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Miami Gender Discrimination Attorney Anisley Tarragona Discusses Workplace Protections Against Gender Stereotyping in Florida

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Miami Gender Discrimination Attorney Anisley Tarragona Discusses Workplace Protections Against Gender Stereotyping in Florida

MIAMI, FL - Workers in Miami and throughout Florida have legal protections when biased gender-based assumptions influence hiring, promotions, pay, or other terms of employment. Miami gender discrimination attorney Anisley Tarragona of BT Law Group, PLLC (https://btattorneys.com/sex-stereotyping-and-harassment/) explains how federal and state law prohibit gender stereotyping in the workplace, what conduct may rise to a hostile work environment, and how affected employees can pursue a claim under Title VII, the Florida Civil Rights Act, and the Miami-Dade County Human Rights Ordinance.

According to Miami gender discrimination attorney Anisley Tarragona, gender stereotyping refers to making generalizations about a person's abilities, traits, or proper role at work based solely on gender or gender identity. The U.S. Supreme Court addressed this issue in Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989), holding that employment decisions based on gender stereotyping constitute impermissible gender discrimination under Title VII. "An employer who acts on the belief that a woman cannot be assertive, or that a man must not show sensitivity, has acted on the basis of gender," Tarragona explains.

Miami gender discrimination attorney Anisley Tarragona notes that workers have protections under three overlapping laws. The Florida Civil Rights Act, codified in Chapter 760 of the Florida Statutes, applies to employers with 15 or more employees. Title VII applies at the same threshold under federal law. The Miami-Dade County Human Rights Ordinance, enforced by the county's Commission on Human Rights at 111 NW 1st Street, 21st Floor, applies to employers with five or more employees and provides broader local coverage than the state and federal statutes.

The firm points out that gender stereotyping can affect virtually any employment decision. Refusing to promote a qualified woman because the employer assumes she will prioritize family over career, refusing to hire a man for a receptionist position based on assumptions about who should fill the role, or terminating a woman for being "too assertive" while tolerating the same behavior in male employees all reflect unlawful stereotyping. Jason D. Berkowitz of BT Law Group adds that severe or pervasive harassment based on gender stereotypes can also create a hostile work environment. "Persistent derogatory comments about an employee's appearance, behavior, or perceived gender nonconformity may support a hostile work environment claim if the conduct is severe or pervasive," Berkowitz observes.

Pregnancy discrimination is closely related, since it often involves assumptions about a pregnant employee's capabilities or commitment to work. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act amended Title VII to explicitly prohibit discrimination based on pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which took effect in June 2023, requires covered employers to provide reasonable accommodations for pregnancy-related limitations, including modified schedules, lighter duty assignments, or additional break time. Under Florida Statutes Section 760.10, pregnancy is also a separately listed protected characteristic at the state level.

Filing deadlines vary by agency. The EEOC requires charges within 300 days of the discriminatory act, with the Miami District Office located at 100 SE 2nd Street, Suite 1500. The FCHR allows 365 days, and the Miami-Dade County Commission on Human Rights requires complaints within 180 days. Filing with one agency typically cross-files with the others through a work-sharing agreement.

"Direct evidence such as a supervisor telling a female employee to act more 'ladylike' is rare," attorney Tarragona observes. "Most cases rely on circumstantial evidence: patterns of differential treatment, statistical disparities in promotions, or inconsistent application of workplace policies. That is why documentation matters so much from the start."

Available recovery may include back pay, front pay, compensation for lost benefits, compensatory damages for emotional distress, and punitive damages in cases involving intentional discrimination. Federal damages are capped based on employer size, from $50,000 to $300,000, while FCRA punitive damages against private employers are capped at $100,000. Both Title VII and the FCRA include fee-shifting provisions allowing prevailing employees to recover attorney's fees and litigation costs.

The firm also notes that the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, 140 S. Ct. 1731 (2020), confirmed that Title VII's prohibition on gender discrimination encompasses LGBTQ-related employment discrimination, including claims based on gender identity. Miami-Dade County's local ordinance expressly extends those protections at the local level as well.

For workers facing gender stereotyping in the workplace, Tarragona recommends preserving emails and written communications that reflect gender-based comments, recording dates and witnesses for each incident, and consulting employment counsel before filing deadlines expire.

About BT Law Group, PLLC:

BT Law Group, PLLC is a Miami-based law firm focused on employment law matters throughout Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. Led by founding partners Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona, the firm represents employees in gender discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination cases. The office is located at 3050 Biscayne Boulevard, Suite 205, Miami, FL 33137. For consultations, call (305) 507-8506.

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Company Name: BT Law Group, PLLC
Contact Person: Jason D. Berkowitz
Email: Send Email
Phone: (305) 507-8506
Address:3050 Biscayne Blvd STE 205
City: Miami
State: FL 33137
Country: United States
Website: https://btattorneys.com/

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