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Walmart Sex Bias Suit Heads To Supreme Court

Walmart Sexism

By MARK SHERMAN   03/28/11 08:27 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Christine Kwapnoski hasn't done too badly in nearly 25 years in the Wal-Mart family, making more than $60,000 a year in a job she enjoys most days.

But Kwapnoski says she faced obstacles at Wal-Mart-owned Sam's Club stores in both Missouri and California: Men making more than women and getting promoted faster.

She never heard a supervisor tell a man, as she says one told her, to "doll up" or "blow the cobwebs off" her make-up.

Once she got over the fear that she might be fired, she joined what has turned into the largest job discrimination lawsuit ever.

The 46-year-old single mother of two is one of the named plaintiffs in a suit that will be argued at the Supreme Court on Tuesday. At stake is whether the suit can go forward as a class action that could involve 500,000 to 1.6 million women, according to varying estimates, and potentially could cost the world's largest retailer billions of dollars.

But the case's potential importance goes well beyond the Wal-Mart dispute, as evidenced by more than two dozen briefs filed by business interests on Wal-Mart's side, and civil rights, consumer and union groups on the other.

The question is crucial to the viability of discrimination claims, which become powerful vehicles to force change when they are presented together, instead of individually. Class actions increase pressure on businesses to settle suits because of the cost of defending them and the potential for very large judgments.

Columbia University law professor John Coffee said that the high court could bring a virtual end to employment discrimination class actions filed under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, depending on how it decides the Wal-Mart case.

"Litigation brought by individuals under Title VII is just too costly," Coffee said. "It's either class action or nothing."

Illustrating the value of class actions, Brad Seligman, the California-based lawyer who conceived of and filed the suit 10 years ago, said the average salary for a woman at Wal-Mart was $13,000, about $1,100 less than the average for a man, when the case began. "That's hugely significant if you're making $13,000 a year, but not enough to hire a lawyer and bring a case."

The company has fought the suit every step of the way, Seligman said, because it is the "biggest litigation threat Wal-Mart has ever faced."

A trial judge and the federal appeals court in San Francisco, over a fierce dissent, said the suit could go forward.

But Wal-Mart wants the high court to stop the suit in its tracks. The company argues it includes too many women with too many different positions in its 3,400 stores across the country. Wal-Mart says its policies prohibit discrimination and that most management decisions are made at the store and regional levels, not at its Bentonville, Ark., headquarters.

Theodore J. Boutrous, Wal-Mart's California-based lawyer, said there is no evidence that women are poorly treated at Wal-Mart. "The evidence is the contrary of that," Boutrous said.

The company is not conceding that any woman has faced discrimination, but says that if any allegations are proven, they are isolated. "People will make errors," said Gisel Ruiz, Wal-Mart's executive vice president for people, as the company calls its human resources unit. "People are people."

Ruiz paints a very different picture of the opportunities offered women at Wal-Mart. She joined the company straight from college in 1992. "In less than four years, I went from an assistant manager trainee to running my own store," she said. "I'm one of thousands of women who have had a positive experience at Wal-Mart."

Kwapnoski, who works at the Sam's Club in Concord, Calif., is one of two women who continue to work at Wal-Mart while playing a prominent role in the suit. The other is Betty Dukes, a greeter at the Wal-mart in Pittsburg, Calif.

"It's very hard for anyone to understand how difficult that is and what courage that is," Seligman said of Kwapnoski and Dukes. "They're Public Enemy No. 1 at Wal-Mart and they are known for their involvement in this lawsuit. Nevertheless, they get and up and go to work every day."

Kwapnoski didn't want to discuss any issues she faces at work as a result of the suit.

She said she has seen some changes at Wal-Mart since the suit was filed in 2001. The company now posts all its openings electronically. "It does give people a better idea of what's out there, but they still can be very easily passed over." she said. "But before you didn't even know the position was open."

