Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
International

10 McDonald's Workers File Sexual Harassment Claims in the US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 May, 2018 11:45 AM
    At least 10 female Mcdonald's current and former employees in the US have filed sexual harassment complaints against the company, the media reported.
     
     
    The complaints were filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in seven states, including Michigan, Florida, and Louisiana. Most of the incidents were alleged to have occurred over the past two years, CNN reported on Tuesday evening.
     
     
    The female workers, including a 15-year-old St. Louis, said that the management did not take the complaints seriously and even retaliated by firing them.
     
     
    McDonald's said in a statement on Tuesday that the company takes sexual harassment allegations "very seriously".
     
     
    "At McDonald's Corporation, we are and have been committed to a culture that fosters the respectful treatment of everyone. There is no place for harassment and discrimination of any kind in our workplace.
     
     
     
     
    "McDonald's Corporation takes allegations of sexual harassment very seriously and is confident our independent franchisees who own and operate approximately 90 per cent of our 14,000 US restaurants will do the same," the statement added.
     
     
    A worker in Chicago said that a supervisor retaliated against her by reducing her hours when she reported instances of sexual harassment by management.
     
     
    The 15-year-old said she was repeatedly harassed by an older employee for two months by commenting on her appearance and sexually propositioning to her.
     
     
    A 20-year-old woman in North Carolina said that she was sexually harassed by co-workers and supervisors. She also said she was subjected to a hostile work environment at the company-owned store because she is black. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students
    Obaidur Rahman, a businessman who is also chairman of the Bihar foundation in Saudi Arabia, has formed an organization called Rahman 30, which will select 30 talented students from the minority community

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

    Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

    Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Saturday sanctioned Rs 3,56,700 from the Chief Minister's Relief Fund, on humanitarian grounds, to facilitate the return of a Gurdaspur resident from a ship he is stuck in at Sharjah Port.

    Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach
    A 15-year-old Indian girl has died of a heart attack while playing at the popular Half Moon beach in Al-Khobar city of Saudi Arabia.

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'
    A new fast-growing Israeli Chrysanthemum flower has been named after visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to honour him.

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme
    Two top Indian-American former executives of a Chicago-area information technology company have been charged by the US federal regulator in an accounting fraud scheme in which they misled investors and siphoned millions of dollars from the firm for their personal benefit. 

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme

    Pakistan Must Pay For Supporting Terrorism, Says U.S. Congressman

    Pakistan Must Pay For Supporting Terrorism, Says U.S. Congressman
    Pakistan knows it is supporting terrorism, as does the United States and Afghanistan, and therefore, must face the consequences, financial or otherwise for doing so, a member of the United States Congress has said.

    Pakistan Must Pay For Supporting Terrorism, Says U.S. Congressman