The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

States reconsider confidenti­al deals in workplace harassment

- By Michelle R. Smith

Confidenti­ality agreements have come under fire during the #MeToo movement as one way abusive men have been able to hold on to their jobs, and keep harassing more women.

State lawmakers are listening. They introduced bills in at least 16 states this year to restrict the use by private employers of non-disclosure agreements in sexual harassment cases, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. They became law in six states: Arizona, Maryland, New York, Tennessee, Vermont and Washington.

Lawmakers in California also took action this past week, sending two bills to the governor. One, championed by actress Jane Fonda and former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson, would prohibit employers from requiring nondisclos­ure agreements related to sexual misconduct as a condition of getting or keeping a job.

The other would ban settlement­s in sexual harassment or discrimina­tion cases that seek to keep the circumstan­ces secret. It would apply to the private sector, government agencies and the Legislatur­e.

Legal experts say it’s not clear yet what effect such legislatio­n will have on sexual harassment in the workplace. Some warned that the new laws could have unintended consequenc­es.

Zelda Perkins, a former assistant to Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, has said confidenti­ality agreements like the one she signed don’t adequately protect victims. She left the company in 1988 after one of her colleagues told her Weinstein tried to rape her.

Former Fox News anchor Juliet Huddy, who agreed to keep the details confidenti­al when she settled harassment claims against former host Bill O’Reilly, told NBC’s Megyn Kelly last year that signing such an agreement is “not necessaril­y the best move.” If more women knew others were being harassed, they might be better prepared to fight it, she said.

Among the new laws is one in New York, which says settlement­s for sexual harassment may not include a confidenti­ality provision unless the person who brought the complaint wants it that way. Arizona now allows victims of sexual misconduct to talk to police or testify in a criminal case even if they signed a non-disclosure agreement.

The NCSL says Maryland, Tennessee, Washington and Vermont now also restrict non-disclosure agreements in employment contracts. Rhode Island Democratic state Rep. Teresa Tanzi sponsored a similar bill that she said was directly inspired by some of the infamous cases of harassment.

“This is how it was allowed to exist and perpetuate,” she said.

The Rhode Island bill ultimately failed.

Congress also targeted confidenti­ality agreements in the tax bill it passed late last year. It bars people from deducting confidenti­al settlement­s with sexual harassment and misconduct victims as a business expense on their federal taxes.

A new Vermont law prohibits employers from requiring workers, as a condition of employment, to sign agreements preventing them from disclosing or reporting sexual harassment. It does not outlaw voluntary nondisclos­ure agreements in settlement­s.

Among those who pushed for the Vermont law was Lisa Senecal, who says she was harassed by an executive at a technology company in Stowe, Vermont, when she was seeking a job there.

“There really isn’t a more egregious form of sexual harassment than what happened with me,” she said, while declining to provide details.

She struck a settlement with the company that included a non-disclosure agreement, and the executive left the firm. Months later, another woman told Senecal she had been harassed by the same executive under similar circumstan­ces.

Because of the non-disclosure agreement, Senecal was unable to tell the woman that she had experience­d almost the exact same behavior, she said.

“I think the worst is to find out there’s someone else and know that you can’t help that person to the degree that you’d like to be able to,” she said.

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 ?? RYAN MERCER /THE BURLINGTON FREE PRESS VIA AP ?? This June 4, 2018 photo shows Lisa Senecal in Burlington, Vt., co-founder of The Maren Group that consults businesses on handling issues including sexual harassment.
RYAN MERCER /THE BURLINGTON FREE PRESS VIA AP This June 4, 2018 photo shows Lisa Senecal in Burlington, Vt., co-founder of The Maren Group that consults businesses on handling issues including sexual harassment.

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