Bill seeks to enforce federal anti-discrimination standards in state law
Send a link to a friend
[March 04, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – In response to a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision
restricting the ability of people to recover damages in federal court
for certain discrimination claims, Democrats in the Illinois House are
pushing a bill to allow the recovery of those damages in state court.
House Bill 2248, dubbed the “Civil Rights Remedies Restoration Act,”
passed out of a House committee on Wednesday and is now awaiting action
by the full House.
The bill comes in response to the U. S. Supreme Court’s ruling last year
in the case of Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller PLLC. In a 6-3 decision
along ideological lines, the court held that a plaintiff cannot recover
emotional distress damages in cases against private companies or
organizations that aim to enforce either the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
or the Affordable Care Act, both of which prohibit recipients of federal
funds from engaging in discrimination.
The case involved a federally funded rehabilitation center in Texas that
refused to provide a sign language interpreter to a deaf and legally
blind patient who had asked for one.
For decades, Congress has built into laws governing many federal
programs provisions that say recipients of funds under those programs
may not discriminate based on protected categories such as race, age,
gender, religion or disability.
“For the last 50 years, the federal government has had a deal that if
you receive federal funds, you cannot discriminate on the basis of
disability,” Charles Petrof, senior attorney for Access Living, which is
pushing the bill, said during committee testimony. “And last year in
April, the Supreme Court upended that deal with the Cummings decision.”
In addition to the Rehabilitation Act and the Affordable Care Act,
similar provisions are found in the Americans with Disabilities Act, the
Age Discrimination Act of 1975, Title IX of the Education Amendments Act
of 1972, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
One of the main methods of enforcing those provisions has been the
ability of people who believe they’ve been discriminated against to sue
and collect compensation for damages – both actual, monetary damages and
noneconomic damages such as “emotional distress.” But with the Cummings
decision, Petrof said, those antidiscrimination standards have become
almost unenforceable.
[to top of second column]
|
Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, and
Charles Petrof, senior attorney for Access Living, testify before a
House committee this week in favor of House Bill 2248. (Capitol News
Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
“What’s sort of unique in the Cummings decision is that the Supreme
Court is taking away rights in a very wonky way,” Petrof said during a
separate interview. “It leaves the rights on the books; it just makes it
practically impossible to enforce them.”
Another enforcement option available to the federal government is to
disqualify a service provider from participating in a program and deny
them federal funding. But Petrof described that as “a nuclear option”
that is rarely ever used.
Under the proposed bill, violations of those federal antidiscrimination
standards would also become violations of Illinois state law, and
Illinois plaintiffs would be able to sue in state court and collect a
minimum of $4,000 in damages for each violation.
Petrof said other states, including California and Florida, have adopted
similar legislation making state courts available for enforcement of
federal antidiscrimination standards, especially in the area of
disability access to public accommodations.
The bill’s sponsors include five members of the House Progressive
Caucus, including its chief sponsor Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago. But
the unanimous vote in the House Immigration and Human Rights Committee
on Wednesday indicates it may have bipartisan support in the full House.
For Cassidy, pushing back against decisions of the majority-conservative
Supreme Court is nothing new. She also has led a working group of
lawmakers crafting state responses to the high court’s decision last
summer in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the decision
that overturned Roe v. Wade and concluded there is no federal
constitutional right to abortion.
In an interview after Wednesday’s committee hearing, Cassidy said if the
court continues to chip away at other longstanding legal precedents and
protections, there could be more state-level legislation to keep those
protections in place in Illinois.
“I think that everybody’s looking at these workarounds, right?” she
said. “My Dobbs working group is completely about that. So it wouldn’t
surprise me.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation. |