Bill Owens was quietly filing
paperwork last May when he felt the distinct presence of another
person's hand fondling the front of his pants. Startled, he
spun on his heels and found a female co-worker, who, giggling
and playfully calling him "Buck Hunter," made a rather lewd
sexual offer.
Sure, there are some guys who'd kill for this sort of attention,
but Owens--happily married for 13 years--is not one of them.
"She grabbed me in front of God and everybody," recalls Owens,
who had been a star salesman at the Home Depot in Salisbury,
Md., for nearly nine months.
The incident at Home Depot might have been a simple case of
girl-on-guy sexual harassment but for the fact that "Buck Hunter"
is an alias Owens uses on the pay-per-view pornographic Website
he and his wife have maintained since late 1999. On the site,
which nets as much as $6,000 a month, Owens and his beloved
bare themselves completely in caught-in-the-act photographs
and real-time streaming video.
Owens had never mentioned his Web business at work, but it
didn't take him long to figure out that his bawdy co-worker
had somehow located the site. He thought it might happen someday,
and expected jeers and chuckles. But not this.
He reported the incident immediately. His boss, however--the
very same boss who had given Owens the nickname "Money Machine"
for his slick salesmanship--was not supportive. "He said he
could protect me from the physical stuff, but he can't control
what comes out of people's mouths," explains Owens, who suspects
his boss' attitude was influenced by his knowledge of Owens'
electronic exhibitionism.
Within days, Owens was pressured to quit his job. He now has
a pending sexual harassment lawsuit against Home Depot. "What
someone does on their own time shouldn't reflect on their job,"
Owens says. "No one said anything to the girl. I think the situation
could have been addressed differently."
Workers have never been immune from on-the-job retribution
for their off-the-clock private activities. In the past, it
was entirely possible to be branded a rabble-rouser if your
boss happened to see a newspaper photo of you being arrested
at an antiwar rally or a gay-rights march.
But the Internet adds new size and scope to those random situations.
A small but growing number of U.S. households--3.3 million in
1999--build and tinker with personal Websites in their free
time, according to Forrester Research. And as more Americans
use the Web as a platform for personal expression--sometimes
creating Websites that espouse objectionable but perfectly legal
sexual or political views--employers are becoming more jittery
about those off-duty activities.
The big worry, of course, is that an employee's Website might
reflect poorly on the company she works for, possibly affecting
business dealings, sales, or worse, exposing the company to
all manner of lawsuits.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) doesn't
tabulate cases of Web-related discrimination complaints, but
officials estimate that only a small fraction of the 80,000
filings it handles annually have anything to do with the Net.
Still, as the phenomenon grows, it raises interesting questions.
Namely: Can anyone expect private boundaries on a global public
medium such as the Internet? And more importantly, how much,
if any, control should companies have over their employees'
personal lives?
Lawyers say the courts have yet to make any clear judgments
on these matters. "As with everything else online, it's new
and there's very little guidance for employers," says Mike Overly,
an intellectual property lawyer with Foley & Lardner in Los
Angeles. "As a result, these personal Websites are a great source
of frustration for them."
A handful of cases that might offer guidance are wending their
way through the courts. In possibly the highest-profile dispute
thus far, George and Tracy Miller filed a charge of discrimination
with the EEOC in December 1999 after they were fired from their
nursing positions at a Scottsdale, Ariz., hospital. They contend
their dismissal was retaliation for their online porn site.
Even though the Millers never mentioned their real names or
their employer on the site, the hospital claims the couple's
presence created a hostile and offensive work environment.
"This is a completely recreational activity that has nothing
to do with work," insists the Millers' lawyer, Larry Walters
of Wasserman & Walters in Winter Park, Fla. "People should be
free to do whatever they want unless their employer can directly
point to material losses in revenues."
Corporate defenses
Walters, whose practice has made its name defending employees
who've been fired for participation in sex-themed Websites (see
"They'll Stand Up for Your Rights," p32), also represents Bill
Owens in his case against Home Depot. The Millers' case is pending.
In the meantime, companies are seeking legal help. Mike Overly,
author of E-Policy: How to Develop Computer, E-mail, and Internet
Guidelines to Protect Your Company and Its Assets, says he receives
at least three or four phone calls each week from corporate
managers who've discovered a poor-taste Website maintained by
an employee.
Those personal Web venues range from porn pages and hate sites
to forums that host gripe sessions for company workers. Often
corporations have one thing in mind: "They want to know how--or
whether--they can force an employee to dismantle his site,"
says Overly.
No such luck. Sites containing content protected by First Amendment
rights are legal. "We almost always advise them to do nothing.
In the end, they may spend more money trying to prevent this
conduct and develop tremendous adverse publicity," notes Overly.
In his book, he suggests that court-shy companies set a clear,
concise, written policy forbidding employees from using workplace
computers to access or maintain their personal Websites.
Even without legal precedent to direct them, employers still
have overwhelming legal advantages. If a company can't quash
an employee's personal site, there's little to prevent a manager
from simply firing a worker who's moonlighting as a Web nudist.
The reason: Most workers in the United States toil under a
legal principle known as "employment at will." It essentially
means companies can fire employees at any time, without explanation.
In order to offer workers some protection, 29 states have laws
that prevent employers from firing an employee for use of "legal
products" outside the workplace.
Indeed, workers have few legal options, unless they can prove
discrimination on the basis of race, gender, religion, or sexual
orientation.
That explains the strange legal contortions in Paul LaViolette's
complaint against the U.S. Department of Commerce. LaViolette,
dismissed in 1999 from his job as an examiner of MRI patents
for the art unit of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, says
his superiors objected to information he presented on his personal
Website.
LaViolette used his site to promote the First International
Conference on Future Energy, a forum for discussing alternative
energy technologies, and provided a link to the Website of the
Integrity Research Institute, which organized the event. LaViolette
alleges that a rival organization, the American Physical Society,
lobbied the Patent Office to have him fired as part of a campaign
to discredit the Integrity Research Institute.
"My views didn't affect my performance, so the PTO has no business
saying or doing anything," says LaViolette. He argues that his
scientific theories are akin to religious beliefs and should
therefore be protected by the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The
Commerce Department, which oversees the Patent Office, is still
reviewing the case.
Some have argued that with cases such as Owens', the Millers',
and LaViolette's becoming increasingly common, the EEOC should
broaden its definition of protected parties as a way to limit
discrimination based on recreational activities and political
views. Federal laws that redefine the boundaries between home
and work could reduce corporate liability for things workers
do and say in their free time.
Developments in the Owens case could signal which way the EEOC
is headed. In late September, it granted Owens permission to
pursue his sexual harassment case against Home Depot in federal
court.
In the meantime, it seems clear that judges and attorneys need
to be increasingly aware of the nuances the Net can add to cases
of harassment in the workplace.
Copyright 2001, Business 2.0
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