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San Francisco (415) 781 3030;
(800) 232 4839
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San Francisco (415) 781 3030;
(800) 232 4839
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Traci M. Hinden

Photo of Traci holding a dog

Traci is a social justice warrior.  Having been in her clients' shoes, as a disabled woman and a rape survivor, she understands and has lived her clients' stories. Traci has dedicated her life, long before attending law school, to being an advocate for those who could not speak on their own behalf. It was only natural for her to continue her passion of fighting for others' injustices by starting her own firm just out of law school. Since that time, nearly two decades later,  she has been a champion on behalf of single parents, disabled, victims of sex harassment and abuse, wage theft and gender and racial issues. Traci's mission to strive for a more balanced society does not just extend to her employee civil rights work and personal injury cases in the courtroom. Indeed, Traci has participated in lobbying efforts nearly her entire career of helping change the laws to ensure that it is not easier for bad actors to prevail. Traci draws inspiration from influential figures such as Professor Anita Hill, Esq. and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sandra Day O'Connor. Their words have fueled her drive for justice and equality.

She believes in creating a world where all individuals, regardless of race, religion, gender or abilities have equal opportunities for respect and success. Traci fights to ensure that workers can have a peaceful work environment and be able to receive the care they need as a result of accidents or injustices. As her clients tell you in their own words, she is more than just a lawyer, she becomes her clients' friend and biggest support. That is because Traci makes sure they can withstand the gamesmanship of litigation and gaslighting that continues in our Court and Healthcare systems. Her peers also recognize her successes and continuously vote for her to be presented with accolades and speaking engagements annually.  Traci will always advocate for those in need and contribute to a fairer and more equitable world.
When she is not working, she spends time with her rescue dogs and husband who help remind her how the present is just that, a gift. 

We don’t accomplish anything in this world alone… and whatever happens is the result of the whole tapestry of one’s life and all the weavings of individual threads form one to another that creates something…

Society as a whole benefits immeasurably from a climate in which all persons, regardless of race or gender, may have the opportunity to earn respect, responsibility, advancement and remuneration based on ability.

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor

Experience

  • The Law Offices of Traci M. Hinden, San Francisco, California


    March 2007- Present

  • Dietz, Gilmor & Associates, San Francisco, California


    August 2006- March 2007

  • Law Offices Of Hinden, Rondeau and Breslavsky, Los Angeles, California


    August 2005- August 2006

  • Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office


    Law Clerk

  • Southwestern University School of Law, Teaching Assistant to Professor Jeffrey

    Lenkov for Sports Law


    Isaacman, Kaufman and Painter, P.C., Beverly Hills, California


    Law Clerk under Steven R. Lowy, Esq

Education

  • Southwestern University School of Law, Los Angeles, California


    Juris Doctorate

  • Occidental College, Los Angeles, California


    Bachelor of Arts, Philosophy

Certifications

  • Certified Mediator (Ron Kelly’s Course Presented by the Bar Association of San Francisco and Co-Sponsored by the Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Mateo County Bar Associations, and the ADR Sections of Marin and Sonoma County Bar Associations)

  • SEEDS Advanced Mediation Course

Admissions/Memberships

Admissions

  • California State Bar: Number 239403

  • U.S. Central District of California

  • U.S. Northern District of California

Membership

  • California Consumer Attorneys of Los Angles and Member of the Women’s committee

  • San Francisco Trial Lawyers Associatione

  • Committee Chair and Participant of California Employment Lawyers Association

  • Committee Participant of California Applicant Attorneys Association

Recognized

  • Recognized as a Northern California Super Lawyers Rising Star in 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020.

  • Superlawyers selected Traci Hinden for inclusion on the December 2014 Top Women Attorneys in Northern California

  • Selected to the Northern California Super Lawyers list for Plaintiff's Employment Law in 2021, 2022 and 2024.

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Why is the employment law fulfilling?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

I went to Law School to help people and I really feel like I help everyone, from average Joe, to high exec, immigrants, the whole gamut. I feel that people really need a voice, and often times people who come to me are those who never would have had a voice. They never even thought about bringing a case and it feels good to advocate on their behalf.

