STATE OF CALIFORNIA
- STATE AND CONSUMER SERVICES AGENCY ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER,
Governor
FAIR EMPLOYMENT & HOUSING COMMISSION
455 GOLDEN GATE AVENUE, SUITE 10600
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94102-3660
TEL: (415) 557-2325 FAX: (415) 557-0855
www.fehc.ca.gov
Fair Employment and Housing Commission’s Sexual Harassment
Training and Education Regulations
Approved by the Office of Administrative Law on July 18,
2007.
To become Effective August 17, 2007.
TITLE 2. Administration
Division 4. Fair Employment and Housing Commission
Text of Modified Regulations
7288.0 Sexual Harassment Training and Education
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(1) "Contractor" is a person performing services
pursuant to a contract to an employer, meeting the criteria
specified by Government Code section 12940, subdivision (j)(5),
for each working day in 20 consecutive weeks in the current
calendar year or preceding calendar year.
(2) "Effective interactive training" includes any
of the following:
(A) "Classroom" training is in-person, trainer-instruction,
whose content is created by a trainer and provided to a supervisor
by a trainer, in a setting removed from the supervisor’s
daily duties.
(B) "E-learning" training is individualized, interactive,
computer-based training created by a trainer and an instructional
designer. An e-learning training shall provide a link or directions
on how to contact a trainer who shall be available to answer
questions and to provide guidance and assistance about the
training within a reasonable period of time after the supervisor
asks the question, but no more than two business days after
the question is asked.
(C) "Webinar" training is an internet-based seminar
whose content is created and taught by a trainer and transmitted
over the internet or intranet in real time. An employer utilizing
a webinar for its supervisors must document and demonstrate
that each supervisor who was not physically present in the
same room as the trainer nonetheless attended the entire training
and actively participated with the training’s interactive
content, discussion questions, hypothetical scenarios, quizzes
or tests, and activities. The webinar must provide the supervisors
an opportunity to ask questions, to have them answered and
otherwise to seek guidance and assistance.
(D) Other "effective interactive training" and
education includes the use of audio, video or computer technology
in conjunction with classroom, webinar and/or e-learning training.
(E) For any of the above training methods, the instruction
shall include questions that assess learning, skill-building
activities that assess the supervisor’s application
and understanding of content learned, and numerous hypothetical
scenarios about harassment, each with one or more discussion
questions so that supervisors remain engaged in the training.
(3) "Employee" includes full time, part time, and
temporary workers.
(4) "Employer" means any of the following:
(A) any person engaged in any business or enterprise in California,
who employs 50 or more employees to perform services for a
wage or salary or contractors or any person acting as an agent
of an employer, directly or indirectly.
(B) the state of California, counties, and any other political
or civil subdivision of the state and cities, regardless of
the number of employees. For the purposes of this section,
governmental and quasi-governmental entities such as boards,
commissions, local agencies and special districts are considered
"political subdivisions of the state."
(5) "Having 50 or more employees" means employing
or engaging fifty or more employees or contractors for each
working day in any twenty consecutive weeks in the current
calendar year or preceding calendar year. There is no requirement
that the 50 employees or contractors work at the same location
or all work or reside in California.
(6) "Instructional Designer" under this section
is an individual with expertise in current instructional best
practices, and who develops the training content based upon
material provided by a trainer.
(7) "New" supervisory employees are employees promoted
or hired to a supervisory position after July 1, 2005.
(8) "Supervisory employees" or "supervisors"
under this section are supervisors located in California,
defined under Government Code section 12926, subdivision (r).
Attending training does not create an inference that an employee
is a supervisor or that a contractor is an employee or a supervisor.
