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Employee Survival Guide®

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The Employee Survival Guide® is the no-nonsense employment law podcast made exclusively for employees. After 200+ episodes, we deliver the straight talk your employer and HR don’t want you to hear — covering every work and career issue that actually...

Location:

United States

Description:

The Employee Survival Guide® is the no-nonsense employment law podcast made exclusively for employees. After 200+ episodes, we deliver the straight talk your employer and HR don’t want you to hear — covering every work and career issue that actually matters. Hosted and produced by Mark Carey, a veteran employment lawyer with 29 years of experience who has litigated hundreds of cases — including class actions — in state and federal courts nationwide. Mark cuts through the BS with blunt, practical advice, always presenting both sides so you can make informed decisions. This podcast is also about your employment story and other courageous employees who have spoken out about their employers. If you work for a living, this is your podcast. Subscribe to our employee podcast show in your favorite podcast app including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe to our feed via RSS or XML. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide ® please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this employee podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Thank you! For more information, please contact Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, or email at info@capclaw.com. Also go to our website EmployeeSurvival.com for more helpful information about work and working.

Language:

English

Contact:

2032554150


Episodes
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When Risk Management Becomes Retaliation: Hollis v. R & R Restaurants

4/25/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A single email can expose an entire retaliation strategy. We start with a scenario that feels painfully familiar in the gig economy: you’re called an “independent contractor,” you believe you’re being controlled like an employee, and you finally file an FLSA lawsuit for unpaid minimum wages. Then your income dries up somewhere else, not because your work changed, but because the owner you sued has ties to another venue across town. We dig into the case documents behind a Portland dispute involving exotic dance clubs, house fees, tip practices, and unusually granular workplace rules. Along the way, we explain the Fair Labor Standards Act in plain language, including why a signed independent contractor agreement is not decisive and how the economic realities test weighs control, profit opportunity, investment, skill, permanence, and whether the work is integral to the business. We also cover the procedural side that can make or break wage and hour claims: discovery, depositions, and the FLSA statute of limitations. The turning point is retaliation. A booked performance gets canceled after a lawsuit is filed, with the reason put in writing as “risk management.” The trial court initially treats that as outside the FLSA because the worker looks like a contractor at the second venue. The Ninth Circuit flips that logic, reading “employer” broadly enough to reach people acting indirectly in an employer’s interest and rejecting the idea that liability avoidance excuses blacklisting. If you care about worker protections, corporate webs, and how retaliation works across related businesses, this one matters. Subscribe for more clear breakdowns of real employment law battles, share this episode with someone navigating contractor status, and leave a review with your biggest question about misclassification or retaliation. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:46:39

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The Syllabus Free Speech Fight: Stuart Reges v. University of Washington

4/24/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. One sentence on a syllabus. A flood of student complaints. An administrator’s order to delete the text. Then IT logs in and edits the professor’s course page anyway, the department spins up a “shadow class” for hundreds of students, and a routine merit raise gets frozen for two years. That’s the real-world chain reaction behind a University of Washington case that forces a hard question: when a professor speaks in a required class document, is that academic freedom or employer-controlled government speech? We walk through Professor Stuart Regis’s dissenting land acknowledgement rooted in John Locke’s labor theory of property, why the Allen School viewed it as corrosive to an inclusive learning environment, and how student reactions became central evidence of “disruption.” From there, we map the legal framework that governs public employee speech, including Garcetti v. Ceballos, the higher-ed academic freedom carveout, and the Pickering balancing test that asks judges to weigh free speech against an institution’s ability to function. We also dig into the policy language fight over UW Executive Order 31 and why words like “unacceptable,” “inappropriate,” and especially “regardless” can trigger overbreadth and vagueness challenges. If you write HR policies, manage public employees, teach at a public university, or just want to understand First Amendment rights at work, this case is a masterclass in how fast the line between protected speech and punishable conduct can move. If this analysis helped you think more clearly about workplace speech, academic freedom, and university policy, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find us. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:29:04

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Gender Based Pay Disparity: Maciel v. D&B Supply, LLC

