430 legal questions have been posted about discrimination by real users. Ask your question and dive into the knowledge of attorneys who handle your issue regularly. Similar topics to explore also include civil rights. All topics and other states can be accessed in the dropdowns below.
Discrimination Questions & Legal Answers - Page 3
Do you have any Discrimination questions page 3 and need some legal advice or guidance? Ask a Lawyer to get an answer or read through our 430 previously answered Discrimination questions.
Answered 7 years and 4 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Depends on the facts.
Could we present a plausible theory of discrimination?
That is never easy. You did not retain legal counsel before filing charges because?
How are you mitigating damages?
What do you want?
Many questions unanswered. Call us to discuss. A lawsuit in federal court will often take 2 to 3 years assuming the case is not dismissed at some point. Employment Law Reality Check.com... Read More
Depends on the facts.
Could we present a plausible theory of discrimination?
That is never easy. You did not retain legal counsel before filing... Read More
Answered 7 years and 5 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Your wife should schedule a consult with an employment lawyer. We will probably not recommend grieving anyone.
We will help her:
1) Determine whether this principal is a good fit for her. She probably needs to start applying for other jobs ASAP.
2) We will help her try to keep her job. She needs to have good performance evaluations or she might risk losing even a union job. We can coach her on that.
3) We will explain in detail why she needs to keep her union happy. The best way is for her to get involved with the union.
Bottom line. She is in a political job. And those jobs today demand results. If the principal she works for or the union rep fears for their own jobs that will trickle down to her.
Have her gather all her performance evaluations and start calling us employment lawyers. We can help guide her but the decision of whether she wants to keep her job will be hers to make in the end.
Grieving the principal would not have been our first choice. She needs an employment lawyer to retain ASAP!
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Your wife should schedule a consult with an employment lawyer. We will probably not recommend grieving anyone.
We will help her:
1) Determine... Read More
Answered 7 years and 5 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
You have done an excellent job of filing the complaint and recording the violation thereafter. Please provide the violation to the employer in order that they are put on notice of the violation. The employer will have to act. Keep careful and detailed written records and provide to employer. The key to your success is the response of the employer. Ed Dimon, Esq. 732-797-1600... Read More
You have done an excellent job of filing the complaint and recording the violation thereafter. Please provide the violation to the employer in order... Read More
You're free to contact our office to discuss your legal rights. Our Ohio employment attorney represents employees throughout the State of Ohio. We provide free consultations and most often work on a contingency fee. If you would like to speak with an experienced Ohio employment lawyer, call us at 614-949-1181.
Ohio employment lawyer https://mcoffmanlegal.com/... Read More
You're free to contact our office to discuss your legal rights. Our Ohio employment attorney represents employees throughout the State of Ohio. We... Read More
I am very sorry to hear about your ordeal. It sounds like you may be a victim of age discrimination. If you are over the age of 40 and are being discrimianted (singled out, etc.) you should call an employment attorney at once. Time is of the essense.
You can call the Akin Law Group and speak to one of our attorneys at 212-825-1400. The consultation is free and confidential.... Read More
I am very sorry to hear about your ordeal. It sounds like you may be a victim of age discrimination. If you are over the age of 40 and are being... Read More
Answered 7 years and 6 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
You have to be able to perform your job duties with or without reasonable accommodations. You have a duty to ask for an accommodation if you need one. If you did not think you needed one went to work and injured yourself you might have a work comp claim. Seek a lawyer who handles those cases.
If you just aggravated or exacerbated an old injury that may or may not be compensable under new York's comp law.
Either way sounds like you need an immediate consultation with a workers compensation lawyer.
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You have to be able to perform your job duties with or without reasonable accommodations. You have a duty to ask for an accommodation if you need... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Is an employer not allowed to make sure that its employees possess documentation to lawfully work in the U.S.?
Many people work unlawfully but are still entitled to minimum wages and overtime pay. But that does not prevent deportation.
You probably dont want to be deported (since you are without U.S. passport) so a good choice might be to provide whatever documentation the employer requests. Otherwise you might get paid for all the work you have done so far but be located in some other country when the payment is made.... Read More
Is an employer not allowed to make sure that its employees possess documentation to lawfully work in the U.S.?
Many people work unlawfully but are... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
You have the basis for a case in that you were treated differently based upon your race. My concerns are twofold. Can we prove the case in that two or three people may testify that this did not occur ? What are your damages ? How were you damaged ? Less pay ? More difficult routes ? The cost to bring these cases is significant. Do you want to spend the money ? Please call. Ed Dimon, Esq. 732-797-1600... Read More
You have the basis for a case in that you were treated differently based upon your race. My concerns are twofold. Can we prove the case in that two... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Was this for a civil service job? What was the error? Who made it and how or why? Did you mitigate your damages? If so what are your damages? Seek legal counsel immediately! If there were or is a tort claim against any governmental entity or individuals working for it you better properly serve your notice of claim within 90 days of when you learned of or should have known about the error. If you dont get ready for a long long possibly expensive litigation. Suing the government is never easy. Seek legal counsel either way. Government or private sector job. People do make mistakes. Its the how and why that matters most and whether you still want the job.... Read More
Was this for a civil service job? What was the error? Who made it and how or why? Did you mitigate your damages? If so what are your damages? Seek... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Looks like you might be regarded or perceived as disabled. That is against the Americans with Disabilities Act. If you need an accommodation ask for one.
Report that comment to human resources and keep a copy. They should investigate. Discuss with no one. Good luck.
Looks like you might be regarded or perceived as disabled. That is against the Americans with Disabilities Act. If you need an accommodation ask for... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Maybe. If your family member was disabled or regarded as such then you might have a claim for associational discrimination prohibited by the ADA. If your family member published to 3rd parties false information that you were involved in criminal activity you might have a slander or defamation of character claim against them.
