House Approves Twin Measures
Monday, January 19th, 2009On January 9, the House marked its first week of the new session by approving two measures designed to prevent wage discrimination. Both measures are under review by the Senate and are reportedly supported by President-Elect Barak Obama.
The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act passed 247-171 and is now before the Senate. On January 15, the Senate has voted to end discussion and is expected to pass the bill shortly.
The Fair Pay Act would essentially remove the statute of limitations on wage discrimination claims, resetting the clock with each subsequent pay- or pension- check. The act would reverse the U.S. Supreme Court’s May 2007 decision which held claims to state limitations (either 180 or 300 days) from the first instance of the discriminatory action—whether or not the employee was aware of the discrimination.
The Paycheck Fairness Act passed the House 256-163 and is also before the Senate. It requires employees to demonstrate that wage disparities are based on job performance, experience, education, or other bona fide business purposes. For the purposes of determining discrimination, it allows comparisons to be made between different physical locations. It also prohibits retaliation against employees who share salary information and allows employees to seek compensatory and punitive damages for violating equal pay laws.
Opposition
Opponents argue the Paycheck Fairness Act goes too far in exposing employers to damages, leading more employers to settle cases even when no discrimination occurred. They also argue that it limits standard pay practices such as regional market rates and prior salary history.
They also argue that the Fair Pay Act goes beyond reasonable limitations, exposing companies to nearly un-ending responsibility for pay decisions made by prior management for which no witnesses or records may be available. They say the legislation, as written, could also allow descendants and family to bring wage discrimination suits—even after the employee is deceased.
Posted by Jaime.