Be it enacted
by the Council as follows:
Section 1. Legislative findings and intent. The City Council finds
and declares that domestic violence is a widely recognized problem
in New York City. Indeed, New York City Police Department statistics
indicate that although the overall crime rate has decreased in
recent years, incidents of domestic violence have increased. However,
little attention has been paid to the impact of domestic violence
on the work lives of the victims and on the City economy as a
whole. In recent years, a growing body of evidence has documented
the devastating impact of domestic violence on the ability of
victims - over 90% of whom are women - to participate fully in
the economy. Yet a victim's capacity to escape an abusive relationship
is dependent in large part on economic factors such as finding
and keeping a job and gaining economic security and independence.
One study found that over one half of women surveyed who were
victims of domestic violence stayed with their abusers because
they lacked alternative resources with which to support themselves
and their children. Other studies have determined that between
twenty-four and fifty-two percent of battered women surveyed had
lost their jobs at least in part due to domestic violence, which
included harassment by the batterers both on and off the job.
Employers are also affected by domestic violence. It has been
estimated that absenteeism caused by domestic violence costs the
nation's employers between three and five billion dollars annually.
In a survey conducted by Roper Starch Worldwide for the Women’s
Work Program at Liz Claiborne. Inc., forty percent of the senior
executives at Fortune 1000 companies surveyed reported that domestic
violence had a harmful effect on their company's productivity,
and sixty-six percent believed that their company's financial
performance would benefit by addressing the issue. In response,
several corporations have established policies and programs to
assist employees struggling with domestic violence, and the State
of New York has enacted legislation that established an executive
office to develop model domestic violence policies for counties,
state agencies and private employers, as well as an advisory council
to develop strategies for domestic violence prevention. (N.Y.
Exec. Law § 575). Further, the State of Maine has enacted
legislation requiring employers to provide unpaid leaves of absence
to victims of domestic violence, and similar legislation has been
enacted in the City of Miami and is pending in the State of Pennsylvania.
Because they are embarrassed or because they fear losing their
jobs, victims are often reticent about informing their employers
about incidents of domestic violence or about requesting simple
accommodations that might assist them in fulfilling their duties.
A growing body of anecdotal evidence suggests that the fear of
negative employment action such as demotion, suspension, loss
of pay and/or benefits or termination against employees who have
revealed that they are victims of domestic violence is not unwarranted.
For example, victims of domestic violence have been terminated
or demoted after requesting simple protective measures such as
time off or flexible hours to confer with an attorney or a domestic
violence counselor, obtain an order of protection or obtain medical
or other services for themselves or family members. The City Council
finds that it is in the best interest of the City of New York
to protect the economic viability of victims of domestic violence
and to support their efforts to gain independence from their abusers.
Victims of domestic violence who are receiving medical treatment
or therapy for the physical and/or psychological effects of domestic
violence may be covered under the disability provisions of sections
8-102 (16) and 8-107 of the Human Rights Law. However, not all
victims of domestic violence need or obtain such treatment and
would therefore not be considered disabled. Further, many victims
of domestic violence do not consider themselves disabled. Accordingly,
the City Council further finds that in order to enable victims
of domestic violence to speak with their employers without fear
of reprisal, about a domestic violence incident or about possible
steps that will enhance their ability to perform their job without
causing undue hardship to the employer, the Human Rights Law should
be amended to provide employment discrimination protection for
New Yorkers who are actual or perceived victims of domestic violence.
§2.
Title 8 of the administrative code of the City of New York is
amended by adding a new section 8-107.1 which shall read as follows:
§8-107.1 Victims of Domestic Violence. 1. Definitions. Whenever
used in this section the following terms shall have the following
meanings:
a. “Acts
or threats of violence” shall include, but not be limited
to, acts which would constitute violations of the penal law.
b. “Victims of domestic violence” shall mean a person
who has been subjected to acts or threats of violence, not including
acts of self-defense, committed by a current or former spouse
of the victim, by a person with whom the victim shares a child
in common, by a person who is cohabiting with or has cohabited
with the victim, by a person who is or has been in a continuing
social relationship of a romantic or intimate nature with the
victim, or a person who is or has continually or at regular
intervals lived in the same household as the victim.
2. Unlawful discriminatory practices. It shall be an unlawful
discriminatory practice for an employer, or an agent thereof,
to refuse to hire or employ or to bar or to discharge from employment,
or to discriminate against an individual in compensation or other
terms, conditions or privileges of employment because of the actual
or perceived status of said individual as a victim of domestic
violence.
APPROVED
ON THE 5th DAY OF January 2001
(Signed) Rudolph W. Giuliani MAYOR
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