USA TODAY International Edition

COVID- 19 sparked flood of workplace lawsuits

OSHA received more than 9,000 complaints

- Paul Davidson

The COVID- 19 pandemic spawned more than 1,000 workplace- related lawsuits last year and drove a record number of class- action cases as employees sued over disputes over workplace safety, how they’re paid while working from home, and family and medical leave.

In 2020, the pandemic led employees to file 1,005 workplace lawsuits in state and federal courts, according to Chicago- based law firm Seyfarth Shaw.

Another law firm, Littler Mendelson, based in San Francisco, says the figure was even higher. It estimated 1,425 such cases as of mid- December.

The lawsuits represent just the leading edge of an even bigger wave that’s expected this year, says Gerald Maatman Jr., a Seyfarth partner. Many were filed after employees were laid off during the pandemic, he says.

“COVID is now a driver of filings and is significantly impacting workplace

class- actions,” Maatman says.

Among the 1,005 workplace lawsuits sparked by the outbreak, well over half – 690 – dealt with layoffs and firings, with employees arguing they were victims of age or racial discrimina­tion, for example.

Nearly 200 were related to workplace safety. Workers claimed businesses didn’t provide adequate personal protective equipment or hygiene products, didn’t comply with cleaning and sanitation protocols, or didn’t enforce temperatur­e checks or mask- wearing by customers or visitors, among other accusation­s.

The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion requires employers to establish a workplace “free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm” to employees.

Last year, OSHA issued COVID- 19- related citations triggered by 295 inspection­s, and it proposed penalties totaling $ 3.8 million. But Debbie Berkowitz, worker safety and health program director for the National Employment Law Project, a worker advocacy group, noted the agency has received more than 9,000 complaints.

Meanwhile, 113 of the workplace suits were so- called wage- and- hour claims, in which staffers contended they were forced to work off the clock, for instance. While most white- collar workers are exempt from overtime requiremen­ts, hourly workers must be paid extra for the hours they put in beyond 40 each week.

Fast- food workers may sue because they weren’t paid for the time they spent putting on and taking off protective gear. And call- center and clerical employees working from home may claim they weren’t compensate­d for all the hours they logged, or for their purchases of computers or printers.

A record 231 wage- and hour- related class- action lawsuits were certified last year, Maatman says, and COVID- 19 cases made up about one- third of those. That’s significant because class- action suits can include hundreds or thousands of plaintiffs, and certification means a judge has determined the case can go forward as a class action. Most such lawsuits are settled before they go to trial, Maatman says.

Other types of workplace suits, according to Seyfarth Shaw:

• Discrimina­tion. In New Jersey, a firm denied a 70- year- old plaintiff ’ s request to work from home. He had cited his age and medical condition for the request. In another case, a worker lost a job because the employer was concerned about exposing him to COVID- 19.

• Leave. Many suits say employees grappling with COVID- 19 themselves or caring for a relative have been illegally denied sick leave or family and medical leave.

• Retaliatio­n. Employees charged that they were fired for complainin­g about unsafe working conditions, or the failure to comply with COVID- 19 protocols.

 ?? ERIN BORMETT/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? A car sporting a sign calling for a safe and healthy workplace drives past Smithfield Foods in Sioux Falls, S. D., on April 9 at a protest on behalf of employees during the COVID- 19 outbreak.
ERIN BORMETT/ USA TODAY NETWORK A car sporting a sign calling for a safe and healthy workplace drives past Smithfield Foods in Sioux Falls, S. D., on April 9 at a protest on behalf of employees during the COVID- 19 outbreak.

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