What Is a Trauma-Informed Employment Lawyer in Sexual Harassment and Retaliation Cases?
A trained trauma-informed employment lawyer helps employees navigate workplace sexual harassment and retaliation under Title VII, the New York State Human Rights Law (NYSHRL), and the New York City Human Rights Law (NYCHRL) by evaluating how power, pressure, and fear affect decision-making, reporting, and job outcomes.
This approach is particularly relevant when a supervisor, executive, or decision-maker controls an employee's job, income, or advancement. Rather than treating a case as a set of isolated events, it considers the full context, including hesitation, delayed reporting, and the workplace dynamics that affect whether and when an employee can come forward.
Phillips & Associates, PLLC is known for our award-winning trial lawyers who take a trauma-informed approach to complex cases involving workplace sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation. If you have questions about our team and how we can help, call (866) 229-9441 or contact us online.
Key Takeaways
- Workplace sexual harassment often involves power imbalance, not just isolated behavior
- Retaliation frequently occurs after reporting misconduct or rejecting a supervisor
- Common retaliation includes reduced hours, reassignment, negative reviews, or termination
- These situations often involve supervisors, executives, business owners, or partners with control over job conditions
- Workplace harassment can include comments, texts, messages, touching, or pressure tied to employment
- New York law, including the NYCHRL, provides strong protections for employees
- Speaking with an employment lawyer early can help you understand your options without committing to a lawsuit
Have questions about sexual harassment and retaliation? View our FAQ.
Why Trauma-Informed Representation Matters
Workplace sexual harassment and retaliation rarely begin with a formal complaint. In most cases, conduct develops over time while the employee weighs the risk of speaking up against someone who controls their income, schedule, or career. A trauma-informed approach evaluates cases with that full context in mind. For our clients, that means:
- Hesitation and delayed reporting are treated as a predictable response to power imbalance, not a weakness in the case
- The legal evaluation focuses on how these situations actually unfold, not how someone ideally should have responded
- Clients who are still employed get a clear picture of the risks before taking any action
- Communication is direct and the process is structured to reduce unnecessary stress
What Cases a Trained Trauma-Informed Employment Lawyer Handles
A trauma-informed employment lawyer handles cases involving:
- Workplace sexual harassment
- Retaliation after reporting misconduct
- Retaliation after rejecting advances
- Workplace relationships involving power imbalance
- Hostile work environment claims
- Pregnancy discrimination and medical condition discrimination
- Whistleblower retaliation
Who Is Most Likely to Experience Workplace Sexual Harassment and Retaliation
Workplace sexual harassment and retaliation most often affect employees whose roles depend on a single supervisor or decision-maker, particularly where that individual controls compensation, scheduling, or career advancement. This can include:
- Executive assistants and personal assistants working closely with leadership
- Administrative and support staff dependent on supervisors
- Hospitality workers, including restaurant and bar employees, whose income depends on shifts
- Security professionals assigned by a single supervisor
- Legal professionals working under partners or senior attorneys
- Employees in small or founder-led companies
- Workers in roles where one person controls assignments, pay, or advancement
Who Typically Commits Workplace Sexual Harassment and Retaliation
Workplace sexual harassment and retaliation are most often committed by individuals in positions of authority who control job conditions, including supervisors, executives, and business owners.
- Supervisors and direct managers
- C-suite executives and senior leadership
- Business owners and founders
- Law firm partners and senior attorneys
What Retaliation Looks Like After Sexual Harassment at Work
Workplace retaliation occurs when an employee experiences negative changes in job conditions after reporting harassment or rejecting advances.
After you say no or report what happened, your job may change:
- Reduced hours or unfavorable shifts
- Loss of assignments or responsibilities
- Exclusion from meetings or opportunities
- Negative performance reviews after positive feedback
- Placement on a performance plan
- Isolation from your team
- Loss of income
- Termination
These changes are often explained as “business decisions,” but timing and context matter.
When to Speak to an Employment Lawyer About Sexual Harassment or Retaliation
You should speak with an employment lawyer as soon as your job changes after reporting harassment, rejecting advances, requesting leave, or raising concerns about workplace misconduct, particularly in cases involving supervisors or authority over job conditions.
You do not need to wait until you are fired.
