A St. Louis-based plastic injection molding company
will pay $190,000 and provide other relief to resolve a sexual
harassment and constructive discharge lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the agency announced today.
According to the EEOC’s suit, EPI Advanced, LLC and Engineered
Products Industries, LLC allowed Dean Miller, a male supervisor, and
another male co-worker to harass press operator Cathy Johnson and seven
other women at its Sherman, Miss., plant. The women claimed that they
were forced to endure a myriad of sexually explicit comments and
propositions, and some were grabbed and touched as well by Miller.
Several women quit because of the harassment, and one woman quit her
job after Miller phoned her at work threatening to sexually assault her
in the employee parking lot. Although several complaints were made by
victims to management, the company failed to properly investigate
complaints and stop the misconduct, the EEOC said.
Such alleged conduct violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964. The EEOC filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Mississippi (Civil Action No. 3:09-cv-00108) after first
attempting to reach a voluntary settlement out of court through its
conciliation process.
In addition to the monetary relief, EPI Advanced, LLC and Engineered
Products Industries, LLC are required, under the publicly filed consent
decree, to develop and maintain a policy prohibiting sexual harassment;
to distribute the policy and complaint procedure to all employees; to
provide mandatory training to its employees within six months of the
decree; to post a notice of the settlement at the Sherman plant; to
maintain records of discrimination complaints; and to report such
complaints to the EEOC, together with any actions taken in response,
for three years. The decree resolving the case also enjoins EPI
Advanced, LLC and Engineered Products Industries, LLC from subjecting
any female employee to sexual harassment.