Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) makes it unlawful for an employer to discriminate against someone because of:
Title VII also makes it unlawful for an employer to take a negative action, or retaliate, against a person because they:
Title VII also makes it unlawful to use policies or practices that seem neutral but have the effect of discriminating against people because of their race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, childbirth, and related conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity), or national origin.
Under Title VII, it is unlawful to discriminate in any aspect of employment, including:
Under Title VII, employers also cannot:
The Attorney General, through ELS, brings lawsuits under Title VII against state and local government employers after the EEOC refers a complaint to the Department of Justice. ELS also can start investigations and bring lawsuits against state and local government employers when there is reason to believe that an employer’s policy or practice discriminates against a group of job applicants or employees based on their race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, childbirth, and related conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity), or national origin.
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) is a federal law that covers employers, including state and local government employers, with 15 or more employees. This law requires covered employers to grant “reasonable accommodations” to qualified job applicants and workers with known limitations because of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. “Reasonable accommodations” can be changes to how a job is performed or changes to how the workplace normally operates. Some examples of possible reasonable accommodations may include: allowing a correctional officer to have a water bottle or food during their shift, allowing a public school teacher longer or more flexible breaks to use the restroom, providing an emergency medical technician with light duty or help with lifting tasks, temporarily transferring a patrol officer to a less physically demanding or safer position, changing a uniform or dress code to allow maternity clothing, and changing equipment or workspaces, such as providing a state park ranger with a stool to sit on.
The PWFA requires an employer to provide reasonable accommodations unless it would be an undue hardship for the employer. “Undue hardship” means the change would be too difficult or expensive and depends on the facts and the employer. The applicant or employee and the employer must engage in an interactive process before the employer decides how to respond to the worker’s request.
The PWFA protects workers who ask for reasonable accommodations, workers who were wrongly denied a reasonable accommodation, and workers who file complaints under the PWFA or who reasonably oppose actions that are illegal under the PWFA. It also protects people from coercion, intimidation, threats, or interference in using their PWFA rights or helping others exercise their PWFA rights.
Under the PWFA, an employer cannot:
The Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA) ensures that servicemembers can return to their civilian jobs after they finish military service obligations. USERRA requires employers to give servicemembers the seniority, status, and rate of pay that they would have if they had remained continuously employed by their civilian employer without a break for military service.
Employers have other obligations under USERRA, too. For example:
USERRA also prohibits:
USERRA covers both voluntary and involuntary military service, in peacetime and wartime, and applies to virtually all civilian employers, including the federal government, state and local governments, and private employers, no matter how many people work for that employer.
Under USERRA, the Department of Justice can bring a lawsuit after the U.S. Department of Labor determines that a servicemember’s USERRA rights were violated and refers the complaint to us. The Department of Justice can bring lawsuits under USERRA against private employers as well as state and local government employers.
Executive Order 11246 applies to federal government contractors and federal government-assisted construction contractors and subcontractors who do over $10,000 in federal government business in one year. It prohibits those employers from discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, childbirth, and related conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity) or national origin.
The Executive Order also requires federal government contractors to take action to ensure equal opportunity in all aspects of employment, including training programs, outreach efforts, and other affirmative steps. Contractors must take action to recruit and advance qualified minorities and women for jobs in which they are underused compared to how many people in those groups are available in the workforce. Contractors should include these efforts into their written personnel policies. Federal government contractors with written affirmative action programs must implement them, keep them on file, and update them yearly. Also, under some circumstances, Executive Order 11246 makes it unlawful for federal contractors and subcontractors from taking negative actions against applicants and employees because they have asked about, discussed, or shared information about their pay or their co-workers’ pay.
Federal government contractors also must take all necessary actions to make sure no one in the workplace tries to intimidate or discriminate against a person for filing a complaint or participating in a lawsuit under the Executive Order.
Executive Order 11246 is administered by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs at the Department of Labor. After the OFCCP sends a matter to our offices, the Department of Justice can a bring a lawsuit in federal court.