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  <title>Ep. 46 - Did the EEOC Just Change the Definition of Harassment?</title>
  <description> In January of 2026, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) voted to rescind its&amp;amp;nbsp;Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace, an over-200-page document from the Biden-era EEOC&amp;amp;nbsp;that&amp;amp;nbsp;aimed to interpret&amp;amp;nbsp;what&amp;amp;nbsp;constitutes&amp;amp;nbsp;“workplace harassment&amp;quot; under&amp;amp;nbsp;federal law.&amp;amp;nbsp;But&amp;amp;nbsp;what does it mean that&amp;amp;nbsp;this guidance has been removed? Is harassment&amp;amp;nbsp; now lawful?&amp;amp;nbsp;Are things that&amp;amp;nbsp;were considered to&amp;amp;nbsp;be&amp;amp;nbsp;harassment no longer illegal?&amp;amp;nbsp;How should&amp;amp;nbsp; workplaces&amp;amp;nbsp;navigate&amp;amp;nbsp;future harassment claims&amp;amp;nbsp;without&amp;amp;nbsp;this guide?&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;   Employment attorneys Mary Charlton and Chad Ayers&amp;amp;nbsp;respond to&amp;amp;nbsp;these&amp;amp;nbsp;crucial&amp;amp;nbsp;questions&amp;amp;nbsp;that many employers are now grappling with. Mary and Chad&amp;amp;nbsp;provide&amp;amp;nbsp;background on the EEOC’s role in the federal government,&amp;amp;nbsp;then&amp;amp;nbsp;explain&amp;amp;nbsp;what this removal will look like in practice and how&amp;amp;nbsp; organizations can best navigate this new landscape.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Tune in to hear Mary and Chad explore:&amp;amp;nbsp;     How the guidance helped&amp;amp;nbsp;to&amp;amp;nbsp;determine&amp;amp;nbsp;what&amp;amp;nbsp;constitutes&amp;amp;nbsp;“workplace harassment”&amp;amp;nbsp;       Who&amp;amp;nbsp;is&amp;amp;nbsp;most affected by the lack of&amp;amp;nbsp;this resource&amp;amp;nbsp;       How the&amp;amp;nbsp;withdrawal&amp;amp;nbsp;of the guidance was highly&amp;amp;nbsp;unorthodox&amp;amp;nbsp;       How Illinois law’s protections and requirements&amp;amp;nbsp;can help&amp;amp;nbsp;offset the rescinded federal&amp;amp;nbsp;interpretations&amp;amp;nbsp;       What&amp;amp;nbsp;steps&amp;amp;nbsp;employers can&amp;amp;nbsp;take&amp;amp;nbsp;to&amp;amp;nbsp;avoid harassment claims&amp;amp;nbsp;in the absence of this guidance&amp;amp;nbsp;     The EEOC’s actions have left&amp;amp;nbsp;employers&amp;amp;nbsp;and employees&amp;amp;nbsp;alike&amp;amp;nbsp;with a lack of clarity surrounding harassment law.&amp;amp;nbsp;Drop in on&amp;amp;nbsp;Mary and Chad’s conversation if&amp;amp;nbsp;you’d&amp;amp;nbsp;like&amp;amp;nbsp;to know how&amp;amp;nbsp;your business can&amp;amp;nbsp;move forward&amp;amp;nbsp;in this new&amp;amp;nbsp;uncertainty.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Stay Connected and Learn More&amp;amp;nbsp;   Read&amp;amp;nbsp;Mary and Chad’s blog,&amp;amp;nbsp;“The EEOC Just Retracted Its Harassment Guidance. Does That Mean Guardrails on Workplace Harassment Are Now Gone?”&amp;amp;nbsp;   Mary Charlton&amp;amp;nbsp;   Chad Ayers The Prinz Law Firm  </description>
  <author_name>Making Work Better: Employment Law &amp;amp; Workplace Challenges</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.prinz-lawfirm.com/makingworkbetter/</author_url>
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