4/24/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. One phone call about a $1/hour wage difference shouldn’t end a career, but sometimes it does, and that’s when retaliation law gets real. We dig into the case of a long-tenured employee at a large Idaho employer who learns a newly hired male coworker is paid more for speaking Spanish, even though she speaks Spanish too. She calls HR, asks for an investigation, and raises the question every worker worries about saying out loud: is this about gender or age? From there, the timeline accelerates: management pushes back, warns her away from wage talk, and within days she’s suspended and then terminated. We unpack why that first complaint can qualify as protected activity under Title VII even without a formal written “policy,” and why the National Labor Relations Act makes “don’t discuss pay” a legally risky instruction. The details matter here, especially when an employer tries to justify discipline with multiple explanations that don’t line up cleanly. We also explain the practical legal road from an EEOC and Idaho Human Rights Commission charge to a federal lawsuit, and why plaintiffs often bring layered claims under Title VII, the Idaho Human Rights Act, and the Equal Pay Act. Then we break down summary judgment through the McDonnell Douglas framework: what the employee must prove, what the employer must offer, and how evidence of pretext can keep a retaliation case headed toward a jury, often prompting serious settlement discussions. If you’ve ever wondered what to document, what to say, and what not to ignore when pay fairness questions collide with HR, this story delivers the clearest example. Subscribe for more real-world workplace law breakdowns, share this with someone navigating a pay dispute, and leave a review with your take: should employers be required to formalize “bilingual pay” instead of treating it as pure discretion? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:18:04

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illegal Prescreening Disability Questions: EEOC v. Lori's Gifts $600,000 Consent Decree

4/24/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A hiring portal can reject you in less than a second, but that speed can hide a serious legal problem. We dig into a newly settled EEOC lawsuit against Laurie's Gifts, a national hospital gift shop chain, and the uncomfortable truth it exposes about applicant tracking systems: when software demands perfect yes or no answers about physical ability, it can quietly screen out disabled, qualified workers before anyone has a chance to talk accommodations. We walk through what happened to Teresa Shepard, a strong candidate who answered “no” to standing for five hours after recent foot surgeries. The ATS instantly kicked her out, twice, with no explanation box and no appeal. Then she bypassed the portal, reached a local hiring manager, and suddenly the “problem” looked solvable in seconds: there was already a stool behind the register, and the manager even used it. That gap between corporate screening logic and real job reality is where disability discrimination risk grows. From there, we break down the ADA rules that matter for every employer using pre-employment screening questions. Title I limits disability-related inquiries before a conditional offer and pushes the interactive process: can the person do the essential functions with or without reasonable accommodation? We also explain how Title V can come into play when a digital wall interferes with the right to request accommodation. Finally, we cover the outcome, including the $600,000 settlement and the compliance changes that follow a federal consent decree. If you build hiring pipelines, work in HR, or keep getting auto-rejected by online applications, this is a must-listen. Subscribe, share this with someone who hires, and leave a review with your take: where should automation stop in hiring? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:15:26

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Remote Work On Trial: EEOC v. FedEx Consent Decree for $280,000

4/24/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A job can be done perfectly and still become impossible to keep. We dig into an EEOC disability discrimination case where a FedEx dispatcher with decades of experience kept operations running while working from home, only to have that accommodation pulled back after a return-to-office push. When a company relocates a role and the commute becomes the true obstacle, the ADA forces a hard conversation: are we talking about the work, or the building? We break down the facts the EEOC highlighted, including serious health conditions that limited mobility and a multi-year stretch of successful telework that, on paper, looked like proof the essential functions were largely sedentary and doable remotely. Then we turn to FedEx’s legal defense: denials of wrongdoing, claims of operational need for in-office interaction, disputes over what performance systems capture, and the argument that remote work during a crisis doesn’t rewrite the rules forever. Finally, we walk through the consent decree that ended the dispute, including a $280,000 payment and policy-focused terms like ADA training, better tracking of accommodation requests, workplace notices, and a reinstatement pathway. We also leave you with the question at the center of today’s remote work accommodation battles: if the work was already proven from home, what should an employer still be allowed to require? Subscribe for more clear, practical breakdowns of workplace rights, share this with someone navigating return-to-office, and leave a review so more workers can find the show. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:09:10

