California
governor signs gender wage-gap bill
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[October 07, 2015]
By Curtis Skinner
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California
Governor Jerry Brown signed legislation on Tuesday aimed at closing the
wage gap between men and women, a law that supporters say is among the
strongest in the country.
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Brown signed the California Fair Pay Act in the San Francisco Bay
Area city of Richmond at the Rosie the Riveter National Historic
Park, which honors women who worked in factories during World War
Two.
"The inequities that have plagued our state and have burdened women
forever are slowly being resolved with this kind of bill," Brown, a
Democrat, said at the signing event.
The bill, authored by Democratic state Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson,
prohibits employees from facing retaliation for discussing their pay
rates at work.
It also allows workers to challenge disparities in pay between
people doing similar jobs or doing the same jobs at different work
sites for the same company.
"Today is a momentous day for California, and it is long overdue.
Equal pay isn’t just the right thing for women, it’s the right thing
for our economy and for California," Jackson said.
Brown's office said in a statement the bill was "among the strongest
in the nation" and received bipartisan support.
The California Chamber of Commerce initially opposed the bill, but
the business group said last week it ultimately came around because
the legislation created a "fair balance" for workers and employers.
In 2013, a woman working full time in California made about 84 cents
for every dollar a man earned, according to Equal Rights Advocates,
a gender justice group. Disparities were particularly stark for
Latina and African-American women, according to the group.
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It said roughly 1.75 million households in California are headed by
women, adding that the wage gap between the sexes costs families in
the state some $39 billion annually.
"The win here is undeniable. We think of 2015 as the year of fair
pay," Equal Rights Advocates Executive Director Noreen Farrell said
in a statement.
The bill was one of a package of reforms pushed by the state's
Legislative Women's Caucus, which also aimed to make workplace
scheduling more accommodating to families and increase aid to
infants and children. Those bills have not been passed.
President Barack Obama's administration has also made gender pay
discrimination a priority, signing in 2009 the Lilly Ledbetter Fair
Pay Act and taking executive actions on the issue last year.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Eric
Beech)
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