Today at 10 a. m. , the EEOC is scheduled to vote on whether to rescind its 2024 Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace.
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Clarity beats chaos: Why rescinding the EEOC’s harassment guidance is a mistake

Today at 10 a.m., the EEOC is scheduled to vote on whether to rescind its 2024 Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace

If the Commission votes "yes," it will be a terrible result for employers — not because the Guidance was perfect, but because clarity beats chaos every time.

Harassment law hasn't suddenly changed. Title VII is still Title VII. Employees will still complain, charges will still get filed, and lawsuits will still follow. The only difference is whether employers have a modern roadmap for compliance, or whether we're left piecing together best practices from decades of cases, inconsistent agency positions, and after-the-fact enforcement.

Here's what the 2024 Guidance actually provided. It consolidated the EEOC's harassment positions into one place and updated them for the way people work today. It explained the legal standards (hostile work environment, quid pro quo, employer liability). It addressed harassment by supervisors, co-workers, and third parties. It covered remote work and digital communications. And, most importantly, it included 77 real-world examples showing what harassment looks like in practice, what crosses the line, and what doesn't.

That matters because employers don't benefit from ambiguity. Plaintiffs and their lawyers do.

Rescinding the Guidance won't make harassment claims disappear. It will make them messier. It will invite inconsistent enforcement. And it will increase the odds that two employers doing the same thing get two different outcomes depending on the investigator, the regional office, or the Commission's current political whims.

If you're thinking, "Employers will just rely on their policies," good luck. Policies only work when managers follow them, HR documents them, and leadership supports them. The Guidance helped employers pressure-test all of that.

Employers should want clear rules, not uncertainty. A vote to rescind would replace practical direction with confusion — and every business will pay the price in higher risk, higher costs, and more litigation.

I sincerely hope the EEOC does the right thing here. But I think we all know this iteration of the agency won't.

Dry January isn't a moral virtue or wellness trend. It's an economic gut punch.

Every January, like clockwork, Dry January comes roaring back.

If you want to take a month off drinking, good for you. Truly. Your body, your goals, your choice. No judgment, and it shouldn't be anyone else's business either.

But we also need to stop pretending Dry January is harmless.

For a whole lot of craft breweries, Dry January isn't a "challenge." It's a revenue problem. A jobs problem. A "can we make payroll in February" problem.

Let's start here: nobody owes a brewery a dime. No one is entitled to your bar tab. And if alcohol has ever been a problem for you personally, do what you need to do—period.

But Dry January has become more than a personal choice. It's a cultural movement. And cultural movements have economic consequences.

The reality is that January is already brutal for hospitality. Post-holiday budgets are tight. Weather keeps people home. Events disappear. Then Dry January comes along and supercharges the slump—not just with fewer drinks ordered, but fewer outings, fewer meals, fewer tips, fewer shifts.

It hits the neighborhood brewery sponsoring your kid's team. The bartender paying rent. The server whose income depends on weekend crowds. The distributor reps, designers, canners, and small vendors that keep the entire ecosystem running.

And this on top of the fact that craft brewers have already been hit hard from every direction: higher ingredient and supply costs, staffing and wage pressure, distribution headaches, fierce competition from THC and other alternatives, and shifting post-pandemic consumer habits. Many are already operating on thin margins. January isn't when they make money—it's when they try not to lose too much. Because of Dry January, some simply won't survive until spring patio season.

Want to drink less? Great. Skip weekdays. Have one instead of three. Order food, even if you skip booze. Buy to-go beer for later. Choose NA options (many breweries now offer them). You can make a health decision without turning January into a month-long boycott of local hospitality.

Dry January isn't immoral. But it is bad for business—and pretending otherwise ignores the people and places we claim to support the other 11 months of the year.

The 1st nominee for The Worst Employer of 2026 is … The Harassing, Retaliating, Evidence-Erasing Employer.

If you're looking for the blueprint for how to turn a workplace into a legal catastrophe and land on my Worst Employer list, look no further than Bryant v. C&M Defense Group. A jury just awarded Makita Bryant $5.5 million after what reads less like an HR failure and more like a master class in how to do everything wrong.

Start with the harassment. The plaintiff, a security officer, alleged that her manager repeatedly targeted her with escalating sexual misconduct—pressuring her to go out with him after work (including to a strip club), making explicit sexual comments, and continuing even after she said no. The allegations get worse: unwanted touching, groping, being shoved against a wall, exposing himself, and demands for sexual acts. This wasn't "inappropriate behavior." It was alleged sexual assault, enabled by authority and isolation at a worksite.

Then comes the part juries punish: retaliation. When the plaintiff finally reported the harassment, the company's response wasn't protection or investigation. It was radio silence, scheduling games, and then termination-by-ghosting—no clear answers, no assignments, no job.