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Forced Arbitration NY and NYC Law: Owens v. Pricewaterhousecoopers, LLC

4/21/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. Getting forced out the day before your benefits vest feels like a gut punch. Now imagine you’re a celebrated fintech leader managing high-pressure work at a massive firm, you deliver on headline projects, and then you’re told to leave 24 hours before a five-year milestone that triggers serious wealth-building and retirement matching. That’s the backdrop for Owens v. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLC, and we walk through why the timing is only the first shock. We unpack the “partner versus employee” problem that shows up across corporate America. PwC used the title “principal,” but the court focuses on control: who sets the work, who can block deals, who can change compensation, and who can remove you. If your firm can steer your book of business and your pay through internal systems, a fancy title may not deliver real ownership power, and that classification can determine whether civil rights protections apply under laws like the New York City Human Rights Law. Then we get into the modern battleground: forced arbitration. Employers love arbitration clauses because they keep disputes private and can limit discovery. Owens points to the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act (EFAA), and the judge’s analysis turns on a surprisingly practical question: what counts as “sexual harassment” when conduct is abusive but not sexual? We explain the court’s line between behind-the-scenes discrimination and direct, face-to-face harassment and why that line can decide if you get a public courtroom or a closed-door proceeding. If you found this useful, subscribe, share it with a coworker, and leave a review with your take: should arbitration clauses be enforceable in workplace civil rights cases? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:23:02

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Forced Arbitration Breaker: Toomey v. One Equity Partners

4/21/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. What happens when a toxic workplace culture collides with the legal system? Join us as we unpack the groundbreaking lawsuit filed by Diana Toomey against One Equity Partners (OEP), a Manhattan private equity firm, that challenges the very foundations of forced arbitration in the workplace. This episode of the Employee Survival Guide® dives deep into the alarming allegations of harassment and discrimination that Toomey faced, revealing an archaic mindset on gender roles and a glaring absence of adequate HR support that has left many employees feeling powerless. Mark Carey and his co-host navigate the intricate legal landscape surrounding Toomey’s case, discussing the implications of the Ending Forced Arbitration Act (EFAA) and its potential to reshape employee rights in the face of corporate resistance. With forced arbitration often silencing victims of workplace discrimination, this episode sheds light on the pressing need for change and employee empowerment within the realms of employment law. Discover how Toomey’s fight against gender discrimination and harassment could set a precedent for future workplace disputes and the importance of understanding your rights as an employee. From the challenges of proving sexual harassment under current laws to the ramifications of corporate arbitration agreements, we break down the complexities that every employee should be aware of. Whether you’re navigating a hostile work environment, dealing with retaliation, or facing discrimination based on sex, race, or disability, this episode offers crucial insights into your rights and the resources available to you. As we explore the realities of severance negotiations and employment contracts, we also highlight the importance of advocating for a healthier workplace culture that prioritizes employee well-being and fair treatment. Tune in for insider tips on navigating employment law issues, understanding workplace policies, and empowering yourself in a system that often feels stacked against you. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn how to survive and thrive in your career, because knowledge is power and your voice matters. Are you ready to take charge of your workplace experience? Listen now and equip yourself with the tools to navigate the complexities of employment disputes, workplace discrimination, and the ever-evolving landscape of employee rights. This is more than just a podcast; it’s your guide to surviving and thriving in today’s challenging work environment. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:16:47

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EEOC Opioid Bias Suit Against Carlstar Group $300,000 Consent Decree

