Eroding protection under
the law
At the age of 50, the federal law that seeks to protect older
American workers from age bias has been enfeebled by court decisions that have
widened loopholes for employers and narrowed the ways employees can seek
redress.
When Congress enacted the Age Discrimination in Employment Act
(ADEA) in 1967, the law was treated as something of an addendum to the Civil
Rights Act, which had been passed three years earlier and banned bias on the
basis of race, gender, religion and, later on, sexual orientation, among other
categories.
The 1967 law effectively added age to the list. Courts and lawyers assumed that key provisions of each act applied to the other.
The 1967 law effectively added age to the list. Courts and lawyers assumed that key provisions of each act applied to the other.
In years to come, lawmakers would strengthen some elements of
the measure, for example largely banning mandatory retirement and requiring
employers to provide more disclosures about the size of their layoffs and ages
of those being let go.
The original act did provide for some exceptions. Employers could favor younger workers if they could show that “reasonable factors other than age” were involved in their choice for a position.
Congress allowed that, if a job required certain abilities such as quick reflexes as a “bona fide occupational qualification,” older workers could legally be passed over for jobs such as jet pilots or police officers.
Even with such exceptions, however, the authors of the ADEA and
the first generation of judges and policymakers to administer the act warned
against letting the measure’s purpose be undercut.
Chief among their concerns were that employers might use the exceptions as loopholes to justify firing older workers because, for example, they have higher salaries than younger ones.
To this day, federal regulations governing employers’ use of the exceptions say it is unlawful to treat older workers less favorably “based on the average cost of employing older employees.”
Chief among their concerns were that employers might use the exceptions as loopholes to justify firing older workers because, for example, they have higher salaries than younger ones.
To this day, federal regulations governing employers’ use of the exceptions say it is unlawful to treat older workers less favorably “based on the average cost of employing older employees.”
But in the past few decades, the warnings and cautions of the
first generation have been brushed aside in a number of important court cases.
One came in 1993, when the Supreme Court expanded an employer’s
ability to outflank the age law by ruling that a company hadn’t discriminated
on the basis of age in firing a 62-year-old man weeks before he’d have been
eligible for his pension. The justices reasoned that since the pension was
based on length of service, not specifically age, the man couldn’t sue.
In a 5-4 decision in 2009, the high court raised the burden of
proof for age bias well beyond what’s required for other kinds of
discrimination.
It ruled that a 54-year-old financial manager who alleged that he’d been wrongly demoted had to demonstrate the nearly impossible — that effectively there was no factor other than age involved in his demotion.
It ruled that a 54-year-old financial manager who alleged that he’d been wrongly demoted had to demonstrate the nearly impossible — that effectively there was no factor other than age involved in his demotion.
Employers’ core arguments for treating later-career employees
less favorably are that older workers cost more in wages and benefits and
produce less because of purported cognitive decline.
With growing frequency, federal judges have accepted these claims about cost and cognition without requiring companies to provide any evidence to support them.
With growing frequency, federal judges have accepted these claims about cost and cognition without requiring companies to provide any evidence to support them.
Lawyers for corporations have argued that the
text of the law requires a much narrower reading of it than was given in its
early years. And, in an increasingly competitive economy, the idea of
replacing older workers with lower-cost younger or foreign ones has come to
seem almost self-evident to Wall Street and, with mounting frequency, public
policymakers.
IBM is one company that in recent years has replaced a
substantial share of its U.S. workforce with younger, less-experienced and
lower-paid workers and sent many positions overseas. A ProPublica investigation found that in making the
cuts, IBM has flouted or outflanked U.S. laws and regulations intended to
protect later-career workers from age discrimination.
Besides the weakening of the age act, two other recent trends in
employment law may also have a dampening effect on older workers’ ability to
fight discrimination.
The first involves arbitration. The Supreme Court, responding to
business and conservative warnings about an overburdened judiciary, has
dramatically expanded the reach of a 1925 law that enabled some business
disputes to be taken to a private third party, rather than to the civil justice
system.
In recent decades, the high court has extended the law’s reach into virtually every legal link between individuals and companies.
In recent decades, the high court has extended the law’s reach into virtually every legal link between individuals and companies.
Arbitration more often favors employers than employees, studies
have shown. But most people don’t have the power to negotiate — or even the
time or training to recognize — clauses in their employment contracts that
require them to go to a private arbiter instead of a judge with their
complaints.
“That’s what really surprises people,” said Alexander Colvin, a
Cornell University law and labor relations professor, who estimates that more
than half of private-sector non-union employees are no longer able to take
their age bias claims to court.
“Most people think ‘Sure, my employer can make me sign something to get a job. But that can’t possibly mean I can’t go to court to protect my civil rights.”
“Most people think ‘Sure, my employer can make me sign something to get a job. But that can’t possibly mean I can’t go to court to protect my civil rights.”
The second legal trend involves employers who impose so-called
class-action waivers on their workers, banning them from joining together to
bring legal claims against firms in court or arbitration.
One of the first big firms to impose such a waiver was D.R.
Horton, the nation’s largest homebuilder. (IBM followed suit.) The National
Labor Relations Board ruled in 2014 that Horton’s move violated longstanding
legal guarantees that employees can “engage in …concerted activities for …
mutual aid or protection.” In short order, three federal appeals courts
rejected the NLRB’s decision while two others affirmed it, dumping the issue in
the Supreme Court’s lap.
The Justice Department originally argued for the NLRB but, under
the Trump administration, has switched sides. During oral arguments at the high
court last October, Justice Stephen Breyer noted that extinguishing the rights
of workers to band together as a legal class could unbalance U.S. employer-employee
relations that have stood since the Roosevelt era, and cut out “the entire
heart of the New Deal.”
The Supreme Court’s decision could come as early as this month.
Even without that ruling, experts said, it’s clear that the other recent
changes in labor laws are making it more difficult for people in the later
stages of their careers to prove bias.
“Older workers could once expect fairness and equality because
of our age law. But courts have stripped the law of its protections,” said
Cathy Ventrell-Monsees, senior attorney advisor with the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission and the former director of age litigation for the senior
lobbying giant AARP.
“Older Americans,” she said, “deserve basic civil rights, not
second-class status.”
Do you have access to information about age discrimination that
should be public?
Email peter.gosselin@propublica.org, or here’s how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.
Email peter.gosselin@propublica.org, or here’s how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.
Peter Gosselin joined ProPublica as a contributing reporter to cover
aging, having previously covered the U.S. and global economies for, among
others, the Los Angeles Times. During the first Obama term, he was chief
speechwriter to the treasury secretary and later an economic adviser to the
original team implementing the Affordable Care Act.