Wheaton Office |
St. Charles Office |
Sycamore Office
630-665-7300
Proposed Law Would Require Sexual Harassment Training for Restaurants
Sexual harassment continues to be on the forefront of American minds. While some progress has been made to address workplace sexual harassment, there are still many industries plagued by sexual harassment. Employees who work in restaurants, hotels, and bars often experience the humiliation that comes with being sexually harassed. Patrons of these establishments may make crude and inappropriate remarks to employees. Perhaps even worse, many employees in the hospitality sector must also put up with this behavior from co-workers or superiors. Because of this, Illinois has proposed a bill that requires mandatory sexual harassment training for restaurant employees. The bill, called the Restaurant Anti-Harassment Act, if passed, will require all Illinois restaurants to provide sexual harassment prevention training to employees.
Requirements Under the Restaurant Anti-Harassment Act
Illinois is just one of many states which have proposed or enacted employee-protectionist legislation in recent years. In February of this year, Illinois Representative Ann M. Williams proposed the Restaurant Anti-Harassment Act in hopes that mandatory harassment prevention training could help mitigate the high incidence of sexual harassment in the restaurant industry. If passed, Illinois restaurant employees must be educated about certain issues related to sexual harassment and how they can help prevent sexual harassment in their own workplace. The topics to be discussed through this training would include:
- The two types of sexual harassment recognized by law (hostile workplace harassment and quip pro quo harassment);
- An explanation of what sexual harassment means and the negative effect workplace sexual harassment can have on victims, businesses, and perpetrators;
- How to differentiate between appropriate and inappropriate conduct at work; and
- How and when employees should report sexual harassment.
Supervisors and managers would be required to undergo additional training about:
- Employer and supervisor liability regarding sexual harassment;
- How to create a harassment-free work environment; and
- How harassment claims should be reported, investigated, and addressed in the workplace.
If the Act is enacted into law, restaurant employers must provide the training within 90 days of the effective date of the Act and within 30 days of hiring a new employee. The training must be done every two years after the initial training.
Contact a Naperville Employment Discrimination Attorney
If you have been a victim of sexual harassment at work, contact the experienced Wheaton, Illinois sexual harassment attorneys at Mirabella, Kincaid, Frederick & Mirabella, LLC for guidance. Call 630-665-7300 to schedule a confidential consultation with our firm today.
Source:
https://www.natlawreview.com/article/illinois-bill-introduced-to-require-sexual-harassment-training-all-restaurant