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Kentucky Lawmakers Receive Training Designed to Combat Sexual Harrassment

Kentucky LRC

Kentucky lawmakers have finished their first-ever training on sexual harassment.

Over a hundred lawmakers heard a lecture from Aime McFerren, a Louisville attorney with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. She shared strategies for identifying sexual harassment, and the benefits of preventing it.

“Sex harassment, retaliation, it’s prevalent still," McFerren said. "It’s costly in a monetary sense, but also in a non-monetary sense. I’m sure you can understand that when a workplace is involved in an investigation where someone has alleged discrimination or retaliation it can be very upsetting to the workplace.”

This has become a larger issue in the General Assembly after revelations that former lawmaker John Arnold allegedly harassed female state employees.

Rep. Will Coursey has also been accused of retaliating against a female state employee who  spoke out about his alleged treatment of a female intern.

Both men have denied the charges.

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