2023 -- S 0821 | |
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LC002613 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- WORKPLACE PSYCHOLOGICAL | |
SAFETY ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Senators Ciccone, Britto, DiPalma, F. Lombardi, Burke, and Tikoian | |
Date Introduced: March 23, 2023 | |
Referred To: Senate Labor | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 28 of the General Laws entitled "LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS" |
2 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 60 |
4 | WORKPLACE PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY ACT |
5 | 28-60-1. Short title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Workplace Psychological Safety |
7 | Act", addressing workplace psychological abuse (bullying and mobbing) with regard to recognizing |
8 | and protecting an employee's right to a psychologically safe work environment. |
9 | 28-60-2. Public policy. |
10 | (a) This chapter sets forth a public policy acknowledging and addressing the relevance and |
11 | importance of mental health as an integral aspect of human well-being, and therefore, employee |
12 | well-being. This chapter also sets forth a public policy against any type of psychological abuse that: |
13 | (1) Violates an employee's right to a physically and psychologically safe work |
14 | environment; and |
15 | (2) Injures or has the potential to injure an employee, hinder the performance of an |
16 | employee, stigmatize the employee, and/or undermine the dignity of the employee, regardless of |
17 | their job category or class. |
18 | (b) Additionally, this chapter declares and reasserts the obligation of employers to keep |
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1 | their employees and the work environment safe as set forth in laws throughout the state and the |
2 | federal government, including the Department of Labor Standards, a part of the Executive Office |
3 | of Labor and Workforce Development, U.S. Department of Labor and the U.S. Occupational Safety |
4 | and Health Act, which includes psychological safety. |
5 | 28-60-3. Purpose. |
6 | It is the purpose of this chapter to: |
7 | (1) Recognize and protect an employee's right not only to a physically safe work |
8 | environment but also to a psychologically safe work environment in the workplace. |
9 | (2) Recognize and promote an employer's responsibility to acknowledge, monitor, prevent, |
10 | discourage, and adequately address issues or allegations of psychological abuse in the workplace. |
11 | (3) Provide legal incentive for employers to acknowledge, monitor, prevent, discourage, |
12 | and adequately address issues or allegations of psychological abuse to eliminate such behaviors |
13 | before they disrupt the safety of the work environment and/or cause subsequent harm to employees. |
14 | (4) Provide legal relief and remedy for employees harmed psychologically, emotionally, |
15 | physically, professionally, or economically by exposure to an unsafe, toxic work environment, |
16 | including any subsequent damages to make employees whole. |
17 | 28-60-4. Scope of application. |
18 | This chapter shall apply to all employees regardless of the nature of their job. |
19 | 28-60-5. Definitions. |
20 | For the purposes of this chapter, the terms used herein shall have the meanings set forth in |
21 | this section: |
22 | (1) "Bullying" means interpersonal abuse that operates employee(s)-to-employee(s), |
23 | especially superior(s) to subordinate(s). The perpetrators are individual(s). |
24 | (2) "Employee" means any person who renders services to an employer and receives |
25 | compensation for them, including full- and part-time paid employees and independent contractors, |
26 | including temporary employees. For purposes of the protection granted under this chapter, the term |
27 | employee shall be interpreted broadly. |
28 | (3) "Employer" means a person(s) or entity who obtains services from an employee and |
29 | hires employees for any compensation. For purposes of the protection granted under this chapter, |
30 | the term employer shall be interpreted broadly, public or private, for profit or not-for-profit. |
31 | (4) "Mobbing" means an interpersonal abuse system that operates employer-to- |
32 | employee(s). The perpetrators are the employer and/or its representative employees. |
33 | (5) "Physical injury" means impairment of a person's physical health or bodily integrity as |
34 | established by competent evidence and may manifest mentally, emotionally, or physically. |
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1 | (6) "Psychological abuse" means mentally provocative harassment. Mistreatment that has |