Consult with an employment lawyer for more possible claims. They would all depend on the evidence and how a theory of recovery might be proven by you and your lawyer. You have a duty to mitigate damages which means you have to keep looking for a new job. How tough will that be to land? If the new job pays more what are your damages? Was a written agreement broken?... Read More
Maybe. If your family member was disabled or regarded as such then you might have a claim for associational discrimination prohibited by the ADA. If... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
You should bring an action for assault. You should make sure the videotapes from the store are preserved. When did this happen ? Were you charged ? Ed Dimon, Esq. 732-797-1600
You should bring an action for assault. You should make sure the videotapes from the store are preserved. When did this happen ? Were you charged ?... Read More
Answered 7 years and 7 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
Were either you or the coworker addicted to drugs or alcohol and no longer are?
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act as Amended protect employees who were addicted but no longer abuse drugs or alcohol.
If the coworker put on his application that he has a disability such as drug abuse but no longer uses them they had to hire him if he met the qualifications to do the job. That is confidential. You will never know that. If that's what he did the risk is that if they do a drug test which comes back positive in the future he will be fired.
If the above applies to you then you can request an accommodation as a disabled person under those facts but dont ne surprised if you are randomly tested much more than any other employee who never abused. Good luck. Interesting question.... Read More
Were either you or the coworker addicted to drugs or alcohol and no longer are?
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities... Read More
If you were discriminated against because of your race, you may have a claim for race discrimination. You should contact an employment attorney who handles employment discrimination cases to discuss your circumstances further. We represent employees throughout Ohio and provide free consultations.
Ohio race discrimination lawyer https://mcoffmanlegal.com/race-discrimination-attorney-columbus-ohio/... Read More
If you were discriminated against because of your race, you may have a claim for race discrimination. You should contact an employment attorney... Read More
Answered 7 years and 9 months ago by Jonas Urba (Unclaimed Profile) |
2 Answers
If you are approached find out what the reason is for whatever action they take. Don't assume that going "back to doing calls" is a demotion or less money. Unless they tell you it's less money, it could be the same or more money. You won't know until you try.
Never quit, unless you already have another job lined up. Quitting may be he worst thing you can do. Constructive discharge, being forced to quit, is tough to prove as well.
You are in Florida. We don't have enough information to determine whether you have sufficient contacts - by contract, function, organization, etc... to have New York's laws possibly provide you with more rights than you do in Florida. New York Courts have stated that the public policy of Florida is repulsive to New York's. In comparison to New York, Florida is not favorable for employees but then many who relocate there no longer work so what concern would it be of theirs? I practiced in Florida for 16 years. No regrets in returning north.
Until there is adverse employment action against you all you can do is keeping doing your job to the best of your ability.
Saving money is not illegal unless the company hires females, who traditionally earn less, to replace males. Or uses money as a disguise for age discrimination, or other discrimination.
Pay attention.
Listen carefully.
Take notes.
Watch what happens to others. Is the company targeting protected classes of workers? Oder, disabled, male or female, etc...?
If it's age, it has to be a "but for age" an employee would still be working.
If it's just saving money, that may not be illegal?
Are you an "at will" employee like most people are? No written contract, no union, not working for the government then probably yes. They need no reason to terminate you. You will have the burden of proving it was an unlawful reason. Your notes, performance evaluations, documents will be key.
If you are offered a severance package (no company is required to offer one unless by contract) pay an employment lawyer to go over it with you before you sign it. Some of us do that long distance nowadays. I seem to represent more and more employees who I never personally meet. The legal landscape is changing rapidly as are most people's jobs.
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If you are approached find out what the reason is for whatever action they take. Don't assume that going "back to doing calls" is a demotion or less... Read More
Answered 7 years and 9 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
2 Answers
You are the Controller. The attorney bringing the action will use the discovery process to determine who knew what or who should have known what was happening with regard to the alleged illegal activities. The attorney wants to prove that the illegal activities took place and that management knew about or should have known about the illegal activities. You are in a difficult position. You should hire an attorney to advise you. I am not sure that the management will have your best interests. You need to understand your exposure. Please call to discuss. Ed Dimon, Esq. 732-797-1600... Read More
You are the Controller. The attorney bringing the action will use the discovery process to determine who knew what or who should have known what was... Read More
Answered 7 years and 9 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
You need to carefully read the terms and conditions of your resignation. The normal condition is that the employee waives all future rights to sue. Ed Dimon, Esq.
You need to carefully read the terms and conditions of your resignation. The normal condition is that the employee waives all future rights to sue.... Read More
Answered 7 years and 9 months ago by Edward J. Dimon (Unclaimed Profile) |
1 Answer
The ten year passage of time is going to make the case most difficult to overturn. You may want to 'supplement' the official record with the positive information after the termination so that you mitigate the consequences. It is far easier to supplement the record. Ed Dimon, Esq.
The ten year passage of time is going to make the case most difficult to overturn. You may want to 'supplement' the official record with the positive... Read More
Based on what you say, you probobally have a decent case. If it was a minor infraction of the rules that caused your firing and you can show that others who have had similar infractions were not discharged, then your case appears to have merit based on age discrimiantion. Retain counsel in Nevada for representation. ... Read More
Based on what you say, you probobally have a decent case. If it was a minor infraction of the rules that caused your firing and you can show that... Read More
Your daughter may be able to sue the school and the girls parents. More facts would be needed to know. Discuss in private with counsel.
Stephen
office in Houston and Orlando.
Your daughter may be able to sue the school and the girls parents. More facts would be needed to know. Discuss in private with... Read More