Employees in Washington State that use employment-discrimination hotlines to submit complaints to their employers sometimes experience consequent retaliation by their employers. It’s not uncommon. Such employees who thereafter pursue associated claims of unlawful retaliation against their employers soon realize the importance of their hotline complaints — particularly, the wording.
Under Washington State unlawful-retaliation laws, should employees reporting employment discrimination via employment-discrimination hotlines specify their protected status (or statuses), when they might rely on those reports to pursue prospective, associated claims of unlawful-retaliation against their employers? Here’s my point of view.
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WASHINGTON LAW AGAINST DISCRIMINATION (WLAD) — PROTECTED STATUSES
Under the Washington Law Against Discrimination (WLAD), it is an unfair practice, with very few exceptions, for an employer to refuse to hire any person, to discharge or bar any person from employment, or to discriminate against any person in compensation or in other terms and conditions of employment because of age (40+); sex (including pregnancy); marital status; sexual orientation (including gender identity); race; color; creed; national origin; citizenship or immigration status; honorably discharged veteran or military status; HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C status; the presence of any sensory, mental, or physical disability; the use of a trained dog guide or service animal by a person with a disability; and state employee or health care whistleblower status*.
It is also an unfair practice for an employer to retaliate against an employee because the employee complained about job discrimination or assisted with a job discrimination investigation or lawsuit.
(*NOTE: The link will take the reader to our Williams Law Group Blog – an external website.)
UNLAWFUL RETALIATION (WA STATE)
“The WLAD prohibits retaliation against a party asserting a claim based on a perceived violation of his civil rights or participating in an investigation into alleged workplace discrimination.” Alonso v. Qwest Communications Company, LLC, 178 Wn.App. 734, 753 (Div. 2 2013) (citing RCW 49.60.210) (hyperlink added).
THE PRIMA FACIE CASE
“To establish a prima facie* retaliation case, a plaintiff must show that[:]
(1) he engaged in statutorily protected activity,
(2) his employer took an adverse employment action against him, and
(3) there is a causal link between the activity and the adverse action.
Id. at 753-54 (citing Short v. Battle Ground Sch. Dist., 169 Wn.App. 188, 205, 279 P.3d 902 (2012)) (paragraph formatting added) (emphasis added). The first element–statutorily protected activity–is at issue for purposes of this article.
(*NOTE: The link will take the reader to our Williams Law Group Blog – an external website.)
ELEMENT #1: STUTORILY PROTECTED ACTIVITY
One way “[a]n employee engages in WLAD-protected activity [is] when … [the employee] opposes employment practices forbidden by antidiscrimination law or other practices that the employee reasonably believed to be discriminatory.” Id. at 754 (citing Short, 169 Wn.App. at 205).
However, “[a] general complaint about an employer’s unfair conduct does not rise to the level of protected activity in a discrimination action under WLAD absent some reference to the plaintiff’s protected status.” Alonso, 178 Wn.App. at 754 (referencing Graves v. Dep’t of Game, 76 Wn.App. 705, 712, 887 P.2d 424 (1994)) (emphasis and hyperlink added).
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EXAMPLE: ALONSO v. QWEST COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY, LLC (EMPLOYMENT-DISCRIMINATION HOTLINES)
In Alonso v. Qwest Communications Company, LLC, “Alonso sued his employer, Qwest Communications Company LLC, and his supervisor for discrimination [based on Alonso’s combat-veteran, disabled-person, and Mexican-American statuses.]” Id. at 734. “[T]he superior court granted Qwest summary judgment dismissal of Alonso’s complaint.” Id. “Alonso appeal[ed], arguing that he provided sufficient evidence to establish [a] prima facie discrimination claim[ ] for[, inter alia,] … unlawful retaliation.” Id.
While working for Qwest, Alonso “used a company hotline to make a general complaint about corruption, mistreatment, and vulgar language against both his supervisor and another employee.” Id. at 754 (emphasis added). However, Alonso “did not express that his complaints were in response to harassment based on any protected status.” Id. (emphasis and hyperlink added).
Accordingly, “[t]he Court [of Appeals] initially evaluated whether Alonso met the first element of an unlawful retaliation claim — that he participated in protected activity.” Id. The court held that Alonso failed to sufficiently establish a prima facie retaliation case, because he did not phone the hotline to report discrimination against him based on a protected class. Id. at 754 (hyperlink added). Therefore, the Court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of his unlawful retaliation claim. Id. at 754-55.
CONCLUSION
Under Washington State unlawful-retaliation laws, I believe employees electing to report employment discrimination–via employer hotlines–should seriously consider specifying their relevant protected status(es) if they might rely on those reports to prosecute associated, prospective unlawful-retaliation claims. IMPORTANT: In any event, NO content in this article, regardless of date, should ever be used as a substitute for direct legal advice from your attorney.
READ MORE OF OUR RELATED ARTICLES
We invite you to read more of our blog articles about this topic:
Adverse Employment Actions: A Closer Look
Definition of Prima Facie Case*
The McDonnell Douglas Burden Shifting Framework*
The Prima Facie Case: Unlawful Retaliation
Top 3 Reasons Unlawful Retaliation Claims Fail
Top 3 Causation Standards: Unlawful Retaliation
Unlawful Retaliation: Adverse Employment Action
Unlawful Retaliation and the Prospective Employer
Unlawful Retaliation: The Actual-Knowledge Standard
Unlawful Retaliation: The Causal Link
Unlawful Retaliation: The Functionally-Similar Test
Unlawful Retaliation: Statutorily Protected Activity
*NOTE: The link will take the reader to our Williams Law Group Blog – an external website.
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