Los Angeles Pregnancy Discrimination Lawyers
Pregnancy discrimination is the unfair treatment of female employees due to pregnancy, childbirth, or any related medical conditions. It is an illegal practice, and there are many strong state and federal laws protecting pregnant and postpartum employees.
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA) of 1978
Pregnant and postpartum employees are protected against discrimination by the federal Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA) of 1978. The PDA amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to prohibit sex discrimination based on pregnancy, childbirth, or health condition related to either one. Pregnancy discrimination is, in effect, a form of gender discrimination.
The PDA makes it illegal for employers to terminate or take other disciplinary action against female employees on the basis of pregnancy, even in the event that pregnancy has caused the employee to become temporarily disabled. In that case, employers must provide reasonable accommodation for the pregnancy-related disability or medical condition.
In California, employees of companies that employ five or more employees are protected from being treated unfairly, with a few exceptions. Employees of religious organizations, for instance, may not be protected to the same extent, and protections can also vary depending on employee marital status. These exceptions aside, a company must treat pregnant workers, and any pregnancy-related disability, in the same manner as they would treat any other temporarily disabled employee, for example, someone suffering from a back injury.
Should I notify my employer if I am pregnant?
You should immediately notify your company that you are pregnant, and request the amount of leave to which you are entitled. This prevents the company from later trying to deny knowledge of your pregnancy. Once the company has been properly notified, any future discipline or termination of a pregnant employee falls under high suspicion of discrimination.
Pregnant women are often hesitant to disclose their pregnancies to employers until they are two or three months pregnant. Ironically, the most important step you can take to protect your job is disclose your pregnancy at the earliest possible opportunity.
Early disclosure is important because employers most often notice when you are suffering the effects of morning sickness, or sharing the news of your pregnancy with your coworkers. Any time management knows of your pregnancy but hasn’t been formally notified, they can have plausible deniability. This allows them to fire you for an unrelated reason, and then deny any knowledge of your pregnancy.
For this reason, the best thing you can do when you become pregnant is to immediately notify your organization, in writing, and preferably from your own personal email account. This way there is proof that the notification was delivered, protecting you against discrimination.
Email is preferred over text messages, which are less desirable because they aren’t as durable as email. If you do use a text message to notify your employer, take a screenshot of your text message conversation, and then send that screenshot to your own personal email account, so you have a durable record of having informed your organization of your pregnancy.
Tell the employer that you are pregnant, your expected due date, and what accommodations you may need in order to keep working during your pregnancy. If you work for a large organization, we recommend you notify by emailing the Human Resources department.
Alert them that you are pregnant, and ask about company policies regarding maternity leave. The employer or HR Department should respond that you are entitled to either FMLA (Family and Medical Leave Act) or CFRA (California Family Rights Act) leave, and provide instructions on how to proceed.
In order to get those accommodations for your pregnancy, you may need a doctor’s note.
If the accommodations are minor, your company may be willing to accommodate without a doctor’s note. However, if you need extended break times or mornings off, those kinds of accommodations typically require a doctor’s note, along with your email notifying the office that you are pregnant.
If do not notify your organization of your pregnancy right away, the company could claim they were not aware of it and thus could not possibly have breached the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. It was simply a coincidence, your boss may say, that they decided to eliminate several positions, including yours. Their hope here is that your termination would not be classified as discrimination.
What if I didn’t notify my employer in writing?
While it is always advisable to alert your company or HR Department in writing to protect yourself against unfair treatment at work, in many cases employees do not, for fear that they will be disciplined or fired.
If you told your company that you’re pregnant verbally, without not documenting it in writing, the company might claim they were never notified. In those cases, the company’s knowledge of your pregnancy becomes the disputed issue of fact, and the crux becomes whether we can convince the jury to believe you over your employer.
However, this is seldom the case. Instead, an organization will typically claim that while they were aware of your pregnancy, they had a different, legitimate, reason for a termination or disciplinary action. This false reason is called the employer’s pretext (made-up reason) for firing you.
Common pretexts for pregnancy discrimination
An employer’s pretext may cite work performance, disciplinary issues, or interpersonal issues with co-workers or other supervisors.
Other times, the company will say that you were fired because of a corporate cutback and that your position was eliminated. These kinds of arguments are often difficult for the company to convincingly support because, for example, you are able to show that your position was necessary to the performance of the organization’s core functions. Or maybe you were replaced by another person after you were terminated.
