Tag: Equal Pay Act

Trial Lawyer Paycheck Inflation Act

The Senate HELP Committee this Thursday will hold a hearing on the Paycheck Fairness Act. While this bill’s title gives the casual observer the sense that it will prevent discrimination in pay, in reality it only promotes more litigation. In the process, the legislation creates tremendous uncertainty for employers who are struggling to create and retain jobs in these trying economic conditions.

This legislation will be a boon to the trial bar by allowing unlimited punitive damages and larger class action suits against employers under the Equal Pay Act. Because the Equal Pay Act is a strict-liability statute, plaintiffs’ attorneys don’t even need to demonstrate an employer’s intent to do harm to file a suit. If passed into law the Paycheck Fairness Act would force employers to second-guess every pay decision that they make.

In addition, the bill eliminates key employer affirmative defenses when presented with such claims. Just last year EEOC data shows that fewer than 5 percent of discrimination claims actually had legal grounds behind them. What does this mean? Even though a case may not have grounds, it forces employers to mount expensive defenses themselves against such claims. As The Washington Post when they rightfully pointed out that this legislation “risks tilting the scales too far against employers and would remove, rather than restore, a sense of balance.”

While illegal discrimination has no place in today’s workplaces, this legislation will not address those issues. Discrimination on the basis of gender is already illegal. The legislation does not make discrimination any more against the law, it simply opens up the judicial process to more civil lawsuits based on equal pay claims. Who benefits? Not the worker, the lawyers

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The NAM Key Vote Letter on H.R. 11, H.R. 12

The NAM sent the following Key Vote letter to the House of Representatives yesterday expressing opposition to H.R. 11, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, and H.R. 12, the Paycheck Fairness Act.
Key Votes are used in the NAM’s ranking of Congressional members’ voting record on manufacturing issues.

Dear Representatives:The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), the nation’s largest industrial trade association representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states, urges you to oppose H.R. 11, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, and H.R. 12, the Paycheck Fairness Act, because this legislation could be harmful to the economy and jobs.

Manufacturers are strongly committed to equal employment opportunity and support vigorous enforcement of anti-discrimination laws. As employers, we are dedicated to fairness in hiring, compensation and job advancement for all employees. Unfortunately, these bills will do little to prevent unlawful discrimination but would invite unwarranted and costly litigation against employers at a time when businesses are struggling.

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