I’m Still OutrAGEd
by James Sokolove on Nov.20, 2009
I recently celebrated my 65th birthday, and that may explain why I continue to be outraged that we tolerate age discrimination in this country. When it comes to firing people because they are older, you might say I’m a little biased!
As I’ve written before, in June, 2009, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for a split 5 – 4 Supreme Court, held that the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act would not apply if age was only one motivating factor behind an employer’s action. The Court held that employees would have to show that age was the decisive factor behind the employer’s action to be successful.
Iowa Senator Tom Harkin is sponsoring the bill that would reverse the ruling. Harkin’s bill should pass. Here’s why:
Prior to the SCOTUS decision, you could sue under ADEA, if part of the reason you were fired was because of age discrimination. But the Court ruled that now employees would have to prove that age discrimination was the key reason why they were fired. It essentially made the burden of proof in age discrimination case extremely difficult to reach.
I recently came across a great editorial in the New York Times that makes the case for change quite nicely. The piece quotes Justice Thurgood Marshall, a brilliant jurist and celebrated champion of civil rights:
“To be rejected on account of old age may or may not feel the same as being rejected on the basis of race or sex. But it is clearly unjust and dehumanizing, and the law should take it more seriously than it does.”
Amen Justice Marshall. Age discrimination is wrong, and we should not be putting up barriers to people who have been discriminated against. We should be throwing the court house doors open and encouraging them to bring suit.
