Santa Maria, California

Sexual Harassment Lawyer in Santa Maria

California sexual harassment lawyer representation for Santa Maria workers. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only.

If you experienced sexual harassment at a Santa Maria workplace, you have strong protections under California law. We represent employees only, never employers, and offer a free, confidential consultation. 1-800-371-3088.

What Is Sexual Harassment in Santa Maria

Sexual harassment in Santa Maria happens in the same places you go every day: space-launch and military operations at Vandenberg Space Force Base (established 1941; located west of Lompoc; current personnel ~10,000 with workforce expected to double to 20,000 over the next five years to meet launch demand per Air & Space Forces Magazine; 77 space launches in 2025 - a record-setting historic year); patient floors at Marian Regional Medical Center (1400 East Church Street, Santa Maria, CA 93454 - 191-bed Level II Trauma Center verified by ACS on September 27, 2022; recognized among America's 250 Best Hospitals for three consecutive years; operated by Dignity Health, a CommonSpirit Health subsidiary); strawberry fields and agricultural operations throughout the Santa Maria Valley (the heart of one of California's largest strawberry-growing regions and host of the 33rd-annual Santa Maria Valley Chamber Strawberry Industry Recognition Dinner); wine industry operations across the Santa Maria Valley AVA (one of the planet's most ideal locations for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay production); classrooms at the Santa Maria-Bonita School District (K-8) and the Santa Maria Joint Union High School District (~8,930 students enrolled, 1,195.76 staff including 411.95 FTE teachers); Allan Hancock College (800 South College Drive, Santa Maria, CA 93454 - the community college serving northern Santa Barbara County); retail along Broadway and at the Santa Maria Town Center mall; and City of Santa Maria offices at 110 East Cook Street (charter city since 1905, (805) 925-0951). The most common Santa Maria pattern is unwanted touching, comments, or pressure from a supervisor, coworker, patient, or customer, followed by retaliation when the worker reports it.

Santa Maria Industries Where Sexual Harassment Is Most Common

  • Space Force, Air Force, and federal civilian workers at Vandenberg SFB - at Vandenberg Space Force Base (established 1941 as Cooke Army Air Field; the Department of Defense's primary West Coast launch facility for polar-orbit space launches and missile testing; home to Space Launch Delta 30). Vandenberg conducted 77 space launches in 2025 - a record-setting historic year, and the on-base workforce is projected to double from ~10,000 to ~20,000 personnel over the next five years per Air & Space Forces Magazine to meet rising launch demand (including SpaceX Falcon 9 Starlink missions). Civilian DoD employees are covered by Title 5 U.S. Code, MSPB appeal rights (5 U.S.C. section 7701), the Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act of 2012 (5 U.S.C. section 2302(b)(8)-(9)), USERRA (38 U.S.C. section 4301 et seq.), the Federal Tort Claims Act (28 U.S.C. section 1346(b)), and federal-sector EEO procedures. Active-duty Guardians and Airmen have MEO complaints, IG complaints, and Article 138 redress.
  • Healthcare workers at Marian Regional Medical Center - at Marian Regional Medical Center (1400 East Church Street, Santa Maria, CA 93454 - 191-bed Level II Trauma Center verified by the American College of Surgeons on September 27, 2022; recognized among America's 250 Best Hospitals for three consecutive years per Healthgrades; operated by Dignity Health, part of CommonSpirit Health). Marian Regional has expanded trauma services with three trauma bays. 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.
  • Strawberry, agricultural, and field workers - in strawberry fields and farms throughout the Santa Maria Valley (the heart of one of California's largest strawberry-growing regions; the Santa Maria Valley Chamber's 33rd-annual Strawberry Industry Recognition Dinner celebrates growers and field workers). Agricultural workers are covered by the California Agricultural Labor Relations Act (ALRA, Cal. Labor Code sections 1140-1166.3), the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act (29 U.S.C. section 1801 et seq. / MSPA), Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order 14 (agricultural), AB 1066 (agricultural overtime - now full daily/weekly overtime under Cal. Labor Code section 859), and Cal/OSHA heat-illness standards (8 CCR section 3395 outdoor heat-illness prevention). The Agricultural Labor Relations Board (ALRB) handles union and unfair-labor-practice claims.
  • Wine industry workers at Santa Maria Valley AVA wineries - at wineries and vineyards in the Santa Maria Valley American Viticultural Area (one of the planet's most ideal locations for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay; the AVA spans both Santa Barbara County and San Luis Obispo County). Wine workers are covered by IWC Wage Order 8 (industries handling products after harvest) for processing/bottling operations and Wage Order 14 (agricultural) for vineyard operations; the ALRA applies to vineyard field workers; Cal/OSHA heat-illness, confined-space, and pesticide-exposure standards apply.
  • K-12 education workers at SMBSD and SMJUHSD - at the Santa Maria-Bonita School District / SMBSD (K-8, one of the largest K-8 districts in Santa Barbara County) and the Santa Maria Joint Union High School District / SMJUHSD (~8,930 students enrolled with 1,195.76 staff and 411.95 FTE teachers per NCES data; serves Santa Maria, Orcutt, and Guadalupe high schools). 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 to all public-school employees.
  • Community-college workers at Allan Hancock College - at Allan Hancock College (800 South College Drive, Santa Maria, CA 93454, (805) 922-6966) - the comprehensive community college serving northern Santa Barbara County; part of the Allan Hancock Joint Community College District. Community-college employees are covered by HEERA (for management/excluded employees) or EERA (for faculty and classified staff), Cal. Education Code sections 87600-87683 (faculty tenure and dismissal), PEPRA, and the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline.
  • City of Santa Maria government and public-safety workers - at the City of Santa Maria (110 East Cook Street, Santa Maria, CA 93454, (805) 925-0951 - charter city, municipal corporation since 1905), the Santa Maria Police Department, and the Santa Maria Fire Department. 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, restaurant, and consumer-services workers - at the Santa Maria Town Center mall, along Broadway and Main Street, and at chain retailers throughout Santa Maria. 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).
  • Aerospace and defense contractor workers - at SpaceX, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and other aerospace and defense contractor offices and facilities near Vandenberg Space Force Base. Private-company employees of public aerospace contractors have specific whistleblower protections under the federal False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. sections 3729-3733) for fraud against the government, Defense Contractor Whistleblower Protection (10 U.S.C. section 4701), Sarbanes-Oxley (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) for public-company employees, and Dodd-Frank section 922 (15 U.S.C. section 78u-6). California's strong non-compete prohibition (Bus. & Prof. Code section 16600) preserves employees' freedom to move to competitors.

