Dorchester City Law - Hiring Bias & Freelance Claims

Labor and Employment Massachusetts 4 Minutes Read · published March 01, 2026 Flag of Massachusetts

Dorchester, Massachusetts residents who suspect hiring bias or freelance misclassification can seek remedies under Boston municipal anti-discrimination rules and Massachusetts state law. This guide explains where to file, typical procedures, timelines, and practical steps to preserve evidence and pursue a complaint with the City of Boston Commission for Human Rights, the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD), or state enforcement for worker classification issues.[1] It also summarizes what official forms and contact points exist and what penalties or remedies officials list on their pages (current as of March 2026).[2]

Penalties & Enforcement

The City of Boston and state agencies handle different aspects of hiring-bias and freelance claims. The Boston Commission for Human Rights enforces the city ordinance on discrimination in employment; MCAD enforces state anti-discrimination law; the Massachusetts Attorney General and Department of Unemployment Assistance review worker classification and wage claims. For specific remedies, see the cited agency pages below.[3]

  • Monetary remedies: back pay, damages, civil penalties or fines where listed on the enforcing page — specific fine amounts are not specified on the cited municipal page.
  • Non-monetary orders: cease-and-desist, reinstatement, corrective orders, or written remedies when the agency makes findings — details vary by agency and are not fully specified on the cited municipal page.
  • Escalation: initial intake, investigation, determination, possible conciliation or hearing, then enforcement actions; exact escalation timelines and graduated fines for first/repeat/continuing offences are not specified on the cited page.
  • Enforcer contacts: City of Boston Commission for Human Rights handles city ordinance complaints; MCAD handles state claims; the Massachusetts Attorney General and Department of Unemployment Assistance handle wage and classification enforcement.
File promptly and preserve job postings, messages, contracts, and payment records.

Appeals, Review & Time Limits

  • Filing deadlines: check the agency intake page for exact statutory deadlines; if not shown, the page is current as of March 2026 and specific statutory time limits are not specified on the cited municipal page.
  • Appeals and review routes: agencies may issue determinations that can be reviewed in court or appealed under the statutes governing each agency; exact appeal time limits and procedures are referenced on the agency pages linked below.
  • Defences and discretion: agencies note defenses such as legitimate business reasons, independent contractor status where proven, or lawful exemptions; availability of variances or permits is not specified on the cited municipal page.

Common Violations

  • Hiring discrimination based on protected traits (race, sex, age, disability).
  • Misclassification of workers as independent contractors to avoid wage or benefit obligations.
  • Failure to post notices, provide required wage statements, or honor local hiring rules.

Applications & Forms

Official intake and complaint forms are available from the enforcing agencies. If a specific form name, number, fee, or filing deadline is not given on the municipal page, the guide notes that the detail is not specified on the cited page.

  • City of Boston Commission for Human Rights: online complaint intake or contact page (see resources below).
  • Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD): state complaint intake and instructions; agency page lists how to file and intake steps.
  • Massachusetts Attorney General / DUA: guidance and reporting for worker misclassification and wage claims; official web pages list reporting options.
Use agency intake forms and include dates, copies of communications, and payment records.

How to File a Complaint

  • Step 1: Preserve evidence — save job ads, contract terms, pay records, emails, texts, and witness names.
  • Step 2: Contact the City of Boston Commission for Human Rights for city ordinance claims or MCAD for state discrimination claims; use the agency intake or complaint portal.
  • Step 3: Complete the agency complaint form, attach evidence, and submit by the method specified (online, mail, or in person).
  • Step 4: Cooperate with investigation or mediation; follow agency instructions for interviews and document requests.
  • Step 5: If an adverse determination issues, review appeal options and deadlines on the issuing agency page or consult an attorney.

FAQ

Where do I file a hiring-bias complaint in Dorchester?
You can file under the City of Boston discrimination ordinance with the Boston Commission for Human Rights or file a state complaint with MCAD depending on your claim; see the agency intake pages for forms and instructions.
How long do I have to file?
Statutory filing deadlines vary by statute and agency; consult the agency intake pages for exact deadlines — if a specific deadline is not posted on the cited municipal page, it is noted as not specified on the cited page.
Can I report misclassification of a freelance worker?
Yes. The Massachusetts Attorney General and Department of Unemployment Assistance accept reports about worker misclassification and unpaid wage issues; follow the official reporting guidance on their pages.

How-To

  1. Gather and date all relevant evidence: contracts, invoices, emails, text messages, pay records, and witness names.
  2. Choose the appropriate agency: Boston Commission for Human Rights for city ordinance matters, MCAD for state discrimination, or AG/DUA for misclassification and wage claims.
  3. Complete the agency complaint intake form and attach evidence; submit by the method listed on the agency page.
  4. Respond promptly to agency requests during intake and investigation; keep copies of all submissions and correspondence.
  5. If the agency issues a determination you disagree with, review appeal procedures on the agency decision document and act within the stated time limits.

Key Takeaways

  • Act quickly and preserve documents and communications related to hiring and payment.
  • Use the City of Boston Commission for Human Rights for local ordinance claims and MCAD or AG/DUA for state claims.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Boston - Commission for Human Rights
  2. [2] Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD)
  3. [3] Massachusetts - Misclassification guidance