Common situations include:
- Your job changes after reporting harassment
- Your hours or pay are reduced
- Your responsibilities are taken away
- You are treated differently after a workplace relationship ends
- You returned from pregnancy leave and your role changed or you were demoted
- You requested a medical accommodation and were terminated or penalized
Speaking with a lawyer helps you understand your options early.
Employment Law Protections for Sexual Harassment and Retaliation in New York
Sexual harassment and retaliation claims in New York are evaluated under:
- Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
- New York State Human Rights Law (NYSHRL)
- New York City Human Rights Law (NYCHRL), which provides broader protections than federal law
These laws prohibit workplace sexual harassment and retaliation, including adverse actions taken after:
- Reporting misconduct
- Rejecting advances or requests for dates
- Requesting protected leave or accommodations
- Participating in an investigation
The NYCHRL is often central in New York City cases because it focuses on how the conduct impacts the employee, rather than requiring a high threshold of severity.
Phillips & Associates, PLLC also represents employees in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Florida, where similar protections apply under state and federal law governing workplace harassment, discrimination, and retaliation.
What You Can Recover in Workplace Sexual Harassment and Retaliation Cases
Employees in workplace sexual harassment and retaliation cases may recover the following:
- Economic damages – Lost wages, bonuses, future earnings
- Emotional distress – Psychological harm, stress, anxiety
- Punitive damages – Employer misconduct
- Attorneys’ fees – Legal costs
How Compensation Is Evaluated in Sexual Harassment and Retaliation Cases
Case value is driven by the evidence, the level of authority involved, and the overall impact on the employee's job and career. Key factors include:
- How frequently the conduct occurred and how long it lasted
- Whether the harasser controlled compensation, scheduling, or advancement
- Whether retaliation followed a complaint or rejection
- The nature of the conduct (comments, messages, touching, pressure, or coercion)
- Whether emotional distress is corroborated through witnesses, medical providers, or mental health professionals
Cases involving supervisors or executives often carry higher value due to increased employer liability and the direct impact on job conditions.
How Workplace Sexual Harassment and Retaliation Cases Are Typically Resolved
Most cases are resolved through confidential settlements. Settlement value depends on the strength of the evidence, the level of authority involved, how clearly the conduct affected job conditions or career advancement, and whether retaliation occurred.
Call For a FREE Consultation: (866) 229-9441
Speaking with a lawyer can help you understand your rights before taking any action.
If you are recognizing your situation in any of this, it may be worth understanding your options. Speaking with a lawyer can help you understand:
- Whether the conduct may qualify as sexual harassment or retaliation
- How power imbalance affects your situation
- What risks exist if things continue
Call (866) 229-9441 or contact us online. Our trauma-informed lawyers offer FREE and confidential consultations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is Workplace Sexual Harassment Under New York Law?
Workplace sexual harassment includes quid pro quo harassment and hostile work environment conduct, particularly where a supervisor or decision-maker controls job conditions such as compensation, scheduling, or advancement.
Can My Employer Retaliate After I Report Sexual Harassment?
Employers are not allowed to retaliate after a complaint, but retaliation often occurs through changes in job conditions. It may appear as reduced hours, reassignment, negative performance reviews, exclusion from opportunities, or termination after reporting misconduct.
What Should I Do If My Boss Is Harassing Me and Controls My Job?
Document what is happening, preserve communications, and understand your options before taking action, particularly in situations covered by Title VII, the NYSHRL, and the NYCHRL.
When a supervisor controls your schedule, pay, or advancement, it can be difficult to refuse or report the conduct. Saving texts, emails, and notes about what occurred can be critical. Speaking with an employment lawyer can help you assess risk and next steps without committing to a lawsuit.
Can I Still Have a Case If I Didn’t Report the Harassment Right Away?
Yes. Delayed reporting is common and does not prevent a claim under Title VII, the NYSHRL, or the NYCHRL.
Many employees wait to report sexual harassment because they fear retaliation, job loss, or damage to their career. The law recognizes that workplace power imbalance can affect when and how someone comes forward.
What Counts as Retaliation After Rejecting a Supervisor or Ending a Workplace Relationship?
Retaliation includes negative changes to your job after rejecting advances or ending a relationship. This may include reduced hours, reassignment, exclusion from opportunities, negative performance reviews, isolation, or termination. These actions often occur shortly after the employee sets a boundary or ends the relationship.