Firm Pays $415K to Settle EEOC Discrimination Suit

by hr4u.
Dec 21 15

A Maryland-based environmental remediation services contractor will pay $415,000 and provide comprehensive equitable relief to resolve the EEOC race, gender discrimination and harassment lawsuit.

 

The EEOC had charged that ACM Services engaged in a pattern or practice of race and sex discrimination in hiring and also harassed two women based on sex, race and national origin and retaliated against them.

 

According to the EEOC’s suit, ACM Services exclusively used word-of-mouth recruitment practices for field laborer positions with the intent and effect of failing to recruit black job applicants. The EEOC said that ACM Services also refused to hire black job applicants, or female applicants for field laborer positions.

 

The EEOC also charged that ACM Services subjected two Hispanic female employees to harassment based on sex, national origin, and race and engaged in unlawful retaliation against them, which resulted in the termination of their jobs, when they opposed the harassment and discrimination.

 

Under the settlement, ACM Services will provide $305,000 in monetary relief for a class of persons not hired or recruited because of race or sex and $110,000 in monetary relief to the two Hispanic female employees.

 

Additionally, the three-year consent decree resolving the lawsuit enjoins ACM Services from engaging in any future race, sex, or national origin discrimination or retaliation, and provides substantial non-monetary relief.

 

The EEOC said ACM Services has agreed to a number of measures, including:

  • implement numerical goals for hiring qualified black applicants and female applicants, including both permanent and temporary or contingent workers, for field laborer positions;
  • create a job opportunities advertisement program to recruit a diverse pool of qualified applicants for field laborer positions and refrain from using word-of-mouth recruiting as its sole method for seeking job applicants;
  • conduct extensive self-assessment of hiring and work assignment practices to ensure non-discrimination and compliance with the terms of the consent decree;
  • pay for advertising of the class claims process; and
  • submit reports to the EEOC concerning numerical hiring goals and other consent decree compliance issues.

 

The EEOC said it will be conducting a claims process over the next 35 months to identify eligible claimants and determine awards.