Federal guidance has shifted, but California law continues to set the standard for harassment prevention and response in public workplaces.
In January 2026, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) voted to rescind its 2024 Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace. The 2024 guidance had offered detailed examples and interpretive direction on federal harassment law. Its withdrawal may create some federal ambiguity, but it does not change employers’ legal obligations under federal anti-discrimination law — and importantly for California public agencies, it certainly does not alter the state’s robust harassment prevention and response requirements.
Below, we break down what this development means for California public agencies and offer practical steps to stay compliant and protect your workplace.
The 2024 EEOC Harassment Guidance
Issued in April 2024, the Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace was the EEOC’s most comprehensive harassment guidance in decades. It addressed:
- Gender identity and sexual orientation as categories of protected characteristics,
- Effective features of employers’ anti-harassment policies,
- Employer liability principles, and
- Harassment in virtual and remote work environments.
As with all EEOC guidance, the document was not legally binding, but it provided insight into how the agency intended to interpret and enforce federal anti-harassment law.
The Rescission and the EEOC’s Justification
On January 22, 2026, the EEOC voted 2–1 to rescind the 2024 guidance. In doing so, the Commission emphasized that:
- The rescission does not alter federal employment laws against discrimination, harassment, and retaliation.
- Employers remain obligated to prevent and correct unlawful harassment.
The EEOC indicated that future enforcement would rely more directly on statutes and court decisions rather than a single, comprehensive guidance document.
Why This Matters for California Public Agencies
California public employers operate in a two-layer compliance environment:
- Federal law: Title VII and other federal anti-discrimination statutes still apply; the EEOC now has fewer formal examples guiding investigations.
- California law: The Fair Employment and Housing Act (“FEHA”) and state regulations impose detailed harassment prevention, training, investigation, and policy requirements.
For most California public agencies, the state law obligations remain the driving force of how harassment issues are handled.
What Has Not Changed
1. California’s Harassment Prevention Duties Remain Robust
Under FEHA and California regulations, public agencies must maintain clear written anti-harassment policies and complaint procedures that cover:
- How to file a complaint,
- Assurances of confidentiality to the extent possible,
- Timelines for investigation,
- Options for remedial action, and
- Protections against retaliation.
These requirements remain regardless of the EEOC’s action and are often more specific than federal law alone. California regulations also specifically define required policy elements that must be distributed to all employees.
2. Mandatory Harassment Prevention Training Has Not Changed
California law continues to require harassment prevention training for employees:
- Supervisory employees: at least 2 hours,
- Non-supervisory employees: at least 1 hour,
- Every two years with defined timing for new hires and promotions.
These training obligations are a compliance cornerstone — not optional. Failure to meet them creates exposure in FEHA claims and enforcement actions.
3. You Still Need Clear, Consistent Investigations
Even without the 2024 EEOC guidance, harassment complaints must be taken seriously with:
- Timely intake and assessment,
- Impartial investigations,
- Well-documented findings,
- Appropriate corrective action, and
- Notice of outcomes to complainants and respondents.
A strong investigative process is as important as ever and remains a key line of defense if a claim is later challenged.
What Has Changed (in Federal Enforcement Practice)
With the EEOC’s withdrawal of its guidance:
- Federal enforcement officials may rely more heavily on prior case law and statutory language rather than a unified interpretive document.
- There may be less predictability in how the EEOC frames certain harassment issues (for example, virtual conduct or emerging workplace scenarios).
However, this does not relax federal responsibilities, and it certainly does not supplant California’s law as the compliance baseline for public agencies.
Bostock’s Intersection with Executive Action
In Bostock v. Clayton County (2020), the U.S. Supreme Court held that Title VII’s prohibition against discrimination “because of” sex includes discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. Following Bostock, the EEOC issued the 2024 Harassment Guidance reflecting a broad interpretation of sex-based discrimination under federal law. The EEOC’s eventual rescission of the 2024 guidance occurred against the backdrop of President Trump’s executive order directing federal agencies to reassess certain interpretations of federal civil rights law. Bostock remains binding Supreme Court precedent interpreting Title VII.
Practical Takeaways for California Public Agencies
• Don’t roll back your policies or practices.
Federal guidance may have shifted, but the underlying federal case law and statutory authority have not. Also, California’s requirements remain unchanged and continue to evolve.
• Keep training current and documented.
Training should be relevant to your workplace and address real issues employees may face, including online and hybrid-work conduct.
• Double-down on process.
Consistent complaint handling and documentation help manage risk in both state and federal contexts.
• Communicate to your workforce and leaders.
Make clear that federal guidance changes do not reduce your agency’s commitment to a harassment-free workplace.
Action Steps for 2026
Now is a good time to:
- Review your harassment and retaliation policy to confirm it meets regulatory requirements and is up to date.
- Ensure training compliance, including tracking who needs training and when it expires.
- Refresh your investigation protocols to ensure they reflect best practices under FEHA and agency policy.
- Brief your leadership team on how federal interpretive changes affect investigation expectations — and how they don’t change your legal duties.
If your agency needs help updating policies, training programs, or investigation workflows in light of these developments, trusted legal counsel can assist.