The suit, citing what are now dated figures from 2001, contends that women are grossly underrepresented among managers, holding just 14 percent of store manager positions compared with more than 80 percent of lower-ranking supervisory jobs that are paid by the hour. Wal-Mart responds that women in its retail stores made up two-thirds of all employees and two-thirds of all managers in 2001.

Kwapnoski said she and a lot of women were promoted into management just after the suit was filed, although she has had only a couple of pay increases in the nine years since. She is the assistant manager in her store's groceries and produce sections.

Now, she said, promotions are back to the way they were before, favoring men over women.

She said she's hoping the long-running court fight will force Wal-Mart to recognize that, stories like Ruiz's aside, women are not valued as much as men are and that her bosses will begin to "make sure that good men and good women are being promoted, not just men."

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WASHINGTON -- Christine Kwapnoski hasn't done too badly in nearly 25 years in the Wal-Mart family, making more than $60,000 a year in a job she enjoys most days. But Kwapnoski says she faced obstacle...
WASHINGTON -- Christine Kwapnoski hasn't done too badly in nearly 25 years in the Wal-Mart family, making more than $60,000 a year in a job she enjoys most days. But Kwapnoski says she faced obstacle...
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04:43 PM on 04/11/2011
Just another attack on Corporate America (Capitalism) by left-wing socialist leeches disguised as a sex bias case... same phony nonsense from the left! Ginsburg probably the only one that will be fooled!
Layman23
Do we want to live in the past?
08:20 PM on 03/29/2011
Didnt Scalia say recently that nowhere in the constitution it says that women and men are equals.

Win win for Wal Mart.
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jefe
liberal at large
12:03 PM on 03/29/2011
SC will be a rubber stamp for walmart : (
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thelazypaperboy
11:42 AM on 03/29/2011
Watch what's going on under Justice Thomas's robe. He might be the schwing vote ...

http://www.jrdeputyaccountant.com/2011/03/tlp-too-many-women-lets-ask-justice.html
11:02 AM on 03/29/2011
Walmart already won if this lawsuit is headed to this GOP heavily weighted court.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ztck5356
When in doubt, Google it.
08:43 AM on 03/29/2011
Ladies, go to Target for a while. Their prices are competitive. Also, K-Mart's prices are very competitive. Just break the old Walmart habit. I've been boycotting Wal-mart for years!! If all the ladies would do this for one year, they would be singing a different tune. We shop there and they discriminate against us? Really? How stupid are we?
10:47 AM on 03/29/2011
I love Target, but the anti-LGTBQ thing is so off-putting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ztck5356
When in doubt, Google it.
08:41 AM on 03/29/2011
Women make up the biggest percent of the workforce now. Yet, they continue to be discriminated against on every level of employment. Women have POWER! Just boycot Walmart ladies. It's not that hard. Bring them to their knees. Stop being doormats for Corporate America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flyr1710
04:40 AM on 03/29/2011
Once this got to the supreme court the plaintiffs do not have a chance. No way this court that is paid off by business rules in favor for the women
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
04:07 AM on 03/29/2011
It has been 88 years since Alice Paul wrote the original ERA. Then 39 years ago, the Equal Rights Amendment was introduced for ratification. Some states made no attempt to ratify it: Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Utah, Arizona and North Carolina. Some ratified it and then rescinded. Others passed it.
It is time to ratify the EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT.
The U.S. Dept of Labor's statistics just released information on the new jobs filled in 2010. Nine of every ten jobs were filled by men. This is ignoring the fact that many women are now heads of household and have family to support. MEN RECEIVED 9 out of 10 positions!
In the 21st century, men would have us ask for their permission to practice birth control and put us at a disadvantage for being able to afford it. The bias, whether it is covering erectile dysfunction pills with Medicare but not birth control. This asinine war of requiring a 3 day waiting period (when you've thought about nothing else for weeks) before a medical procedure, has become a circus that once had the dignity of patient-doctor privilege. However it has become an opportunity for the "hall monitor" to vicariously "look up the skirts" of women to inspect them, for what? Their own titillation.
PASS-------THE-----EQUAL------RIGHTS-------AMENDMENT-----------
We are not 3 / 5's of a person.
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CompliantMedia
Enjoy the little things in life.
03:51 AM on 03/29/2011
Based on what was written by the 9th Circuit justices after the 6-5 appellate court ruling in favor of the plaintiffs here are the issues that are likely to be argued before the SCOTUS regrading class action certification.

