Sacramento, California

Workplace Harassment Lawyer in Sacramento

Harassment doesn't have to be sexual to be illegal. FEHA protects you against harassment based on any protected category.

Harassment isn't only sexual harassment. Race-based slurs from a coworker. Mocking your accent or your religion. Targeting you because of a disability or a pregnancy. Constant harassment by a supervisor because of your age, your sexual orientation, your gender identity, or your military service. All of these are actionable under California's Fair Employment and Housing Act if the conduct is severe or pervasive.

If you're a state-agency analyst whose supervisor mocks your accent, a Mercy nurse on a unit where the charge nurse uses racial slurs, or a Natomas warehouse worker whose lead targets you because of your immigration status, the legal framework is the same, Government Code section 12940(j), Title VII, and parallel federal statutes. The fact patterns and proof differ by industry, but the standards do not.

Visit our Sacramento office at 400 Capitol Mall Suite 444A, Sacramento, CA 95814 or call (415) 318-7920 for a free, confidential consultation.

What Is Workplace Harassment in Sacramento

FEHA prohibits harassment in any Sacramento 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.

Sacramento Industries Where Harassment Claims Are Most Common

  • State of California government workers - at the State Capitol (10th and L Streets), the Governor's Office, and the dozens of state-agency headquarters across Sacramento employing approximately 100,000+ State of California workers, including the Department of General Services (DGS), DMV, EDD, CRD, DLSE, Cal/OSHA, CalPERS, CalSTRS, California Department of Justice, California Highway Patrol headquarters, and hundreds more. State employees are covered by: (1) the California Government Code section 19570 et seq. civil-service system and the State Personnel Board (SPB); (2) Skelly v. State Personnel Board (1975) 15 Cal.3d 194 pre-deprivation due-process rights; (3) FEHA (Cal. Gov. Code section 12940 et seq.); (4) the California Whistleblower Protection Act (Cal. Gov. Code section 8547 et seq.), enforced by the State Auditor's Office for state employees; (5) the State Tort Claims Act (Cal. Gov. Code sections 810-996) with a 6-month claim-filing deadline (Cal. Gov. Code section 911.2); and (6) collective bargaining agreements with multiple state employee unions (SEIU Local 1000, CAHP, CCPOA, CAPS, IUOE).
  • Healthcare workers at the four dominant Sacramento hospital systems - at Sutter Health (Sacramento-headquartered, 50,000+ employees, 29% acute-care bed market share, named to Forbes' America's Best Large Employers list 2026), Dignity Health/CommonSpirit (28% market share including Mercy General Hospital, Mercy San Juan Medical Center, Methodist Hospital), Kaiser Permanente (23% market share including Kaiser South Sacramento and Kaiser Roseville), and UC Davis Health (17% market share - operating the UC Davis Medical Center at 2315 Stockton Boulevard, Sacramento, CA 95817, (916) 734-2011 - a 653-bed multispecialty academic medical center with $1.7 billion annual budget, 30,000+ patients admitted/year, serving 33 counties). Covered by SB 525 healthcare worker minimum-wage schedule (Cal. Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16), California Health and Safety Code section 1278.5 ($25,000-per-violation civil penalty for patient-safety retaliation), and CNA / SEIU-UHW collective bargaining agreements. UC Davis Medical Center employees, as employees of the Regents of the University of California, are subject to the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline.
  • K-12 education workers - at the Sacramento City Unified School District / SCUSD (5735 47th Avenue, Serna Center, PO Box 246870, Sacramento, CA 95824, (916) 643-7400 - the 11th-largest school district in California with 47,900 students in 81 schools), Twin Rivers Unified School District, Natomas Unified School District, San Juan Unified School District, and the Elk Grove Unified School District (in adjacent Elk Grove - the 4th-largest district in California). Public-school workers have pre-deprivation due-process rights under Skelly v. State Personnel Board (1975) 15 Cal.3d 194, California Whistleblower Protection Act (Cal. Gov. Code section 8547), and the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline.
  • Higher education workers - at California State University, Sacramento / Sacramento State / CSUS (6000 J Street, Sacramento, CA 95819 - the principal four-year public university in Sacramento, state-of-California employees subject to civil-service rules and CFA collective bargaining for faculty), the Los Rios Community College District (Sacramento City College, American River College, Cosumnes River College, Folsom Lake College), and UC Davis (in adjacent Davis). Subject to the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline.
  • City and county government workers - at the City of Sacramento (915 I Street - charter city), the County of Sacramento with 12,000+ employees across dozens of departments (Sacramento is the county seat), the Sacramento Police Department / SPD, the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office / SSO, the Sacramento Fire Department, and the California Highway Patrol (Sacramento headquarters at 601 N. 7th Street). Peace officers are covered by the Public Safety Officers Procedural Bill of Rights (POBR, Cal. Gov. Code section 3300 et seq.). Subject to the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline.
  • Retail, restaurant, and consumer-services workers - along J Street, K Street, the Downtown Commons (DOCO) at the Golden 1 Center (home of the Sacramento Kings), Arden Fair Mall, Sunrise Mall, and throughout Midtown and East Sacramento. Common claims: wage and hour (off-the-clock and rounding violations under Cal. Labor Code sections 226.7, 510, 512), commission disputes (Cal. Labor Code section 2751), and sexual harassment under FEHA (Cal. Gov. Code section 12940(j)). Fast-food workers at chains with 60+ national locations earn the $20.00/hour AB 1228 floor (Cal. Labor Code section 1474).
  • Transportation and federal government workers - at the Sacramento International Airport (SMF - operated by Sacramento County), the Union Pacific Railroad Sacramento yard, the Sacramento Regional Transit District (SacRT - light rail and bus), and at the various federal agencies in Sacramento. Federal workers are covered by the Civil Service Reform Act (CSRA, 5 U.S.C. section 2302), the Whistleblower Protection Act / WPA and WPEA (5 U.S.C. section 2302(b)(8)), and may file with the Office of Special Counsel (OSC) and the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB). Federal EEO complaints go through the federal agency EEO process under 29 C.F.R. Part 1614 with a 45-day deadline. Rail workers are covered by the Federal Railroad Safety Act / FRSA (49 U.S.C. section 20109) whistleblower protection.