4/16/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A positive drug test shouldn’t erase a doctor’s clearance, but that’s exactly what this story reveals. We dig into the EEOC’s federal lawsuit against Carlstar Group after two long-time manufacturing employees, Harold Simmons and Timothy Patty, are terminated for using legally prescribed pain medication to treat serious back and neck injuries. Both men had worked for years on the factory floor, both disclosed prescriptions, and both were examined by the company’s own medical providers who cleared them as fit for duty. Then HR steps in with a hard line: change your meds or lose your job. We explain why that kind of blanket drug policy can trigger Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) liability, especially in safety-sensitive roles. We walk through the EEOC’s core legal theories: unlawful discharge tied to disability treatment, a discriminatory qualification standard that screens out disabled workers, and failure to accommodate when an employer skips the interactive process. We also unpack the “direct threat” standard and why generalized fear of opioids is not enough without objective medical evidence tied to the individual worker. The 2026 consent decree is the turning point: $300,000 in payments, but also the real hammer, court-ordered equitable relief. The decree forces individualized risk analysis, documentation, training, and a strict ban on HR inventing restrictions where medical professionals have not. We close with a forward-looking question for anyone watching AI in HR: if humans already default to shortcuts, what happens when software starts auto-flagging “risk” at scale? Subscribe, share this with a coworker, and leave a review with your take: should safety policies ever override a doctor’s clearance? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:22:07

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The $8.4 Million Race & Retaliation Verdict: Franchitti v. Cognizant Technology Solutions

4/5/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. An $8.4 million jury verdict doesn’t happen because someone has a bad day at work. It happens when timelines, documents, and motive line up so cleanly that a jury can’t ignore what the paper trail is saying. We’re breaking down the federal court record behind Jean-Claude Franchitti v. Cognizant, starting with how a high-performing tech consulting leader builds a $20 million book of business and then gets trapped in a restructuring that turns into a high-stakes internal turf war. We talk through the corporate mechanics that matter in real workplaces: matrix reporting, competing business units, budget starvation, promotion committees, and the “bench” or deployment pool that can quietly end careers. Then we get into the core allegations that drive the case: national origin discrimination, demographic targeting, and an H-1B visa pipeline that allegedly created a travel-ready staffing bench. We also explain why retaliation under Title VII often comes down to one simple, brutal question: what happened right after the employee complained to HR, and how fast did the company act? From the EEOC’s findings to the settlement that collapses because of a sealed False Claims Act qui tam filing, we follow the procedural gauntlet all the way to Judge Furman’s rulings and the pretrial evidence battles that shape what the jury can hear. If you’re an employee, manager, HR professional, or executive, the takeaways are practical: document everything, understand the staffing incentives behind decisions, and don’t confuse HR’s role with legal representation. Subscribe for more deeply reported employment law breakdowns, share this with someone navigating a toxic workplace, and leave a review with the question you want us to tackle next. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:01:03:53

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The Quiet Workplace Fear We All Carry – And Why This Podcast Is Becoming Something Bigger Than I Ever Expected

4/3/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. Are you feeling the weight of quiet workplace fear every day, wondering if your job is at risk due to unfair treatment or retaliation? You're not alone. In this enlightening episode of Employee Survival Guide®, Mark Carey, an employment lawyer with nearly 30 years of experience, dives deep into the pervasive anxiety that plagues employees across various sectors. He shares compelling stories of individuals whose lives have been upended by toxic workplace dynamics, shedding light on the often-unspoken fears that come with employment, job security, and the struggle for employee rights. Mark emphasizes that quiet workplace fear isn't just about the immediate threat of job loss; it's a constant undercurrent that can affect every aspect of your well-being. From navigating hostile work environments to dealing with discrimination—whether it be based on race, gender, or disability—these issues are more than just legal terms; they are real barriers to your career advancement and job satisfaction. Mark encourages listeners to confront their own fears, share their experiences, and foster a community of support that can combat the toxic culture that often thrives on silence. Throughout the episode, you'll discover practical strategies for overcoming quiet workplace fear and reclaiming your voice in the workplace. Mark invites you to contribute your own stories, promoting a collective resistance against the dynamics that perpetuate fear and control. Whether you're facing challenges with severance negotiations, performance reviews, or workplace bullying, this episode is packed with insights that empower you to navigate the complexities of employment law and workplace policies. Join us as we explore how to advocate for your rights, negotiate effective severance packages, and understand the nuances of employment contracts. With tips on managing remote work challenges and navigating workplace conflicts, this episode is your go-to resource for developing the skills necessary for survival in today's job market. As Mark Carey unpacks the intricacies of employment law, he provides you with the knowledge to stand up against discrimination, retaliation, and unfair treatment in your career. Don't let quiet workplace fear dictate your professional life. Tune in to Employee Survival Guide® and take the first step towards empowerment, resilience, and a healthier work culture. Your stories matter, and together, we can challenge the status quo of workplace dynamics. Embrace your journey to employee advocacy and survival—because you deserve a work environment that respects your rights and fosters your growth. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:08:33