But the cherry on top is the evidence issue. The plaintiff alleged she turned over a recording device containing audio proof of the harassment. She begged for it back. She explained it also contained the voice of her deceased aunt—something irreplaceable. The company allegedly kept and never returned it. Call it what you want: evidence mishandling, spoliation, destruction, bad faith. A jury likely called it what it looked like—a cover-up. And cover-ups, once uncovered, add decimal points to verdicts.

When an employer tolerates harassment, punishes reporting, and makes evidence disappear, it's not just risking liability. It's begging for a bad outcome. And at $5.5 million, this one landed exactly where it belonged. It also lands this employer as my first nominee for the Worst Employer of 2026.

      

WIRTW #786: the 'propaganda' edition

What the hell is going on at the Department of Labor?

On January 10, the DOL posted this on X: "One Homeland. One People. One Heritage. Remember who you are, American."


Read that again. Slowly. If that doesn't make the hair on the back of your neck stand up, it should.

Myriad people immediately flagged the post as sounding eerily similar to one of the Nazi Party's central slogans — "Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer" (one people, one realm, one leader). And they're not wrong to hear the echo. Even if you want to give the DOL every possible benefit of the doubt (you shouldn't), the vibe is unmistakable: nationalist propaganda, identity worship, and "blood and soil" messaging dressed up as patriotism.

And it wasn't even that subtle. The post was paired with a black-and-white montage of Revolutionary-era imagery and propaganda-style art — the kind of aesthetic authoritarian movements love because it sells nostalgia, certainty, obedience, and "purity" in one neat package.

Keep in mind, this is the Department of Labor. Its job is supposed to be enforcing wage-and-hour laws, protecting workplace safety, ensuring fair labor standards, and helping people get employed and trained. Not cranking out memes that wink at fascist tropes and flirt with Nazi-era rhetoric, slogans, and iconography.

This isn't happening in a vacuum. Union leaders and historians are sounding alarms about a "rhetorical shift towards white supremacy" within the federal government, with campaigns featuring idealized, mostly White male workers, "Americanism" over "globalism," and messaging designed to convince the "real Americans" that only people like them belong. Indeed, ICE is recruiting potential agents with the tagline, "We'll have our home again," a lyric tied to white nationalist groups.

When federal agencies start talking like this, it's not "patriotism." It's not an accident. It's propaganda — and it's the point.



Here's what I read this week that you should read, too.



Trump Team Piling Up Injustices in Minnesota — via The Chief Organizer Blog



Whither Bostock? — via SCOTUSblog


Is HR Useless? Only If You Ignore Compliance, Risk, and Reality — via Improve Your HR by Suzanne Lucas, the Evil HR Lady



Handling Investigations in a Global Workplace — via Employment Law Worldview

When “irreparable harm” isn’t: 8th Circuit slams brakes on a noncompete injunction

Employers love preliminary injunctions in restrictive covenant cases. And courts are supposed to grant them only in extraordinary circumstances.

The 8th Circuit just reminded everyone what "extraordinary" actually means.

In Choreo, LLC v. Lors, a private-equity-owned financial advisory firm watched its office implode. Four senior advisors resigned and joined a competitor; weeks later eight of the nine remaining advisors followed them. Clients fled. Roughly $400 million in assets under management walked out the door.

Choreo did what employers do in these situations. It sued. It alleged noncompete and nonsolicitation violations, employee raiding, trade secret theft, and tortious interference. The district court responded with a nuclear option—a broad preliminary injunction barring the former advisors from servicing clients, communicating about their new jobs, or recruiting employees, and barring the new firm from basically touching anything related to Choreo.

The 8th Circuit just vacated it all. Why? One word: irreparable harm.

Yes, Choreo lost clients. Yes, it lost goodwill. Yes, its branch was effectively gutted. But none of that, the court held, justified emergency injunctive relief.

Client losses are calculable. This is the financial services industry. Fees are percentage-based. Assets are known. Lost revenues can be estimated and awarded as damages. Calling the harm "goodwill" doesn't magically make it intangible and incalculable.

As to the claim of branch destruction, it came too late. By the time the injunction issued, the damage was already done. Injunctions prevent future harm; they don't rewind the clock.

The court's message was blunt: economic harm—even massive economic harm—is not irreparable if money can fix it. And conclusory declarations saying "this can't be calculated" don't cut it when the numbers are sitting right there in the record.

Just because a preliminary injunction doesn't issue doesn't mean a restrictive covenant is unenforceable. Choreo may still win on the merits. But preliminary injunctions are not automatic in employee-defection cases—far from it. The bar is high. And if you want one, you'd better prove, with clear evidence, that money damages won't do the job.

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