The rapid spread of artificial intelligence into hiring and firing decisions has created an urgent threat to working people, and minority employees in particular bear the heaviest weight of this shift. These systems are sold to employers as neutral, efficient, and free from human bias, but the workers on the other side of the screen know better. Behind the language of innovation sits a simple reality. Algorithms learn from the past, and the past of American employment is a record of exclusion, segregation, and unequal opportunity. When a company feeds that history into a machine and asks it to predict who deserves a job, a promotion, or a paycheck next month, the machine does exactly what it was built to do. It carries old discrimination forward in a new package, and it does so at a scale and speed that no human hiring manager could ever match.

Minority candidates are often screened out before a human being ever sees their application. Resume analyzers can quietly penalize graduates of historically Black colleges and universities, applicants with names the system associates with women or with particular ethnic or religious backgrounds, and applicants whose career paths include time away from traditional employment for caregiving, immigration, military service, or recovery from illness. Video interview platforms that claim to measure confidence, enthusiasm, or fit have repeatedly been shown to score candidates with darker skin tones lower, to misread accents as a lack of communication skill, and to penalize candidates with disabilities that affect speech, eye contact, or facial movement. The applicant rarely learns any of this. They receive a polite rejection email, if they receive anything at all, and the door closes without explanation. Workers deserve to know when a machine has judged them, what it judged them on, and how to challenge a result they believe is wrong.

The danger grows once a worker is on the job. Algorithmic management tools now track keystrokes, bathroom breaks, driving routes, pick rates, call times, and countless other metrics, and they feed those numbers into systems that recommend discipline, demotion, or termination. The workers most likely to be subjected to this kind of constant surveillance are warehouse staff, delivery drivers, call center agents, retail employees, gig workers, and home health aides, jobs disproportionately held by women, people of color, and immigrants. A pregnant worker flagged for too many breaks. A disabled worker flagged for slower movement. A Muslim worker flagged for stepping away to pray. A Black worker whose performance score drops because the system was never tested on people who look or sound like her. These are not hypothetical scenarios. They are happening now, in real workplaces, to real people, and the affected employees often have no idea that an algorithm played any role in the decision that upended their livelihood.

This is why strong protections for employees, and especially for minority employees, are so essential. Workers should never be hired or fired by a system they cannot see, cannot question, and cannot appeal. Every applicant and every employee subjected to an automated decision deserves clear notice that AI is being used, a plain language explanation of what the system measures, the right to request a human review by someone with actual authority to overturn the result, and the right to a reasonable accommodation when a disability, a religious practice, a pregnancy, or a caregiving responsibility puts them at a disadvantage in the eyes of the machine. Bias audits should be mandatory, independent, and public, not quiet internal exercises that the employer grades for itself. When a tool is shown to harm a protected group, it should be pulled from use, not patched and redeployed while the same workers continue to pay the price.

The laws requiring employers to protect workers from discriminatory practices already exists. Title VII, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, and a growing body of state and local laws all apply to algorithmic decisions, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has been clear that an employer cannot hide behind a vendor when its tools produce discriminatory results. New York City, Illinois, Colorado, and a steadily expanding list of jurisdictions now require bias audits, candidate notice, or both. A company that profits from a worker’s labor does not get to outsource accountability to a piece of software.

The conversations around the use of AI in the workplace has to keep returning to the people most affected. Behind every rejected application is someone trying to support a family. Behind every algorithmic termination is someone who showed up, did the work, and trusted that they would be treated fairly. Minority employees have spent generations fighting for the right to be judged on their abilities rather than on assumptions about who they are, and a poorly governed AI system can erase that progress in a single hiring cycle. Protecting workers from these harms is not anti-technology. It is pro fairness, pro dignity, and pro the basic principle that the people whose lives are shaped by a decision deserve a meaningful voice in how that decision is made. If you have reason to believe your application or continued employed has been threatened by discriminatory employment practices utilizing AI, we have attorneys available for consultation.By Kalandra N. Wheeler

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We asked Kalandra N. Wheeler, a Trial Attorney in the Houston office of Wiley Wheeler, P.C., to provide her sincere answers to a range of questions.  After reading, you will be more more abreast with the understanding and competency that Ms. Wheeler

We asked Kalandra N. Wheeler, a Trial Attorney in the Houston office of Wiley Wheeler, P.C., to provide her sincere answers to a range of questions.  After reading, you will be more more abreast with the understanding and competency that Ms. Wheeler brings.

1.Why did you start practicing labor and employment law?

I wanted to be able to help people that otherwise might not find help. Labor and employment laws affect most of society.  And – whether our results help one or many – our work and efforts as employment lawyers touch people in a real way in their every day lives.

2. Who is your favorite Supreme Court Justice?

Thurgood Marshall.

3. What do you think is the most important part of a good case?

The client. Good facts and evidence are definitely important. But good clients are a lawyers’ most valuable asset.  A good client: (1) is invested in their case; (2) works or worked hard for their employer; (3) can tell their story clearly and concisely; and (4) is someone that a jury will find sympathetic and relatable.

4. If you could write a new law, what would it do?

The Texas Workplace Anti-Bullying law.  I hear the stories, the ones told by employees looking for help. And in far too many of those stories the law offers no solution.  Every employee that goes to work and works hard to do the job they are hired to perform should be able to do so without abuse, harassment, and bullying. There is no justification for bullying, not in our schools, and not in our workplaces.

5. Besides Rob Wiley, P.C., what is the most interesting job that you have had?

For a year before law school, I worked as a lube tech for Jiffy Lube.  I spent hot summer days, working on hot cars, changing oil or flushing transmissions or radiators.  I never had a customer come back with a complaint.

6. How do you market yourself differently than others?

I tell clients what they need to hear, not necessarily what they want to hear. Before a client begins down any path toward resolving an employment dispute, they need thoughtful, honest advice. I am a believer in justice and everyday people deserve competent representation in an arena that is difficult for non-lawyers to navigate.

7. What do you do when you’re not practicing law?

I spend time with family and friends.  I read true crime books.  I sew and draw.

8. How would you describe the color yellow to someone who could not see?

It’s not the intense heat of the sun during the month of August, but instead the softness of the sun on your skin just as the seasons change from Summer to Fall.  It’s warm. And soft to the touch.  It’s fresh squeezed lemonade with a hint of sugar.  Slightly cool, inviting, and happy.

9. What’s your favorite legal TV show?

Law & Order: SVU

10. If you could argue any case in history, what would it be?

The Karen Silkwood case. But really, I think that would be more about arguing and trying a case alongside Gerry Spence for the learning experience.

Kalandra N. Wheeler is a Trial Attorney in the Houston office of Wiley Wheeler, P.C.  She graduated from The University of Houston with a bachelor’s degree in political science.  Ms. Wheeler went on and received her law degree from The University of Arkansas.