I recently received a call from a Native American being harassed at work because his hair is long.
Many Native Americans' wear their hair long as an expression of their ancestry and heritage, and because they maintain sincere religious beliefs that long hair is a sacred symbol of their life and experience in the world and should only be cut to mark major life events, such as the death of a loved one.
To my knowledge, the only federal court to address this issue is the Fifth Circuit, which ruled in favor of a Native American boy and permitted him to wear his hair long at school. As I considered the facts of the case, I was reminded of a recent press release from the EEOC announcing a lawsuit against a corporation that failed to hire a qualified applicant because she wore dreadlocks.
According to the EEOC's suit, after completing an online job application, Chastity Jones was among a group of applicants who were selected for a group interview on May 12, 2010. At the time of the interview, Jones, who is black, had blond hair that was dreaded in neat curls, or "curllocks."
Catastrophe's human resources staff conducted the group interview and offered Jones a position as a customer service representative. Later that day, the human resources staff met with Jones to discuss her training schedule. During that meeting, they realized that Jones's curled hair was in dreadlocks. The manager in charge told Jones that the company did not allow dreadlocks and that she would have to cut them off in order to obtain employment. Jones declined to cut her hair, and the manager immediately rescinded the job offer.
The EEOC argues that Catastrophe's ban on dreadlocks and the imposition of its grooming policy on Jones discriminates against African-Americans based on physical and/or cultural characteristics.
Race discrimination violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Eliminating barriers in recruitment and hiring, especially class-based recruitment and hiring practices that discriminate against racial, ethnic and religious groups, older workers, women, and people with disabilities, is one of six national priorities identified by the EEOC's Strategic Enforcement Plan.
The EEOC filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Alabama (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Catastrophe Management Solutions, Inc., Civil Action No. 1:13-cv-00476-CB-M), after first attempting to reach a pre-litigation settlement through its conciliation process. The agency seeks compensatory and punitive damages for Jones as well as injunctive relief.
"This litigation is not about policies that require employees to maintain their hair in a professional, neat, clean or conservative manner," said C. Emanuel Smith, regional attorney for the Birmingham District Office. "It focuses on the racial bias that may occur when specific hair constructs and styles are singled out for different treatment because they do not conform to normative standards for other races."
Delner Franklin-Thomas, district director for the EEOC's Birmingham District Office, added, "Generally, there are racial distinctions in the natural texture of black and non-black hair.
The EEOC will not tolerate employment discrimination against African-American employees because they choose to wear and display the natural texture of their hair, manage and style their hair in a manner amenable to it, or manage and style their hair in a manner differently from non-blacks. Hair grooming decisions and policies (and their implementation) have to take into consideration differing racial traits, and cannot penalize blacks for grooming their hair in a manner that does not meet normative standards for other races."