2 | the effect of hurting, weakening, confusing, or frightening a person mentally or emotionally. |
3 | (i) Behaviors that may constitute psychological abuse include, but are not limited to: |
4 | (A) Covert and/or subtle unethical and unprofessional behavior, directed in a targeted |
5 | and/or systematic manner such as sabotage, exclusion, marginalization, misrepresentation of |
6 | employee performance or behavior, spreading of lies, discipline that does not follow procedure, |
7 | withholding of vital information, behind closed door verbal abuse and/or abusive gestures, frequent |
8 | request for work below competence level, inconsistent enforcement of rules, long-term assigning |
9 | of tasks beyond the employee's duties without compensation, and behaviors without just cause |
10 | consisting of physical isolation, ignoring, regular inconsistent instructions, and unmanageable |
11 | workloads; |
12 | (B) Overt and/or blatant unethical and unprofessional behavior directed in a targeted and/or |
13 | systematic manner such as undermining, request to take part in illegal activity, public or group |
14 | humiliation or degradation, taking credit for work, making snide comments or ridicule publicly, |
15 | physically isolating an employee, ignoring, exclusion from work-related social gatherings or |
16 | communications, inconsistent following or enforcement of rules, degrading role changes that could |
17 | jeopardize future career prospects, placing in dangerous or physically threatening working |
18 | conditions, hostile yelling, shouting, or physical gestures and postures, outright physical abuse such |
19 | as pushing and shoving, looking into or disclosing of private facts about the employee or their |
20 | family, and behaviors without just cause consisting of discounting a person's work proposals or |
21 | opinions, persistent criticism, excessive monitoring, unmanageable workloads, threat of dismissal, |
22 | removal of job duties, tampering with or spying on equipment or personal belongings, and changing |
23 | work conditions or duties; |
24 | (C) Employer non-response and/or prolonged response to employee complaints of |
25 | psychologically abusive behavior, rigged internal protocol, unethical communication, i.e. |
26 | misrepresenting a complaint process and misrepresenting an investigatory process, hollow |
27 | investigations, misrepresenting the findings in subsequent reports, blame shifting, willful blindness |
28 | to the bully's continued and escalating behavior, willful deafness to the reporting employee's |
29 | request for assistance; and |
30 | (D) Employer failure to provide a safe working environment, failure to acknowledge |
31 | employee complaints of abusive behavior, failure to provide a transparent reporting system, failure |
32 | to adequately address employee complaints, failure to remove a known stressor(s), failure to alter |
33 | and/or stabilize the work environment, willful exacerbation of the reporting employee's work |
34 | environment through toleration and proliferation of abusive behavior by representing employees. |
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1 | (7) "Psychological injury" means impairment of a person's mental health as established by |
2 | competent evidence and may manifest mentally, emotionally, or physically. |
3 | (8) "Reasonable person" means an unbiased person who displays reason, fairness, caution, |
4 | and care. |
5 | (9) ''Representative employee" means administrative employees in leadership and/or |
6 | management positions whose responsibility is to oversee and enforce organizational policies |
7 | including, but not limited to, CEOs, CFOs, presidents, vice presidents, executive directors, |
8 | members of a board of directors, or employees in human resources, legal, or diversity, equity, and |
9 | inclusion. |
10 | (10) "Third party" means a neutral person with no prior affiliation with the parties. |
11 | (11) "Toxic work environment" means an intolerable employment condition in which a |
12 | reasonable person would find it difficult, uncomfortable, and/or an impossible environment to |
13 | perform their workplace duties and tasks. |
14 | 28-60-6. Employee right to dignity and a psychologically safe work environment. |
15 | Every employee shall have the right to a work environment that is safe and affords them |
16 | the dignity to which all human beings are entitled, free from all forms of psychological abuse. |
17 | 28-60-7. Employer responsibility to provide safe work environments and ensure |
18 | worker dignity. |
19 | Employers have a general duty to provide a safe work environment free from all forms of |
20 | abuse including psychological abuse. Employers have a general duty to ensure that all employees |
