July 13, 2021

Female Doctors Being Penalized for Wearing Hoop Earrings 

According to a recent story on The Lily, women in medicine, particularly Latinx and Black women, are being unfairly judged as unprofessional because of their choice to wear hoop earrings during work or school hours. 

What started as a tweet from a doctor recalling her being docked points on a practical exam in medical school for wearing hoop earrings turned into a chorus of similar stories from women of color in the medical profession with thousands of doctors and medical students tweeting with the hashtag #BigHoopEnergy

Many of the women’s stories touched on how personal appearance is policed by those with seniority or who are in positions of power. These experiences fit into a wider constellation of confrontations over workplace appearance between people of color and the older, whiter establishment that makes assumptions about an apparent lack of professionalism because of hairstyle, clothing or accessories.

While some forms of appearance discrimination are prohibited by law, such as those that infringe on a protected class, there is less clarity nationally regarding issues related to dress codes and hairstyles, as evidenced by the Supreme Court’s unwillingness to consider EEOC v. Catastrophe Management Solutions where a black employee was fired for refusing to cut her dreadlocks.

New York City and New York State have taken a more liberal approach in fighting race-based discrimination. The NYC and NYS Human Rights Laws specifically define natural hair style as a racially protected characteristic. NYC imposes disparate treatment liability for any employer who subjects an individual to less favorable treatment because of a protected characteristic.  

Similarly, Latinx and Black women’s unfavorable treatment based on their choice to wear hoop earrings likely qualifies as disparate treatment on the basis of race and gender, as hoop earrings have longstanding associations with minority communities. An employer looking to prohibit medical professionals from wearing hoop earrings can impose an across-the-board dress code policy prohibiting all employees from wearing large earrings. Yet, the policy’s implementation must be proportionate across all employees and not just those with protected characteristics under the law.

Regardless of the legality, such experiences as the one described in the Lily demonstrate the difficulty women of color have being judged in professional settings by their appearance rather than their skills and experience.

 

 

Staffing Updates at Berke-Weiss Law

June 1, 2021
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Berke-Weiss Law has some new employees and promotions to share.

Wage Gaps and Cutthroat Culture Highlight Gender Disparity, ABA Report Finds

May 13, 2021
Gender Discrimination
In a new report undertaken by the American Bar Association, several key aspects of the legal profession are causing women attorneys to consider leaving the field. Among the most significant factors are the persistent pay gap based on gender and the hyper-individualistic, competitive nature of the industry, which often pits lawyers against one another, degrading any sense of community workplace culture.

Childcare and Paid Leave Funding Part of $1.8tn “American Families Plan” 

April 29, 2021
Paid Family Leave
In a speech to a joint session of Congress, President Biden unveiled the “The American Families Plan,” the third part of the president’s push to power a post-pandemic recovery. Along with the $1.9 trillion fiscal stimulus and a proposal for an infrastructure plan that would earmark $2.3 trillion to upgrade roads, bridges, railroads, and the country’s aging power grid, the American Families Plan seeks to fund a wide range of initiatives to address deep-lying problems on the job market that the pandemic exposed, and hopefully help the more than 2 million women who left the workforce in 2020 to return.

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