Under California law, an employer is required to promptly and thoroughly investigate any claim of harassment, discrimination, or retaliation. The obligation to investigate arises out of the affirmative duty under the Fair Employment and Housing Act, Cal. Gov. Code section 12940(j) and (k) to take all reasonable steps necessary to prevent discrimination and harassment from occurring. The duty to investigate a harassment claim promptly and throughly exists whether or not the claimant consents to an investigation or cooperates with one. Further, neither an employee’s failure to report harassment nor the fact that the harassment stopped before the investigation began conclusively absolve an employer from liability for discrimination and harassment. Moreover, it is not enough for an employer to conduct an investigation without also taking measure to protect the employee from retaliation. CommentsJerry Shumway 09/12/2010 11:37
I hope the same laws apply to Arizona. I wrote a letter to HQ complaining of harassment by my supervisor. She was harassing me because I requested reasonable accommodation. They did nothing and I was discharged 12 days after their receipt of my letter. They should have at least investigated my complaint and maybe I would still be working. Instead, they tried to create a bogus paper trail to justify their actions!!!!
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