A federal jury has awarded $2 million in punitive damages against SkyWest Airlines and $170,000 for emotional harm to Sarah Budd, a female parts clerk, to settle a sex discrimination lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency announced.
The EEOC said the verdict is the largest jury trial award ever obtained by the agency in the Northern District of Texas.
According to the EEOC, multiple coworkers and at least one manager made extremely crude sexual comments to Budd, including the suggestion that she should make money via prostitution. Male co-workers also made suggestions or requests that Budd perform demeaning sex acts, and made frequent jokes and remarks about rape and rape victims, including the statement that women who report rape do so for attention.
The jury agreed that Budd, herself a survivor of sexual assault, experienced physical illness and intense mental anguish as a result of her work environment.
Budd reported the sexual harassment to her supervisor, who did nothing in response to her complaint. When Budd reported the sexual harassment to the employee relations department, the employee relations manager did not interview many employees identified as witnesses to and participants in the harassment or ask obvious follow-up questions.
As a result, the investigation did not uncover the full extent of the harassment. Although SkyWest promised to discipline participating coworkers and provide department-wide training, the discipline was superficial and SkyWest canceled the training after Budd retired, deciding that it was no longer necessary. SkyWest conducted training three years later, and only in response to litigation, the EEOC said.
The Dallas jury of ten returned a unanimous verdict finding that SkyWest Airlines subjected Budd to a hostile work environment based on her sex and that the company knew or should have known of the harassment but failed to take prompt remedial action. The jury did not find Budd had also been retaliated against when she was placed on indefinite administrative leave following her complaint, however.
The monetary judgement was reduced to $300,000 based on Title VII’s statutory caps applicable to compensatory and punitive damages.
The attorneys representing the EEOC include lead trial attorney Lang and trial attorneys Brooke L贸pez and Ann Henry. Budd was also personally represented by Edith Thomas of the law firm of Zipen, Amster, & Greenberg.
Source: EEOC
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