U.S. agency saw sharp rise in sexual
harassment complaints after #MeToo
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[October 05, 2018]
By Daniel Wiessner
(Reuters) - The U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission said on Thursday that the number of sexual
harassment complaints workers filed with the agency over the past year
rose for the first time in nearly a decade, attributing the increase to
the #MeToo movement.
The commission said the number of complaints, known as charges, filed in
the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 rose more than 12 percent over the
previous year, when it received about 6,700. It said the numbers were
preliminary, as the agency typically publishes comprehensive data from
its fiscal year by the following February.
EEOC Acting Chair Victoria Lipnic said in a statement that the numbers
reflected "the heightened demand of the #MeToo movement."
The #MeToo movement emerged in response to accusations of sexual
harassment and abuse by powerful men in the entertainment industry
starting last October. Many lawyers and other experts had predicted that
the movement would spur an uptick in harassment claims.
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The number of sexual harassment charges lodged with the EEOC had fallen
each year since 2010, when nearly 8,000 were filed. Many worker
advocates and women's rights groups, as well as the commission in a 2016
report, said that was likely due to victims not reporting harassment
rather than employers effectively addressing it.
In order to sue employers for harassment, workers must first file
charges with the EEOC, which enforces federal laws banning workplace
discrimination based on sex and other factors. They also can file
complaints with state agencies that enforce anti-discrimination laws, so
the EEOC's numbers do not provide a full picture.
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A vendor sells #MeToo badges a protest march for survivors of sexual
assault and their supporters in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
U.S. November 12, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
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The EEOC on Thursday also said it had filed 41 lawsuits including
sexual harassment claims against employers over the past year, a 50
percent increase over fiscal year 2017. The commission in most cases
gives workers the right to sue on their own, but can file its own
lawsuits.
The commission recovered nearly $70 million for victims of sexual
harassment in the past year, up more than $20 million from the
previous year.
The impact of #MeToo has also been felt in some courts. In July, a
federal appeals court in Philadelphia cited the movement in reviving
a sexual harassment lawsuit by a former secretary for a Pennsylvania
county.
The court said #MeToo has shown that many victims of workplace
harassment fear retaliation if they speak out, and said victims
should not be blocked from suing their employers because they failed
to report misconduct.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York, Editing by Alexia
Garamfalvi and Dan Grebler)
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