Training Deadlines
All existing employees must be trained by January 1, 2020.
The training must be repeated every two years.
New employees must be trained within one year of their employment start date. New employees do not have to be trained until they have been employed continuously for six months. They must be trained again every two years after.
New supervisors must be trained within one year of becoming a supervisor. They must be trained again every two years after.
What must the training cover?
The training must be interactive and cover the following topics:
- The illegality of sexual harassment
- The definition of sexual harassment, using examples
- The legal remedies and complaint process available to the employee
- Directions on how to contact the Department of Labor
- The legal prohibition against retaliation
In addition, supervisor training must include the specific responsibilities of a supervisor to prevent and correct sexual harassment, while addressing the legal prohibition against retaliation.
[Clear Law Institute’s online course, Preventing Workplace Harassment, includes all of the required content from the Delaware sexual harassment training law.]
Other Required Provisions
Information Sheet
The Delaware Department of Labor will create an information sheet providing notice to employees of their anti-harassment rights in the workplace. The information sheet will include the same five elements required in the mandatory anti-harassment employee training, as mentioned above. Delaware employers with 4 or more employees in Delaware must distribute this information sheet, physically or electronically, to existing employees and new hires.
Existing employees must receive this information sheet by July 1, 2019.
New hires, after January 1, 2019, must be provided this information sheet at the time they begin their employment.
The Delaware Department of Labor’s information sheet has not been created yet.
To be notified when the information sheet is available, please provide us your email address through our contact form.
Liability Standard
Under the DDEA, an employer can now be held responsible and liable for acts of sexual harassment of an employee if:
- The employer knew, or should have known, of a non-supervisory employee’s sexual harassment of an employee and failed to take appropriate corrective measures.
- Harassment committed by a supervisor results in a negative employment action of an employee, including any action taken by a supervisor that negatively impacts the employment status of an employee.
- A negative employment action taken against an employee in retaliation for the employee filing a discrimination charge, participating in an investigation of sexual harassment, or testifying or lawsuit about the sexual harassment of an employee.
A Delaware employer can avoid liability for acts of sexual harassment by a non-supervisor if they can prove that:
- The employer exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct any harassment promptly, and
- The employee unreasonably failed to take advantage of any preventative or corrective opportunities provided by the employer.
For more information on Clear Law Institute’s 50-state compliant online sexual harassment training and workplace harassment training, click here. Or, please call 703-372-0550 or submit a contact form.