discrimination

Fixing Our Criminal Injustice System

Two interrelated and unacceptable trends have emerged: warehousing over rehabilitation and bias over equal justice. The priorities that should drive our justice system—crime prevention, protection of the public, and fair treatment for all—have given way to the unwise and unequal approach of “prison-fits-all.” more »

Striving for Equality: An Honest Assessment

As the Bush administration files an optimistic report to the United Nations on the state of equal opportunity in America, a parallel report by independent experts documents the significant ways in which our government has fallen short in ensuring equal opportunity. more »

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Restore Workers' Ability to Fight Wage Discrimination

When the Supreme Court in 2007 ruled that an employee only had 180 days to file a wage discrimination complaint against an employer, it ignored the real-world realities of wage discrimination. In the case of Goodyear Tire employee Lilly Ledbetter, who brought her case to the Supreme Court, it took her years to learn that she was earning less than her male counterparts. Yet, she was denied a way to address the discrimination.

The Senate in January 2008 began considering a bill, the Fair Pay Restoration Act, which addresses the 180-day statute of limitations for employees to bring pay discrimination claims against their employers. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D. Mass., said that the legislation "gives workers a realistic opportunity to stop ongoing discrimination, and it holds firms accountable for violating the law." As Ledbetter herself put it when she testified before a Senate committee in January, the Senate should follow the lead of the House in passing the bill so that "so that our civil rights laws can once again offer effective protection against discrimination."