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Prior salary can't justify wage gap between men and women, U.S. appeals court rules Dolan, Maura . Los Angeles Times (Online) , Los Angeles: Tribune Interactive, LLC. Apr 9, 2018.
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ABSTRACT (ENGLISH) On Monday, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decided unanimously in Rizo’s favor, ruling employers may not
consider prior salaries in setting a person’s pay. The decision by an 11-judge en banc panel overturned a three-
judge panel’s decision last year against Rizo. In one of the concurrences, Judge M. Margaret McKeown, a
President Clinton appointee, said she agreed that prior salaries may reflect historical sex discrimination. FULL TEXT Aileen Rizo was sitting at a lunch table with other math consultants in 2012 when she learned that her employer
had just hired a man with less experience and education at a higher salary.
Rizo, then a math consultant for the Fresno County Office of Education, said the new hire made $13,000 a year
more than she did. When she asked management about the disparity, she was told her pay had been based on her
prior salary. She sued.
On Monday, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decided unanimously in Rizo’s favor, ruling employers may not
consider prior salaries in setting a person’s pay.
“I am just overjoyed,” Rizo, 43, said in an interview. “I have three daughters, and I know what I did will make the
world a better place for them. I wanted to make a difference.”
The decision by an 11-judge en banc panel overturned a three-judge panel’s decision last year against Rizo.
Written by Judge Stephen Reinhardt, who died late last month, Monday’s ruling said that allowing employers to
consider prior salaries in setting pay was “wholly inconsistent” with the federal Equal Pay Act, passed in 1963.
“The financial exploitation of working women embodied by the gender pay gap continues to be an embarrassing
reality of our economy,” wrote Reinhardt, a President Carter appointee who was dubbed the liberal lion of the
circuit courts.
Women still earn less than men, and the gap costs women more than $860 billion a year, he said.
“If money talks, the message to women costs more than ‘just’ billions: women are told they are not worth as much
as men,” Reinhardt wrote.
“Allowing prior salary to justify a wage differential perpetuates this message, entrenching in salary systems an
obvious means of discrimination,” he said.
The federal Equal Pay Act bars wage disparity except in cases of seniority, merit, quantity or quality of production
or “any other factor other than sex.”
The Fresno County Office of Education argued unsuccessfully that setting wages based on prior salaries came
under the last exception for a factor “other than sex.”
Reinhardt said Monday’s decision amounted to a “general rule” and did not determine whether past salary may
play a role in salary talks.
But several judges said in concurring opinions that the decision was overly broad.
Four complained that the majority had wrongly held that any consideration of prior pay was illegal, even when it
involved job-related factors. A fifth said employers should be able to consider past salaries as long as they did not
reflect sex discrimination.
In one of the concurrences, Judge M. Margaret McKeown, a President Clinton appointee, said she agreed that prior
salaries may reflect historical sex discrimination.
“But the majority goes too far in holding that any consideration of prior pay is ‘impermissible’ under the Equal Pay
Act, even when it is assessed with other job-related factors such as experience, education, past performance and
training,” wrote McKeown, who was joined by Judge Mary H. Murguia, a President Obama appointee.
McKeown warned that Monday’s “drastic holding” might impose liability on employers who even consider prior
salary in setting a wage.
“The Equal Pay Act should not be an impediment for employees seeking a brighter future and a higher salary at a
new job,” she wrote.
Attorneys on both sides of the case said that the decision would prevent employers from considering prior pay in
any context.
Michael Woods, an attorney for the Fresno County Superintendent of Schools, said the office plans to appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
The policy of basing pay on prior salaries applied to more than 3,000 employees over 17 years and had “no
disparate impact on female employees,” who make up a majority of staff and senior administrators in the county
office, Woods said.
The Fresno office stopped considering prior salary in 2016 in response to changes in California law, which now
says prior pay cannot be used to justify disparity in earnings.
Kevin Brunner, Rizo’s lawyer, called the decision “the exact precedent we were trying to set.”
“If you could use prior pay, you could never close the gender gap,” Brunner said.
Monday’s decision applies to nine Western states. California’s pay law, amended in part because of the Rizo case,
says pay differences based on race, sex or ethnicity may not be justified solely by prior salary.
Laurence Zakson, who represented guilds for makeup artists, hairstylists and costume designers as well as a
public employee union, said Monday’s ruling was important because the wage protections now extend beyond
California.
“My clients are extraordinarily pleased and think this is a major step forward toward getting the pay gap remedied,”
Zakson said.
Rizo, who is now a candidate for state Assembly, testified in Sacramento in favor of the recent changes to
California’s equal pay law.
Once the new state requirements took effect in 2016, she and other women working in the Fresno office received
pay raises, though they were not retroactive, Rizo said.
“For the last six months [at the office], I finally did get equal pay for equal work,” she said.
Basing pay on prior salary hurts many women, including those who take time off work to have or raise children, she
said.
Her lawsuit created tensions at work, and she always felt like “the elephant in the room,” she said. She resigned in
2016 and now works as a math researcher for a nonprofit organization.
The timing of the 9th Circuit decision “couldn’t be better,” she said. Tuesday is national Equal Pay Day.
Twitter: @mauradolan
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UPDATES:
4:25 p.m.: This article was updated with additional reaction and background.
12:30 p.m.: This article was updated with additional details from the decision.
This article was originally published at 11:35 a.m.
Credit: Maura Dolan
DETAILS
Database copyright 2019 ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved.
Subject: Gender pay gap; Employees; Wages &salaries; Women; Federal court decisions; Sex
discrimination; Litigation; Employers
Location: United States--US Sacramento California Western states Fresno County California
California
People: Murguia, Mary H Obama, Barack
Company / organization: Name: Twitter Inc; NAICS: 519130; Name: Supreme Court-US; NAICS: 922110
Publication title: Los Angeles Times (Online); Los Angeles
Publication year: 2018
Publication date: Apr 9, 2018
Section: Local - Lanow
Publisher: Tribune Interactive, LLC
Place of publication: Los Angeles
Country of publication: United States, Los Angeles
Publication subject: General Interest Periodicals--United States
Source type: Blogs, Podcasts, &Websites
Language of publication: English
Document type: News
ProQuest document ID: 2023431393
Document URL: http://0-
search.proquest.com.wizard.umd.umich.edu/docview/2023431393?accountid=1457
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Copyright: Copyright Tribune Interactive, LLC Apr 9, 2018
Last updated: 2018-04-10
Database: Global Newsstream
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- Prior salary can't justify wage gap between men and women, U.S. appeals court rules