Hostile Work Environment Harassment
Filed Under Main Content
Hostile work environment harassment requires, under the law, a link between the hostility by a coworker or supervisor that is based on a protected characteristic, such as gender, disability, race, or creed. Just because a boss is mean does not necessarily constitute a legal claim for hostile work environment. On the other hand, if the motivation of the boss is based on circumstantial evidence of sexual harassment or discrimination based on a disability or some other suspect classification, then an employee may have a claim for hostile work environment harassment.
The further requirements for hostile work environment sexual harassment are that the harassment is either “serious” and/or “pervasive”. “Serious” generally means that there was an unwanted and offensive touching or threat thereof. “Pervasive” means sexually harassing conduct that consists of more than a few isolated incidents, that is hostile or abusive to employees because of their sex, and frequent enough to alter the conditions of employment and create an abusive work environment. Note that a sexually objectionable environment must be both objectively and subjectively offensive. That means that not only must a particular plaintiff perceive the workplace as hostile or abusive, but also that a reasonable person, considering all the circumstances, would share the same perception of a hostile or abusive workplace.
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