The Tenth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has held that several
Hispanic plaintiffs should be permitted to go to trial on their
claims that their employer's English-only policy violates federal
antidiscrimination laws. See Maldonado v. City of Altus. In this
case, the employer adopted a policy requiring employees to speak
English in all work-related communications, except when necessary
to communicate with a citizen in his or her native language because
of the citizen's limited English skills. The policy exempted
private conversations between co-workers that occur while on break
or during lunch hours or before or after work hours, as long as
city property is not used in the communication. The policy also
exempted private communications between an employee and a family
member so long as the c...
Blog About: Plaintiffs Entitled to Trial on Discrimination Claims Based on Employer's English-Only Policy.
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Court Allows Challenge To Citys "English-Only" Policy (Hospitality Industry) (pdf).
When the City of Altus, Oklahoma received a complaint
that non-Spanish-speaking employees could not
understand what was being said on the city radio because
employees were speaking Spanish, the city promulgated a
policy to address the situation. The policy, which generally
provided that all work related and business communications
be conducted in English, drew a lawsuit from eleven
Hispanic employees who were fluent in both English and
Spanish. The employees contended that the citys
English-only policy violated federal employment discrimination
laws and their First Amendment Rights.

Developing Law on English-Only Policies (pdf).
EEOC regulations prohibit blanket restrictions on the use
of languages in the workplace, and the agency has
targeted employers who impose broad English-only
policies. However, a narrowly drawn policy that requires
English to be spoken at certain times and/or in certain
areas is permissible if the employer can establish a
business necessity for the policy.



Free Speech and English-Only Policies in the Workplace.
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