Sacramento Local Protections

Sacramento has no separate citywide minimum-wage, hotel-worker, fair-workweek, healthcare-worker, or paid-sick-leave ordinance beyond California state law. Sacramento is a charter city. Sacramento workers rely on the state-level floor under California Labor Code section 1182.12 ($16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026) plus industry-specific state rules including AB 1228 ($20/hour fast-food) and SB 525 (healthcare-worker tiered schedule). State of California workers in Sacramento (100,000+) are also covered by the California Civil Service Act (Cal. Gov. Code section 19570 et seq.), the California Whistleblower Protection Act (Cal. Gov. Code section 8547 et seq.), and the State Tort Claims Act (Cal. Gov. Code sections 810-996).

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 Sacramento

State FEHA charges go to the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), 2218 Kausen Drive, Suite 100, Elk Grove, CA 95758. Federal Title VII charges go to the EEOC Oakland Local Office (Sacramento County jurisdiction), 1301 Clay Street, Suite 1170-N, Oakland, CA 94612. Civil suits are heard at the Sacramento County Superior Court, Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye Sacramento County Courthouse, 500 G Street, Sacramento, CA 95814. Call us at (415) 318-7920 before any deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is non-sexual harassment illegal in California? +
Yes. FEHA (Government Code section 12940(j)) prohibits harassment based on any protected category, not just sex. Race, religion, national origin, age (40+), disability, gender identity, sexual orientation, military or veteran status, and other protected categories all give rise to harassment claims if the conduct is severe or pervasive. Title VII, the ADEA, and the ADA cover the same conduct under federal law. The legal standard for severity and pervasiveness applies the same way regardless of which protected category is involved. Call 1-800-371-3088.
If a state worker's coworker keeps making racist comments and the supervisor told the worker to "let it go," what can a worker do? +
A supervisor's response of "let it go" can be its own legal problem. FEHA imposes a duty on employers under Government Code section 12940(k) to take all reasonable steps necessary to prevent harassment from occurring. When a supervisor is on notice of harassment and dismisses it, the employer has failed that duty. As a state employee, a worker has parallel routes: an internal complaint to the worker's agency's EEO office, a complaint to the California State Auditor under the Whistleblower Protection Act if a worker believes the supervisor's response is itself part of an improper governmental activity, and a charge with the California Civil Rights Department under FEHA. The Government Claims Act six-month deadline runs on FEHA claims against state agencies. Document each incident in writing the same day it happens, save the documentation outside work email, and call 1-800-371-3088.
Can a worker sue the worker's coworker personally for the harassment? +
Yes, on the harassment itself. Government Code section 12940(j)(3) allows individual liability for harassment under FEHA, supervisors, managers, and coworkers can all be personally named. Individuals cannot be personally liable for retaliation or discrimination claims under FEHA per the California Supreme Court's decision in Jones v. The Lodge at Torrey Pines Partnership (2008) 42 Cal.4th 1158. The employer is the bigger pocket and is jointly liable, but personally naming the harasser changes the dynamic of a case and removes the employer's ability to control the harasser's testimony.
What's the difference between FEHA harassment and Title VII harassment? +
Both prohibit harassment based on protected categories like race, sex, religion, and national origin. The differences matter for filing strategy. FEHA covers more employers (5+ employees vs. 15+ for Title VII, 20+ for ADEA). FEHA's protected categories are broader (gender identity, sexual orientation, marital status, military status, ancestry, and more, all expressly listed). FEHA has a three-year filing deadline at the California Civil Rights Department; Title VII has a 300-day deadline at the EEOC when filed in California. FEHA allows individual liability for harassers; Title VII does not. Most employees have parallel claims under both statutes, and the firm typically file both to preserve every option.

Were You Harassed at Work?

Speak with a California workplace harassment lawyer today. Free confidential consultation. No fee unless you win. Call 1-800-371-3088.

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.