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Equal Employment Opportunity Commission: Case Study

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The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or otherwise known as the EEOC is responsible for making it illegal to discriminate against a job applicant and or employee ("EEOC," n.d., para. 1) based upon Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which was founded in order to safeguard employees in the United States from certain forms of discrimination. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which forbids employers from centering employment decisions to wit, compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges on a person’s race, color, religion, sex, or natural origin (Gomez-Mejia, Balkin, & Cardy, 2012, p. 97).
Honolulu City Council members agreed to pay $4.7 million to settle a lawsuit that says the Honolulu Police Department engaged in racial and sexual discrimination (Riker, 2016). This was a 2010 case in which it was alleged that the Honolulu Police Department placed officers’ lives in jeopardy by simply refusing backup during routine nighttime traffic stops that was related to a DUI task force. The lead officer Sergeant Shermon Dowkin, on the DUI team was black and the patrol commanders were Asian American, it was alleged they had instructed other officers to not provide back up to Dowkin’s team based on race (Riker, …show more content…

Very interdependent understands synergy, and not only can explain what it’s done, how you do it, but the most important part, why we do it and has a 50,000-foot view below them (H. D. Crisp, personal communication, February 9, 2016). Additional documented training should be provided by the Human Resource Department in the proper procedure or reporting these types of actions with the hopes of catching these issues as small problems before becoming large legal

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