Guaranteeing the Rights of Every American Worker

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Today, the Senate may finally vote on a bill named after me which will restore the ability for average Americans to file pay discrimination cases under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other laws.

I've been struggling with this issue of pay discrimination for a long time. I was subjected to close to 20 years of pay discrimination at Goodyear. I spent years litigating to get the remedies a jury said I deserved. After the Supreme Court took away my right to sue, I testified [pdf] in front of Congress on the need to fix their decision.

In the year since that decision, I've crisscrossed the nation speaking of the impact it will have on the lives of millions of workers. Now that we are so close to a vote in the Senate, I've spent the past two days explaining - to Senators, to the media, to the public as a whole -- that a vote for this bill is a vote for the rights of every American worker.

I've told my story.

I also make the point that this bill merely restores the law to what it was before the Supreme Court ruled in my case. It's modest. The Supreme Court is the entity that so drastically reversed precedent.

Previously, every check after a discriminatory pay decision was considered an instance of discrimination. This makes a lot of sense, since the impact of pay discrimination is felt every single time you get a check with less money than you deserve. But the Court's ruling reverses this familiar and sensible rule and makes it practically impossible for people subject to pay discrimination to protect their rights.

At Goodyear, I didn't know anything about what the other male managers were making until I got an anonymous note telling me about their salaries. I went right into the EEOC after that to protest the discrimination, but according to the Supreme Court, I got the information I needed too late.

It wasn't till I filed the case that I got a full picture of just how much less I was making. At the end of my career with Goodyear, I was earning about $3700 per month, which is about 20 percent less than the lowest paid male supervisor in the same position.

This simply wasn't fair. But the Supreme Court believes that people like me should have to live with continuing discrimination if they don't immediately challenge it.

That rule doesn't reflect American values. And it doesn't value Americans' opinions either. Poll after poll has shown that equal pay for equal work continues to be the highest priority women's issue around.

This is the week of Equal Pay Day, on which we highlight the continuing pay disparities between men and women. Without the passage of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, we could be looking at continuing discrimination against women and minorities, seniors and Americans with disabilities. That is simply too high a price to pay.

The Senate has a chance to do what the House did last summer and rectify a great wrong. The Senate should make it plain in the law that each check after a discriminatory pay decision counts as an instance of discrimination. That rule would recognize that pay decisions are made in secret, that salaries are not widely known, and that the cumulative effect of pay discrimination can be great if it goes unnoticed. And it would restore the ability for average Americans to remedy discrimination.

If we're serious about making equal pay a reality, this is a critical first step.

 
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I'm so sorry all of us lost this one. Some day gender and race won't be what Republicans use to discriminate against people, even in the area of wages, but we're not there yet.

And I have heard barely a peep about this from the media. They're too obsessed with the horserace to care about real issues that actually affect people's lives.
Keep fighting!

And "true blue america", I'm guessing you're a white male. That means you don't know what discrimination is, so shut the frack up. Every white male that allows wage discrimination to continue without fighting against it loses their right to be treated politely by millions of us who have endured discrimination.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 AM on 04/25/2008
- tjntn I'm a Fan of tjntn 5 fans permalink
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True Blue American tells us "how it works". He ignores the fact that a number of laws are in place to protect abuse by employers and until the Bush-appointed Supreme Court made the 5-4 decision that someone has to file within 180 days (even if they don't know about the wage discrimination until later), there were effective protections in place against wage discrimination based upon gender. Without such laws, children would be working in sweat shops, there would be no minimum wage, and various minorities (we can only hope radical right wing Republicans will soon fit that category) would be legally discriminated in home purchases, hiring practices, and wages. But we do have laws that help to prevent that sort of injustice and THATS HOW IT WORKS in the United States. You don't like it True Blue American? Go find a plutocracy somewhere to live in.

The Republicans today blocked the Lilly Ledbetter legislation. Remember when Republicans whined about the Dems not allowing legislation to come to a vote. The vote on the floor would be 56-42 in favor but the Republicans can block it because of the 3/5 rule for a vote. Let me make this clear, both sides have a right to block votes because that's the way the Senate rules are set up. And we all have a right to make sure that after the 2008 election, the Republicans will not have enough Senate seats to ever do it again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 04/24/2008
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Great, another bill which will be abused. The french fry guy deserves at least 30,000 a year also.This is how it works- you come into an agreement with your employer on your wage or salary. Each year you get a raise or negotiate a new agreement. If you don't like it , quit and get another job. Cry baby!! Please don't break your arm patting yourself on the back.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 04/23/2008
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