Arguing for the majority, Judge Michael Daly Hawkins said the company’s policies and treatment of women were similar enough that a single lawsuit was both efficient and appropriate. He added that the six women who represent the class, four of whom have left Wal-Mart, had claims typical of the other plaintiffs. (I would like to know how many other plaintiffs. The entire country?)

Representing Wal-Mart's side Chief Judge Alex Kozinski wrote, “But the half-million members of the majority’s approved class held a multitude of jobs, at different levels of Wal-Mart’s hierarchy, for variable lengths of time, in 3,400 stores, sprinkled across 50 states, with a kaleidoscope of supervisors (male and female).”
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My only point would be that if in 2001 less than one third of Wal-Mart's managers were women from a pool of employees that is 70%-80% women, does this not weaken Wal-Mart's attempt to argue that a small group of women who began the lawsuit 10 years ago CANNOT represent a huge nationwide class of current and former employees that could total millions of women.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
03:35 AM on 03/29/2011
maybe if women everywhere boycotted Wal Mart, even just for one month, it would send a huge message to them? I doubt they would care though, but its worth a try. We have to do something.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
03:33 AM on 03/29/2011
the ivy greed stacked court will side with walmart. Then, within a year of so, they will hear the case soon to be heard in the Missouri Supreme court, The so called, " Enterprise Law" Because it was written and is being bought and paid for and pushed by those nice people at Enterprise Rent A Car. It removes Whistle Blower Protection for employees who narc on companies planning to break the law. So basically , it would be too late before they could tell the authorities, or they would face not only the wrath of the companies, but could face huge damaging legal cases too, which would send messages to others not to tell on things they see in a company, or they too can lose everything.
Imtellingg you, its the end of workers rights, worker safety, and fair paying jobs. The top 1% is totally in control now, and they are the ivy greed capitalist who are totally dismantling everything that made our country great for their own personal power and profit. Bend over, its coming hard to you and no k y or anything. I use to think we still had time to stop them. But nowI'mm wondering if its to late ?
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
10:40 AM on 03/29/2011
I don't disagree with your outlook regarding corporate greed, but repeating ivy greed like a mantra is revealing a pretty strong anti-intellectual bias--you're painting a whole lot of people who are adamantly against the things you're talking about with the same brush, and it's not really fair...
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Big Richard
Stuck in the middle with you
05:34 PM on 03/29/2011
"you'­re painting a whole lot of people who are adamantly against the things you're talking about with the same brush"

Then, why don't we hear from them? I'll wait.............................Still waiting!
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exile
01:10 AM on 03/29/2011
big fail in the supreme court
after thomas votes to continue sex bias
and the rest vote to let a big company
continue to do as they please
its a done deal.
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Birdman
10:01 PM on 03/28/2011
I know many recent labor law changes in California were as a direct result of abuses by WalMart.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
09:57 PM on 03/28/2011
class action for 1/2 of the population with thousands of stores is ridiculous....this means that some women were discriminated by women......there are women store and department managers....class action for each store would make sense but not the whole country....and i agree that wal mart just like most of every other corporate environment in the world does discriminate. it is life, and not fair.
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CompliantMedia
Enjoy the little things in life.
04:05 AM on 03/29/2011
The plaintiff's attorneys will argue that Wal-Mart manages its operations and employment practices in a highly uniform and centralized manner.

I am not saying that this will persuade the majority of our conservative SCOTUS. But I do think this is an argument that will be made.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
11:35 AM on 03/29/2011
i am sure they will argue it well...but to put that many employees under 1 umbrella is far reaching.