



Recruiting News Network
Recruiting
News
OperationsThe Recruiting Worx PodcastMoney + InvestmentsCareer AdviceWorld
Tech
DEI
People
People on the Move
The Leaders
The Makers
People
People on the Move
The Leaders
The Makers
Brand +
Marketing
Events
Labor +
Economics
SUBSCRIBE





Diversity + Equity + Inclusion

Waste Pro, GFL face EEOC lawsuits over race and sex discrimination complaints

HR Dive

September 29, 2023

Diversity + Equity + Inclusion

Waste Pro, GFL face EEOC lawsuits over race and sex discrimination complaints

HR Dive

September 29, 2023

Photo by Pawel Czerwinski on Unsplash

A Waste Pro facility in Florida and several GFL Environmental locations in Georgia are the subject of two separate workplace discrimination lawsuits from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The EEOC announced on Tuesday it has sued Waste Pro of Florida for racial harassment and retaliation at its Jacksonville, Florida location, saying the company “subjected Black employees to racist slurs and then retaliated against them for complaining about the behavior.”

Separately, the EEOC announced last week that it had also filed a lawsuit against GFL Environmental and related locations for sex discrimination. It alleges that several companies run by GFL in Georgia, including Waste Industries and TransWaste locations, have routinely refused to hire women for driver roles since at least 2016.

Waste Pro harassment complaint

According to the EEOC complaint, two Waste Pro employees at its Jacksonville location regularly used racial slurs in front of Black employees. In some instances, the workers told a Black Haitian American to “go back to Haiti” and made other discriminatory remarks. The EEOC alleges the slurs and harassment happened on a “nearly daily basis” and often in the presence of other workers.

The targeted employee reported the harassment several times to supervisors starting in December 2021, but no corrective action was taken until March 2022 when a maintenance manager formally notified human resources, according to the complaint.

The worker who filed the complaint asked HR not to reveal his identity because he did not want to be the subject of retaliation from the two main co-workers who were harassing him. However, according to the complaint, HR disclosed his name to the two workers.

Just before a meeting where HR planned to discuss the discrimination issue with the full maintenance staff, the targeted employee found a stuffed monkey waving an American flag in his work area, according to the EEOC. He reported the incident but said nothing was done.

In the weeks following the meeting, he said his harassers locked away necessary equipment so he couldn’t access it, refused to communicate with him about repair schedules and made sure he was left with the most difficult assignments, according to the EEOC complaint. Waste Pro did not take corrective action when the worker notified supervisors about these issues, and the employee resigned because he did not believe the company would intervene, the EEOC stated.


Click for full article

The EEOC alleges several GFL locations in Georgia won’t hire women drivers, while a Waste Pro facility in Florida failed to intervene

What we're reading

‘We’re all fighting the giant’: Gig workers around the world are finally organizing

by
Peter Guest
-
rest of world

Gig workers are connecting across borders to challenge platforms’ power and policies

Got Zoom fatigue? Out-of-sync brainwaves could be another reason videoconferencing is such a drag

by
Dr. Julie Boland
-
The Conversation

I was curious about why conversation felt more laborious and awkward over Zoom and other video-conferencing software.

How to Purchase an Applicant Tracking System

by
Dave Zielinski
-
SHRM

Experts say the first step in seeking a new ATS should be to evaluate your existing recruiting processes.

View All Articles

Events

Hire Virtue's Hiring Blitz & Job Fair

Houston, TX
-
to
August 6, 2025
View All Events
Related Articles

Unseen, unheard, unhired: Inside the quiet crisis of bias in talent acquisition

Sara Yahia

July 21, 2025

Pay transparency promised pay equity. Is it working?

Courtney Vinopal

July 15, 2025

© 2024 recruiting news network.
all rights reserved.



Categories
Technology
Money
People
TA Ops
Events
Editorial
World
Career Advice
Resources
Diversity & Inclusion
TA Tech Marketplace
Information
AboutContactMedia KitPrivacy Policy
Subscribe to newsletter
