The corporate climb: corporate Canada’s quiet Me Too reckoning
TORONTO — Maria Soklis remembers feeling ostracized by her co-workers early in her career for speaking up about “aggressive” sexual harassment — until more allegations by others involving the same person later came to light.
She complained to her employer (which she did not want to name), who handled it in an “exemplary fashion” and terminated her harasser swiftly.
Still, her harasser was well-liked and she felt shunned by her colleagues.
“This type of behaviour typically doesn’t happen on a one off. So, naturally, there was further information about other incidents… which helped make what I did more credible.”