Senate Committee Hears Testimony on Need for Fair Pay Legislation (1/24/2008)
ACLU applauds Senator Kennedy for making employment protections
a civil rights priority
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions committee
held a hearing today on S. 1843, the "Fair Pay Restoration Act," which would
ensure that victims of workplace discrimination receive effective remedies. The
bill’s companion measure, H.R. 2831, passed the House of Representatives in
July, 2007. The ACLU urges the committee to support S. 1843 in order to fix a
recent Supreme Court decision that undermines protections against discrimination
in compensation that have been bedrock principles of civil rights laws for
decades.
Testifying at the hearing was Lilly Ledbetter, the woman at the center of
last year’s Supreme Court decision Ledbetter v. Goodyear, in which the
5-4 majority held that workers cannot sue for the later effects of past wage
discrimination. Ms. Ledbetter was the victim of pay discrimination during her
nearly twenty years of employment at Goodyear Tire, but the Supreme Court
decided she did not have a valid claim because she hadn’t filed her complaint
within 180 days of Goodyear’s initial discriminatory pay decision. Not only was
it not immediately apparent to her when the pay discrimination began, but her
employer kept it secret, willfully preventing her from gathering the information
necessary to file a complaint within 180 days.
"The Fair Pay Restoration Act will ensure employers aren’t let off the hook
because they’re able to keep unfair pay decisions hidden from their workers,"
said Deborah J. Vagins, ACLU Policy Counsel for Civil Rights. "Correcting the
Ledbetter decision would restore Congress’ legislative intent, as well as
the commonsense law that prevailed before the Supreme Court’s ruling. This
legislation reaffirms a fundamental principle of our civil rights protections –
providing justice to individuals who have suffered because of unlawful
employment practices. Responsible employers know that discrimination hurts their
bottom line because businesses thrive on the talent and creativity that a fairly
treated workforce provides."
"This bill is a modest and logical fix to an ongoing civil rights problem,"
continued Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office. "American workers should know that they are protected from wage
discrimination and are able to challenge such discrimination when they discover
it. There should be no benefit to employers in keeping pay discrimination
hidden. The ACLU thanks Chairman Kennedy and Ranking Member Enzi for holding
this hearing, and strongly urges the committee to support this legislation."
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