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HOUSE OKS PAYCHECK FAIRNESS ACT FOR FEMALE WORKERS
Friday, August 1, 2008
(PAI)HOUSE OKS PAYCHECK FAIRNESS ACT FOR FEMALE
WORKERS
WASHINGTON (PAI)--Turning back objections from
big business and yet another veto threat from
the anti-worker GOP Bush regime, the House July
31 passed the Paycheck Fairness Act, a bill
designed to put some teeth into federal equal
employment laws. The 247-178 vote saw 14
Republicans join all 233 Democrats in voting
yes. All the “no” votes came from the
GOP.
The measure (HR 1338), pushed for 11 years by
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and with the strong
support of the AFL-CIO and women’s rights
groups. It drew a blast from the National
Association of Manufacturers. NAM said
the 1962 law on the issue--which DeLauro’s
bill updates, is good enough.
NAM said it opposes pay discrimination abased
on sex, but warned lawmakers who voted for
equal pay that it would use the vote to
determine campaign contributions.
Bush’s Office of Management and Budget said
his senior advisors “would strongly
recommend” he veto HR 1338. They charge
it would open the way to unlimited lawsuits
over unequal pay. Senate Labor Committee
Chairman Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) praised
its passage, but did not say when his panel
would try to move
it.
The threats did not stop DeLauro or her allies
from pushing paycheck fairness.
The bill
“is about ensuring that women who work hard
and productively and carry a full range of
family responsibilities are paid at a rate they
are entitled,” DeLauro
said.
Rebutting the White House and big business,
DeLauro added “It is time to stand up for
working women and their families. We can do
that by,,, re-asserting the principle that
women and men should be paid the same when
doing the same work, and making it real by
allowing female employees to sue for
compensatory and punitive
damages.
DeLauro said her bill does not impose “the
arbitrary caps women face under Title VII” of
the Civil Rights Act. As amended by prior
GOP-run Congresses, those caps often put a
$300,000 limit on discrimination damages--small
change for companies that give woman workers
unequal
pay.
And DeLauro said her bill “protects employees
from retaliation for sharing salary information
with their co-workers, with some
exemptions.” Lack of data often hampers
victims of pay discrimination from finding out,
until years later, how much they lost to
it.
Aiming at Bush, DeLauro also said her bill
“does not eliminate key employer defenses
against claims of discrimination. It simply
makes clear that when an employer states that
its pay scale is informed by a ‘factor other
than sex,’ that must actually be true, and
not just an excuse to continue discriminatory
practices.” Kennedy and other lawmakers
have introduced a companion Senate bill.
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