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Related: About this forumTransgender Woman Wins $125,000 After Settling Discrimination Suit with American Samoa
Also: Justice Department Secures Settlement with American Samoa Government to Resolve Employment Discrimination Case Involving Harassment of Transgender Woman (U.S. Department of Justice)
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Source: The Advocate
Transgender Woman Wins $125,000 After Settling Discrimination Suit with American Samoa
BY CHRISTOPHER WIGGINS
SEPTEMBER 14 2023 5:00 PM EST
A U.S. Justice Department lawsuit against the American Samoa Government (ASG) over allegations that the ASG unfairly treated a former employee because she was transgender has been settled.
According to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, it is illegal to discriminate based on sex or gender identity at ones workplace.
In a consent decree approved by the court, ASG agreed to pay Simeonica Tuiteleleapaga $125,000 as compensation for the harassment she suffered at the hands of her supervisor during her employment at ASG, a DOJ press release said.
In addition, the consent decree mandates that ASG implement comprehensive policies and procedures to address complaints of sex-based discrimination and provide training to its employees, ensuring that they are well-equipped to handle such matters with sensitivity and adherence to the law.
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Read more: https://www.advocate.com/news/american-samoa-transgender-employee-lawsuit
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Source: U.S. Department of Justice
Justice Department Secures Settlement with American Samoa Government to Resolve Employment Discrimination Case Involving Harassment of Transgender Woman
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
For Immediate Release
Office of Public Affairs
The Justice Department announced today that it secured a settlement with the American Samoa Government (ASG) to resolve the departments lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for Hawaii alleging that the ASG discriminated against a former employee, Simeonica Tuiteleleapaga, because she is a transgender woman, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VII is a federal statute that prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, national origin, religion and sex, including sexual orientation and gender identity, and prohibits retaliation against employees for opposing discriminatory employment practices.
Under the consent decree that the district court approved yesterday, the ASG is required to pay $125,000 to compensate Ms. Tuiteleleapaga for the harassment she suffered at the hands of her supervisor. The consent decree also requires the ASG to adopt new policies and procedures to handle sex based discrimination complaints and to provide its employees training on these new policies.
Discrimination against transgender employees is discrimination based on their sex, and no employee should have to tolerate a supervisors hostile comments about their gender identity, said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Departments Civil Rights Division. Transgender employees must be free from discrimination, harassment or derision in the workplace. The Justice Department will not tolerate discrimination based on an employees sex or gender identity and will safeguard the rights of vulnerable workers, including LGBTQI+ employees.
According to the departments complaint, then-director of the ASGs Department of Human and Social Services, Mr. Meki Solomona, harassed Ms. Tuiteleleapaga and another transgender employee on multiple occasions, despite the employees complaints about his misconduct. The complaint describes one humiliating instance when Mr. Solomona singled out Ms. Tuiteleleapaga at a department-wide meeting, where he threatened to eliminate her position, asked her if she was a girl or a boy and told her to [t]ake it off and let us see if you are a woman. After Ms. Tuiteleleapaga left the meeting in tears, Mr. Solomona continued his tirade for 40 minutes, repeatedly referring to her as a thing or an it. After the meeting, as described in the complaint, Mr. Solomona attempted to transfer her to another work location; misgendered her to her supervisor; attempted to terminate her; and refused to allow her routine work travel authorizations. The ASG failed to take any actions to stop his harassment.
The Hawaii District Office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) investigated and attempted to resolve Ms. Tuiteleleapagas charge of discrimination before referring it to the Justice Department as an enforcement action. More information about the EEOCs jurisdiction is available on its website at www.eeoc.gov.
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Read more: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-secures-settlement-american-samoa-government-resolve-employment