21 | are treated respectfully and with dignity. |
22 | 28-60-8. Prohibited activity. |
23 | (a) It shall be an unlawful employment practice for any employer or employee to engage |
24 | in the psychological abuse of another employee during or outside the course or scope of their work |
25 | that creates a toxic work environment in which a reasonable person would find intolerable to |
26 | perform their regular workplace duties and tasks, has the ability to cause subsequent injury, and/or |
27 | jeopardizes future career prospects without just cause. The determination of which shall be |
28 | conducted from the view of a reasonable person under the totality of the circumstances, its impact |
29 | on the work environment of the employee, and/or its subsequent impact on the employee's well- |
30 | being. There is no requirement of extreme, outrageous, or repetitive behavior on the part of the |
31 | offender to be unlawful. The creation of a toxic work environment, subsequent injury or potential |
32 | injury, and/or damage to future career prospects shall suffice regardless of protected status. |
33 | (b) It shall be an unlawful employment practice to retaliate in any manner against an |
34 | employee who has opposed any unlawful employment practices under this chapter, including, but |
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1 | not limited to, filing a claim internally or externally on behalf of oneself or another objecting to |
2 | behavior in violation of this chapter whether as an complainant, witness, or advocate. |
3 | (c) It shall be an unlawful employment practice to require any complainant under this |
4 | chapter to enter into mediation, forced arbitration, a non-disclosure agreement, or any agreement |
5 | for the employer to see or review the complainant's medical history not pertinent to the complaint, |
6 | unless willingly disclosed and consented to by the complainant. |
7 | (d) Conduct that does not constitute psychological abuse includes, but is not limited to: |
8 | (1) Acts intended to exercise a supervisor's authority to discipline with just cause and |
9 | conducted in a progressive disciplinary manner in compliance with policies and laws; |
10 | (2) Demands for protecting the confidentiality of the services provided by the employer; |
11 | (3) The formulation or promulgation of regulations or memoranda to direct the operations, |
12 | maximize efficiency, and evaluate employees' performance based on the general objectives of the |
13 | employer; |
14 | (4) The temporary assignment of additional duties when necessary to ensure the continuity |
15 | of services; |
16 | (5) Administrative actions directed to the completion of an employment agreement, with |
17 | cause; and |
18 | (6) Employer's affirmative actions to enforce the provisions of a human resources |
19 | regulation, clauses of employment agreements, or obligations, duties, and prohibitions established |
20 | by law. |
21 | (e) Concerted activity/Section 7 activity under the National Labor Relations Act as |
22 | interpreted by the National Labor Relations Board shall not be construed as psychological abuse. |
23 | 28-60-9. Procedure. |
24 | (a) Every employer shall be responsible for taking all reasonable measures to acknowledge, |
25 | monitor, prevent, discourage, and adequately address incidents of psychological abuse. |
26 | (b) Every employer shall include this procedure in policies and corrective action plans and |
27 | implement and enforce it: |
28 | (1) Adopt and implement preventive and detective internal policies against psychological |
29 | abuse, including anti-retaliation policies, within ninety (90) days consistent with this chapter. |
30 | Policies should include a broad reporting procedure, including formal and informal reporting |
31 | methods, that include an employee's right to make a complaint outside of the employer's internal |
32 | reporting procedure. |
33 | (2) Notify and train all managers, supervisors, and other representative employees as to |
34 | handling complaints of psychologically abusive behavior, including the employer's reporting |
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1 | provisions and policies to acknowledge, monitor, prevent, discourage and adequately address all |
2 | such complaints. |
3 | (3) Post employees' rights under this chapter and employer reporting policies in such a |
4 | manner that all employees have access, including on the website, bulletin boards, job descriptions, |
5 | and in applicable promotional materials. Any employer who fails to notify and train all managers, |
6 | supervisors, and other representative employees and post notice of employees' rights under this |
