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NELA - National Employment Lawyers Association
Oct 09, 2020

The National Employment Lawyers Association Calls On Jams To Examine Past Cases For Bias

For Immediate Release Contact: Andrea Hansen 509.306.1867 ahansen@flyingcrow.com

Arbitrator’s dissemination of racist content exposes the threat of concealed prejudice among "neutrals”

Washington, D.C. – September 8, 2020 – The National Employment Lawyers Association (NELA), the nation’s largest legal association whose members exclusively or primarily represent workers, and its related charitable arm The Employee Rights Advocacy Institute For Law & Policy, are urging JAMS, a private dispute resolution provider, to conduct a full assessment of all discrimination cases overseen by Judge Richard Neville. Neville recently distributed via email to 39 recipients a racist essay contending the inferiority of Black Americans. He has since left JAMS.

As a JAMS neutral (arbitrator), Neville decided case outcomes, including employment discrimination cases, many of which are before JAMS instead of a court due to forced arbitration clauses imposed by employers on their employees. Now his neutrality on previous cases, particularly those related to discrimination or involving people of color, must be called into question due to his legitimizing of discriminatory beliefs. Neville’s willingness to share racist rhetoric with colleagues, including another JAMS neutral, under his JAMS email signature also raises concerns about whether the culture at the organization ignores or harbors racism.

While NELA and The Employee Rights Advocacy Institute support voluntary dispute resolution, the organizations have long advocated against forced arbitration, a practice in which employers require workers, as a condition of employment, to give up the right to take the company to court if they are subject to illegal treatment. The revelation about Neville brings to the fore the additional burden employees bear when cases are handled by an arbitrator who tolerates or harbors bias.

The organizations have issued a request to JAMS outlining several actions it must take to investigate racism in Neville’s cases, as well as organization-wide:

"We were deeply disturbed to learn of Judge Neville’s distribution of racist ideology,” Wade Cowan, NELA president, said. "Many American workers are forced into arbitration by their employers as the only way to vindicate their workplace rights, such as the right to be free from discrimination. With the system already rigged in employers’ favor, how can workers of color and those who have experienced workplace discrimination trust arbitration when ostensible neutrals, who will decide their case, may not be neutral at all?”

Read our letter to JAMS

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 About the National Employment Lawyers Association (NELA) and The Employee Rights Advocacy Institute For Law & Policy Founded in 1985, the National Employment Lawyers Association (NELA) is the nation’s largest bar association whose members exclusively or primarily represent workers to ensure the preservation of their rights. The organization provides continuing legal education, works to ensure a fair judiciary, and advocates for laws and policies that promote justice for workers. NELA members have represented tens of thousands of individuals who have experienced injustice in the workplace. NELA founded The Employee Rights Advocacy Institute For Law & Policy in 2008 to study issues that impact workers, inform policymakers about necessary systemic improvements and educate the public about workers’ rights.


This article was syndicated from the NELA website and originally appeared on:
https://www.nela.org/2020-09-news-jams/

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NELA - National Employment Lawyers Association

The NELA is a national professional association of lawyers who represent employees against their employers and former employers in the areas of employment discrimination, illegal workplace harassment, wrongful termination, denial of employee benefits, and other employment-related matters. The National Employment Lawyers Association is the largest national association advocating for employees rights in the United States.

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