Conduct Defined
57
•Harassment is abusive conduct
based on protected status
that is illegal employment
discrimination
•Retaliation is adverse employment
action based on protected
conduct that is illegal
employment discrimination
•Bullying is repeated abusive
conduct occurring in the
workplace that is not based on
protected status and is not illegal
•Bullying & Harassment have
similar impacts on victims and
work environment
Bullying vs. Harassment
58
Hypo 2: Trouble in The Office
Robert, the City Manager of the mid-size City, is known for his “salty” demeanor.
He becomes upset when his administrative assistant Angela doesn’t do her work
correctly. During one week, Angela arrives late, forgets to notify Robert of several
urgent constituent requests, and incorrectly calendars an important meeting.
Robert yells at her in the office: “What the f*** is wrong with you? Pull your
head out of your @$$!”
The next day, Angela forgets to pick up lunch for Robert’s meeting with a Council
Member. Robert comes out of his office, throws money on her desk, goes back
into his office and slams the door. The Council Member watches silently. After
this incident, Angela calls in sick for a week. She now says she is afraid of Robert.
Robert says his conduct isn’t abusive -he was just “frustrated” that her work
“wasn’t done right.” He says he holds his staff to the same high standard as
himself.
Appropriately resolve any issues that are presented by this scenario using the California
standard for Abusive Conduct.
Source: Pantoja v. Anton, 198 Cal. App. 4th 87 (2011)
59
Reasonable Person in Target’s Position
“Careful consideration [must be given] to the social
context in which particular behavior occurs and how
it is experienced by its target… Common sense, and
appropriate sensitivity to social context will enable
courts and juries to distinguish ... conduct which a
reasonable person in the plaintiffs' position would
find severely hostile and abusive.”
Citing Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc. 523 U.S. 75, at 81-82, 118 S. Ct.
998, 140 L. Ed. 2d 201 (1998).
60
Is this Abusive?
61
Is this Abusive?
62
Recognize Bullying
63
Best Practice: Identify Objective Red Flags
Such as repeated instances of:
•Personalized, demeaning comments or insults
•Criticism in public
•Verbal and physical outburst behavior
(swearing, shouting, slamming doors)
•Verbal and nonverbal threats and intimidation
•Inappropriate criticism of another’s work
•Rumors
•Ostracism and exclusion
•Questions? Consult Human Resources or City Attorney
64
Abusive Conduct: Be Sure To Consider
•Abusive conduct is to be avoided,
but is not yet illegal
Look to intention
Conduct –context, severity
•Abusive behavior is different from
–Someone who is simply
not liked by others
–Persons who just
don’t get along
•Distinguish proper supervision and discipline
When in doubt,
consult City Attorney/Human Resources
65
A.OK to look,
but don’t touch
B.OK to look,
if they want you to look
C.Don’t look
and don’t touch
D.All of the above
E.None of the above
Bonus: #IsItOK
If You Feel Attracted To Someone at Work?
66
Unintended Consequences of #MeToo
66
Prediction
“Excuse me, sir, would
you please take this out
of my line of sight until
my wife gets here? It just
would not be right for
me to sit here alone with
a woman-shaped
container, particularly
one as shapely as this.”
“In fact, I would advise you
to do the same for the man
sitting over there—I see he
is sitting very close to Mrs.
Butterworth even though
he appears to be wearing a
wedding ring.”
Source: “Mike Pence Asks Waiter To Remove Mrs. Butterworth From Table Until Wife Arrives,” The Onion, 3/30/17
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Presenter
68
Camille Hamilton Pating
Principal
Chair, Workplace Investigations
Labor and Employment Practice Group
Oakland Office
555 12th Street, Suite 1500
Oakland, CA 94607
(510) 808-2000
[email protected]