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Information is Power: Employee Survival Guide Shapes the Future of Work

4/2/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. Walking into an HR meeting with termination papers on the desk is one of the worst feelings at work. We start there and ask a different question: what happens when you don’t walk in scared, but walk in informed, holding proof that the clause they’re using to threaten you may be unenforceable under federal law? That single shift captures the bigger story we unpack, based on a provocative “Looking Back from 2032” blueprint from a veteran employment lawyer. We rewind to the pre-2020 workplace model built on dominion and control: non-compete agreements that trap mobility, at-will employment that keeps everyone on edge, and culture messaging that demands loyalty while masking layoffs and retaliation. Then we get specific about the mechanics, including how paper trails are manufactured, how performance reviews get weaponized, and why information asymmetry lets companies operate like a rigged casino where the house always wins. Next comes the quiet revolution: workers trading legal knowledge in decentralized networks, learning severance negotiation tactics, recognizing retaliation timelines, and using case law to call bluffs in contracts that try to waive federal civil rights. We also challenge the fear that legal literacy means constant warfare. The idea here is mass consensus, a shared recognition of mutual dependence that pushes companies toward trust, transparency, remote work where it fits, real disability accommodations, and performance systems that reward measurable contribution. The episode ends on a sharp structural question about the future of middle management when the enforcement role no longer makes sense. If you care about worker rights, employment law basics, non-compete enforceability, severance agreements, retaliation red flags, and the future of corporate culture, subscribe, share this with a colleague, and leave a review. What’s one workplace policy you wish you understood before you signed it? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:20:53

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Noose On The Job Site: Race Discrimination: EEOC v. Air Systems, Inc. $1.25 million settlement

4/1/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A billion-dollar campus can look like the future from a drone shot while the people building it live in something far older and darker. We open the federal court record in EEOC v Air Systems Inc. and track how three Black electricians and trainees at the Apple Park construction site described daily racial harassment that management allegedly saw and ignored until it escalated into a written death threat and a noose. We break down the employment law concepts that decide whether a story becomes a Title VII case: hostile work environment standards, an employer’s duty on a chaotic multi-employer job site, and the difference between actual notice and constructive notice. Then we follow the timeline where reporting up the chain is met with dismissal and, most dangerously, retaliation. When a termination lands the same day as a complaint, we explain why that “temporal proximity” can be a legal smoking gun and how patterns of indifference can turn a bad manager problem into company-wide liability. From there, we walk through how the EEOC enforcement machine really works: filing a charge, investigation, a reasonable cause finding, mandatory conciliation, and what it means when the agency declares negotiations “unsuccessful, futile, and non-productive.” We also translate the endgame: a $1.25 million settlement in a consent decree, why “dismissed with prejudice” still comes with teeth, and how retained jurisdiction lets a judge enforce training, reporting reforms, and non-retaliation obligations. If you want practical guidance on documenting harassment, understanding protected activity, and recognizing the moment your employer’s inaction becomes actionable, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a coworker who needs it, and leave a review so more workers can find these survival tactics. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:49:51

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Sexual Harassment, Whistleblowing, Forced Arbitration: Sheehan v. Everstory Partners