(9) "Trainers" or "Trainers or educators"
qualified to provide training under this section are individuals
who, through a combination of training and experience have
the ability to train supervisors about the following: 1) what
are unlawful harassment, discrimination and retaliation under
both California and federal law; 2) what steps to take when
harassing behavior occurs in the workplace; 3) how to report
harassment complaints; 4) how to respond to a harassment complaint;
5) the employer’s obligation to conduct a workplace
investigation of a harassment complaint; 6) what constitutes
retaliation and how to prevent it; 7) essential components
of an anti-harassment policy; and 8) the effect of harassment
on harassed employees, co-workers, harassers and employers.
(A) A trainer shall be one or more of the following:
1. "Attorneys" admitted for two or more years to
the bar of any state in the United States and whose practice
includes employment law under the Fair Employment and Housing
Act and/or Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964,
or
2. "Human resource professionals" or "harassment
prevention consultants" working as employees or independent
contractors with a minimum of two or more years of practical
experience in one or more of the following: a. designing or
conducting discrimination, retaliation and sexual harassment
prevention training; b. responding to sexual harassment complaints
or other discrimination complaints;
c. conducting investigations of sexual harassment complaints;
or d. advising employers or employees regarding discrimination,
retaliation and sexual harassment prevention, or
3. "Professors or instructors" in law schools,
colleges or universities who have a post-graduate degree or
California teaching credential and either 20 instruction hours
or two or more years of experience in a law school, college
or university teaching about employment law under the Fair
Employment and Housing Act and/or Title VII of the federal
Civil Rights Act of 1964.
(B) Individuals who do not meet the qualifications of a trainer
as an attorney, human resource professional, harassment prevention
consultant, professor or instructor because they lack the
requisite years of experience may team teach with a trainer
in classroom or webinar trainings provided that the trainer
supervises these individuals and the trainer is available
throughout the training to answer questions from training
attendees.
(10) "Training," as used in this section, is effective
interactive training as defined at section 7288.0, subdivision
(a)(2).
(11) "Two hours" of training is two hours of classroom
training or two hours of webinar training or, in the case
of an e-learning training, a program that takes the supervisor
no less than two hours to complete.
(b) Training.
(1) Frequency of Training. An employer shall provide two
hours of training, in the content specified in section 7288.0,
subdivision (c), once every two years, and may use either
of the following methods or a combination of the two methods
to track compliance.
(A) "Individual" Tracking. An employer may track
its training requirement for each supervisory employee, measured
two years from the date of completion of the last training
of the individual supervisor.
(B) "Training year" tracking. An employer may designate
a "training year" in which it trains some or all
of its supervisory employees and thereafter must again retrain
these supervisors by the end of the next "training year,"
two years later. Thus, supervisors trained in training year
2005 shall be retrained in 2007. For newly hired or promoted
supervisors who receive training within six months of assuming
their supervisory positions and that training falls in a different
training year, the employer may include them in the next group
training year, even if that occurs sooner than two years.
An employer shall not extend the training year for the new
supervisors beyond the initial two year training year. Thus,
with this method, assume that an employer trained all of its
supervisors in 2005 and sets 2007 as the next training year.
If a new supervisor is trained in 2006 and the employer wants
to include the new supervisor in its training year, the new
supervisor would need to be trained in 2007 with the employer’s
other supervisors.
(2) Documentation of Training. An employer shall keep documentation
of the training it has provided its employees under this section
to track compliance, including the name of the supervisory
employee trained, the date of training, the type of training,
and the name of the training provider and shall retain the
records for a minimum of two years.
(3) Training at New Businesses. Businesses created after
January 1, 2006, must provide training to supervisors within
six months of their establishment and thereafter biennially.
Businesses that expand to 50 employees and/or contractors
and thus become eligible under these regulations, must provide
training to supervisors within six months of their eligibility
and thereafter biennially.
(4) Training for New Supervisors. New supervisors shall be
trained within six months of assuming their supervisory position
and thereafter shall be trained once every two years, measured
either from the individual or training year tracking method.
(5) Duplicate Training. A supervisor who has received training
in compliance with this section within the prior two years
either from a current, a prior, an alternate or a joint employer
need only be given, be required to read and to acknowledge
receipt of, the employer’s anti-harassment policy within
six months of assuming the supervisor’s new supervisory
position or within six months of the employer’s eligibility.
