NYC Council eyes ban on agreements restricting workplace discrimination claims

โ€”

by

in

The New York City Council is considering strengthening the hand of workers looking to bring discrimination or harassment claims against their employers.

A pending proposal would deem unenforceable any employer-worker agreement restricting the time workers have to file such claims. The measure arises as a growing number of employers large and small are using the agreements and effectively limiting their legal exposure.

New York Cityโ€™s Human Rights Law gives workers one year to file a complaint with the New York City Commission on Human Rights and three years to file a claim in civil court. The Council bill would void โ€œany provision of any agreement purporting to shorten the periodsโ€ during which workers can file complaints, according to the text.

โ€œToo many employees have been unknowingly signing away their rights and their protections in contracts that employers are giving to them,โ€ said Councilmember Lincoln Restler, the billโ€™s sponsor, at a recent hearing held by the Councilโ€™s civil and human rights committee. โ€œIt is undermining the protections that New Yorkers are guaranteed.โ€

Restler said employers who have sought to shorten the filing period include Northwell Health, the stateโ€™s largest employer. A spokesman for Northwell Health said the health care provider had no comment on the legislation.

Anne Clark, managing partner of the law firm Vladeck, Raskin & Clark, P.C. and a member of the New York affiliate of the Legislative Committee of the National Employment Lawyers Association, said the bill could potentially benefit thousands of city workers.

Currently, she said, some companies require even prospective workers to waive their rights, by inserting clauses in job applications that give would-be workers as few as six months to file claims.

โ€œIn essence, the employers are trying to write themselves out of the civil rights laws,โ€ Clark said at a Council hearing last year.

In an email to Gothamist, Clark wrote that six months โ€œis not a lot of…

Read the full article here


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *