San Francisco Chronicle

Can better policies limit sex harassment?

- By Barbara Ortutay Barbara Ortutay is an Associated Press writer.

Sexual misconduct happens at work not because companies don’t publish harassment policies, experts say, but because managers don’t enforce them — and because people fail to apply them to themselves.

While the floodgates on reporting abuse and sexual harassment have opened with high-profile cases in Big Tech, Hollywood and Washington, it’s not clear whether the effects of the #MeToo movement have trickled down to day-to-day offices, factories and other places regular people work.

“I do think it will be a lasting movement,” said Roberta Kaplan, an attorney who won the Supreme Court case that legalized gay marriage in the U.S. But while Kaplan— who is defending a woman who is being sued by Hollywood produced Brett Ratner after accusing him of rape — thinks “most companies have policies that are pretty good,” there’s still a problem: Many people don’t truly comprehend them.

“They understand the English language, and what the words mean in the abstract sense, but I don’t think most people understood it in everyday life,” she said.

In an unusual move for a large company, Facebook on Friday publicly released its policies against workplace harassment and bullying, including its enforcemen­t procedures and how it investigat­es complaints. The company says it wants to help other companies create better policies, and ideally prompt them to publish their own procedures too.

“We don’t think we are perfect, we don’t think we have all the answers,” said Lori Goler, the company’s vice president of people. But she said companies should “come together to make sure that we all learn from each other.”

Facebook itself has been sued for sex discrimina­tion and harassment, in 2015 by a former employee who said she was wrongfully terminated in 2013 after she complained about being harassed. The woman, Chia Hong, later dropped the suit, and Facebook has maintained no wrongdoing.

Facebook would not disclose how many complaints of sexual harassment it has investigat­ed, or specific details on how well its policy has actually worked. Goler said the goal is not to reduce the number of reports, but to get “as many people to raise their hand as possible.”

Dan Eaton, an employment attorney and instructor of business ethics at San Diego State University, said “sexual harassment policies, like ethics policies, are only as good as the managers who implement them and are responsibl­e for making sure there is broad compliance.”

For a policy to be effective, he said, it has to be applied consistent­ly — and if wrongdoing is found, there have to be consequenc­es that are disclosed “not only to the person who complained but to the entire workplace.”

Goler said that while Facebook’s policy itself has been “pretty consistent” over the years, the training around has evolved to address the “gray areas” and nuanced situations that people might encounter. For example, she said, “how many times do you ask someone out?” before backing off, and what if they don’t say no outright but that they are busy? Do you ask again?

Facebook, like many other companies, will fire offenders if the company determines that sexual harassment has taken place. More difficult are the unclear cases, where it’s one person’s word against another’s.

Facebook also has a mandatory arbitratio­n agreement for anyone who joins the company. Experts on workplace harassment say these sorts of clauses can deter people who want to report harassment.

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