That supervisor shall otherwise be put on a two year tracking
schedule based on the supervisor’s last training. The
burden of establishing that the prior training was legally
compliant with this section shall be on the current employer.
(6) Duration of Training. The training required by this section
does not need to be completed in two consecutive hours. For
classroom training or webinars, the minimum duration of a
training segment shall be no less than half an hour. E-learning
courses may include bookmarking features which allow a supervisor
to pause their individual training so long as the actual e-learning
program is two hours.
(c) Content.
The learning objectives of the training mandated by California
Government Code section 12950.1 shall be: 1) to assist California
employers in changing or modifying workplace behaviors that
create or contribute to "sexual harassment" as that
term is defined in California and federal law; and 2) to develop,
foster and encourage a set of values in supervisory employees
who complete mandated training that will assist them in preventing
and effectively responding to incidents of sexual harassment.
Towards that end, the training mandated by California Government
Code section 12950.1, shall include but is not limited to:
(1) A definition of unlawful sexual harassment under the
Fair Employment and Housing Act and Title VII of the federal
Civil Rights Act of 1964. In addition to a definition of sexual
harassment, an employer may provide a definition of and train
about other forms of harassment covered by the FEHA, as specified
at Government Code section 12940, subdivision (j), and discuss
how harassment of an employee can cover more than one basis.
(2) FEHA and Title VII statutory provisions and case law
principles concerning the prohibition against and the prevention
of unlawful sexual harassment, discrimination and retaliation
in employment.
(3) The types of conduct that constitutes sexual harassment.
(4) Remedies available for sexual harassment.
(5) Strategies to prevent sexual harassment in the workplace.
(6) "Practical examples," such as factual scenarios
taken from case law, news and media accounts, hypotheticals
based on workplace situations and other sources which illustrate
sexual harassment, discrimination and retaliation using training
modalities such as role plays, case studies and group discussions.
(7) The limited confidentiality of the complaint process.
(8) Resources for victims of unlawful sexual harassment,
such as to whom they should report any alleged sexual harassment.
(9) The employer’s obligation to conduct an effective
workplace investigation of a harassment complaint.
(10) Training on what to do if the supervisor is personally
accused of harassment.
(11) The essential elements of an anti-harassment policy
and how to utilize it if a harassment complaint is filed.
Either the employer’s policy or a sample policy shall
be provided to the supervisors. Regardless of whether the
employer’s policy is used as part of the training, the
employer shall give each supervisor a copy of its anti-harassment
policy and require each supervisor to read and to acknowledge
receipt of that policy.
(d) Remedies.
As part of an order in an adjudicatory proceeding pursuant
to California Code of Regulations, Title 2, section 7429,
the Commission may issue an order finding an employer failed
to comply with Government Code section 12950.1 and order such
compliance within 60 days of the effective date of the Commission’s
order.
(e) Compliance with section 12950.1 prior to effective date
of Commission regulations.
An employer who has made a substantial, good faith effort
to comply with section 12950.1 by completing training of its
supervisors prior to the effective date of these regulations
shall be deemed to be in compliance with section 12950.1 regarding
training as though it had been done under these regulations.
NOTE: Authority cited: Section 12935(a), Government Code.
Reference: Sections 12926(r), 12940(j)(5), 12950, 12950.1,
Government Code.
7288.0 7288.1 Labor Organizations. (Reserved.)
7288.1 Labor Organizations. (Reserved.)
7288.1 7288.2 Apprenticeship Programs. (Reserved.)
7288.2 Apprenticeship Programs. (Reserved.)
7288.2 7288.3 Employment Agencies. (Reserved.)
7288.3 Employment Agencies. (Reserved.)
7288.1 Labor Organizations. (Reserved.) 7288.2 Apprenticeship
Programs. (Reserved.) 7288.3 Employment Agencies. (Reserved.)
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