Karla's Musings

Equal Pay On Obama’s Crack Down List

In the January 2010 State of the Union address, Obama said his administration will focus on equal pay saying “we’re going to crack down on violations of equal pay laws — so that women get equal pay for an equal day’s work.” 

When I heard that I wondered what law requires equal for an equal day’s work?  What new standard is this?  Does this mean if you work eight hours you get the same pay regardless of responsibility level, performance outputs, experience, skill and knowledge factors, or working conditions, or even seniority?  The above factors are all legal and bona fide contributors to differences in pay.  Never have we used “equal day’s work”. 

Probably Obama just read the teleprompter wrong. 

Seriously though — we hear that there is a new task force established called “National Equal Pay Enforcement Task Force” so employers will want to find out what that is all about. 

As a consultant to employers on pay equity issues for many years I have found that employers want to pay equal pay for equal work, regardless of gender.  It is not in their interest to do otherwise.  Employers can use various job evalulation approaches to help them build an internal equity pay structure that pays employees based on legally compensable factors. 

Politicians and alarmists like to claim that women get paid 77.7% of what men do.  Senator Tom Harkin recently touted out that statistic.  However, when variables such as length of time in workforce, type of industry and work (especially jobs dominated by either men or women), and willingness to accept lower pay and many other legitimate factors are placed into the equation — the percentage is more like 95%. 

Equal pay for equal work was NOT created by Obama.  It has been the law of the land since 1963.  I recently heard Obama take credit for signing into law equal pay.  Well the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act was indeed his FIRST piece of legislation signed.  It merely extended the time period after the supposed infraction took place that a woman can sue.  Which required employers to do more non-value busy work by adjusting how and length of time they keep their pay records.

There is no bigger advocate in the world than me when it comes to equal pay.  But seriously — enough already with the regulations, threats, task forces, and intimidating threats on employers.  

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