An urgent, joint letter – costs in sexual harassment litigation

Here at BroadAgenda and the 50/50 by 2030 Foundation at the University of Canberra, we are proud signatories to a joint letter that has been tabled in Federal Parliament this week. We believe the contents of the letter are urgent – not just for targets of sexual harassment – but for each and every one of us, as we seek a fairer and more just society that’s free from gendered violence.

The letter, which you can read in full underneath, addresses a specific concern we have regarding the proposed Respect@Work legislation.

While we’re broadly supportive of the proposed Respect@Work legislation, we have deep concerns about one particular aspect – and that is so-called “cost neutrality” in sexual harassment litigation. 

This would require both sides in sexual harassment suits to pay their own costs. This will greatly damage sexual harassment victims’ ability to take matters to court. Or put the opposite way: We believe this will unfairly benefit employers and alleged perpetrators.

Alongside us, it is signed by organisations and individuals involved in sexual harassment and discrimination litigation, as lawyers, law firms, academics, advocates, trade unions, health services and policy experts. 

If you wish to understand this further, Josh Bornstein, head of employment law and Maurice Blackburn, was on the ABC earlier this week discussing the issues at play. One of the things he said was: “If you apply a neutrality principle to entrenched inequality, what you end up with is just further inequality.”

None of us want that.

Please put your support behind this letter and share it as widely as you can.

❖❖❖❖❖

 The Hon Mark Dreyfus KC MP 4 November 2022 

Attorney-General 

Senator the Hon Katy Gallagher 

Minister for Women 

Joint Letter – Costs Protections in Sexual Harassment Litigation 

Dear Attorney-General, Minister, 

We the undersigned are organisations and individuals involved in sexual harassment and discrimination litigation, as lawyers, law firms, academics, advocates, trade unions, health services and policy experts. 

We welcome the Albanese Government’s introduction of the Anti-Discrimination and Human Rights Legislation Amendment (Respect at Work) Bill 2022 (the Bill). The Bill is a landmark step towards implementing the recommendations of the Sex Discrimination Commissioner’s Respect@Work report. The Bill will go a significant way to strengthening legal protections against workplace sexual harassment. We applaud the Government on its commitment to preventing and addressing workplace sexual harassment and other forms of discrimination. 

However, we write to express our deep concern at the proposed amendments to the costs provisions in the Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986. The Bill proposes a costs neutrality model, whereby litigants bear their own costs unless the court orders otherwise. The Bill provides that the court may make such orders as to costs as they consider “just” where “there are circumstances that justify it in doing so.” The Bill sets out various factors the court must have regard to in making costs orders. 

While superficially the arrangement represents an improvement on the status quo, its design and uncertainty around its operation will in fact serve to undermine access to justice. The proposed model will ultimately make it harder for targets of sexual harassment to vindicate their legal rights; it will deter women from pursuing cases and reduce the compensation that they will achieve if they do proceed. Taking a costs neutrality approach to a relationship that is characterised by endemic inequality only serves to entrench that inequality. The proposed approach will also make it uneconomical for law firms to offer no-win, no-fee arrangements in discrimination matters and make it unviable to bring class actions against employers. 

We urge you to amend the Bill to include an “equal access” asymmetrical costs model. Such an approach would protect a complainant from an adverse costs order, unless they have acted vexatiously or unreasonably, but enable them to recover costs should they succeed. This model would recognise the significant inequality in resources between complainants in sexual harassment matters and their employers. It would also underscore the wider public interest in those who have been sexually harassed vindicating their legal rights. 

We would recommend that the revised costs provision be modelled on equivalent provisions in the Corporations Act 2001. This model could be used for all anti-discrimination claims 

(consistent with the Bill) or, as an interim measure, only apply to sexual harassment claims – to be followed by a comprehensive review of costs in anti-discrimination litigation. 

The Bill is a great step forward in addressing the scourge of sexual harassment in our workplaces. We implore you not to allow a faulty costs provision to undermine its positive impact. 

Kind regards. 

Grata Fund 

Public Interest Advocacy Centre 

Australian Council of Trade Unions 

Australian Women Lawyers Ltd 

Women Lawyers Association of New South Wales 

Working Women’s Centre SA Inc 

Australian Discrimination Law Experts Group (endorsed by) 

Dr Fiona Allison, University of Technology, Sydney 

Ms Robin Banks, University of Tasmania 

Dr Elizabeth Dickson, Queensland University of Technology 

Mr Liam Elphick, Monash University 

Professor Beth Gaze, University of Melbourne 

Professor Beth Goldblatt, University of Technology, Sydney 

Associate Professor Anne Hewitt, University of Adelaide 

Dr Sarah Moulds, University of South Australia 

Associate Professor Karen O’Connell, University of Technology, Sydney 

Ms Adriana Orifici, Monash University 

Professor Simon Rice, University of Sydney 

Associate Professor Belinda Smith, University of Sydney 

Dr Peta Spyrou, University of Adelaide 

Dr Bill Swannie, Victoria University 

Emerita Professor Margaret Thornton, The Australian National University 

Shine Lawyers 

Samantha Mangwana (Practice Leader ‑ Employment Law) 

Maurice Blackburn Lawyers 

Josh Bornstein (National Head of Employment Law) 

