From the playground to the classroom to the office -- bullies can be found in all walks of life, but new anti-harassment legislation in some states could put an end to bullying in the workplace that can be costly for employers.
"We define bullying as strictly repeated health harming mistreatment," Dr. Gary Namie of the Workplace Bullying and Trauma Institute, an advocacy group that supports anti-bullying legislation, told Ortega-Wells of the Insurance Journal. Namie and his organization have supported anti-bullying legislation, or the "Healthy Workplace Bill," since the first bill was introduced in California in 2003. He says bullying in the workplace "undermines legitimate business interests."
While bullying is not currently a protected category under harassment law, Johan Lubbe, a partner at Jackson Lewis LLP law firm, says bullying is likely the next "evolutionary" step in harassment law. He advises businesses to understand what workplace bullying conduct is and to develop preventative strategies that prohibit such conduct in the work environment.
Coverage for bullying claims may already exist under some employment practices liability policies, according to Gregg Draddy, assistant vice president of employment practices liability at The Hartford. Draddy says "there are issues around bullying/harassment that are covered, whether it's under other workplace harassment, infliction of emotional distress, or other areas that are covered under wrongful acts under EPLI policies."
Robert Cap, associate product manager for EPLI and nonprofit D&O, at Shand Morahan, a part of the Markel Corp. Group, argues that the problem in coverage for workplace bullying "is that if the allegation was simply one of workplace bullying, it's hard to do that negligently -- it's really an intentional act."
That's precisely why anti-bullying legislation is needed, says WBTI's Namie.
Source: The Insurance Journal
Monday, July 10, 2006
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