A Black Workday employee sued the company after it sent police to his home for a 'wellness check' --[Reported by Umva mag]

Anthony Hill, a Black Workday employee, filed a suit alleging race and disability discrimination after police were sent to his home for a "wellness check."

Oct 11, 2024 - 09:46
A Black Workday employee sued the company after it sent police to his home for a 'wellness check' --[Reported by Umva mag]
Workday
  • A Black Workday employee sued the company, claiming race and disability discrimination.
  • Workday sent police to his home while he was in the hospital.
  • Anthony Hill, the employee, alleges that he faced other incidents of racial bias at the company.

A Black Workday employee filed a race and disability discrimination lawsuit against his employer after it sent police to his house for a "wellness check" while he was being treated at a hospital and had requested medical leave.

Anthony Hill, a senior legal counsel at Workday, who is Black and on leave from the company, filed the lawsuit against the company in the Northern District of California's court in December 2023. The case is still ongoing.

In June, the case was dismissed without prejudice because the court ruled that Hill had not adequately pleaded that California law should apply extraterritorially. Workday is based in California, while Hill is based in Maryland. Hill has filed an amended complaint, which Workday has moved to dismiss. Court-mediated settlement negotiations last month were unsuccessful.

Hill alleges that he was on medical leave from October 12, 2022, to November 22, 2022.

Leading up to his leave, Hill said he started drinking more as he faced more stress. On October 12, 2022, he went to the hospital due to "stress, exhaustion, and trauma associated with this and other disparate, discriminatory, retaliatory, harassing and hostile treatment of him" by other Workday employees, the lawsuit said.

That day, Hill emailed his manager to inform her that he was having a medical emergency and going to the hospital. He also sent a completed leave request form and said he would file the required Family and Medical Leave Act paperwork soon.

The following day, his manager replied with information about FMLA and said, "Please don't worry about work and focus on feeling better."

On October 20, 2022, while he was still at the hospital, Workday sent police to his house for a "wellness check."

According to a police report about the incident, a safety and security manager at Workday called the police for a welfare check on Hill because the company was unable to contact Hill or his wife, his emergency contact. The police spoke with Hill's wife, who confirmed that Hill was in medical treatment, the report said.

Hill told Business Insider that he did not receive any records, calls or emails from Workday after the last email from his manager on October 13 and before the incident.

At the hospital, Hill couldn't use his cellphone, so a member of the rehabilitation center staff informed Hill about this and allowed him to call his wife. Hill said when he heard about this, he felt like he "was going to have a heart attack," and his wife, who was home at the time, was "rattled" about the incident.

The police department of Montgomery County, where the wellness check took place, declined to comment as it is not involved in the lawsuit.

"There's nothing they would've thought cops with guns could solve on October 20 that doctors with stethoscopes could not have solved," Hill told BI.

Workday declined to comment on this report.

FMLA guarantees eligible employees of covered employers to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid medical or family leave in a year. The employee must make it clear they need to take leave for FMLA reasons, while the employer should let the employee know they qualify for medical leave and provide the paperwork for the employee to complete.

The Department of Labor requires that employers give employees 15 calendar days to provide their complete medical certification under FMLA.

Hill said he was initially worried about complying with the FMLA when he was admitted to the hospital because he had not finished the paperwork at the time, but the staff told him of this legal protection, and he said the hospital provided the FMLA paperwork within 15 days.

Hill filed an EEOC charge against Workday in April 2023. In August 2023, he first filed a lawsuit against the company in the Superior Court for the District of Columbia, which was voluntarily dismissed without prejudice.

Returning from medical leave

A few months after returning from leave, Hill asked Workday's HR department in March 2023 for more information on the wellness check. The staff declined to provide him with information or documentation about it.

"They won't tell me anything. Did they think it was an emergency? Did they think I was in danger?" Hill said."Did they think I was going to hurt someone? Why did they send police to my house and endanger my wife and kids?"

While Workday may have been trying to contact Hill to finish his FMLA paperwork, it's uncommon to send police to an employee's house for a wellness check, said Cassie Lenning, partner at Outten and Golden, a law firm that represents tech employees and is not involved in the lawsuit.

If an employee had mental health issues that the employer was aware of, that could be a situation where an employer may send someone for a wellness check, Lenning said.

"Even in that circumstance, why wouldn't they send someone from the office as opposed to the police? There's still a level of escalation in calling the police, well-intentioned or not," Lenning said. "I question the judgment of someone who would send police to the home of a Black man. There are racial implications that are being ignored."

Hill said after he went back to work, he received "awful treatment," such as receiving more pushback at work and getting left out of meeting invites. He said he had a modified schedule where he worked half-time.

In January 2023, he reported to HR about his racial and disability discrimination claims at the company and asked to be transferred to a different group at work. The company's HR staff investigated the case and then closed it in March, concluding that his claims "lacked merit," the lawsuit said.

Other claims of work discrimination

Hill has worked at Workday since January 2021. Leading up to his leave, he said he had been seeking a promotion but had been denied one. When he asked his manager for one, he was told he had to put together and submit a document on his accomplishments.

"That's a hurdle my non-Black colleagues didn't have to overcome," Hill said.

Later, he said he started getting more pushback in his work, such as when he enforced policies around limiting gift-giving to federal officials that the company wanted him to sign off on. According to the lawsuit, Hill also said a colleague told him during a meeting, "Everybody knows you don't want to work, Anthony," and doubled down on his work ethic and professional reputation. Hill told his manager that the incident "appeared racist."

"It was quite clear to me they were setting me up to fail," Hill said.

In March 2023, Hill was put on paid administrative suspension for five weeks. In May 2023, Hill went on approved disability and medical leave, although he said he was denied long-term disability leave.

"Without a doubt, I was retaliated against over and over again," Hill said.

Workday is also facing a class action lawsuit claiming its AI software for employers screens out job applicants for discriminatory reasons.

In 2020, after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other Black people at the hands of police, several tech companies shared statements taking a stand against racism. These promises have led to little action to improve diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging at tech companies.

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Read the original article on Business Insider





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