Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Senate to Vote on Equal-Pay Measure for Women
Senate to Vote on Equal-Pay Measure for Women It has been nearly half a century since Congress passed the Equal Pay Act of 1963. But that pesky pay gap between men and women persists â" and now thereâs actually something you can do about it. This Wednesday, the Senate is scheduled to hold a preliminary vote on the Paycheck Fairness Act, a bill that could put some teeth into the old Equal Pay Act by strengthening and updating many of its provisions. âMany people think that equal pay for equal work was something that was solved back in the â60s,â says Deborah Vagins, legislative counsel for the ACLUâs legislative office. âBut what weâve seen is that because of loopholes and weak remedies, itâs been less effective in combating wage discrimination than everyone had hoped.â This isnât some shaggy old feminist cause rearing its head. This is a live issue for American families, given that in nearly a third of households today, women are the primary breadwinners. And according to a nationwide survey of registered voters, more than 75% of Republicans, Democrats, men and women all said they supported the measure. The new bill has already passed the House, and if it gets the 60 votes necessary to avoid a filibuster this week, it could, possibly, pass the Senate and become law â" giving women stronger legal recourse when facing discriminatory pay. Do we really need a new law? Christina Hoff Sommers, a conservative scholar, argued against the bill recently in The New York Times. And a recent analysis of 2008 Census data showed that young, single, childless women were out-earning men by about 8% in most U.S. cities. But â" letâs face it â" thatâs a pretty small demographic. A September report from the General Accounting Government Accountability Office is more in line with what the average woman experiences: In 2007, female managers earned about 81 cents for every dollar earned by their male colleagues. Mothers earned 79 cents. Whatâs an under-earning gal to do? Let your Senator know that you wonât stand for this, thank you very much. Your daughters will thank you, too. Follow MONEY on Twitter.
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