What are the signs of sexual harassment in a San Francisco workplace?
San Francisco jobs span technology, hospitality, finance, nonprofit, and city-specific workplace patterns — and these warning signs look the same in all of them:
- 01A supervisor, coworker, customer, or vendor engages in unwelcome sexual conduct.
- 02Work opportunities or treatment are tied to sexual attention.
- 03Reports are ignored, minimized, or followed by retaliation.
Sound familiar? Speak with us 24/7 →Does California law protect San Francisco workers here?
Yes — California employment law applies statewide, in San Francisco County as everywhere else:
- 01California harassment law can apply to conduct by supervisors, coworkers, nonemployees, and others in the workplace context.
- 02Preserving messages, dates, witnesses, and report records can be important.
Deadlines in employment cases are real, strict, and vary by claim — talking to an attorney early protects your options.
Protect your options — speak with us →What will we ask when you call?
- 01What conduct occurred and who was involved?
- 02Did you report it, and what happened next?
- 03Are there messages, photos, recordings, or witnesses?
Tell your story once — start now →Questions workers ask
Q.Should I speak with an attorney about sexual harassment?
A.Consider speaking with an attorney when the facts involve money owed, job loss, harassment, discrimination, retaliation, leave denial, or a deadline. This site provides general information and intake support, not legal advice.
Q.Does submitting the form make me a client?
A.No. Submitting information or using the intake assistant does not create an attorney-client relationship unless an attorney agrees to represent you in writing.