Santa Maria Local Protections

Santa Maria has no separate citywide minimum-wage, hotel-worker, fair-workweek, healthcare-worker, or paid-sick-leave ordinance beyond California state law. Santa Maria is a charter city - a municipal corporation since 1905, with City Hall at 110 East Cook Street, (805) 925-0951. Santa Maria is the largest city in Santa Barbara County by population (109,707 at the 2020 census). The Santa Maria labor market is anchored by Vandenberg Space Force Base, which is undergoing major expansion - a record 77 space launches in 2025 and workforce projected to double from ~10,000 to ~20,000 personnel over the next five years. Santa Maria 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 Marian Regional Medical Center workers), AB 1066 (agricultural overtime - critical for Santa Maria Valley strawberry and wine field workers), and AB 701 (warehouse quotas). The California Agricultural Labor Relations Act (ALRA, Cal. Labor Code sections 1140-1166.3) protects strawberry and field workers throughout the Santa Maria Valley.

Sexual harassment in Santa Maria is governed by FEHA (Cal. Government Code section 12940(j)), which covers any Santa Maria employer with 1 or more employees for harassment claims, and by federal Title VII (15 or more employees). California also requires sexual-harassment prevention training for all employees of companies with 5 or more workers (Cal. Government Code section 12950.1). In a notable Santa Maria case, Fresh Venture Foods, Gold Coast Packing, and Babe Farms agreed to pay $900,000 to settle an EEOC sexual-harassment and retaliation lawsuit involving male-on-female harassment of female farmworkers at a Santa Maria processing facility, with the EEOC alleging that working conditions were so intolerable some women had no choice but to quit.

California Law

California gives you broad statewide protection against sexual harassment. For the full statutory framework, deadlines, and how the state laws fit together, see our California employment law page and the in-depth California Sexual Harassment Guide.

What Compensation Can You Recover

California does not cap damages for sexual harassment claims. For a full breakdown of what you can recover, see the California Sexual Harassment Guide.

How to File a Sexual Harassment Claim in Santa Maria

Civil employment lawsuits filed by Santa Maria workers are heard at the Santa Barbara County Superior Court - Cook Division, 312 East Cook Street, Building E, Santa Maria, CA 93454, (805) 614-6414 (also the Miller Division at 312-M East Cook Street, Santa Maria). For agency contacts, deadlines, and the full filing process, see our California employment law page. We handle the filing process for you, call us at 1-800-371-3088 before any deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

If a harasser at Marian Regional Medical Center was a doctor, can the hospital be liable? +
Yes. Hospitals are strictly liable under FEHA. section 1278.5 also protects against retaliation. EFAA voids forced-arbitration.
A worker was harassed by a Santa Maria Valley ag-field supervisor. Can the company be liable? +
Yes. FEHA covers harassment claims at any employer with 1+ employees. AB 469 also requires farm-labor contractor licensing including harassment-prevention obligations.
Does a Santa Maria ag employer have to provide harassment training in Spanish or Mixteco? +
Yes. Government Code section 12950.1 requires sexual-harassment prevention training in a language workers understand at employers with 5+ employees.
How long does a worker have to sue for sexual harassment in Santa Maria? +
FEHA: 3 years; Title VII: 300 days.

Free Confidential Consultation

Speak with a California sexual 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.