We’ve even seen situations where a pregnant woman trained her replacement to perform the specific tasks associated with the position that was supposedly eliminated. There are thus a number of ways to prove that you were pregnant, the employer knew of your pregnancy, and you were terminated because of it.
Employers often undertake complicated schemes in order to discriminate against employees who become pregnant. In one case, the employer, upon learning of the employee’s pregnancy, changed her title to Special Projects Coordinator and replaced her administrative position with a permanent replacement.
After she returned from pregnancy leave, her boss cut the hours of the Special Projects Coordinator position. When that didn’t cause the employee to quit, they cut the pay of the position, and then ultimately fired the employee when she made a mistake.
While it’s not illegal for a company to fire an employee who makes a mistake, it’s very unusual to fire a 17-year employee for one mistake. That fact, together with the fact that her hours and pay were both cut upon her return from pregnancy leave, were strong indicators of discrimination.
Your boss’ pretext for treating you unfairly can be overcome by showing you had worked for years, with positive annual employment reviews, or with other performance indicators showing there was no performance issue until you became pregnant. This is how an employee can demonstrate that the pregnancy was in fact the main factor for termination or other adverse employment action.
What other laws protect pregnant workers from discrimination?
Beyond the PDA, there are a number of federal and state laws in place to protect pregnant women from discrimination in the workplace:
The FMLA (Family and Medical Leave Act) is a federal law that provides employees with up to 12 work weeks of job-protected unpaid leave each year (job-protected meaning without any threat of losing your job). FMLA also requests that employers covered by the law maintain the health benefits for eligible workers just as if they were working.
The CFRA is the California version of the FMLA, available to workers employed for over one year at a company with more than 5 employees . If you work at the post office, you have to take FMLA leave, because that’s a federal employer.
On the other hand, if you work at any other private organization or even a state governmental agency, then CFRA leave is more beneficial to employees. Sometimes smaller employers also allow FMLA leave even though they are not obligated by law to do so. As a benefit of employment, those employees are still protected by the CFRA law, meaning their positions are protected against employment discrimination for up to 12 work weeks of leave.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is a federal law that prohibits workplace discrimination on the basis of certain protected characteristics, including sex. This includes protections for pregnant employees.
Under Title VII, it is illegal for an employer to discriminate against an employee or job applicant because of pregnancy, childbirth, or medical condition related to either. This means that employers cannot treat pregnant women differently than other employees or job applicants because of their pregnancy or related conditions.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) protects against discrimination for individuals with disabilities in employment. While pregnancy itself is not considered a disability under the ADA, pregnancy-related impairments may be considered disabilities and therefore protected.
Under the ADA, employers with 15 or more employees cannot discriminate against employees or job applicants based on pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. This means that employers cannot make employment decisions based on an employee’s pregnancy, such as refusing to hire a pregnant applicant or firing an employee because she is pregnant.
In addition, the ADA requires employers to grant accommodations to employees with pregnancy-related impairments. This means that employers must make changes to the workplace or job duties to enable the employee to perform the essential functions of her job assignments, as long as the accommodations do not pose undue hardship to the employer.
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) of 2023 prevents pregnant and postpartum mothers from being forced from their place of work, allows them to receive the accommodations they require to perform the essential functions of their job, and ensures that they are not retaliated or discriminated against by their employers.
Accommodations for pregnant and postpartum employees
Reasonable accommodations for pregnant and postpartum workers include:
- Flexible work schedule to accommodate medical appointments and treatments
- Access to a private and comfortable space for breastfeeding and to pump or express breast milk
- Additional breaks and time off for rest and recovery
- Alternative assignments or reduced workload during pregnancy and postpartum recovery
- Permission to work from home or telecommute, if possible
- Adjusted workplace policies to allow for more frequent restroom and water breaks
- Providing ergonomic furniture and equipment to prevent injury and reduce physical stress
- Adjusted dress code to allow for comfortable clothing and footwear
- Additional time off for prenatal care, childbirth, and recovery
- Providing a supportive work environment with access to counseling and mental health support, if needed.
- Appropriate adjustments for pregnancy-related disabilities, such as gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, hyperemesis gravidarum, pelvic girdle pain, postpartum depression, placenta previa, symphysis pubis dysfunction, carpal tunnel syndrome, and anemia.