3/31/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A funeral home runs on trust, silence, and strict rules. That is exactly why the allegations in Sheehan v. Everstory Partners hit so hard and why we wanted to unpack them carefully, with the big disclaimer front and center: this is active litigation, the employer denies wrongdoing, and what we’re discussing comes from court filings and the judge’s orders. We start with the facts as alleged, because the details drive everything in employment law. The complaint describes a hostile work environment with explicit sexual comments, public humiliation, and disturbing physical displays, plus claims that staff were pressured to break Pennsylvania funeral home regulations involving cremation authorizations, disinterment permits, and record accuracy. Then we track what happens after complaints to HR and management: constructive discharge, suspensions, terminations, and the legal importance of temporal proximity, disparate treatment, and patterns of antagonism in retaliation claims. The real legal earthquake is procedural. Everstory allegedly tried to force the dispute into private arbitration using broad onboarding arbitration agreements. We explain why forced arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act can keep sexual harassment and retaliation claims out of public view, limit discovery, and reduce accountability. Then we break down how the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 (EFAA) changes the leverage, including Judge Padova’s rulings on plausibility under Rule 12(b)(6), Twombly, and Iqbal. Finally, we get into the “entire case doctrine,” the idea that once a plausible sexual harassment dispute is part of the case, the arbitration clause can become unenforceable for the whole lawsuit, not just one claim. If you’ve ever signed employment paperwork without reading the fine print, this conversation may change how you look at arbitration agreements forever. Subscribe to Employee Survival Guide, share this with a coworker, and leave a review if it helps, what part of the arbitration fight surprised you most? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:01:01:13

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Age Discrimination & Constructive Discharge: Frostie Ellis-Yancey v. Midwest Block & Brick

3/30/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. What happens when a loyal employee faces a shocking betrayal from the very company they dedicated their life to? Join Mark Carey in this gripping episode of the Employee Survival Guide® as he unravels the harrowing tale of Frosty Ellis Yancey, a 42-year veteran of Midwest Block and Brick, who found herself at the center of a devastating corporate scandal involving age discrimination and a canceled transfer that turned her life upside down. Frosty’s journey is a cautionary tale for anyone navigating the complex waters of employment law, especially when it comes to age discrimination. After receiving the green light for a lateral transfer to Houston, she sold her home in St. Louis and made significant life changes, only to have her dreams shattered by an abrupt cancellation from management. This episode dives deep into the legal intricacies of her case, exploring concepts such as constructive discharge and the implications of age discrimination. Mark and his co-host dissect recent court rulings, including the landmark Supreme Court decision in Muldrow v. City of St. Louis, which could reshape the legal landscape for employees facing similar corporate betrayals. Listeners will gain invaluable insights into the importance of securing written agreements and the potential pitfalls of corporate bureaucracy that can leave long-serving employees vulnerable. The discussion raises critical questions about the role of human resources in employee relations and the systemic issues within corporate structures that often lead to workplace discrimination and hostile work environments. With age discrimination at the forefront, it’s essential for employees to understand their rights and the necessary steps to protect themselves in the face of corporate challenges. This episode is not just about Frosty's story; it serves as a wake-up call for employees everywhere. As Mark and his co-host navigate the murky waters of employment law, they empower listeners with practical tips on negotiating severance packages, understanding employment contracts, and recognizing the signs of a toxic workplace. Whether you’re dealing with performance reviews, facing discrimination, or simply trying to survive in a demanding work environment, this episode is packed with insights that can help you advocate for your rights and navigate the complex landscape of employment law. Don't miss out on this eye-opening discussion that highlights the importance of vigilance, legal awareness, and employee empowerment in today’s corporate world. Tune in to the Employee Survival Guide® and equip yourself with the knowledge to thrive in your career while safeguarding your rights against age discrimination and other employment law issues.To Show Your Support: send Frostie Ellis-Yancey an email to frostieyancey@sbcglobal. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:22:16

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Weaponized PIPs: Walsh v. HNTB Corporation

