Georgia Department of Labor You can reach the Georgia DOL at 404-656-3045 in Metro Atlanta or 877-709-8185 from elsewhere in the state.
If the complaint is jurisdictional, an Intake Coordinator will contact you regarding filing an Official Equal Employment Complaint with the Agency. For further information, please contact the Intake Coordinator at (404) 656-5392 or (404) 656-1736.
To prove an employer engaged in discrimination using circumstantial evidence, you must show that you are part of a protected class ing to anti-discrimination laws, you have the qualifications for the job, you experienced adverse treatment at the job, and the employer replaced you with someone who does not belong ...
Explain as clearly as possible what happened, why you believe it happened, and how you were discriminated against. Please include how other persons were treated differently from you, if applicable. If you were denied a benefit or service, please provide a copy of the denial letter.
To prove discrimination, plaintiffs must provide evidence that they: (a) are a member of a protected class, (b) are qualified for the position at issue, (c) suffered an adverse employment action, and (d) the employer treated similarly situated employees outside of the protected class more favorably (or some other ...
A hostile work environment is one where you are harassed or discriminated against to the point that it affects your work performance. The misconduct must be associated with your race, national origin, gender, disability, sexual orientation, religion, age and even pregnancy.
If the complaint is jurisdictional, an Intake Coordinator will contact you regarding filing an Official Equal Employment Complaint with the Agency. For further information, please contact the Intake Coordinator at (404) 656-5392 or (404) 656-1736.
Unfair treatment may include (but is not limited to) the following types of specific behavior: denying a training opportunity afforded to other workers; withholding information needed to perform one's job; segregating disfavored workers from others; spreading lies or rumors about an employee;
The Georgia Commission on Equal Opportunity (GCEO), through its Employment Division, enforces the Fair Employment Practices Act, which makes it unlawful for a state agency to discriminate against any employee on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, disability, national origin or age.
Keep a Written Record: The first step in documenting employment discrimination is to keep a written record of every incident that occurs. Your records should include dates, times, locations, who was involved, who witnessed it, and details of what exactly happened.