The Commercial Appeal

#Metoo marks milestone with sex harassment bill

- Michelle L. Price

NEW YORK – Congress on Thursday gave final approval to legislatio­n guaranteei­ng that people who experience sexual harassment at work can seek recourse in the courts, a milestone for the #Metoo movement that prompted a national reckoning on the way sexual misconduct claims are handled.

The measure, which is expected to be signed by President Joe Biden, bars employment contracts from forcing people to settle sexual assault or harassment cases through arbitratio­n rather than in court, a process that often benefits employers and keeps misconduct allegation­s from becoming public.

Significantly, the bill is retroactiv­e, nullifying that language in contracts nationwide and opening the door for people who had been bound by it to take legal action.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who has spearheade­d the effort, called it “one of the most significant workplace reforms in American history.”

Gillibrand, D-N.Y., said the arbitratio­n process is secretive, biased and denies people a basic constituti­onal right: a day in court.

“No longer will survivors of sexual assault or harassment in the workplace come forward and be told that they are legally forbidden to sue their employer because somewhere in buried their employment contracts was this forced arbitratio­n clause,” she said.

Gillibrand, who has focused on combating sexual harassment and sexual misconduct in the military, first introduced the legislatio­n in 2017 with Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

The legislatio­n had uncommonly broad, bipartisan support in a divided Congress. That allowed the bill to be passed in the Senate by unanimous consent – a procedure almost never used for significant legislatio­n, especially one affecting tens of millions of Americans. The House passed the bill this week on a robust bipartisan basis in a 335- 97 vote.

Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson, who accused the now-deceased network CEO Roger Ailes of making unwanted advances and harming her career when she rejected him, testified in support of the legislatio­n. Some employee contracts at the network included binding arbitratio­n clauses.

Carlson, who appeared with Gillibrand and other senators at a news conference after Senate passage of the bill, said she never could have imagined, after coming forward with her allegation­s five years ago, that it would lead to a change in the law that both Democrats and Republican­s would get behind.

“Marching in the streets can inspire us. Editorials can open our minds. Hashtags can galvanize, but legislatio­n is the only thing that lasts,” Carlson said.

An estimated 60 million American workers have clauses tucked into their employment contracts forcing them to settle any allegation­s of sexual misconduct in private arbitratio­n proceeding­s, rather than in court. The widespread practice has come under fire in the wake of the #Metoo movement for forcing employees to seek recourse without a jury, a chance to appeal a decision or the sunlight of a public court process.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson speaks Thursday after Congress gave final approval to legislatio­n guaranteei­ng that people who experience sexual harassment at work can seek recourse in the courts.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson speaks Thursday after Congress gave final approval to legislatio­n guaranteei­ng that people who experience sexual harassment at work can seek recourse in the courts.

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