7 | chapter shall be subject to fines and penalties by the wage and hour division not to exceed one |
8 | hundred dollars ($100) for each separate offense. |
9 | (4) Acknowledge employee complaints of psychologically abusive behavior in writing and |
10 | initiate a neutral third-party fact-finding professional investigation within five (5) business days of |
11 | a formal or informal complaint of an alleged violation of this chapter unless the danger is imminent |
12 | whereby immediate action is called for. Take all steps to assure immediate cessation of the alleged |
13 | violation which shall be included in the investigatory report, including removing the instigating |
14 | employee who allegedly violated this chapter from working with the complainant if necessary. |
15 | Ensure and monitor complainant's safety through separation from the alleged perpetrator during the |
16 | investigation and submit weekly written updates of the investigation's progress to the complainant. |
17 | (5) Implement and uphold an effective anti-retaliation provision that guarantees no |
18 | retaliation against any employee who has opposed any unlawful practice in a complaint under this |
19 | chapter. |
20 | (6) Complete the third-party investigation within thirty (30) business days of the initial |
21 | complaint and inform the complainant of its outcome. The investigator shall notify in writing the |
22 | complainant of any delay, if reasonable, not to exceed sixty (60) days. The complainant shall agree |
23 | on who is chosen as the third-party neutral investigator. The investigator shall not be hired for the |
24 | purposes of determining the complainant's legal standing or legal advantages and disadvantages. |
25 | (7) A neutral third-party investigator shall establish whether or not the creation of a toxic |
26 | work environment occurred which is the minimum level of damage under this chapter. The |
27 | investigator shall also establish whether or not subsequent injury occurred beyond the minimum |
28 | level of damage under this chapter. |
29 | (7) When psychological abuse occurs between employees of different employers, all |
30 | employers concerned shall be responsible for investigating the allegation of psychological abuse, |
31 | regardless of whether or not they are the direct employer of the complainant. |
32 | (9) If the outcome favors the complainant, issue an apology to the employee, reinstate work |
33 | if applicable, and coach and/or counsel and/or discipline the employee who violated the chapter. |
34 | (10) If another complaint occurs after coaching and is found in favor of the complainant, |
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1 | take the next step in the disciplinary process including removing supervisory duties from the |
2 | employee who violated this chapter and/or terminating the employee who violated this chapter. |
3 | (11) Apply evaluation and discipline processes evenly and fairly to all employees. |
4 | (12) Annually perform an anonymous workplace climate survey, with its results to be |
5 | submitted to OSHA (private sector employers) and the department of labor and training (public |
6 | sector employers) annually. |
7 | (13) Report quarterly the number of employee complaints of abusive behavior, employee |
8 | disciplines, workers' compensation claims, absenteeism rates, stress leave rates, attrition rates, |
9 | discrimination complaints, investigation rates, follow up action rates, the workforce gender and |
10 | racial makeup, and de-identified wage and salary data by protected category to OSHA (private |
11 | sector employers) and department of labor and training (public sector employers), who will make |
12 | this information publicly available, at a minimum under the Freedom of Information Act. |
13 | (c) If the employer proves to have exercised reasonable care to prevent and promptly |
14 | correct the conduct, such employer shall be held harmless from any claim under the provisions of |
15 | this chapter. Such immunity shall not be extended to the person who engaged in psychological |
16 | abuse in their personal capacity. |
17 | (d) The aggrieved employee shall have the following options to notify the employer of the |
18 | complaint without use of the employer's protocol: |
19 | (1) File a restraining order against the employee who violates this chapter dependent upon |
20 | applicable state law. |
21 | (2) Report the alleged violation of this chapter internally to initiate an internal investigation |
22 | within five (5) days of notification unless the danger is imminent whereby immediate response is |
23 | called for. |
24 | (3) Seek outside assistance. File a complaint (the employer will not receive a copy of the |
