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The
FLSA specifically provides that it is "unlawful for any
person ... to discharge or in any other manner discriminate
against any employee because such employee has filed any
complaint or instituted any or caused to be instituted any
proceeding under or related to this Act, or has testified or is
about to testify in any such proceeding."
This
statute has "teeth," and is interpreted broadly in favor of
employees.
An
employer who retaliates or discriminates against an employee in
violation of this statute is potentially subject to fines or
even criminal prosecution, and the affected employee is entitled
to "legal or equitable relief ... including without limitation
employment, reinstatement, promotion, and the payment of wages
lost and an additional equal amount" plus attorneys' fees and
court costs. Punitive damages are available in appropriate
cases, and "anti-retaliation" cases may be brought against
individuals as well as institutional employers.
Courts
have ruled that the "anti-retaliation" FLSA provisions are
designed "to foster an environment in which employees are
unfettered in their decision to voice grievances without fear of
economic retaliation or reprisal," and as a consequence the
courts have interpreted the statute to apply to a wide variety
of retaliatory employer actions. In addition to "firing" cases,
retaliation has been found when employers blacklisted employees
who made FLSA claims, refused to hire applicants who had made
FLSA claims at other jobs, fired relatives, reduced job
responsibilities, assigned employees to unpopular job duties or
shifts, disciplined employees out of proportion to past
disciplinary practices, reduced performance evaluations, and
declined to recommend "normal" raises.
Of
course, making an FLSA claim will not likely make an employee
popular with management, and not all "adverse" employer
reactions to an employee who makes an FLSA claim will "cross the
line" into illegal retaliation or discrimination. "Nasty looks,"
"cold shoulder" treatment at work, and the like are not likely
(in and of themselves) to be considered unlawful, even if they
result from management displeasure about an employee's making an
FLSA claim. And in the unlikely event that an employer actually
discriminates or retaliates against an employee in violation of
this statute, the remedies provided by the law may take time and
aggravation to obtain. However, most often there is no real
retaliation or discrimination, and "threats" can usually be
dealt with summarily by a call to a "higher up" in the
organization (or the employer's lawyer) who, in turn, will
almost always advise the offending party to "knock it off"
immediately. |