SUPREME COURT SLAPS WOMEN
June 27,
2007
The May 29 US Supreme Court ruling limiting the ability
of workers to sue companies for pay discrimination will
make it harder for workers to recover wages unfairly
denied them, experts say.
The 5–to–4 decision, written by Justice Samuel Alito,
dismissed a suit by Lilly Ledbetter, an employee for 19
years at a tire plant in Gadsden, Ala., who says she was
paid less than her male counterparts. The High Court
said she did not file her lawsuit against Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Co. within 180 days after the discrimination
occurred as required by Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964. A jury originally awarded Ledbetter more
than $3.5 million because it found that gender
discrimination led her to being paid less. An appeals
court reversed the ruling saying the law requires that a
suit be filed within 180 days.
Before the May 29 ruling, many courts allowed workers to
sue for pay discrimination years after the initial
discrimination because the courts considered each new
paycheck a new discriminatory act.
In
a strong dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the only
woman on the court, said the majority opinion “overlooks
common characteristics of pay discrimination.” She said
that given the secrecy in most workplaces about
salaries, many employees would have no idea within 180
days that they had received a lower raise than others.
The court’s decision is a “setback for women and a
setback for civil rights,” says Marcia Greenberger,
co-president of National Women’s Law Center.
“The ruling essentially says tough luck to employees who
don’t immediately challenge their employer’s
discriminatory acts, even if the discrimination
continues to the present time. Not only does the ruling
ignore the reality of pay discrimination, it also
cripples the law’s intent to address it, and undermines
the incentive for employers to prevent and correct it.”
In her dissent, Ginsburg invited Congress to change the
law to eliminate the 180-day rule, saying the ball is in
Congress’ court. Presidential candidate Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton says she plans to introduce such a bill.
Rep. George Miller, chairman of the House Education and
Labor Committee, agrees legislation is needed:
“This ruling will force Congress to clarify the law’s
intention that the ongoing effects of discriminatory
decisions are just as unacceptable as the decisions
themselves.”
While the ruling involved charges of gender
discrimination, according to The New York Times, some
experts say it could have broad ramifications in cases
involving discrimination because of race or national
origin, narrowing the legal options of many employees.
Some legal experts said the ruling would put pressure on
workers to file discrimination claims within 180 days
even when they are still seeking more conclusive
evidence that they were discriminated against.
As
James Brudney, a professor of labor and employment law
at Ohio State University, told The Times:
“Unless they notice it on the first paycheck or a recent
paycheck, they’re going to be in trouble.”