Lexpert Magazine

Jan/Feb 2018

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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62 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2018 It was in October that e New York Times and e New Yorker first published reports by more than a dozen women that Hollywood film executive Harvey Wein- stein had sexually harassed or sexually as- saulted them. Since then, a shamefully long parade of women in the US have stepped forward detailing similar stories of perverse behaviour by privileged men. e more fa- miliar names include television host Char- lie Rose, Senator Al Franken, actor Kevin Spacey and a growing list that includes cor- porate bigwigs as well. In Canada, Albert Schultz, Founding Artistic Director of the Soulpepper theatre company, is being sued by four women alleging sexual harassment in the workplace. More than 250 members of the theatre community have signed a pe- tition in support of the four complainants, and Schultz has been compelled to resign. You might think this rising tide of #MeToo Twitter revelations would prompt a high degree of anxious corporate navel- gazing about the need for better harassment policies and remedies in US workplaces. e so-called "Weinstein Effect" — where droves of women have been emboldened to tell their stories of sexual harassment — has certainly prompted a conversation. But the evidence suggests that, so far, conversation hasn't resulted in corporate change. In Canada, the story is different, because we've been down this bumpy road before, says Jodi Gallagher Healy, a labour and em- ployment lawyer with Hicks Morley Hamil- ton Stewart Storie LLP in London, Ontario. "I think the greater impact in Canada has been from the Jian Ghomeshi situation. e CBC was such a well-known employer and Mr. Ghomeshi such a well-known figure on CBC, I think it really rang through the halls of employers in Canada." Also helping to ring Canada's sexual harassment alarm bell was the Dalhou- sie University scandal in January 2015. irteen male dentistry students were suspended for posting violent sexual com- ments aimed at female classmates on their Facebook group page. Together the two incidents sparked greater awareness about the need for Canadian corporations and institutions to create or revamp their poli- cies regarding sexual harassment. Host Culture e Ghomeshi case was one of those ex- tremely rare instances where an investiga- tion report into workplace sexual harass- ment was made public. e report was pre- pared by Janice Rubin and Parisa Nikfar- jam of Rubin omlinson LLP, a Toronto- based employment law firm specializing in workplace training and investigations concerning harassment and violence. KATHERINE POLLOCK > FASKEN MARTINEAU DUMOULIN LLP I think there's a lot of training going on at Canadian companies … [but] I believe that companies could do a better job in ensuring top managers … are trained and understand that it is part of their role to effect cultural change when necessary. ILLUSTRATION BY SÉBASTIEN THIBAULT | IN-HOUSE ADVISOR: HARASSMENT IN THE WORKPLACE |

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