Governor Ron DeSantis signed the Stop WOKE Act (Florida HB7)—which prohibits employers from requiring employees to participate in certain types of diversity, equity, and inclusion training—into law on April 22.
The Florida House and Senate passed the bill in mid-March.
The law makes it an unlawful employment practice under Florida law to “[subject] any individual, as a condition of employment . . . to training, instruction, or any other required activity that espouses, promotes, advances, inculcates, or compels such individual to believe” a defined list of concepts related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).
The “prohibited concepts” listed in the law are as follows:
However, the law states that it should not be construed to “prohibit discussion of the concepts listed . . . as part of a course of training or instruction, provided such training or instruction is given in an objective manner without endorsement of the concepts.”
The law will be enforced in the same manner as Florida’s existing employment civil rights protections. A person who believes his or her rights were violated may file a complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations within 365 days of the alleged violation and then, in most cases, pursue a civil or administrative action. Remedies available under the law include injunctive relief, back pay, compensatory damages and punitive damages (not to exceed $100,000).
The Florida attorney general is also empowered to bring civil actions for damages, injunctive relief, and fines not to exceed $10,000 per violation when the attorney general has cause to believe an employer engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination or otherwise engaged in discrimination that violates the law and raises issues of “great public interest.”
Prudent employers operating in Florida should evaluate existing training programs to determine whether they “espouse, promote, advance, inculcate, or compel” (i.e., encourage) participants to believe any of the prohibited concepts.
If a training program encourages participants to believe any of the prohibited concepts, then an employer would be prohibited from making such training “a condition of employment.” In other words, under the law, an employer can no longer require an employee to participate in any DEI training course that promotes any of the prohibited concepts. An employer can still offer the trainings, however, on a voluntary basis. The key point is that the training cannot be mandatory.
As noted above, the law does not bar employers from mandating trainings that mention these topics altogether. It only prohibits trainings that espouse, promote, advance, inculcate, or compel employees to believe those concepts. Thus, a training that presents the prohibited concepts objectively, without endorsement of the concepts presented in the training, would likely pass muster under the law.
One potential way to mitigate risk is to include disclaimers noting that the employer does not endorse any particular concept related to discrimination and that trainings are provided purely for educational purposes and are not intended to compel employees to believe any of the concepts discussed.
If you have any questions or would like more information on the issues discussed in this LawFlash, please contact any of the following Morgan Lewis lawyers:
Miami
Jennifer Bullock
Samuel S. Shaulson
Kimberley E. Lunetta
Princeton
Emily Cuneo DeSmedt
Terry D. Johnson
Washington, DC
Jocelyn R. Cuttino
Sharon Perley Masling
Grace E. Speights