Ravena, NY – A federal lawsuit filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) alleges that black tradesmen were subjected to harsh racial discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and an attempted noose snaring at the Lafarge Ravena Cement Plant by the Texas subcontractor CCC Group while the plant was undergoing a $300 million multiyear upgrade.
These vicious racially
based attacks continuously occurred over a nine-week period without
intervention, according to the black tradesmen mentioned in the suit
The lawsuit filed in U.S. district court contends the
following -
CCC Group, Inc., violated federal law when it fostered a work environment rife with racist comments and discriminatory work conditions, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charged in a lawsuit filed.
The San Antonio, Texas-based construction company operated a
construction site in Ravena, N.Y., in 2016. According to the EEOC’s lawsuit,
white supervisors and employees regularly made unwelcome racist comments, used
racial slurs, threatened black employees with nooses, and subjected African
American employees to harsher working conditions than white co-workers.
The EEOC charges that white employees frequently referred to
black employees with insulting racial epithets. According to the EEOC’s
lawsuit, some of this harassment occurred on a company radio channel for all to
hear. White employees bragged that their ancestors had owned slaves and told a
black employee he walked funny because slaves used to walk with a bag on their
shoulder picking cotton.
Further, one white supervisor attempted to snare an employee
with a noose, the EEOC said. Another Caucasian supervisor told an African
American employee that for Halloween, “You don’t even have to dress up. I will
dress in white and put a noose around your neck and we’ll walk down the street
together.”
The EEOC further charges that African American employees
were given more physically taxing and dangerous work than Caucasian
counterparts, including being assigned outdoor work in winter while white
colleagues worked inside. Black employees objected to and complained about the
racial harassment, but it persisted, the EEOC said.
Such alleged conduct violates Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, which prohibits employers from discriminating against employees on
the basis of race. Race harassment is a form of race discrimination that is
prohibited by the statute.
The EEOC filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of New York, after first attempting to reach a pre-litigation
settlement through the agency’s conciliation process. The EEOC seeks
compensatory damages and punitive damages for the affected employees, and
injunctive relief to remedy and prevent future workplace racial harassment.
“Employers need to proactively prevent any behavior that
creates a racially hostile workplace,” said Jeffrey Burstein, regional attorney
for the EEOC’s New York District Office. “Here there were numerous examples of
abhorrent racial discrimination and harassment. The use of a noose is
especially vicious. Such misconduct violates federal law and common decency.”
Judy Keenan, acting director of the New York District Office,
added, “Racial harassment is never acceptable. This harassment was especially
vicious, widespread and continuous, and the employer failed to do anything to
stop it.”
The EEOC’s New York District Office is responsible for
processing discrimination charges, administrative enforcement, and the conduct
of agency litigation in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
York, northern New Jersey, Rhode Island and Vermont. The agency’s Buffalo Local
Office conducted the investigation resulting in this lawsuit.
Lafarge Company who was contracted as the general contractor on
the project, issued the following statement, “We find the allegations against
CCC contracting to be very concerning.
Lafarge and its parent company, LafargeHolcim, take all claims of
discrimination of any kind very seriously. We follow a business code of conduct
and investigate and take action on all complaints that are brought to our
attention.”