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Matthies Law Firm, P.C. |
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Serving
as Employment Law Advisors for over 25 years |
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Employment Law Training is Vital to the Health of your
Business!
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| Option 1: | One 4-hour session within
1 hour driving time of Tulsa (at your location) |
$1200, plus
$30/participant for materials |
| Option 2: |
Two separate 2-hour
sessions within 1 hour driving time of Tulsa (at your location) |
$1400, plus
$30/participant for materials |
| Option 3: |
Two sessions of
back-to-back sessions for 1st/2nd shift supervisors (same limits) |
$2300, plus
$30/participant for materials |
Our firm also offers other training programs, including statute-specific and issue-specific training (such as sexual harassment prevention). For larger organizations, we also are able to offer more intensive 1-2 day workshops for HR professionals, covering hot topics and emerging issues which may arise in your organization. So, if your company has any supervisory training needs, we will be happy to assist you.
Excerpts from the Tenth Circuit decision in EEOC v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. 98-2015 (10th Cir. 1999), which applied the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Kolstad on punitive damage awards in employment litigation, and discussed the effect of the lack of training of two Wal-Mart managers (Wiggins and Dunn) on the ultimate awardability of punitive damages:
We therefore consider whether Wiggins and Dunn's conduct ran contrary to Wal-Mart's good-faith efforts to comply with the ADA. Kolstad provides us no definitive standard for determining what constitutes good-faith compliance with the antidiscrimination requirements of the ADA. It is clear, however, that in modifying the common law rules of vicarious liability to protect employers who make good faith efforts to comply with Title VII, the Court intended to encourage "employers to adopt antidiscrimination policies and to educate their personnel on [federal] prohibitions" against workplace discrimination. Kolstad, 119 S. Ct. at 2129.
Thus, the extent to which an employer has adopted antidiscrimination policies and educated its employees about the requirements of the ADA is important in deciding whether it is insulated from vicarious punitive liability. Wal-Mart certainly had a written policy against discrimination, but that alone is not enough. Our review of the record leaves us unconvinced that Wal-Mart made a good faith effort to educate its employees about the ADA's prohibitions.
Wiggins testified that it was after her deposition in this case, some three years after Amaro's suspension and termination, that she became aware of "any law requiring employers to make reasonable accommodations to enable qualified employees to do their job," and that she had received no training about disability discrimination. EEOC's App. at 82. Lonnie Quintana, the personnel manager, who was also responsible for training at the store where Amaro worked, testified that during her seven years as a Wal-Mart manager, she had received no training in employment discrimination nor in the requirements of the ADA. She had never discussed the Act with any of the employees under her supervision, and did not have a copy of the Wal-Mart ADA handbook. See EEOC's App. at 173-75.
Wal-Mart's assertion of a generalized policy of equality and respect for the individual does not demonstrate an implemented good faith policy of educating employees on the Act's accommodation and nondiscrimination requirements. The evidence demonstrates a broad failure on the part of Wal-Mart to educate its employees, especially its supervisors, on the requirements of the ADA, and to prevent discrimination in the workplace. We therefore conclude that given the facts of this case, Wal-Mart enjoys no protection from vicarious punitive liability for the conduct of its managerial agents against Amaro.
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