Forest Service chief set to testify before congressional committee on work place abuse

iStock/Thinkstock(WASHINGTON) — In an ongoing battle of harassment and misconduct allegations at the U.S. Forest Service, its chief, Vicki Christiansen, is set to testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Thursday along with a former employee from the agency who claims to have been harassed by the former chief.

Shannon Reed, an air quality specialist, claims in her written testimony she was viewed as a “sexual object” and that the former Forest Chief Tony Tooke grabbed her buttocks.

“I did not report Mr. Tooke because I feared retaliation,” Reed wrote.

Tooke resigned after an investigation looking into the allegations made against him of sexual misconduct began. Shortly after, Christiansen, the interim chief at the time, issued a mandatory full-day training about harassment and safety in the work place.

One hundred current and former female employees of the U.S. Forest Service, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, wrote an open letter Wednesday to Christiansen, echoing Reed’s fear of retaliation and to “expose serious issues of discrimination, harassment, and workplace violence against female employees.”

The women who signed the letter work in a variety of departments within the agency ranging in years of service from as little as three years to more than 25 years. They are all from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities and live across the country.

The Nov. 9 letter is not the first time women working in the agency have complained about abuse.

In the letter, the women wrote that the USDA and its agencies have a history of overlooked reports of sexual harassment and misconduct allegations. They stated that senior officers of the USDA Coalition of Minority Employees “wrote letters to the Secretaries of Agriculture and Forest Service Chiefs describing incidents of discrimination, harassment, and retaliation against female employees in the Forest Service.”

“Despite the concerns of congress and the public exposure, the USDA and the Forest Service continue to ignore our complaints and continue this culture of abuse,” the letter stated. “We decided it is time for you to hear our voices.”

“The concerns of congress” the women wrote about were prompted after two women who worked for the agency testified before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in December 2016. They testified after a few women shared their stories in a Huffington Post Highline report. Multiple class-action lawsuits have also been filed against the agency over the years.

The women claim the agency took no action and there were no “positive changes to the work environment” even after the hearing.

“We watched Congressman Chaffetz, Congressman Cummings, Congressman Gowdy, Congresswoman Speier, and others tell Deputy Chief Lenise Lago and Assistant Secretary Joe Leonard that they did not believe their ‘data’ and told them to fix the problems of gender discrimination and sexual harassment,” the letter stated. “We hoped the agency would take action.”

Fueled by the agency’s lack of effort to confront the ongoing issue, the women said they continued to speak to media outlets in hopes of garnering more attention to expose the agency’s shortcomings.

“When PBS aired in March 2018 we had hope again,” the women stated after the outlet published its investigation of women who reported harassment and received retaliation in return. The PBS report also revealed sexual misconduct allegations made against Tooke.

“The exposure of Tony Tooke’s sexual misconduct/forced retirement was the perfect opportunity for the Forest Service to admit there were problems at all levels, and to assess how and why a male manager guilty of sexual misconduct could promote to the highest levels of the agency,” the women wrote. “It was our expectation that the agency would acknowledge those of us who have been coming forward (many of us for years), and include us in problem solving initiatives. This did not happen.”

Despite the full training day and the “30-day plan” implemented to include listening sessions, “Stand Up” values clarification/training sessions and advisory groups, the women claim the tactics were ineffective as they continued to face harassment and abuse in their work fields.

“Many of us observed that managers with harassment claims against them (including sexual harassment) were the ones facilitating these sessions,” the letter stated. “We sat there and listened to management and employees blame the women, and blame PBS for having to go through these processes.”

Some women spoke out during the “Stand Up” sessions, but not everyone did so for fear of retaliation, they wrote in the letter.

“And we want you to understand, we have real concerns that through your ‘Stand Up’ program you are putting the burden on us to ‘stand up’ and speak out about harassment when you have not made it a safe environment for us to do so,” the women wrote.

In conclusion, the women demand Christiansen and her staff meet with everyone who signed the letter and that a delegation of women meet with USDA and Forest Service officials to “collaborate on problem solving” and find a resolution. The hope is to alleviate the impact harassment has had on their mental and emotional health.

“We have ideas and want to share them with you and your staff,” the women stated.

ABC News reached out to Christiansen’s press team, but have not received a response.

Copyright © 2018, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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