Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 839 - BUREAU OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES
Division 5 - DISCRIMINATION
Section 839-005-0030 - Sexual Harassment in Employment
Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 12, December 1, 2024
(1) Sexual harassment is unlawful discrimination on the basis of sex and includes the following types of conduct:
(2) The standard for determining whether harassment based on an individual's sex is sufficiently severe or pervasive to create a hostile, intimidating or offensive working environment is whether a reasonable person in the circumstances of the complaining individual would so perceive it.
(3) Employer proxy: An employer is liable for harassment when the harasser's rank is sufficiently high that the harasser is the employer's proxy, for example, the respondent's president, owner, partner or corporate officer.
(4) Harassment by Supervisor plus Tangible Employment Action: An employer is liable for sexual harassment by a supervisor with immediate or successively higher authority over an individual when the harassment results in a tangible employment action that the supervisor takes or causes to be taken against that individual. A tangible employment action includes but is not limited to the following:
(5) Harassment by Supervisor, No Tangible Employment Action: When sexual harassment by a supervisor with immediate or successively higher authority over an individual is found to have occurred, but no tangible employment action was taken, the employer is liable if:
(6) Harassment by Co-Workers or Agents: An employer is liable for sexual harassment by the employer's employees or agents who do not have immediate or successively higher authority over the aggrieved person when the employer knew or should have known of the conduct, unless the employer took immediate and appropriate corrective action.
(7) Harassment by Non-Employees: An employer is liable for sexual harassment by non-employees in the workplace when the employer or the employer's agents knew or should have known of the conduct unless the employer took immediate and appropriate corrective action. In reviewing such cases the division will consider the extent of the employer's control and any legal responsibility the employer may have with respect to the conduct of such non-employees.
(8) Withdrawn Consent: An employer is liable for sexual harassment of an individual by the employer's supervisory or non-supervisory employees, agents or non-employees, even if the acts complained of were of a kind previously consented to by the aggrieved person, if the employer knew or should have known that the aggrieved person had withdrawn consent to the offensive conduct.
(9) When employment opportunities or benefits are granted because of an individual's submission to an employer's sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, or other sexual harassment, the employer is liable for unlawful sex discrimination against other individuals who were qualified for but denied that opportunity or benefit.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 659A.805
Stats. Implemented: ORS 659A.030