What discrimination looks like?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

We see discrimination in a few places. It could be a failure to hire case. It could be a failure to promote case, failure to transfer, failure to provide equal pay, and it can look like anything. It could be between a male and a female in gender discrimination. It could be between an African American person and a Chinese person. It could be between two different religions. And that’s what it’s about is comparing them and there’s two avenues there. It’s either direct discrimination, which means there’s been some names, there’s been some, you know, epitaph, something that has been slurred, or it’s an impact case, which is all of the Latinos in that company are not being promoted, or all of the Chinese people are given pay raises and no one else.

What to do if harassed at work?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

Well, I think you want to stop for a second and collect your thoughts and see, you know, what exactly is happening, maybe document it, because most people, you know, will take a stand back and say did that just happen, and then kind of let it go. It’s important to document it. If you write down the day and what happened, maybe anybody else who’s around, and then I think before you run off to HR I would absolutely call an attorney, because you want to find out is this a Worker’s Comp stress situation, or is this a true, hostile work under Employment Civil Rights.

What is a protected class?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

So that’s what separates it from a possible stress case in Worker’s Comp versus an Employment Civil Rights case is in order to sue for harassment in employment law you only need to have one employee, versus five employees for discrimination under California’s act. But what makes the distinction is for a protected class, and a protected class includes those that are being harassed or discriminated based on their race, their religion, their age, their disability, their sex, which includes their gender, their gender identity, their pregnancy status, if they are trying to take leave to take care of themselves or another, veteran status, any others like that.

Reasonable accommodation.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

Sometimes people will write an e-mail. They’ll take notes. I’ve had clients, if they’re like in the service industry and they have a work schedule, when it was continuous harassment they would write down on their work schedule what was said, you know, maybe little bits and pieces of names they were called, people who were around, anything of that nature.

Medical marujuana use.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

A reasonable accommodation could be restructuring of your job, restructuring of your physical situation; maybe you need an ergonomic, maybe you need a stool because you have a back injury and you can’t stand, maybe you need less hours, like part-time work, or maybe you need leave, which could be intermittent leave, or it can be leave for some time. And the other option is maybe you need another open position, because you can no longer perform your position.

Documenting harassment.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

So, if you’re not an exempt employee, which means you’re not salaried, you’re an hourly employee, if you work more than 8 hours in one day, more than 40 hours in one week, or 7 days a week, you are owed overtime. And on the seventh day every hour of that day would be time and a half. After 8 hours, up to 12 hours you would be owed time and a half. Anything after 12 hours in one day would be double time, and anything over 40 hours a week would also be time and a half.

Union Failer to Act.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

The moment you feel you can’t do your job without a reasonable accommodation.

Prayer in the workplace.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

So this is very similar to the last issue of, you know, what can you wear, and again, if it’s not an undue burden on the employer they have to try and accommodate it. Sometimes it means taking off the entire day. Certain religions allow for prayer on Saturday. Some religions allow for prayer on Sunday. Employers, if they can, should not schedule you on those days. They should schedule around that. If it’s prayer within your workday, possibly there’s a way you can structure it such that you could do it during your break.

Overtime pay.

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

Well, the very first thing I would do is not say anything disparaging against your employer. Do not post anything on Facebook. Any of that stuff would come in if you later on wanted to bring a claim. I would file for unemployment, even if you quit. You are sometimes entitled to it. There are exceptions.

What to do when you lose your job?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

So, if you have a contract in place through your union about what your rights are, and anything that’s listed in there the union is not following, your action would be either the union to bring it on your behalf, or for you to file a claim against the union. The National Labor Relations Board would provide that for you if you wanted to bring a claim against the union.

Communicating accommodation needs?

Traci Hinden

Read Transcript

Yes, unfortunately. Most people are surprised by this. There is a case called Ross v. Ragingwire. It is a United States’ Supreme Court Case that says even if your state, and in this the state in question was California, allows for you to have medical marijuana, if the employer does drug testing, it is still an illegal substance in the United States. And since we are United States and federal law preempts it, you can be lawfully terminated for that.

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