Burbank, California

Workplace Harassment Lawyer in Burbank

California workplace harassment representation for Burbank workers. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only.

Burbank's entertainment industry produces a wide range of FEHA harassment fact patterns, race, religion, national origin, disability, age (40+), sexual orientation, and gender identity, across studio lots, animation production, post-production suites, and broadcast newsrooms. Government Code section 12923 (effective Jan 1, 2019) makes a single severe incident actionable. Call us at 1-800-371-3088.

What Is Workplace Harassment in Burbank

FEHA prohibits harassment in any Burbank workplace based on any protected category - race, religion, disability, age (40+), national origin, ancestry, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, military or veteran status, reproductive-health decision-making, and more (Cal. Government Code section 12940(j)). Under Cal. Government Code section 12940(j)(4), the harassment provisions apply to employers with one or more employees, much broader than the 5-employee threshold for discrimination claims. To prove a hostile-work-environment claim under Jones v. The Lodge at Torrey Pines Partnership (2008) 42 Cal.4th 1158, you must show conduct that was based on a protected category, unwelcome, and either severe or pervasive enough to alter your working conditions. A single severe incident can satisfy the standard.

Burbank Industries Where Harassment Claims Are Most Common

  • Entertainment-industry workers at Warner Bros Discovery - at Warner Bros Discovery (Burbank's largest employer with ~10,000 employees per the Burbank Chamber of Commerce; headquarters at 4000 Warner Blvd, Burbank, CA 91522). Entertainment workers are typically protected by collective bargaining agreements through the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA), Writers Guild of America (WGA), Directors Guild of America (DGA), International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE), and Teamsters Local 399. Production crew workers have specific protections under the federal Sarbanes-Oxley Act (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) for Warner Bros Discovery (NASDAQ: WBD) public-company employees, the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 (18 U.S.C. section 1836), the California Uniform Trade Secrets Act (Cal. Civil Code section 3426 et seq.), and California's strong non-compete prohibition (Bus. & Prof. Code section 16600).
  • Walt Disney Company employees at the Burbank headquarters - at The Walt Disney Company headquarters (500 South Buena Vista Street, Burbank, CA 91521 - ~7,800 Burbank employees per Burbank Chamber). Disney has faced significant employment-discrimination litigation: in September 2025, Orange County Superior Court approved a $233 million class-action settlement in Grace et al v. Walt Disney Co. et al (Case No. 30-2019-01116850), and a separate $43 million Rasmussen v. Walt Disney gender pay discrimination class-action settlement (Cohen Milstein) involving thousands of California women alleging they were paid less than men. Disney public-company employees (NYSE: DIS) are also protected by Sarbanes-Oxley (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) and Dodd-Frank section 922 (15 U.S.C. section 78u-6).
  • Healthcare workers at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center - at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center (501 South Buena Vista Street, Burbank, CA 91505-4809 - 446 licensed beds, founded 1943, HCAI ID 106190758; part of Providence Health & Services / CommonSpirit-equivalent). Providence has faced significant wage-and-hour litigation: an April 18, 2024 King County jury found Providence Health & Services must pay more than $229 million in unpaid wages to more than 33,000 workers (Bennett v. Providence). Covered by SB 525 healthcare-worker minimum-wage schedule (Cal. Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16), California Health & Safety Code section 1278.5 ($25,000-per-violation civil penalty for patient-safety retaliation), and CNA / SEIU-UHW / NUHW collective bargaining agreements.
  • Airport, aviation, and BUR airport workers - at Hollywood Burbank Airport / BUR (2627 N Hollywood Way, Burbank, CA 91505 - ~2,700 employees, the 3rd-largest employer in Burbank; private employment provider is TBI Airport Management). Aviation workers are covered by the federal Railway Labor Act (45 U.S.C. section 151 et seq.) for airline employees, the Whistleblower Protection Program (49 U.S.C. section 42121) for aviation safety, federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations for ground transportation, and California state laws. Burbank Airport is currently building a 14-gate replacement passenger terminal.
  • Burbank Unified School District (BUSD) workers - at the Burbank Unified School District (~13,820 students enrolled 2025-26 per CDE; 21 schools per US News). Covered by California Education Code sections 44930-44987 (permanent-employee dismissal protections), the Educational Employment Relations Act (EERA / Cal. Gov. Code sections 3540-3549.3), Cal. Education Code section 44113 (school-employee whistleblower protections), and CTA-affiliated collective bargaining agreements. PEPRA and the 6-month government-claim deadline apply.
  • City of Burbank and Burbank Water and Power (BWP) workers - at the City of Burbank (charter city, council-manager form per the Burbank City Charter; five at-large City Council members elected for four-year terms; one serves as Mayor), the Burbank Police Department, the Burbank Fire Department, and Burbank Water and Power (BWP) - the city's municipally-owned electric and water utility (one of only a handful of California cities to operate its own electric utility). BWP utility workers may have Energy Reorganization Act section 5851 (42 U.S.C. section 5851) whistleblower protections for energy-safety reporting. Police covered by POBR (Cal. Gov. Code section 3300 et seq.); firefighters by FBOR (Cal. Gov. Code section 3250 et seq.); all public employees by PEPRA, MMBA (Cal. Gov. Code sections 3500-3511), and the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline (Gov. Code section 911.2).
  • Retail and consumer-services workers - at the Burbank Town Center, along Magnolia Boulevard, and at chain retailers throughout Burbank including West Coast Customs, West Elm, 24 Hour Fitness, Target, Walmart, Lowe's, and REI. Fast-food workers at chains with 60+ national locations earn the $20.00/hour AB 1228 floor (Cal. Labor Code section 1474). Retail workers covered by IWC Wage Order 7 (mercantile industry).
  • NBCUniversal and Universal Studios workers - at NBCUniversal (parent company has 41,897 total employees per Revelio Labs; Burbank-area operations include studios and corporate offices). Production employees covered by IATSE, Teamsters Local 399, SAG-AFTRA, DGA, and WGA collective bargaining agreements. Public-company employees of Comcast Corporation (NASDAQ: CMCSA) parent are protected by Sarbanes-Oxley (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) and Dodd-Frank section 922.

