As always, there are some EEOC cases that jumpy out at me when I review developments on that front. Below are a couple EEOC cases and settlements that caught my eye this month.
At the start of the month, the EEOC announced that Albertsons had agreed to pay $210,000.00 to settle a national origin discrimination suit brought against the company. According to the allegations, the company allowed a manager to harass Hispanic employees at one of its locations in California. The lawsuit went on to allege that the manager focused on employees that had limited English speaking abilities. This conduct is in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which prohibits discrimination on the basis of national origin.
Recently, Jet Propulsion Laboratory agreed to pay $10 million to resolve an age discrimination suit filed against the company. The suit alleged that the company systematically laid off employees over the age of 40 yet retained younger employees. Older employees were also allegedly passed over for rehire in favor of younger, less qualified employees. This alleged conduct is in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. It is worth recognizing that this was not a judgment awarded against Jet Propulsion by a judge or jury, but rather an agreed upon settlement to resolve the dispute. Whether the company could have (or would have) presented adverse witnesses to counter the age discrimination allegations is unclear (and something that will go unanswered as a result of this settlement.)
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