Jody Blanke, Professor - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Jody Blanke, Professor

Description:

Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta * Title VII It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer - to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: blanke
Learn more at: http://ssbea.mercer.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Jody Blanke, Professor


1
Title VII
  • Jody Blanke, Professor
  • Computer Information Systems and Law
  • Mercer University, Atlanta

2
Title VII
  • It shall be an unlawful employment practice for
    an employer -
  • to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any
    individual, or otherwise to discriminate against
    any individual with respect to his compensation,
    terms, conditions, or privileges of employment
    because of such individuals race, color,
    religion, sex, or national origin or
  • To limit, segregate, or classify his employees or
    applicants for employment in any way which would
    deprive or tend to deprive any individual of
    employment opportunities or otherwise adversely
    affect his status as an employee, because of such
    individuals race, color, religion, sex, or
    national origin. Title VII of the Civil Rights
    Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. sec. 2000e
    et seq., sec. 703(a)

3
Title VII
  • Prohibits discrimination on the basis of
  • Race
  • Color
  • Gender
  • Religion
  • National origin

4
Title VII
  • For purposes of making decisions regarding
  • Hiring
  • Firing
  • Training
  • Discipline
  • Compensation
  • Benefits
  • Classification
  • Other terms or conditions of employment

5
Title VII
  • Applies to all public (federal, state and local)
    and private employers with 15 or more employees
  • Covers all levels of employees (managerial and
    hourly)
  • Exemption - permits religious institutions and
    associations to discriminate when performing
    their activities
  • Petruska v. Gannon University, p.78

6
Filing Claims under Title VII
  • Employee files a claim with the EEOC
  • EEOC notifies the employer
  • Title VII includes antiretaliatory provisions
  • Mediation
  • EEOC investigation
  • No-Reasonable-Cause Finding
  • EEOC issues employee a right-to-sue letter
  • Exhaustion of administrative remedies
  • Reasonable-Cause Finding
  • Conciliation
  • Civil suit filed in federal district court

7
Filing Claims under Title VII
  • In 2007, there were 82,792 charges filed with the
    EEOC
  • 12.2 were settled
  • 17.8 were closed
  • e.g., failure to pursue claim
  • 59.3 resulted in findings of no reasonable cause
  • 5.0 resulted in findings of reasonable cause
  • the EEOC was successful in 91.5 of its litigation

8
State Agencies
  • Many state and local agencies often contract with
    the EEOC to become a 706 agency. These
    agencies can process EEOC claims. The EEOC will
    often defer a complaint to a 706 agency before
    investigating the matter itself.
  • Georgia Fair Employment Practices Act of 1978
    protects public employees in Georgia, O.C.G.A
    45-19-20 et seq.

9
Theoretical Bases for Title VII Lawsuits
  • Disparate Treatment
  • Disparate Impact

10
Disparate Treatment
  • Employees Prima Facie Case
  • Employee is a member of the class of persons
    protected by Title VII,
  • Employee applied for and was qualified for a job
    for which the employer was seeking applicants,
  • That despite these qualifications, employee was
    rejected, and
  • After this rejection, the position remained open
    and the employer continued to seek applicants
    with those same qualifications.

11
Disparate Treatment
  • Employers Defense
  • Employer can defend by showing that it had a
    legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its
    decision.
  • Employees Counter
  • Employee must prove that the grounds offered by
    the employer were merely a pretext for its
    actions and that discrimination was the real
    reason.
  • McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, p. 89
  • Black civil rights activist protested after being
    laid off and was not rehired when new position
    became available. Supreme Court remanded case to
    give Green a chance to prove pretext.

12
Disparate Treatment
  • Employer may defend by showing that there is a
    bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ) that
    is reasonably necessary to the employers
    business
  • Available only in cases involving gender,
    religion and national origin (not for race or
    color)
  • The basis for preferring one group over another
    goes to the essence of what the employer is in
    business to do
  • Predominant attributes of the group discriminated
    against are inconsistent with that business

13
Disparate Treatment
  • BFOQ examples
  • Airlines and bus companies can have maximum age
    requirements
  • Airlines cannot hire only females as flight
    attendants
  • Wilson v. Southwest Airlines, p. 92
  • Playboy can hire only females as Playboy Bunny
    servers
  • Essence of business male entertainment
  • Hooters cannot hire only females as Hooters
    servers
  • Essence of business serving spicy chicken wings

14
Disparate Impact
  • Discrimination can be established by proving that
    an employment practice, although neutral on its
    face, disproportionately affects a protected
    group in a negative way.
  • Courts have determined the that the following
    screening devices have a disparate impact
  • Educational requirement race, e.g., Griggs v.
    Duke Power, p. 94
  • Credit status gender, race
  • Arrest record race
  • Unwed pregnancy gender, race
  • Height and weight requirements gender, national
    origin
  • Marital status gender
  • Conviction of crime unrelated to job performance
    - race

15
Disparate Impact
  • The Four-Fifths Rule is a rule of thumb that
    permits a 20 margin between the outcomes of the
    majority and the minority under a given screening
    device
  • i.e., disparate impact is statistically
    demonstrated when the rate for a protected group
    is less than 80 (or four-fifths) of the higher
    scoring majority group
  • Employer can rebut the employees prima facie
    case by showing the existence of a business
    necessity
  • e.g., requirement of credit history may result in
    fewer women hired, but handling large sums of
    money may warrant credit check
  • Employee would then have to prove that there is a
    means of addressing the issue that has less of an
    adverse impact
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com