If you’ve ever spoken up about unfair treatment at work and then found yourself suddenly demoted, reassigned, or let go–you may have experienced workplace retaliation, full stop!
While many employees are aware that discrimination is illegal, fewer understand that the law also protects them when they report discrimination or other similar acts of workplace misconduct. Understanding what retaliation is — and when it crosses a line — is one of the most important things you can do to protect yourself as an employee of New York State.
Defining Retaliation in the Employment Context
At its core, retaliation is what happens when an employer punishes an employee for exercising their voice, a legally protected right. According to Legal Aid at Work, asserting these rights is called “protected activity,” and it can take many forms — from filing a formal complaint to simply asking your manager about a pay change you suspect was discriminatory.
What distinguishes retaliation from other workplace conflicts is the causal link: the employer’s negative action must be a reaction to a complaint or other protected activity, not an independent, legitimate business decision. It’s worth noting that retaliation doesn’t have to happen immediately after you act. Retaliatory action can occur weeks, months, or even years after an employee exercises a protected right — as long as the employer’s motivation is traceable back to that activity.
What Counts as a “Protected Activity”?
Protected activities are broader than most employees realize. The Department of Labor makes clear that the following are shielded from employer punishment:
- Filing or participating in an EEO charge, complaint, or investigation.
- Communicating with a supervisor about workplace discrimination.
- Requesting a religious accommodation — even if the request is denied, your employer cannot retaliate against you for making it.
- Requesting accommodation based on disability, religion, or a pregnancy-related medical condition.
- Asking about salary or pay to uncover potentially discriminatory wages.
- Acting as a whistleblower — reporting fraud, safety violations, or illegal activity.
Religion-based complaints deserve special attention. The EEOC has made clear that Title VII protects employees who report or oppose religious discrimination at work, and retaliation for raising such concerns is unlawful regardless of whether a formal complaint is filed.
It is also important to understand who is protected. Anyone can file a retaliation claim — even if they are not a member of the protected class that was the subject of the original complaint. In other words, if you supported a colleague’s discrimination claim, your employer cannot legally retaliate against you for that support.
What Are the Negative Actions That Signal Retaliation?
Retaliation is not limited to wrongful termination, though that is often the most obvious form. Retaliatory actions include anything that would discourage a reasonable employee from raising a workplace concern — a deliberately broad standard designed to protect employees.
Common retaliatory actions include:
- Demotion or reduction in title/responsibility.
- Salary cuts or changes to pay and benefits.
- Reassignment to a less desirable role or location.
- Creating a hostile work environment through increased scrutiny, exclusion from meetings, or abusive supervision.
- Negative performance evaluations that are undeserved and timed suspiciously after protected activity.
- Being placed on a Performance Improvement Plan, without just reasoning.
- Constructive discharge — where conditions become so intolerable that an employee is effectively forced to quit.
The EEOC’s whistleblower protection resources also note that employers cannot threaten to report an employee to immigration authorities or take other intimidating actions in response to protected activity.
Is Every Wrongful Termination a Form of Retaliation?
Not automatically, but termination can absolutely constitute retaliation when the circumstances are right. The key distinction is why the termination occurred. Employers are permitted to fire workers for legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons even if those employees have previously engaged in protected activity. The legal question is whether the termination was motivated — at least in part — by the employee’s protected conduct.
If your termination followed closely on the heels of a complaint, involved selective enforcement of policies, or came alongside other suspicious negative actions, it may well rise to the level of unlawful retaliation. A New York retaliation lawyer can help evaluate whether your circumstances support a claim.
How to Handle a Retaliation Claim
If you believe you have experienced retaliation, your first and most important step is documentation. Record dates, keep copies of performance reviews, save emails, and note any witnesses. The EEOC’s guidance on religious discrimination cases advises employees to keep records documenting what they experienced or witnessed, along with names and contact information for potential witnesses.
From there, you generally have the right to file a charge with the EEOC or the New York State Division of Human Rights. Doing so opens a formal investigation and is often a required step before pursuing a lawsuit. If your claim is valid, remedies may include back pay, reinstatement to your position, removal of adverse actions from your personnel file, and compensation for damages.
Navigating a retaliation claim is complex — especially when employers are savvy about offering non-retaliatory explanations for their actions. If you’ve experienced a demotion, salary change, hostile work environment, or termination after speaking up at work, speaking with an employment attorney sooner rather than later is critical.
Call a New York Employment Law Attorney Now
Think you may have a retaliation claim? our team at Filippatos Law is here to help. If you are experiencing discrimination at work, please give us a call at 888-9-JOBLAW for a free consultation. We will do our utmost to help secure you the justice you deserve.