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A report of abuse is met with silence

I am not just as a victim but a long-term public servant whose career and health are being systematically destroyed by a toxic, retaliatory management culture. The internal system has completely failed me.

​I have worked for a healthcare company since 2001 and in this abusive department since 2007. After filing several grievances about a lack of mutual respect, I became the target of sustained abuse led by a director.

​The abuse is targeted and coordinated: the director has hired staff who were clearly instructed to belittle me, speak to me condescendingly, and publicly undermine my authority.

​When I spoke up about the abuse, I was not protected. I was punished. While two coworkers who complained saw their situations improve, I was subjected to immediate, severe retaliation. I was placed under close monitoring and written up for “unprofessional behavior,” which led to an HR “guilty” finding in a show-cause hearing. My workload was punitively increased with impossible deadlines. In a final act of humiliation, I was asked to train new staff while simultaneously facing disciplinary action.

​Written emails detailing this discrimination to the HR Diversity Officer and Labor Relations have been met with silence.

​The result is a severe decline in my health, including constant anxiety, panic attacks, low blood pressure, and significant weight loss.

​My case proves that current HR and Labor Relations policies are not shields for victims—they are weapons used by abusers to enforce silence.

​My nearly 20 years of service and the documented retaliation I’m experiencing is a definitive case study to push for a law that will define and outlaw psychological workplace abuse and provide strong, enforceable anti-retaliation provisions to protect victims when they speak up.

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