25 | complaint until there is litigation) that discloses the complainant's identity directly and only to |
26 | OSHA (private sector employees) or the department of labor and training (public sector |
27 | employees). These offices shall: |
28 | (i) Evaluate the conditions described in the complaint. |
29 | (ii) If it is determined that the complaint describes a potential OSHA violation, the case is |
30 | assigned to an inspector. |
31 | (iii) Contact the employer in writing and require the employer to respond by a due date |
32 | with proof that the hazard has been corrected; or make an appointment for a site visit prioritized |
33 | according to the nature of the hazard; or phone or visit the workplace the same day if there is |
34 | imminent danger. Issue fines and/or penalties, including legal action, to violators. |
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1 | (iv) Make violations of this chapter available to the public per the Freedom of Information |
2 | Act, redacting all private information as to the aggrieved employee, including their name to protect |
3 | their privacy and not interfere with future job prospects. |
4 | (v) If applicable, forward the complaint to another agency with jurisdiction. |
5 | (vi) Collect and maintain data on the effectiveness of this chapter as determined by a |
6 | decrease in employees self-reporting experiencing psychological abuse at work. |
7 | (vii) The method of funding these offices shall mirror workers' compensation fees. A |
8 | premium shall be charged to employers and will increase or decrease with the number of |
9 | proven/accepted claims with a penalty assessed: |
10 | (A) Employers grossing more than one million dollars ($1,000,000) annually are taxed |
11 | fifteen hundredths percent (0.015%) on earnings each quarter or minimum of fifteen thousand |
12 | dollars ($15,000) annually. |
13 | (B) Employers grossing five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) up to nine hundred |
14 | ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($999,999) annually are taxed ten |
15 | hundredths percent (0.010%) on earnings quarterly with a maximum of ten thousand dollars |
16 | ($10,000) annually. |
17 | (C) Employers grossing two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) up to four hundred |
18 | ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($499,999) annually are taxed five |
19 | thousandths percent (0.005%) on earnings quarterly with a maximum of two thousand five hundred |
20 | dollars ($2,500) annually. |
21 | (D) Employers who have two (2) employees, the owner and at least one other employee, |
22 | grossing less than one hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($199,999) |
23 | annually are taxed two thousandths percent (0.002%) on earnings quarterly with a maximum of |
24 | four hundred dollars ($400) annually. |
25 | (viii) Since state antidiscrimination commissions and the EEOC do not routinely take part |
26 | in the investigation of cases, the EEOC and state antidiscrimination commissions shall not be |
27 | designated with oversight unless the scope of these agencies change. |
28 | (4) Sue the employer and/or individual(s) in violation of this chapter directly through the |
29 | judicial branch. |
30 | 28-60-10. Employer liability. |
31 | Any employer that allows, engages in, or promotes psychological abuse whereby creating |
32 | a toxic work environment shall be liable to the affected employee(s). |
33 | Every employer shall: |
34 | (1) Be liable for failing to take the appropriate measures to provide employees with a |
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1 | psychologically safe work environment as outlined in this chapter. |
2 | (2) Be liable for engaging in any violation of this chapter. |
3 | (3) Be liable for any damages, including economic, compensatory, and punitive damages, |
4 | to any employee who has been subjected to work in a toxic work environment as outlined in this |
5 | chapter in the scope of their employment unless the employer can demonstrate they have met all |
6 | elements of the affirmative defense provided in ยงยง 28-60-9(c) and 28-60-13. An employee is |
7 | entitled to recover the greater of all actual damages or five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each |
8 | violation of this chapter. |
9 | (4) Be strictly liable for all damages, including economic, compensatory, and punitive |
10 | damages, resulting from any prohibited behaviors of this chapter carried out by a supervisor or |
11 | representative employee of such employer. |
12 | (5) If not prevailing, be liable for the plaintiff's reasonable attorneys' and witnesses' fees |
13 | and costs. A prevailing employer shall not be awarded fees and costs. |
