EEOC: Lawsuits and Settlements – November 1 to 15, 2024

Each month, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) files lawsuits and settles cases covering the federal laws they are responsible for enforcing. These federal laws include:

Below is a list of lawsuits and settlements by the EEOC in from November 1 to 15, 2024.



EEOC Lawsuits

The EEOC did not announce that it filed any lawsuits from November 1 to November 15, 2024.


EEOC Settlements

Georgia: Sureste Property Group to Pay $75,000 in EEOC Race Discrimination Lawsuit

Allegations

Race discrimination

Laws Involved

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act

State

Georgia

Summary

According to the EEOCโ€™s lawsuit, Sureste violated federal law when it fired its first and only Black project development manager because of his race. The project development manager performed well, despite being assigned more work than his white counterparts, but the company terminated him less than a year after his hire, claiming first that he was โ€œlazyโ€ and not a good fit for the companyโ€™s โ€œculture.โ€ Later, the company claimed that his role had been eliminated, but less than a month after firing him, Sureste promoted a significantly less-qualified white employee to the same position.


Maryland: Verizon Maryland to Pay $115,000 in EEOC Disability Discrimination Suit

Allegations

Disability discrimination; Reasonable accommodation

Laws Involved

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

State

Maryland

Summary

According to the EEOCโ€™s lawsuit, a management employee who suffered from hypertension asked his manager for a change to a field position or to an alternate management position to accommodate his disability. There was an opening for a field position which the employee previously held, but Verizon did not allow him to compete for that position, telling him he would have to resign and reapply for the position in six months. The company offered no other accommodation, was not offered opportunities to compete for other vacant management positions, and the employee was forced to quit due to medical necessity, the suit said.


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