3/27/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A PIP can look like a boring HR form. Up close, it can act like a precision tool for applying pressure where no spreadsheet can measure it. We walk through a recent age discrimination fight involving a 26-year IT veteran and the moment her workplace flipped from “keep up the good work” to a 90-day performance improvement plan built on vague accusations like being “contentious” and “hiding in the IT room.” When someone in management says you can be replaced by “younger, cheaper people,” you’d expect the law to do the rest. The outcome is a lot more unsettling. We trace the full timeline from stalled raises and the “contentment penalty” to the weaponized PIP, the slow grind of micromanagement after she passed it, and the decision to resign. From there, we unpack constructive discharge and why courts set the bar so high that many people who feel “forced out” still can’t prove they were legally compelled to quit. We also explain summary judgment in plain English and how missing details in legal briefs can erase the day-to-day reality of workplace harassment and retaliation. Then we zoom out to the bigger employment law shift: the Supreme Court’s Muldrow v City of St Louis decision and the newer “worse off” standard for adverse actions. Finally, we translate all of this into a practical, listener-first PIP survival strategy: protect your leverage, create a record through HR, consider an EEOC complaint to trigger retaliation protections, and build documentation that can survive legal scrutiny. If you’ve ever faced a performance improvement plan, feared age discrimination at work, or wondered what to write down and when, this is the roadmap. Subscribe for more real-world employee rights breakdowns, share this with someone staring at a PIP, and leave a review so more workers can find these strategies. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:43:26

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The Employee Survival Guide: Radical Legal Tactics for Workplace Crisis

3/26/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. This episode is about the show itself, the Employee Survival Guide and why Mark Carey has made it so subversive to mainstream corporate america. Tune into discover why Mark created this podcast only for employees. If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:43:04

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Extreme Race Discrimination in the C Suite: Wanda Wilson v. JP Morgan Chase

3/24/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. Employment disputes aren’t like broken bones. There’s no clean X-ray, no single image a judge can point to and say “there it is.” Instead, workplace discrimination and retaliation claims live in emails, policies, memories, power dynamics, and the quiet ways institutions protect themselves. We walk through Wanda Wilson v JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. using three lenses: Wilson’s second amended complaint, the bank’s official answer, and Judge Jesse M. Furman’s decision on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss in the Southern District of New York. You’ll hear how a plaintiff builds a legally strategic timeline around performance, qualifications, and alleged disparate treatment, and how allegations like slurs, racially coded subjugation, executive-floor security practices, and a denied title change can shape hostile work environment and race discrimination claims under both the NYCHRL and NYSHRL. Then we flip the page to the defense playbook: sterile denials, careful admissions, and affirmative defenses designed to contain liability, including legitimate non-discriminatory reasons, mitigation of damages, and the Faragher-Ellerth framework that leans heavily on written HR policies and reporting procedures. Finally, we break down what the judge allows to proceed and what gets cut, including a sharp look at why retaliation claims can fail on causation even when the timeline feels obvious. The case ultimately settles, leaving one lingering question about whether corporate HR systems are built to protect employee well-being or to manage legal risk. Subscribe for more clear-eyed breakdowns of employment law and workplace rights, share this with a coworker who needs it, and leave a review if it helps. After listening, what would you do differently if your workplace told you to “use the open door policy”? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:54:31

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Retaliation & Race Discrimination: Rehab Mohamed v. SHRM $11.6 million verdict

3/23/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. What happens when an organization that champions workplace fairness is found guilty of racial discrimination and retaliation? Join Mark Carey in this eye-opening episode of Employee Survival Guide® as he unpacks the shocking case against the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), which was ordered to pay a staggering $11. 6 million for its unjust treatment of employee Ruby Mohammed. This isn’t just a legal case; it’s a wake-up call for all employees navigating the murky waters of corporate culture. Mark meticulously details the timeline of events that led to this landmark verdict, highlighting Ruby’s impressive performance history and the abrupt shift in her treatment following a managerial change. As we delve into the hypocrisy of SHRM—an organization that preaches equality yet practices discrimination—we expose the insidious nature of retaliation that can lurk within corporate HR practices. This episode serves as a crucial reminder of the systemic issues that can undermine employee rights, particularly for those from marginalized backgrounds. Are you aware of how bias can manifest in subtle ways, creating a hostile work environment? Understanding these dynamics is essential for every employee. Mark emphasizes the importance of documenting workplace interactions and recognizing the mechanisms of power that can work against you. Whether you’re dealing with retaliation, discrimination, or simply trying to survive in your job, this episode is packed with valuable insights and strategies for empowerment. From severance negotiations to navigating employment law issues, Mark provides insider tips that can help you advocate for yourself in the face of workplace challenges. Learn how to protect your rights and understand the complexities of employment contracts, including noncompete agreements and severance packages. This episode is more than just a cautionary tale; it’s a guide for anyone aiming to thrive in their career while facing the realities of discrimination and retaliation. Join us for this compelling discussion that not only sheds light on a pivotal legal case but also equips you with the tools you need for workplace survival. Tune in to discover how to navigate the often treacherous landscape of employment, advocate for yourself, and ensure that your rights are respected in the workplace. Don’t miss this critical episode of Employee Survival Guide®—where knowledge is your best defense against retaliation and discrimination! If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:26:40