Burbank Local Protections

Burbank has no separate citywide minimum-wage, hotel-worker, fair-workweek, or paid-sick-leave ordinance beyond California state law. Burbank is a charter city operating under the council-manager form of government per the Burbank City Charter, with five at-large City Council members elected for four-year terms (one serves as Mayor). Burbank workers rely on the state-level minimum-wage floor (Cal. Labor Code section 1182.12 - $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026) plus industry-specific state rules including AB 1228 ($20/hour fast-food), SB 525 (healthcare-worker tiered schedule - directly relevant to Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center workers), and AB 701 (warehouse quotas). Burbank's economy is dominated by major entertainment-industry employers (Warner Bros Discovery ~10,000, Walt Disney ~7,800, NBCUniversal) whose workers are typically covered by SAG-AFTRA, WGA, DGA, IATSE, and Teamsters Local 399 collective bargaining agreements.

California requires harassment-prevention training for all employees of companies with 5+ workers (Cal. Government Code section 12950.1).

California Law

Individual supervisors can be personally liable for FEHA harassment under Reno v. Baird (1998) 18 Cal.4th 640 (supervisors are not personally liable for discrimination, but they are for harassment). For the full California harassment framework, see our California employment law page.

What Compensation Can You Recover

California does not cap FEHA harassment damages. You may recover back pay, front pay, emotional-distress damages, punitive damages, and attorneys' fees and costs (Cal. Government Code section 12965(c)). SB 331 (Silenced No More Act) means severance agreements cannot bar you from discussing the harassment publicly. For details, see our California employment law page.

How to File a Workplace Harassment Claim in Burbank

State FEHA charges go to the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), Los Angeles Office, 320 West 4th Street, 10th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90013. Federal Title VII charges go to the EEOC Los Angeles District Office, 255 East Temple Street, 4th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90012. Civil suits are heard at the Los Angeles County Superior Court - Burbank Courthouse, 300 East Olive Avenue, Burbank, CA 91502 (North Central District; the Glendale Courthouse at 600 East Broadway, Glendale, CA 91206 also serves the area). Call us at 1-800-371-3088 before any deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

If a Burbank harasser is a vendor or freelance collaborator, is the studio still liable? +
Yes. FEHA section 12940(j)(1) holds employers liable for harassment by non-employees when the employer knew or should have known and failed to take immediate corrective action. Studios with regular freelance and vendor relationships are particularly exposed.
Most of the worker's harassment was over Slack and Zoom. Does FEHA cover remote harassment? +
Yes. California FEHA covers harassment "in the workplace," and California courts have consistently held that remote and digital harassment - Slack, Teams, Zoom, email, text, counts when it affects the worker's terms of employment.
Providence Saint Joseph in Burbank has an unionized nursing staff. Does the worker's CBA bar a FEHA harassment claim? +
No. Statutory FEHA harassment claims survive collective-bargaining arbitration clauses unless waived "clearly and unmistakably." SEIU-UHW grievance procedures do not displace the worker's right to bring FEHA claims directly.
Is one severe incident enough, or do a worker need a pattern of harassment? +
Under Government Code section 12923(b), a single severe incident can be enough to establish a hostile work environment.

Are You Being Harassed at Work?

Speak with a California workplace harassment lawyer today. Free confidential consultation. No fee unless you win.

Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Employment law is complex and fact-specific. The information on this page reflects California law as of 2026 and may change. If you believe your rights have been violated, please consult a licensed California employment attorney to evaluate your specific situation.