It is important for postpartum mothers to be able to express milk at work for several reasons:
- To maintain milk supply: Regularly expressing milk through breastfeeding or pumping is essential to maintain a mother’s milk supply. If a mother is unable to pump at work, she may not be able to produce enough milk to meet her baby’s needs.
- To provide milk for the baby: Mother’s milk provides optimal nutrition for babies, and it is recommended by health experts as the best source of nutrition for babies during the first year of life. By pumping milk at work, postpartum mothers can ensure that their babies continue to receive this vital nutrition even when they are apart.
- To prevent health problems: If a mother is unable to pump milk regularly, she may experience breast engorgement, which can lead to blocked milk ducts, mastitis, and other health problems.
- To support the transition back to work: Pumping milk at work can help postpartum mothers feel more confident and comfortable in their transition back to work, and help balance the demands of work and motherhood.
Overall, allowing postpartum mothers to pump breast milk at work is an important step in supporting their physical and emotional health, as well as the health of their babies.
Can I be fired for taking maternity leave?
No, you cannot legally be fired for taking maternity leave. California employers are strictly prohibited from workplace discrimination against women due to pregnancy, including subjecting them to:
- Firing
- Failure to hire or promote a pregnant woman
- Forced leave of absence
- Unfair treatment following a leave of absence
- Retaliation for complaining about unfair treatment
- Harassment, pay cuts, discipline, or demotion
- Reductions in benefits, such as health insurance or leave
Employer-provided health insurance must cover expenses for pregnancy and pregnancy-related conditions at the same level of coverage as other medical conditions. And if you are fired or disciplined because of your pregnancy or for taking related leave, you can sue your company or organization for discrimination.
California juries are generally sympathetic to employees who have been victims of employment discrimination, and especially if they were fired while pregnant or because of their pregnancy. California juries are very motivated to protect a woman’s right to take leave in order to provide for her child.
The law is also very accommodating to pregnant workers’ efforts to demonstrate that pregnancy was a substantial motivating factor in a disciplinary action, demotion, or termination at the hands of the employer.
What is the Pregnancy Disability Leave Law (PDLL)?
The Pregnancy Disability Leave Law (PDLL) applies beyond the 12th week of CFRA leave. With your doctor’s certification, no matter how long you’ve worked for your employer, you can take up to four months of leave for your pregnancy-related condition. This applies in the case that your doctor certifies your pregnancy as dangerous to you or to your fetus or even after you deliver, and if you are still recovering from the effects of your delivery or cesarean section.
PDLL leave can be used in combination with CFRA leave, giving a pregnant employee up to four months of leave for her pregnancy, followed by up to 12 weeks of CFRA leave. In total, this equals almost seven months off. In addition to all of this, there are laws that protect pregnant women from unfair workplace practices in the state of California.
What Is the interactive process?
When you are pregnant, sometimes you need a modification of your duties due to the effects of pregnancy. You might need mornings off when you’re suffering from morning sickness, lengthier bathroom breaks, or more frequent breaks. The interactive process is required of the employer once they know that you are suffering from a disability, even a temporary disability like pregnancy.
What triggers the interactive process is a doctor’s note. These kinds of small accommodations are something that every employer must offer its pregnant workers, once they are informed of the need to do so. Oftentimes, employers skip the interactive process and this is one way we can prove that the employer failed to accommodate a pregnancy.
Examples of reasonable accommodation
When you are pregnant, you may need certain differences in your job description or work hours. You may need time off when you’re suffering from the effects of your pregnancy, like morning sickness, preeclampsia, or early onset labor. You might need bed rest.
Your doctor will have to prescribe any such accommodations that you need. Once on notice of those needs, your employer is required to accommodate you. Other types of accommodations might be light duty assignments or lifting restrictions.
Employees who work as dental assistants, for example, are normally required to take patient’s X-rays, but those X-rays have the potential to harm their unborn child. It’s very typical for a doctor to provide that dental assistant with a work restriction against performing X-rays. The dentist sometimes finds it very difficult to accommodate that restriction, but they are obligated to do so, even if it means taking all the dental X-rays themselves.
