The New York City Council recently approved legislation effective April 1, 2019, intended to combat sexual harassment. The Stop Sexual Harassment in NYC Act mandates that private employers with 15 or more employees in New York City conduct annual sexual harassment training. The New York State Legislature recently passed legislation with a similar mandate for employers in New York State.
The city law provides that training must be conducted by employers with 15 or more employees in New York City, and that the training must:
The city law also has a record-keeping requirement. In addition to the training mandate, provisions of the city law affecting private employers include a posting requirement, an extension of the statute of limitations for filing sexual harassment complaints with the New York City Commission on Human Rights under the New York City Human Rights Law from one year to three years, and a clarification to the New York City Human Rights Law to explicitly include sexual harassment. The city law will become effective in April 2019.
New York State law changes. At the state level, the law will require that, in consultation with the New York State Division of Human Rights, the New York State Department of Labor must develop a model sexual harassment prevention guidance document, model sexual harassment prevention policy, and model sexual harassment prevention training program. After the policy and training have been developed, New York employers must either adopt the policy, or a policy that meets or exceeds the state policy’s minimum standards, and administer the model training, or develop and administer a training that meets or exceeds the state training’s minimum standards. The model policy must:
The model training must provide the above information in an interactive format. Regulations regarding the state law have yet to be enacted, but it’s expected that they will outline the timeline for employer compliance with the law, set parameters for the length and specific subject matter of the training, and carve out any exceptions for small employers. This provision will take effect 180 days after the governor signs the bill into law.
The state bill also amends New York State Law to prohibit the sexual harassment of non-employees, such as vendors and contractors, in the workplace, effective immediately. The state bill institutes a 21-day period for settling complainants to consider nondisclosure provisions, and a seven-day revocation period after such agreements have been signed, effective 90 days after the bill becomes law. The state bill also bans mandatory workplace arbitration of sexual harassment claims, with a carve-out for collectively bargained arbitration procedures, effective 90 days after the bill becomes law.