WorkplaceHorizons.com, a publication of Kilpatrick Stockton LLP, monitors legal trends affecting employment relationships. The site maintains a watch list (see side panel) of proposed legislation and emerging issues to provide insight into what’s happening and what may happen in workplace regulation.
Entries in Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (2)
New report claims workplace bills would kill jobs
Congressional Republican leaders today unveiled a new website and report entitled: “Death by a Thousand Cuts: Democrats’ War on American Jobs,” which it describes as “a new report cataloging a Democratic agenda that threatens millions of U.S. jobs and family budgets at a time when many Americans are grappling with the rising cost of living and record tax burdens.”
The 58-page report covers a host of issues, such as tax increases and spending measures, that the authors contend will cripple an already “vulnerable economy.” It also makes clear the positions of the Republican leadership on a number of bills on the WorkplaceHorizons.com Watch List.
New Focus on Eliminating Pay Discrimination
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., pundits, academics and advocates have reacted swiftly and loudly -- calling for an overhaul of current pay related statutes. Professors Joanna Grossman and Deborah Brake, for example, have called not only for changes in Title VII relating to the statute of limitations on pay discrimination claims, but also for extending the statute of limitations for any Title VII claim to two years and eliminating the caps on damages that can be awarded in Title VII actions.
Congress has responded with a spate of proposed legislation aimed at overhauling significant portions of the FLSA, Title VII and other civil rights statutes. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the Paycheck Fairness Act and the Fair Pay Act of 2007 (Norton Act) are all specifically aimed at curing the perceived deficiencies of existing pay related legislation. In addition, Senator Kennedy has proposed the Equal Remedies Act, which seeks to eliminate all of the damage caps contained in Section 1981a. In short, passage of all or some of this legislation represents a significant change in the nature and litigation of pay discrimination claims.





