Pittsburgh Harassment Lawyer

Workplace harassment can leave you feeling isolated, anxious, and uncertain about your career. The Lacy Employment Law Firm helps Pittsburgh employees understand whether the conduct they experienced may violate employment law and what they can do next. 

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Workplace Harassment Legal Help for Pittsburgh Employees

You deserve a workplace where you are judged by your work, not targeted because of who you are.

Not every disagreement or unpleasant interaction is illegal. Workplace harassment may become unlawful when unwelcome conduct is connected to a protected characteristic and is severe or pervasive enough to create an intimidating, hostile, or abusive work environment.

 

Harassment can come from a supervisor, coworker, executive, customer, contractor, or another person connected to your workplace. Our attorneys can review what happened, explain which federal, Pennsylvania, or Pittsburgh protections may apply, and help you decide how to move forward.

Lacy Employment Law Firm

Diamond Building | 100 Fifth Avenue, Suite 509 | Pittsburgh PA, 15222

PITTSBURGH PRACTICE AREAS

Types of Workplace Harassment We Handle

Harassment does not always involve physical contact or an explicit threat.

Why Pittsburgh Employees Choose Our Harassment Lawyers

Clear legal guidance for a difficult and deeply personal workplace problem.

Every harassment case is different. Our approach begins by listening carefully, identifying the legal issues, and developing a strategy based on your circumstances and goals.

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What Happens When You Contact Our Firm

You do not need to have every document or legal detail figured out before speaking with a lawyer.

Because employment claims can have strict filing deadlines, getting advice early may help you preserve evidence and avoid losing important legal options.

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Serving Employees Throughout Pittsburgh

Workplace harassment can happen in any position, workplace, or industry.

We assist employees working throughout Downtown Pittsburgh, Oakland, the Strip District, the North Shore, the South Side, and surrounding Allegheny County communities.

 

Our attorneys represent workers across Pittsburgh’s healthcare, education, technology, finance, manufacturing, hospitality, retail, nonprofit, professional services, and public-sector workplaces. Whether you are still employed, on leave, recently terminated, or considering an internal complaint, we can help you understand your rights.

Related Practice Areas Section

Frequently Asked Questions

Workplace harassment generally involves unwelcome conduct connected to a legally protected characteristic, such as race, sex, religion, national origin, age, disability, or pregnancy. The conduct may be unlawful when it is severe or pervasive enough to create an intimidating, hostile, or abusive workplace. A single incident may qualify when it is extremely serious.
No. Rude management, personality conflicts, unfair criticism, and general bullying are not automatically illegal. Employment law usually requires a connection between the conduct and a protected characteristic, retaliation, or another protected workplace right. An attorney can review the full pattern and determine whether legal protections may apply.
Yes. Workplace harassment can occur through email, text messages, video calls, workplace chat platforms, social media, or other digital communication. Conduct outside the physical workplace may also be relevant when it affects your employment or working environment.
Reporting procedures can affect an employer’s responsibility and your potential claim, but the correct approach depends on the circumstances. Review your employer’s harassment policy and speak with an attorney before acting when possible, especially if the harasser controls your job or you fear retaliation.
Keep copies of relevant messages, emails, schedules, performance reviews, complaints, employer responses, disciplinary notices, and workplace policies. Write down dates, locations, witnesses, and what was said or done. Preserve evidence lawfully and avoid altering or deleting relevant communications.
Employers generally cannot retaliate against employees for making a good-faith harassment complaint, opposing unlawful discrimination, or participating in an investigation. Retaliation may include termination, demotion, reduced hours, exclusion, threats, or increased scrutiny.
Depending on the facts, a complaint may be filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, or the Pittsburgh Commission on Human Relations. Different laws, employer-size requirements, procedures, and deadlines may apply, so employees should seek advice promptly.