Dan cited CareerBuilder’s annual V-Day survey, which offers some interesting stats about the current state of office romances:
- 22 percent of workers have dated their boss (up 7 percent from last year)
- 31 percent of workers who started dating at work ultimately married each other
- Almost one in ten female workers whose work romance soured left their job
- 41 percent of workers had to keep their romance a secret
Yet, love and work do not always go well together, especially on Valentine’s Day.
Consider Russo v. APL Marine Services, which involved a failed romantic relationship between the plaintiff-employee and the captain of the boat on which she worked. Their relationship included a Valentine’s Day tryst, and after it ended, she alleged harassing behavior such as butt slaps and requests for “make-up sex.” (Full disclosure — the employer ultimately won this case, but not after four years of litigation, including a jury trial and an appeal, and likely hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.)
What else can go wrong with office romances? As it turns out, a lot.
Here are 10 reasons co-workers shouldn’t date each other:
- Conflicts of interest.
- Extortion and blackmail attempts.
- Uncomfortable conversations with HR and company attorneys explaining your love life.
- Have to describing your employee’s private affairs in a deposition or, worse, to a jury.
- Office gossip.
- Love contracts.
- The loss of respect from co-workers and management.
- Facing termination for not disclosing a romance.
- Harassment and retaliation lawsuits when someone other than an employee’s paramour gets passed over for a promotion, fired, or otherwise thinks you are playing favorites.
- Harassment or retaliation lawsuits by a jilted partner when the relationship goes south.
Despite this list of potential horribles, there is nothing inherently illegal about romantic relationships between employees.
Nevertheless, especially in today’s #MeToo and #TimesUp environment, employers need to understand that permitting office romances amplifies the legal risk of claims of discrimination, harassment, and retaliation.
The question, then, isn’t whether these relationship are illegal (they’re not), but how much risk you, as an employer, want to assume in the event a relationships sours, or other employees feels shunned or mistreated as a result.
- Ban them outright?
- Ban them only between a manager/supervisor and his/her subordinate?
- Permit them with a signed agreement (the “love contract”)?
- Do nothing and permit them across-the-board?
Happy Valentine’s Day!