Chattanooga Times Free Press

Poll: Some workers changing actions amid #MeToo

- BY MICHELLE R. SMITH AND HANNAH FINGERHUT

WASHINGTON — Barbara Myers started work as an apprentice electricia­n in 1995, and over the years she learned to shoot back sexual banter on the job site as much as she had to take it from some of her coworkers.

Those days, she says, are starting to change.

“I have worked over the last several years, actually, to really be much more circumspec­t in my conversati­on,” Myers said. “And so, basically, I don’t talk about things like that. And I know a lot of the guys are the same way.”

Myers is among the roughly one-third of American workers who say they’ve changed how they act at work in the past year, as the #MeToo movement has focused the nation’s attention on sexual misconduct and highlighte­d issues of racial and ethnic diversity at the same time, according to a new poll of Americans who are full- or part-time employees.

The survey, conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs

Research in collaborat­ion with the software company SAP, also found that about a third of all working adults say they have talked about sexual misconduct in the workplace with coworkers in the past year.

“I have worked constructi­on. And I grew up during that time period, where banter of that type was much more free,” Myers said. “I have had to watch what I say. … If I find that it would be offensive to a woman, I know that there are men that are just as sensitive.”

The poll finds American workers view the #MeToo movement more favorably than unfavorabl­y, 45% versus 27%. Half of women had a favorable opinion, compared with 4 in 10 men; just over 3 in 10 men view the movement unfavorabl­y.

Those who say they have been subjected to workplace sexual misconduct are especially likely to view the movement favorably, compared with of those who say they have not been victims of misconduct, 60% versus 42%.

About half of working adults think things will change for the better for working women in general as a result of the recent high-profile sexual misconduct cases. And as a result of recent focus on issues of racial and ethnic diversity, about 4 in 10 working adults think change for the better is likely for African Americans, while about a third say the same for workers of Hispanic origin.

Still, the poll found that few Americans expect positive change will come to their own workplace or for them personally. Count ShaeTiaunn­a Green, 26, a cashier from Wyoming, Michigan, among them.

Green, who is African American and a lesbian, said she’s hoping for positive change, but she’s not optimistic.

Still, she said she has thrived in diverse workplaces, so when she applied for her current job at a supermarke­t last year, she made sure it was diverse and had inclusive policies. The poll finds that diversity and inclusion policies are much more important to black and Hispanic workers than to white workers and are slightly more important to women than to men.

“I wanted to make sure that was an aspect, and so that I knew that everyone had an equal opportunit­y and I wouldn’t be excluded from certain opportunit­ies,” she said.

About 4 in 10 working Americans say their employer has establishe­d new training on harassment in the workplace, instituted new policies about harassment or introduced new training on workplace diversity in the last two years. Most of those who say their workplace has made any of those changes think it’s had a positive impact.

Jason Phillips, 49, works for Seattle and said employees receive ongoing diversity training that he believes has had a positive effect on his workplace, allowing people to advance their understand­ing of issues of race and equity.

“We’re all on a different point in that spectrum,” he said. “And so, it provides everyone all these different opportunit­ies to advance their awareness wherever they are on that spectrum.”

In assessing their own workplaces, about 4 in 10 working adults say white people and men experience more advantages compared with others, while about half don’t think they are more or less advantaged, according to the poll.

Robin Knight, a 58-year-old dental technician from Brooklyn, said that when it comes to pay, men often have the advantage, even though she thinks in her female-dominated field, women often have an edge in getting hired.

“For some reason, if a man is writing a check, he’ll write more to his own counterpar­t than to us, and I don’t know why,” she said.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL ?? McDonald’s workers carry a banner and march toward a McDonald’s in south Los Angeles.
AP FILE PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL McDonald’s workers carry a banner and march toward a McDonald’s in south Los Angeles.

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