Los Angeles Times

Addressing sex harassment starts with HR

Scandals put focus on human resources department­s’ role.

- By Tracey Lien and David Pierson

SAN FRANCISCO — A woman is sexually harassed or assaulted at work. She alerts her company’s human resources department, which does nothing. Only after she makes her allegation­s public does her employer pay attention.

It’s a narrative familiar now only because women like former Uber engineer Susan Fowler and others have risked their careers to share their stories about how the people hired to protect them in their workplace ultimately failed.

In the wake of Fowler’s bombshell blog post — which set in motion events that led to the eventual resignatio­n of Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick — and the recent sexual harassment scandals roiling companies including Amazon Studios, Fox News, Vox Media and Weinstein Co., questions abound as to what human resources department­s were doing when employees needed them most.

At the heart of the problem, experts and victims say, is the fact such department­s often serve the company first and foremost, not individual employees. Their job is to limit any reputation­al and legal damage to the company, creating, in some circumstan­ces, an incentive to dismiss allegation­s or keep them secret.

“Is human resources really the right place to go?” Gretchen Carlson, the former Fox News anchor who sued the company’s late chief executive, Roger Ailes, for sexual harassment, told Fortune. “Because what I always equate it to is, who’s giving them the paycheck?

“In the end, if the culture’s being set from the top and it’s trickling down to the lower levels, human resources may not be looking out for you,” she added.

Even if human resources officials wanted to take aggressive measures against problemati­c employees, there’s no guarantee they could. Many don’t have a di-

rect line to the CEO, let alone the board of directors, said Patrick Wright, director of the Center for Executive Succession at the University of South Carolina.

“It all starts at the top of the HR house,” Wright said. A company’s human resources chief has “to have a relationsh­ip with the board that makes it possible to surface issues … particular­ly those that are being hidden by the CEO.”

The problem, said Wright, is that many human resources department­s don’t feel empowered to speak up against executives or protect employees from the very people who are signing their paychecks.

This is particular­ly pronounced in industries such as tech, where the high demand for talent means that human resources tends to focus on hiring and retaining talent rather than advising and coaching leaders on their behavior.

The fierce competitio­n for workers has also taught some executives that they are “almost god-like and can get away with anything,” said Wright. This can lead to human resources managers playing down complaints out of fear of offending a “high performer.”

That’s precisely what Fowler says she was told when she complained about a predatory supervisor.

Many human resource teams at start-ups tend to be small, inexperien­ced and focused on recruitmen­t, leaving them ill-equipped to handle complaints when they arise.

That was the case for Eden Rohatensky, a designer who wrote a blog post detailing her experience­s with sexual harassment at various start-ups. (Rohatensky was a former employee of the media company Vox. Though she did not explicitly state the name of her employer or harasser, Vox announced it had fired an editorial director for inappropri­ate behavior shortly after she published her blog.)

“There aren’t resources to truly take care of people, and so many things get messed up because of that,” Rohatensky told the Los Angeles Times via email.

All this “creates a perfect storm of somewhat out-ofcontrol executives,” said Wright.

That sort of environmen­t compounds the lack of faith many employees have in their human resources department­s.

Human resources is considered so ineffectua­l by workers that 75% of women who have experience­d unwanted and inappropri­ate advances from male colleagues have never bothered to report it out of fear of retaliatio­n or not being believed, according to a 2016 Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission study. Of those who did report incidents, 95% said they’d seen no consequenc­es for accused men.

The most successful human resources teams — those that are able to nip problems in the bud before they can become explosive scandals, lawsuits or costly settlement­s — are empowered by a head of human resources who in turn is empowered by a company’s top leaders, corporate governance experts said.

Some proven strategies, according to mediator Abby Silverman Weiss, include having an organizati­onal chart that has the head of human resources reporting directly to the CEO or higher.

Alexandra Coonce, the vice president of people at tech start-up Glint, meets one-on-one with her CEO every week and has quarterly meetings with the company’s board members. She has a direct line to the board, which she believes has helped the company create an environmen­t of “transparen­cy, trust and openness.”

“I don’t believe any of us are powerless,” said Coonce, who has even been granted the authority to hire a thirdparty firm to conduct internal investigat­ions should it be necessary.

Another strategy includes getting the company’s board or audit committee to audit the human resources team as they would any other risk, which is what former U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder recommende­d to Uber after the ride-hailing company commission­ed his law firm to investigat­e the company’s culture.

“If they look at HR and ask questions as if it’s a regular risk — questions such as, ‘Do we have any potential HR issues that could rise to a material level?’ — that can also empower an HR team,” Silverman Weiss said.

Uber said it has overhauled its human resources practices since Fowler’s blog post. The company tripled the size of its human resources team and introduced an anonymous hotline for employees to report abuse or inappropri­ate behavior, an Uber spokespers­on said.

The company believes its failings in the past were partly due to the lack of senior employees in human resources.

The vice president heading the department, Liane Hornsey, now reports directly to Chief Executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi. She’s also tasked with informing the board of directors about progress the company is making in meeting Holder’s recommenda­tions, the spokespers­on said.

For organizati­ons stuck in a culture of toxicity, sometimes it takes a scandal and leadership overhaul before human resources can be effective again.

“There usually has to be some type of shock,” said David Mayer, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. “Or it could be the industry reading the leaves. You can see that in Hollywood this isn’t just affecting Harvey Weinstein’s firm — a lot of firms are now hyper-aware of this.”

Many effective heads of human resources have had “badge-on-the-table moments,” said Wright, where they know that raising an issue could get them fired, but their conscience requires that they raise it anyway.

“I heard one chief HR officer say that they should have an employment contract that specifies a significan­t payout if they are fired, [and that] that would give them courage,” said Wright.

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? EXPERTS and victims of workplace sexual harassment and assault say that human resources department­s often are devoted to defending a company’s reputation more than upholding individual employees’ rights.
Spencer Platt Getty Images EXPERTS and victims of workplace sexual harassment and assault say that human resources department­s often are devoted to defending a company’s reputation more than upholding individual employees’ rights.

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