Taking X-rays is a minor part of a dental assistant’s job duties. The dental assistant can still set up the X-ray, put the lead blanket across the patient, and position the film in the right place. When it comes time to take the X-ray, she has to be allowed to be relieved from that duty. Since it’s so inconvenient for the dental office, sometimes they’re motivated to terminate that employee on a pretext. A pretext is a lie based on a false reason to fire an employee.
Employers go to extremes to avoid accommodating pregnant women both because doing so is inconvenient and expensive for the company, and because there is some belief on the part of the organization that the employee will be less dedicated to work once she has a newborn baby.
The key is that employers are required to give their employees reasonable accommodation, which might include taking away some of the non-essential part of your job duties. As long as you can define a way that the company would be able to do that, the company might be obligated to do so under the law.
What if my employer refuses to give me time off for morning sickness?
Reasonable accommodations, like time off for morning sickness or other pregnancy-related conditions, is a requirement of an employer who employs five or more people and is on notice of your pregnancy. Failure to accommodate your pregnancy or related serious health conditions would be looked upon by the court and the jury very negatively.
As a plaintiff in a pregnancy discrimination case, you are typically viewed very favorably by jurors as a prospective mother looking to support her family by working during her pregnancy. Juries appreciate and value that contribution both to your family and to society. They are willing to punish an employer who gets in the way of that by virtue of its selfishness and unwillingness to accommodate very reasonable requests.
What if my employer refuses to give me time off or light duty due to my pregnancy?
Employers with five or more employees in California are required to make reasonable accommodations for a pregnancy once they’re on notice of the pregnancy, particularly when a doctor’s note supports the employee’s request. Assuming those facts are in play, an employer would be looked upon very negatively for its failure to accommodate a pregnant employee or to allow that employee protected leave.
The laws in California allow pregnancy disability leave for up to 4 months. This is in addition to the paid family leave time, or in the case of a large employer, FMLA time, to which an employee who is pregnant would be entitled.
A large employer of 50 or more would be obligated to give seven months of combined leave to a pregnant worker. It would be four months of leave (in the case of an employee disabled by pregnancy), and then 12 weeks of FMLA time for recovery from delivery. As long as you are able to return to work after that seven month period of time, your employer is absolutely required to hold your job open.
Sometimes, employers will suggest that your position was eliminated for reasons not associated with your pregnancy. For example, they lost a project that you are working on and they are no longer able to maintain that position because they are no longer performing that project.
If your employer normally takes on and loses different projects in the course of their business, you can show that other projects would have come and gone, and that the “elimination” of your position was a lie designed to disguise discrimination.
These cases produce a great deal of sympathy from juries and are very lucrative. If your employer refuses to accommodate your need for time off for pregnancy, you should contact a pregnancy discrimination lawyer right away. Our firm understands the lengths that employers sometimes go to in order to avoid accommodating pregnant workers. We will do whatever it takes to prove that that’s what was going on in your case.
What do employers do to try to get away with firing pregnant employees?
Employers go to great lengths to find excuses to terminate pregnant women because it is very expensive and very inconvenient to accommodate them. Employers often hear of an employee’s pregnancy through their coworkers.
Don’t assume that just because you haven’t formally told your company that you are pregnant, that your employer doesn’t already know of your pregnancy. Employers who know of a pregnancy, yet have not formally been put on notice of that pregnancy, will create a false reason to terminate that pregnant worker before they can give notice of the pregnancy.
The best defense to pregnancy discrimination is that the employer wasn’t aware that the employee was pregnant. Obviously, this does not work when the employee is six months along and visibly pregnant at the time of her termination. In most cases, employees are not visibly pregnant, are terminated for false reasons, and are shocked because they don’t understand that their company actually engaged in a scheme to eliminate them before they were able to put them on notice of their pregnancy.
In other cases, employers will go through complicated processes to eliminate positions, or find excuses based on work flow, sales, or customer complaints in order to terminate a pregnant employee.
If you’re pregnant, and all of a sudden, your organization tells you that you’re fired because a customer complained about you, it may not be true. Other examples might be claims that sales have slowed and your position has been eliminated. Employers are willing to go through a lot of effort to avoid accommodating pregnant workers.
The best thing that you can do to protect yourself is to call an employment law firm as soon as you realize that discrimination is at the heart of your employer’s decisions about your termination or requests for accommodations during your pregnancy.
Can I sue for pregnancy discrimination if I am a union member?
