Fort Worth Pregnancy Discrimination Lawyer

Standing up for pregnant employees, new parents, and caregivers

Pregnancy should be celebrated — not punished. If your employer refuses reasonable accommodations, cuts your hours, forces you onto leave, or fires you after you share your news, that is not just unfair. It may be illegal. We are here to listen, explain your options in plain language, and fight to protect your job, your health, and your family’s future.

Your rights under Texas and federal law

Pregnant and postpartum workers are protected by multiple laws, including:

Employers must engage in a good-faith interactive process to identify accommodations and are prohibited from retaliation when you assert your rights.

What pregnancy discrimination looks like

Forced leave or termination

 Pushing you out after you disclose pregnancy or upon return from leave, or insisting you “take leave” instead of accommodating restrictions.

Denied accommodations

 Refusing light duty, lifting limits, more frequent breaks, seating, water access, or schedule adjustments — especially when similar accommodations are provided to others.

Pay, hours, and position cuts

 Reducing hours, demoting you, or reassigning desirable accounts or shifts because you are pregnant or recently gave birth.

Leave and attendance problems

 Counting pregnancy-related appointments or recovery time against you, denying FMLA when you qualify, or penalizing protected absences.

Lactation issues

 Failing to provide reasonable break time and a private, non-bathroom space to express milk.

Hostile work environment

 Comments about your body, assumptions that you can’t do your job, pressure to ignore medical restrictions, or “jokes” about motherhood and commitment.

Retaliation

 Discipline or termination after requesting accommodations, reporting harassment, or taking protected leave.

Reasonable accommodations that often help

You do not need magic words to ask for help. A simple written request describing what you need and why is enough to start the process.

EEOC, TWC, and deadlines

Most pregnancy discrimination and retaliation claims must begin with a charge to the EEOC or the Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division. Deadlines can be short — as little as 180 days, and often up to 300 days in Texas. Other claims (like wage, leave, or contract issues) can have different timelines. Contact us quickly so we can protect your rights.

How we build your case

We move fast to secure evidence employers control.

What your recovery can include

We do not accept quick offers that ignore the full impact on your health, career, and family. We fight for every dollar you deserve.

What to do now

Why choose us

Focused advocacy

 We represent people, not corporations. Your goals guide our strategy from day one.

Resources to go the distance

 We secure the records and experts your case needs. Employers and insurers know we are ready for court.

Always trial-ready

 We prepare every case as if a jury will hear it. That preparation creates leverage in negotiations and strength in the courtroom.

Personal attention

 You work directly with our attorneys. You will always know what is happening and why.

Results that matter

 We pursue outcomes that restore financial stability, protect your reputation, and help you move forward.

Talk with a Fort Worth Pregnancy Discrimination Lawyer Today

You do not have to face this alone. The sooner you contact us, the sooner we can protect your rights and build the strongest case possible.

Call (817) 335-9700 or email us to schedule your free consultation. We’ll review your case, explain your rights, and outline the path to maximum compensation.

Serving Fort Worth, Arlington, North Richland Hills, Haltom City, and all of Tarrant County

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely on advertisements.