NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio said he plans to rip a page out of Cuomo's playbook by forcing private companies that do city business to
disclose claims of sexual harassment against their employees.
Not exact matches
One
of Uber's top executives, Amit Singhal, resigned on Monday for not
disclosing previous
sexual harassment claims from his prior job at Google.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said last week he thinks it's a «great idea» to have the government force private companies that do business with the city to
disclose the number
of claims of sexual harassment against their employees.
These includes a proposal for legislation preventing the use
of public money in settling
sexual harassment claims, removal
of forced arbitration provisions from employee contracts and a requirement that companies doing business with the state
disclose the number
of sexual harassment adjudications and nondisclosure agreements they've carried out.
Currently, employers who settle
sexual harassment claims generally include an NDA in the settlement, prohibiting the accused from
disclosing the terms
of the agreement.
Uber also asked for the resignation
of Amit Singhal, a top engineer who failed to
disclose a
sexual harassment claim against him at his previous employer, Google, before joining Uber.