[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 80 (Friday, June 7, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4017-S4018]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EQUAL PAY ACT ANNIVERSARY
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I come to the floor today to recognize
an important anniversary. Fifty years ago Congress passed the Equal Pay
Act, a law that was to ensure pay equity for women in the workplace.
This landmark legislation was signed into law by President Kennedy on
June 10, 1963, and prohibited discrimination on the basis of sex in the
payment of wages by employers. The goals of the legislation were
groundbreaking. It was the first time Congress acted on this issue,
addressing a real and growing problem as more women entered the
workforce. Congress stepped up to the plate and took the first attempt
at fixing outright discrimination that was bound to have an impact on
working families across America.
Today we find ourselves in a similar place, in need of a solution
because the Equal Pay Act is in need of fixing. It
[[Page S4018]]
recently made big headlines when a Pew research study was released
saying that women are the primary earner in 4 of 10 households today,
many of these women being the sole earners. But what was missed in this
discussion is the impact that the pay gap is continuing to have on
these households who are dependent on the salaries of women.
The pay gap results in $4,000 less per year for working families and
$434,000 less over a lifetime. Think of what these families could
accomplish if they got simply what they were owed. With rising costs
for childcare, medical care, and filling up the family car, these
families are held down by unfair and unjust pay policies.
While these are the day to day impacts, there are also real
consequences to the pay gap over a lifetime. The pay gap affects your
income, affects your pension, and affects your Social Security. Women's
Social Security benefits are 71 percent of men's benefits. The average
income from private pension based on women's earnings was only 48
percent of men's earnings. The consequences of our inaction on pay
equity are following women out of the workplace, further impacting
their lives down the line. For years I have fought a solution to this.
Under the Paycheck Fairness Act, no longer will employers be able to
retaliate against workers for sharing information about wages. Right
now, if you ask someone what they get paid you can get fired. For
years, Lilly Ledbetter was humiliated and harassed because she tried to
find out what she was making.
No longer will women be able to seek only back pay when they are
discriminated against. Under this pay they can seek punitive damages.
No longer will employers be able to use almost any reason to justify
paying a woman less than a man. Excuses such as ``oh, they do harder
jobs,'' ``oh, they do dangerous jobs,'' or ``oh, they have a better
education than you'' will no longer be tolerated. Women do hard and
dangerous jobs. Ask anyone who runs a daycare center or is a
firefighter. No longer will women be on their own in fighting for equal
pay for equal work or education and training.
In this country, they say work hard, play by the rules, and you will
get ahead. We work hard every day, but we find the rules are different
for women and men. In 1963 women made 59 cents for every dollar made by
men. Almost 49 years later we have made an 18-cent gain. Women now make
77 cents for every dollar earned by men. Forty-nine years and 18 cents.
That is not rewarding hard work, and it is certainly not playing by the
rules.
In March, during the Budget debate, the Senate agreed with us and
unanimously voted that it was time to do something about the pay gap.
Well, now it is time to step up to the plate on this 50th anniversary.
Let's end pay inequity and end the policies that keep women uneducated
and unequipped to fight for their fair share. It is not just for our
pocketbooks. It is about the family checkbooks and getting it right in
the law books. And it is also about the generations of women to come.
Let's not make it another 50 years without giving the Equal Pay Act the
tools it needs to finally fulfill its promise.
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