66% of Female Restaurant Workers Report Being Sexually Harassed by Managers

mentalfloss

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66% of Female Restaurant Workers Report Being Sexually Harassed by Managers

A large majority of restaurant workers say they face consistent sexual harassment at the hands of customers, co-workers and managers, according to a new advocacy group survey.

Researchers at the Restaurant Opportunities Center (ROC) United, a nonprofit which advocates for low-paid service industry workers, interviewed 688 current and former restaurant employees from 39 states, and reported a number of findings:

66% of female and more than half of male restaurant employees reported having been sexually harassed by managers

80% of women and 70% of men reported sexual harassment by co-workers

78% of women and 55% of men reported sexual harassment by customers

50% women 47% men, and 60% trans workers characterized the behavior as “scary” or “unwanted”

30% of women, 22% of men, and 40% of transgender workers said inappropriate touching was a “common occurrence”
Examples of sexual harassment given by respondents ran from sexual jokes to explicit advances and groping. In general, women reported a higher volume of harassment than men.

ROC United also said reports of sexual harassment increase in restaurants which give employees a base pay of $2.13 an hour—forcing waitstaff to rely on tips from customers—rather than offering minimum wage.

“When a guest does it, then I feel a lot more powerless,” a participating Houston server told ROC United. “That’s when I’m like, man, that’s where my money’s coming from.”

Women making $2.13 an hour reported getting sexually harassed twice as much as women working in states that pay minimum wage to all workers, and they were three times as likely to be told by management to wear “sexier” clothes, they said.

Several survey participants said that management not only dismissed harassment at the hands of customers, but encouraged them to play along.

“I was kind of surprised,” said a respondent. “He said, ‘Well, those people pay a lot of money for our services and, I mean, would it hurt to smile a little bit, be a little bit more friendly to them?’ And I was blown away.”

http://time.com/3478041/restaurant-sexual-harassment-survey/
 

Cannuck

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Like the video of the women walking around New York, I think the definition of harassment is far too broad, making these stories all but meaningless.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Damn right. Why, just look at poor Jian Gomeshi, being persecuted and made out to be a criminal and a pervert just for a little horseplay.
 

mentalfloss

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Maybe Jian can help refine that definition.

Edit: Curse you Tecumseh for beating be to the punch.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Maybe Jian can help refine that definition.

Edit: Curse you Tecumseh for beating be to the punch.
Hah! Shemanese curses don't work on Induns!

Y'all got guns, smallpox, habitat destruction, false treaties, residential schools, concentration ca. . . uh, reserves, but we got ALL the cool curses!

That's why we won.
 

mentalfloss

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mentalfloss

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What is the current legislative definition again?
(Canadian version)
 

Cannuck

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How do you know it is too broad then?

It doesn't really say in this story. That's why I referred to the video of the woman walking around New York where somebody asked " how are you doing this evening" and that was cited as a case of harassment. At the top of the page, it did mention "Examples of sexual harassment reported in a new survey run from sexual jokes to explicit advances and groping", but without knowing what is considered an explicit advance or whether the sexual jokes were even directed at the workers it's hard to say if these people were actually harassed.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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It doesn't really say in this story. That's why I referred to the video of the woman walking around New York where somebody asked " how are you doing this evening" and that was cited as a case of harassment. At the top of the page, it did mention "Examples of sexual harassment reported in a new survey run from sexual jokes to explicit advances and groping", but without knowing what is considered an explicit advance or whether the sexual jokes were even directed at the workers it's hard to say if these people were actually harassed.
Agreed. Experience has shown us that "Don't be a rude, intimidating, crass douchebag" is too high a standard to expect North American men to meet.
 

Cannuck

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Agreed. Experience has shown us that "Don't be a rude, intimidating, crass douchebag" is too high a standard to expect North American men to meet.

Whose definition of rude? And it is there a difference between being rude to somebody and harassing them?
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Whose definition of rude? And it is there a difference between being rude to somebody and harassing them?
Good, leave out "intimidating" and focus on "rude." And since there is no single definition or standard for rudeness, that means we can do whatever we want! Thus we have used logic to demonstrate that "Good morning, Alice" and "How 'bout I ram my cock down your throat, you skanky bitch?" are equally acceptable in the workplace.

K, good day's work, guys. Let's all go grab some beers and tits.
 

Cannuck

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Perfect! More whiny junior-high school diversion! See, I didn't go to junior high school, so I'm kinda behind the curve on these techniques.

Don't be so silly. The woman in the NY vid would clearly see them both as unacceptable so it's hardly a diversion...but please, do carry on. Unlike you, I don't see your rudeness as harassing in any way.