14 | 28-60-11. Individual liability. |
15 | (a) Any employee, representative or otherwise, who knowingly allows, engages in, or |
16 | promotes psychological abuse creating a toxic work environment and/or subsequent injury shall be |
17 | civilly liable for an amount equal to double the amount of damages caused by the improper conduct |
18 | to the affected employee and may be prosecuted and punished pursuant to the provisions of |
19 | subsection (b) of this section. |
20 | (b) Any employee, representative or otherwise, who allows, engages in, or promotes |
21 | psychological abuse creating a toxic work environment and/or subsequent injury shall be guilty of |
22 | a misdemeanor and upon conviction, shall be punished by up to one year imprisonment or a fine in |
23 | an amount up to fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) or both. |
24 | (c) It shall be an affirmative defense for an employee if that employee committed a |
25 | violation of this chapter at the direction of the employer or a representative employee under threat |
26 | of continued employment, termination, or any other such threat. |
27 | (d) Employers and employees can be held liable under this chapter, but an employer or |
28 | representative employee cannot hold an employee civilly or criminally liable under this chapter. |
29 | 28-60-12. Scope of the protection. |
30 | (a) Any person who reports psychological abuse shall be protected by this chapter. |
31 | (b) No person shall aid, abet, incite, compel, or coerce the doing of an act forbidden under |
32 | this chapter or to attempt to do so. |
33 | (c) No employer shall terminate, sanction, mislead, coerce, intimidate, threaten, interfere |
34 | with, discriminate against, or otherwise retaliate against any person in the opposition of unlawful |
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1 | employment practices or exercise of any right under this chapter, including, but not limited to, an |
2 | employee as to the terms, conditions, compensation, location, benefits, or privileges of employment |
3 | because the employee or witness offers or attempts to offer, verbally or in writing, any testimony, |
4 | statement, information, or claim to a labor union, human resources office, employer office, |
5 | legislative, administrative, or judicial forum, or any other internal or external office or otherwise |
6 | engages in any other reasonable participation in a claim under this chapter insofar as such |
7 | statements constitute a disclosure of privileged information as provided by law. |
8 | (d) The employee shall show proof of the violation through direct and circumstantial |
9 | evidence. |
10 | (e) The employee may bring a prima facie case of violation of the law by proving they |
11 | reported an incident of workplace psychological abuse and was subsequently terminated, |
12 | threatened, or discriminated against in their employment. Once the prima facie case is established, |
13 | the employer may allege and provide a legitimate and nondiscriminatory ground for the |
14 | termination. If the employer alleges and provides such grounds, the employee shall show that the |
15 | grounds alleged by the employer was a mere pretext for termination. |
16 | 28-60-13. Affirmative defense. |
17 | (a) An employer may establish an affirmative defense to limit damages for psychological |
18 | abuse under this chapter where the employer took all steps outlined in this chapter to acknowledge, |
19 | monitor, prevent, discourage, and adequately address the issues and complaints surrounding |
20 | allegations of psychological abuse and exercised reasonable care to prevent and promptly correct |
21 | any violation in this chapter or acted with just cause. |
22 | (b) Because this chapter requires employers to take all reasonable necessary steps to |
23 | adequately address complaints of psychological abuse, an employer shall not be exempt from |
24 | liability if the employer or its representative employees or supervisors knew or should have known |
25 | of said conduct and failed to acknowledge, monitor, prevent, discourage, or address the allegations |
26 | of psychological abuse and promptly correct the situation. |
27 | (c) This defense shall not be available when the employer or its representative employees |
28 | or supervisors engage in this conduct. |
29 | 28-60-14. Remedies. |
30 | Complainants who prove a violation of this chapter shall be entitled to all remedies |
31 | necessary to make such complainants whole. Such remedies shall factor whether a toxic work |
32 | environment existed and/or whether or not injury resulted: |
33 | (1) An apology to the complainant employee and mandatory training and/or coaching |
