Dating danger? Businesses rethink workplace romance policies

FILE- In this 2014 file photo provided by Ashley M. Hunter and HM Risk Group, LLC, Hunter poses for a photo in Dallas. Hunter’s dating policy rules out relationships between her eight staffers and vendors of HM Risk Group, an insurance company based in Austin, Texas. “If you’re in a billion-dollar business, you can weather those problems, but I can’t,” she says. (Lester O. Hunter/Courtesy of Ashley Hunter and HM Risk Group, LLC via AP)

This undated photo provided by R. Couri Hay Creative Public Relation shows Marianne Bertuna, right and Arthur Aidala. Bertuna was an intern and then an associate in Aidala’s small New York law firm, starting in 1997. Aidala was attracted to her, but told himself, “This is a work person and nothing is going to happen.” The couple got married in 2016. (Patrick McMullan/R. Couri Hay Creative Public Relations via AP)

NEW YORK — It happens in so many workplaces — two colleagues begin a romantic relationship. But a heightened awareness about sexual harassment means small business owners can get more anxious when employees start dating.