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Sexual Harassment & Sexual Assault: Bryant v. C&M Defense Group $million verdict

3/23/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. A time card problem rarely ends with million dollar punitive damages and a personal judgment that follows an executive beyond an LLC. We walk through the legal record of Mikita Bryant v. CNM Defense Group, its COO Charles Reedy, and the spin off entity Global Security Management Team, starting with unpaid overtime and alleged independent contractor misclassification that kept a security officer working up to extreme hours without overtime pay. From there, we trace the allegations of quid pro quo sexual harassment and battery by a senior leader, and why power matters as much as the misconduct itself. We explain the legal thresholds between hostile work environment and quid pro quo harassment, how the absence of safe reporting structures changes behavior on the ground, and why “good faith” defenses and blanket denials don’t erase control, texts, or timelines. The story pivots on one object: a recording device that captured audio and also held the only remaining voice of Bryant’s deceased aunt. When that tape is handed to leadership during a report and allegedly never returned, the case expands into Georgia tort claims like conversion, trespass to chattel, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, a strategy that can bypass Title VII damages caps. We also map the corporate restructuring steps that look like a shell game, and the successor liability tools courts use to treat a “new” LLC as the old one in disguise. We end with the jury’s multiphase verdicts from January 2026 and the March 19, 2026 attorney’s fee judgment, focusing on what juries punish hardest: retaliation, cover ups, and attempted evasion. If this helped you think differently about workplace retaliation, Title VII, FLSA overtime, and corporate accountability, subscribe, share, and leave a review. What detail in the record changed your view the most? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:34:07

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Race Discrimination & Retaliation: Wilson v. City of Fresno $15 million verdict

3/23/2026
Comment on the Show by Sending Mark a Text Message. You can do everything “right” at work and still end up in the crosshairs. We start with a nightmare scenario that’s painfully familiar to anyone who has ever reported misconduct: a supervisor uses a racial slur, the employee trusts HR, and the system allegedly flips so hard the complainant becomes the problem. Using primary court documents, we unpack Wilson v. City of Fresno and the path to a staggering $15 million jury verdict for non-economic damages. We follow the allegations from the ground level: layoffs and reinstatement battles, a return to a workplace that feels engineered to degrade, and the small physical details that can make a hostile work environment real to a jury. Then the story widens when a coworker, Charles Smith, gets pulled into the supervisor’s orbit, pressured to ostracize Wilson, and confronted with a spelled-out racial slur in a confined work truck. We break down associational harassment, forced complicity, and how retaliation can land on the person who simply refuses to participate. From there, the focus shifts to the institutional response: a prolonged outside investigation, discipline that centers on the complainant’s emotional reaction, and the paper trail that makes retaliation claims under Title VII and California FEHA so powerful. We also translate the court process in plain language, including summary judgment, issue preclusion, and why some claims get trimmed while the core story still reaches a jury. If you care about employment law, HR investigations, workplace culture, or just how power protects itself, listen through to the verdict and the lessons. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what should a fair workplace do first after a serious complaint? If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, X and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Leaving a review will help other employees find the Employee Survival Guide. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com. Disclaimer: For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice.

Duration:00:46:55