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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LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2018 63 eir report made nine recommenda- tions and pointed out CBC management's numerous missed opportunities to act ear- lier to mitigate Ghomeshi's toxic impact on the women he worked with. It has served as a guideline of what to do when rumours or complaints of bullying, harassment, sexual harassment or other destructive behaviours circulate through a workplace. Two things stood out in the report for Gallagher Healy. e first was about capacity — the resources at hand, especially a clear policy and proper training that give an organizai- ton ways to prevent or reduce harassment of any kind. Only then can an organization investigate and deal with harassment if it happens. e CBC was found lacking. "e other idea that came out of the Ghomeshi situation was this idea of 'host culture,'" says Gallagher Healy. "is idea that the host was untouchable. What the report ultimately drives home for employ- ers," continues Gallagher Healy, "is that no one is untouchable. Everyone should be bound by the proper rules of how we treat each other." Gallagher Healy got a lot of anxious questions from clients aer the Ghomeshi report went public, "particularly around the issue of, when is there sufficient infor- mation [before the complaint] for the em- ployer to take action or do an investigation." Oen, especially when harassment involves superiors, victims are reluctant to file offi- cial complaints for fear of inaction or retri- bution. So they suffer silently. It doesn't help that, in Canada, some companies still fail to provide adequate means for harassment vic- tims to discreetly and reassuringly express their complaints through the right process. Rubin omlinson recently surveyed companies about, among other things, the percentage of employers that had improved their harassment complaint mechanisms with a confidential hotline. Janice Rubin was dismayed by the re- sults. e respondents were generally from companies that had more proactive harass- ment policies, "yet only 50 per cent of them had [created a hotline]," she says. Clearly, from the cases worming to the surface in the US, there's been a long-stand- ing and significant sense of untouchability by powerful men across a wide spectrum of business and political arenas. at has ranged all the way up to the presidency of the United States. Bill Clinton allegedly propositioned and exposed himself, with- out consent, to Paula Jones and, though he paid an $850,000 out-of-court settlement, he le office with the highest approval rat- ing of any president since the Second World War. More recently Americans have seen Donald Trump elected to the country's SHANA FRENCH > SHERRARD KUZZ LLP If you don't have a workplace policy on sexual harassment and provide training on it, and hold your managers accountable for it, there is significant liability. Not just from a brand perspective, but from a legal perspective. | IN-HOUSE ADVISOR: HARASSMENT IN THE WORKPLACE |

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