May 20, 2020
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Americans Still Uncomfortable Returning to Work or Being in Crowds

Along with the rest of the world, we’re continuing to watch the reopening efforts unfolding. In countries like France and Iran, which have reopened in recent weeks, there have been setbacks as new outbreaks pop up; something that epidemiologists and public health experts expected.

Here in the U.S., reopening has been left largely up to choices on a state-by-state or even county-by-county basis, often with states reopening while not yet meeting CDC guidelines regarding insufficient testing regimes or too many daily cases to make contact tracing logistically feasible.

One of the major hurdles to reopening, as we have noted in previous blog posts, is ensuring that employers have taken appropriate safeguards to protect their workers. As we learn more about the virus, one thing that is increasingly clear is that many of the major outbreaks are occurring at the workplace, with significant hotspots at prisons, call centers, meat processing facilities, and warehouses where many people are crammed together in poorly ventilated areas. At the end of April, 66% of workers were not comfortable returning to the workplace.

At this point, without firm guidelines, and a Senate majority leader blocking any progress on a new round of stimulus unless employers are exempted from liability regarding workplace safety, there is still too much uncertainty regarding employees safety at work. On top of that, some states are trying to force workers off unemployment rolls by making them ineligible for benefits if they are invited back to work by the employers, regardless of whether the employers have taken COVID-specific health and safety precautions.

Ultimately in the U.S., it will be up to individuals to make these determinations. In April, the Associated Press reported that 94% of Americans were avoiding large crowds, and according to former Obama-era official Andy Slavitt, that number has barely budged, with 70% saying it will take months for them to feel comfortable in crowds of 10 or more.

With Michael Bloomberg in the Race, It's Time We Talk About NDAs (again)

February 25, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
Sexual Harassment
In 2018, Governor Cuomo signed a law that banned many NDAs and mandatory arbitration for complaints, but some activists and policymakers argued that the state had focused too narrowly on sexual harassment, and the 2019 laws expanded the 2018 laws to include protections against NDAs in other forms of workplace discrimination.

The Postpartum Ad the Oscars Wouldn't Run

February 24, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
Paid Family Leave
Sometimes reality is too real for Hollywood and the culture machine, as was demonstrated when ABC and the Academy decided not to air an ad dealing straightforwardly with the reality of postpartum life. The ad for Frida Mom, a retailer in the baby and new mother field, depicted a women confronting in a realistic manner the stress and changes that occur for new mothers.

Associate Alex Berke quoted in Mother Jones on Defamation and Sexual Harassment

February 18, 2020
Sexual Harassment
Alex Berke, an employment lawyer in New York, says she asks men what their goal is when they come to her after being accused of sexual harassment. Will a lawsuit really stop people from talking about them?

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