Is it a ridiculous comparison?
I think RA has a point here, although it is an imperfect comparison.
From a legal perspective…it’s interesting. Certainly there have been successful cases of perceived sexual harassment, no? And if someone must travel as part of their job, and cannot for example take a train or but to their destination, it makes an interesting argument.
However, I think that the company, as Orogeny pointed out, has certainly lessened culpability as they have no control over the screening procedures, especially if they change and get more…intrusive.
Let’s take it to the extreme and say everybody who flies gets a…body cavity search and strip search. Company A is aware of this, and informs new hires that they must fly (cannot travel by any other means) as part of their job i.e. that the new hire must endure such screening as a part of their job, even though company A does is not directly involved in the screening.
I suppose if they knew this in advance and had the employee sign off on it, they would have no legal culpability.
But…now we have a long-standing employee of Company A who does the same traveling, and the screening procedure changes from what it is now to body-cavity searches and strip searches. The company says old employee must continue to travel by plane, giving no other alternative, such as a web-based meeting online,etc. So, this employee’s work environment has changed for the worse. Is the company on the hook for not trying to find other alternatives to the employee’s travel? Hmmmm.
And further yet, take the last scenario and assume that the company has no other way for the employ to do his work…he or she MUST travel to the destination to do hands-on work, as other alternatives like a web-conference simply will not work. Would this change Company A’s culpabiltiy?
Let’s ask Prof. Kingsfield.