34 | and/or counseling and/or discipline for violators of this chapter who remain with the employer. |
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1 | Employers shall not limit themselves to this remedy; |
2 | (2) Reinstatement of work; |
3 | (3) Removal of the employee who violated this chapter from supervisory duties or |
4 | termination of said employee; |
5 | (4) Economic damages for lost wages, both front pay up to twenty-four (24) months and |
6 | back pay; |
7 | (5) Expenses related to treatment related to the psychological abuse including future |
8 | medical expenses for psychological injury or resulting physical injury; |
9 | (6) Compensable damages to compensate for the resulting pain and suffering and emotional |
10 | and psychological damages; |
11 | (7) Punitive damages to deter future acts of psychological abuse; |
12 | (8) Injunctive relief whereby the court may enjoin the defendant from engaging in the |
13 | unlawful employment practice; |
14 | (9) Public notification of the case outcome without disclosing the plaintiff's name if desired |
15 | by the plaintiff; |
16 | (10) Attorneys' fees for the prevailing plaintiff; and |
17 | (11) Any other relief deemed appropriate, including restorative measures, including |
18 | modification of the disciplinary record of the employee and/or organizational training. |
19 | 28-60-15. Statute of limitations. |
20 | Any person who has a cause of action under the provisions of this chapter shall have the |
21 | later of a period of three (3) years to file said cause of action from the last alleged psychologically |
22 | abusive behavior from the employee with OSHA, or the department of labor and training, or a |
23 | private cause of action. If a claimant files a complaint with OSHA or the department of labor and |
24 | training, the statute of limitations for filing a private cause of action is tolled. |
25 | 28-60-16. Summary proceeding. |
26 | Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, in any judicial proceeding |
27 | instituted for violations of the provisions of this chapter, the aggrieved person may choose to bring |
28 | their cause of action through a summary proceeding. For purposes of this section, a summary |
29 | proceeding shall be conducted by a superior court judge sitting without a jury. The Rhode Island |
30 | court rules of evidence shall not apply, except as to privilege, in a summary proceeding but shall |
31 | be considered as a guide toward full and fair development of the facts, The court shall consider all |
32 | evidence presented and give it the weight and effect deemed appropriate. |
33 | 28-60-17. Severability clause. |
34 | If any clause, paragraph, subparagraph, article, provision, section, or part of this chapter |
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1 | are held to be unconstitutional or void, the holding to such effect shall not affect, impair, or |
2 | invalidate the remainder of this chapter. The effect of said holding shall be limited solely to the |
3 | clause, paragraph, subparagraph, article, provision, section, or part thereof thus held to be |
4 | unconstitutional or void. |
5 | 28-60-18. Conflict with laws. |
6 | (a) Nothing in this chapter should limit employee rights under any other law including the |
7 | OSH Act, laws under state-level OSHA agencies or their equivalent, Title VII of the Civil Rights |
8 | Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, state EEO |
9 | laws, the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), and state labor rights laws. |
10 | (b) Nothing under this chapter shall restrict workers from negotiating broader protections |
11 | via collective bargaining or other concerted activity. |
12 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- WORKPLACE PSYCHOLOGICAL | |
SAFETY ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would prohibit any type of psychological abuse in the workplace inflicted by an |
2 | employer upon an employee or by a co-employee upon an employee that results in the violation of |
3 | an employee's right to a physically and psychologically safe work environment. |
4 | This act would also provide an employee subject to bullying, psychological abuse, |
5 | psychological injury and/or physical injury with protections in the workplace and civil remedies |
6 | against perpetrators of any prohibited activity. This act also would assess civil penalties upon |
7 | employers violating the act based upon the gross amount of revenues earned by employers in |
8 | addition to civil liability for damages sustained by the employee as well as civil and criminal |
9 | liability for any such conduct of a co-employee. |
10 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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