Back in October 2013, The Employee With The Dragon Tattoo told you
about how the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
("EEOC") had filed suit against Catastrophe Management Solutions Inc.
(“CMSI”), an Alabama based insurance claims company. The lawsuit alleged the company violated
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act by discriminating against an African-American
job applicant on the basis of race because she wore dreadlocks. The case
highlighted the employment issues that can arise over workplace grooming
policies, and also sparked sharp criticism against the EEOC’s position from the
business community, as well as on the pages of the Wall Street Journal.
However, in a recent ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit has upheld the employer’s workplace ban on dreadlocks and
rejected the EEOC’s hard-edged position that a mutable choice, such as
hairstyle, equals an immutable trait such as race.
The case began back in 2012. Chastity Jones was offered a position with
CMSI as a customer service representative. At the time of her interview, Jones,
who is black, had blond hair that was dreaded in neat curls, or “curllocks.”
CMSI’s grooming policy required employees to be “dressed and groomed in a
manner that projects a professional and businesslike image while adhering to
company and industry standards and/or guidelines . . . [H]airstyles should
reflect a business/professional image.
No excessive hairstyles or unusual colors are acceptable.” When the manager in charge told Jones that
the company did not allow dreadlocks and that she would have to change her
hairstyle in order to obtain employment. Jones declined to do so, and the
manager immediately rescinded the job offer.
In the lawsuit, the EEOC argued that
CMSI’s ban on dreadlocks and the imposition of its grooming policy on Jones
discriminated against African-Americans based on physical and/or cultural
characteristics. At the time of the
filing of the lawsuit, Delner Franklin-Thomas, district director for the EEOC's
Birmingham District Office, stated, “Generally, there are racial distinctions
in the natural texture of black and non-black hair. The EEOC will not tolerate
employment discrimination against African-American employees because they
choose to wear and display the natural texture of their hair, manage and style
their hair in a manner amenable to it, or manage and style their hair in a
manner differently from non-blacks.”
The lower federal court later dismissed the lawsuit on the basis that unlike race, “a hairstyle, even one closely associated with a particular ethnic group, is a mutable characteristic.” The EEOC appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, arguing that dreadlocks are a natural outgrowth of the immutable trait of race and that a policy forbidding dreadlocks could be a form of racial stereotyping.
The lower federal court later dismissed the lawsuit on the basis that unlike race, “a hairstyle, even one closely associated with a particular ethnic group, is a mutable characteristic.” The EEOC appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, arguing that dreadlocks are a natural outgrowth of the immutable trait of race and that a policy forbidding dreadlocks could be a form of racial stereotyping.
In his recent article discussing the Eleventh Circuit’s ruling
against the EEOC, my colleague Day Peake, in Phelps
Dunbar’s Mobile, Alabama Office, explained the appellate court’s
rationale:
The Eleventh Circuit held that Title VII’s
prohibition on intentional discrimination does not protect hairstyles
culturally associated with race. Rather, it prohibits intentional discrimination based on immutable traits such as race, color or
national origin. By this rationale, the court explained, discrimination based
on black hair texture, such as a natural Afro, would violate Title VII. A
prohibition on an all-braided hairstyle, however, addresses a mutable choice
and does not implicate Title VII’s proscription of intentional race
discrimination.
This decision offers an important exploration of the
definition of “race,” which is not defined in Title VII. EEOC relied on its
Compliance Manual definition, which provides that “Title VII prohibits employment discrimination against a person
because of cultural characteristics often linked to race or ethnicity, such as
a person’s name, cultural dress and grooming practices, or accent or manner of
speech.” The court chose not to give this guidance much deference or weight in
its analysis because the court found the guidance to be contradictory to a
position taken by EEOC in an earlier administrative appeal.
The Eleventh Circuit also rejected and criticized
the EEOC’s argument on appeal that CMSI’s grooming policy was illegal under a
theory of disparate impact, which does not require proof of discriminatory
intent, as opposed to disparate treatment, which would constitute intentional
discrimination.
In addition to a victory for CMSI, the Eleventh
Circuit also vindicated the Wall Street Journal’s assessment of the EEOC’s
lawsuit back in 2013:
Apparently
Ms. Franklin-Thomas has never seen dreadlocked whites (like the Counting Crow's
Adam Duritz) or Latinas (like Shakira). Catastrophe's policy is in fact
racially neutral because
it enjoins all employees, regardless of race, "to be dressed and groomed
in a manner that projects a professional and businesslike image,"
including "hairstyle." The company determined that dreadlocks don't
meet that standard, as is its right . . . The larger travesty of this case and
other misbegotten EEOC crusades of late is that they take time and resources
away from individuals with legitimate claims of employment discrimination.
Banning dreadlocks doesn't qualify.
Notwithstanding the Eleventh Circuit’s ruling,
issues of workplace grooming and dress codes are often case and fact specific,
and can easily turn into a litigation minefield, particularly over issues of
religious accommodation. This was
highlighted recently in the United States Supreme Court’s ruling in EEOC v. Abercrombie & Fitch Stores (2015).
Employers should carefully and regularly
review such policies, and consult with counsel prior to taking adverse
employment actions based on violations of such policies that might implicate a
protected class of employees under Title VII.
A MESSAGE TO READERS OF "THE EMPLOYEE WITH THE DRAGON
TATTOO"
A reader of this blog recently asked if she could be
included on an e-mail list for new posts. I currently do not have an
e-mail service but it seems like an excellent idea and I will be setting it up
in the very near future. If you would like to be included, please send
your name, your company, and your e-mail to me at fijmanm@phelps.com. Thanks!
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