Thomas A. McKinney Explains What Employees Should Know About Workplace Age Discrimination

Older employees often bring decades of experience, leadership, and industry knowledge to the workplace. Despite this value, many workers over the age of 40 continue to face age-related bias involving hiring decisions, promotions, compensation, layoffs, and workplace treatment.

Thomas A. McKinney, a New Jersey employment lawyer, regularly represents employees in cases involving workplace discrimination, retaliation, wrongful termination, and employment disputes. According to McKinney, age discrimination frequently appears in subtle ways that employees may initially overlook.

Age Discrimination Is Often Difficult to Recognize

Many employees expect age discrimination to involve direct comments about age or retirement. While those situations do occur, most employers avoid openly acknowledging age-related motives.

Instead, older workers may notice gradual changes in how they are treated. Employees may suddenly be excluded from meetings, passed over for promotions, criticized more harshly, or replaced by younger workers following restructuring or layoffs. In some situations, employers use phrases such as “new direction,” “fresh energy,” or “culture fit” to justify decisions that may disproportionately affect older employees.

Employees seeking additional information about workplace discrimination protections can review the firm’s page on New Jersey workplace discrimination claims.

Federal and New Jersey Laws Protect Older Workers

Employees age 40 and older are protected under the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). New Jersey workers also receive protection under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (LAD), which broadly prohibits discrimination based on age.

These laws generally prohibit employers from making employment decisions based on age, including decisions involving hiring, firing, compensation, promotions, layoffs, and workplace conditions.

Importantly, New Jersey’s anti-discrimination protections apply to employers of all sizes, making the LAD one of the strongest employee protection laws in the country.

Layoffs and Restructuring Can Raise Legal Questions

Age discrimination claims often arise during workforce reductions, reorganizations, or company restructuring. Employees sometimes discover that older workers were disproportionately selected for layoffs while younger employees with less experience were retained.

In some cases, employers attempt to pressure older employees into retirement or encourage them to accept severance agreements quickly without fully reviewing the legal implications.

Because severance agreements often require employees to waive potential legal claims, workers should carefully evaluate these agreements before signing.

Documentation Can Strengthen a Claim

Employees who suspect age discrimination should preserve relevant evidence whenever possible. Emails, performance reviews, disciplinary records, witness information, organizational charts, and internal communications may all become important later.

Documentation can help identify patterns of unequal treatment, inconsistencies in employer explanations, and sudden changes in workplace behavior following age-related comments or complaints.

Retaliation After Complaints Is Also Prohibited

Employees who report age discrimination or participate in workplace investigations are generally protected from retaliation. Employers cannot legally punish workers for raising concerns about unlawful conduct.

Retaliation may involve termination, demotion, reduced responsibilities, exclusion from projects, hostile treatment, or sudden disciplinary action after protected activity occurs.

Why Legal Guidance Matters

Age discrimination cases can become highly fact-specific and often involve complicated legal and evidentiary issues. An employment lawyer can evaluate workplace conduct, review documentation, assess severance agreements, and determine whether legal claims may exist.

Early legal guidance may also help employees preserve evidence and avoid mistakes that could unintentionally affect future claims.

Contact Information

Castronovo & McKinney, LLC
100 Eagle Rock Avenue, Suite 200
East Hanover, NJ 07936
Phone: (973) 920-7888
Email: info@cmlaw.com 

Conclusion

Employees should not assume workplace bias is simply part of getting older in a competitive workforce. Both federal and New Jersey laws provide important protections for workers facing age discrimination.

With guidance from experienced employment counsel like Thomas A. McKinney, employees can better understand their legal rights and take informed steps to protect their careers, reputations, and financial futures.

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