Union members are just as protected against discrimination as non-union members. The union might try to tell you that you need to file a grievance and go through an arbitration proceeding, or a grievance procedure. Pregnancy discrimination does not, in fact, have any such legal requirement.
It’s important that you file a timely complaint with the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) and/or the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). The claim must be filed within 180 days of the incident in question, or 300 days, if a state or local agency enforces a pregnancy discrimination law.
Those complaints are something that an employment law firm should take care of on your behalf. As long as your termination, failure to accommodate, failure to provide medical leave, or retaliation for taking leave is due to a pregnancy, there is no reason that you cannot sue.
After you file your discrimination claim with one or both agencies, we then obtain a Right-to-Sue letter. Fortunately, reporting discrimination to either the DFEH or the EEOC is considered reporting to both, allowing us to file suit in either state or federal court. After receiving a Right-to-Sue letter from either the EEOC or DFEH, you have 12 months to file suit.
Can I still sue for pregnancy discrimination if my employer had me sign an arbitration agreement?
There is a trend on the part of employers to require their employees to sign arbitration agreements. This is because arbitration is more likely to go in the company’s favor than a lawsuit is. In order to reduce the chance of a big loss in court, employers are finding it cost effective to pay for arbitration and to get its employees to agree that they are willing to waive a jury.
In those cases, the first thing we do is try to fight the arbitration agreement. We’ll file your complaint in court, just as we would had you not signed an arbitration agreement, in the hopes that we might be able to beat the arbitration agreement.
Beating the arbitration agreement is something that’s evaluated on a case by case basis, depending upon the actual terms of the arbitration agreement. Over the years, the law has evolved and sometimes an organization’s arbitration agreements are not kept up to date with the law. We may be able to get the court to agree that you should not be required to arbitrate your pregnancy related lawsuit with your former employer.
Even in cases where the court upholds the arbitration agreement, we are often able to change or define the terms of that arbitration before an arbitrator who has a reputation for neutrality. The problem with arbitration is that many arbitrators do not have a reputation for neutrality in their decisions. That is what creates the imbalance that arbitration presents for employees and that is why we fight arbitration whenever possible.
What type of damages can I win in a pregnancy discrimination lawsuit?
There are three major kinds of damages that can be recovered when you take legal action. The most obvious is lost wages. When your employer terminates your employment because of your pregnancy, you’re no longer getting paid. Those wages that you would have earned are one measure of the damages that you can recover.
If, as a result of your termination, you become depressed or begin suffering anxiety symptoms associated with your wrongful termination, any medical or psychiatric costs associated with treatment for those conditions are also recoverable.
In addition to that, the biggest type of damage that an employee can be compensated for in an employment discrimination lawsuit is emotional distress. The emotional distress caused by worrying about how you are going to support your baby and your family, worrying about whether you can find a new job while you are pregnant, and mourning the loss of those friendships you established while you were working for your former employer are all part of the emotional distress that you suffered as a result of pregnancy discrimination.
In addition, if we can show that a managing agent who sets policy at your company was in any way responsible for the decision to terminate your employment because you were pregnant, you will be entitled to punitive damages.
Punitive damages are not based on how you’ve suffered. They are damages designed to punish the organization for its illegal behavior in terminating a pregnant employee because of her pregnancy. Those kinds of damages, in the case of large employers, can be very large.
Big verdicts are still possible without punitive damages but where you see punitive damages, the numbers can be even greater because the amount of the punitive damages awarded is based on the company’s net worth. The best thing you can do is call an employment attorney as soon as you believe you’re being retaliated against for taking pregnancy leave or being treated unfairly at work because of your pregnancy.
Hiring a pregnancy discrimination lawyer
Our firm has a wealth of experience in dealing with discrimination and retaliation cases. In the last ten years our legal team has handled more than ten pregnancy discrimination lawsuits and most recently obtained an $800,000 settlement for a pregnant client who was fired from her job of just two years prior to giving birth.
If you have suffered pregnancy discrimination at the hands of your employer, you should review a selection of Los Angeles pregnancy discrimination attorneys and pay special attention to the details of their results in court as well as their client testimonials. When you contact Wrongful Termination Law Group, our experienced pregnancy discrimination attorneys will work closely with you to ensure you are familiar with the relevant discrimination laws, carefully review your case, and work hard to ensure your civil lawsuit is won or settled so that you can recover from your employer’s actions and move on with your life and career.