Alexandra Grayson (Principal Lawyer) 

Mia Pantechis (Principal Lawyer) 

Violet Co Legal & Consulting 

Karen Iles (Principal Solicitor) 

Gen Vic 

Dr Helen Keleher (Acting CEO, Gender Equity Victoria) 

Women’s Health Goulburn North East 

Amanda Kelly (Chief Executive Officer) 

Women’s Health in the South East 

Kit McMahon (Chief Executive Officer) 

Drummond Street Services 

Karen Field (CEO) 

Silvana Arcifa (General Manager Family Services) 

Cheryl Miller Yell (Director Strategic Partnerships and Projects) 

Phoebe Wallish (Director of Business Development & Systems + General Manager Stepfamilies Australia) 

Jemma Mead (Director of Services) 

Helen Rimington (General Manager, Families, Youth and Communities) 

Paula Fernandez Arias (General Manager Queerspace) 

Rebecca Cooper (General Manager of Operations and Facilities) 

Ali Hogg (Manager of Communications) 

Andrew Rush (Clinical Governance and Practice Lead) 

Robert Riccioni (Corporate Director) 

Association of Employees with Disability (AED Legal Centre) 

Women’s Health Victoria 

Carolyn Mogharbel (Acting Chief Executive Officer) 

Dhanya Mani
Survivor advocate
Founder, Kate’s List

Professor Michelle Ryan
Director, Global Institute for Women’s Leadership

Kieran Pender
Honorary Lecturer, ANU College of Law

Professor Nareen Young, Associate Dean (Indigenous Leadership and Engagement)
UTS Business School

Associate Professor Dominique Allen
Faculty of Law
Monash University

Professor Emerita Sara Charlesworth
College of Business & Law
RMIT University

Sue Webeck
Chief Executive Officer
Domestic Violence Crisis Service

Mary Crooks AO
Executive Director
Victorian Women’s Trust

Sheryn Omeri
Barrister, English Bar and Australian Bar

Leah Marrone
Barrister, Flinders Chambers

Ginger Gorman
Award-winning social justice journalist
Editor, BroadAgenda

Amy Kilpatrick

Director, Governance & Strategy
50 50 by 2030 Foundation
University of Canberra

Alex Eggerking

Professor Nicola Henry
Social & Global Studies Centre
RMIT University

Dr Alice Witt 

Research Fellow 

RMIT University 

Professor Fiona Jenkins 

Convenor, ANU Gender Institute 

The Australian National University 

Dr Regina Torres-Quiazon 

Acting Executive Director 

Multicultural Centre for Women’s Health 

Dr Evita March 

Senior Lecturer 

Federation University 

Lula Dembele 

Survivor advocate 

Frances Crimmins 

CEO YWCA Canberra 

Katherine Berney 

Director National Women’s Safety Alliance 

Dr Alex Poll 

Lecturer 

Federation University 

Louisa Chatterton 

Clinical Psychologist |Lecturer 

Federation University 

Rosie Batty AO 

2015 Australian of the Year 

Dr Patricia Cullen 

Senior Lecturer 

Population Health, UNSW 

Early Career Fellow, National Health and Medical Research Council 

Professor Michael Flood 

Queensland University of Technology 

Sarah Nelson 

Survivor Advocate 

Hayley Foster 

Chief Executive Officer 

Full Stop Australia 

Cathy Humphreys 

Professor of Social Work 

University of Melbourne 

Kim Sattler 

Delia Donovan 

Chief Executive Officer 

Domestic Violence NSW 

Kathie Melocco 

WOW Chaplaincy 

Emeritus Professor Madeleine King 

University of Sydney 

Rebecca Glenn 

Founder & CEO 

The Centre for Women’s Economic Safety 

Professor Julian Webb 

Melbourne Law School 

Tess Moodie (they/them) 

Advocate, Consultant and Speaker 

Maree Crabbe 

Founder and Director 

It’s Time We Talked 

Stella Topaz 

Natalie Hocking 

Survivor Advocate 

Dr Chay Brown 

Australian National University, The Equality Institute 

Survivor Advocate 

Tony McAvoy SC 

Barrister 

Emeritus Professor Patricia Easteal AM 

University of Canberra 

Carol Andrades 

Senior Fellow 

University of Melbourne 

Professor Jenny Morgan 

Melbourne Law School 

Trish van Leeuwen 

Chief Business Development and Philanthropy Officer 

Illawarra Women’s Trauma Recovery Centre 

Jessica Koot 

Vice Chair, Illawarra Women’s Health Centre 

Principal Lawyer and Practice Leader – Wollongong 

Australian Family Lawyers 

Associate Professor Bridget Harris 

Deputy Director, Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre 

School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts, Monash University 

Kristine Ziwica 

Journalist, Author and Women’s Advocate 

Karen Bentley 

Chief Executive Officer 

WESNET 

Philip Flood AO 

Silke Meyer 

Professor of Social Work 

Griffith University 

Jane Matts 

Practice Leader 

Sisters In Law Project (SILP) 

Survivor Advocacy 

Kathleen Maltzahn 

Chief Executive Officer 

Sexual Assault Services Victoria (SASVic) 

 

A PDF version is available here:

Joint Letter on the Costs Protections in Sexual Harassment Litigation

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