[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 57 (Tuesday, April 8, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2208-S2210]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EQUAL PAY DAY
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, today is Equal Pay Day. I mentioned that
to someone earlier and they said: What does that mean? What that means
is an American woman working full time in America today--I am talking
about an average American woman working full time, year-round--had to
work all last year and up to today of this year to earn what the
average male made last year up to December 31. That is what Equal Pay
Day is. Think about that. A man gets paid up to December 31, and a
woman has to work all that year and up to today to get the same pay.
It is shocking that in 2014 that is still happening in America--
shocking--because we passed the Equal Pay Act in 1963. In 1963, a woman
made about 60 cents on the dollar for what a man made. Today, it is 77
cents, so I guess we can say we have made some headway. So 1963, 1973,
1983--in 40 years, we have gone from 60 cents to 77 cents.
What we found out, through our committee hearings of the committee I
am privileged to chair, the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions, is that a lot of employers in this country are not abiding by
some of the provisions of the Equal Pay Act. I compliment Senator
Mikulski, who is a member of our committee as well as the Chair of the
full Appropriations Committee, for her leadership in bringing this
bill, the Paycheck Fairness Act, to the Senate.
When we passed it in 1963, 25 million female workers, as I said,
earned about 60 cents on the dollar. Now it is 77 cents. Again, the
deficit and what it means for a lifetime of earnings is startling. Over
the course of a 40-year career, women, on average, earn more than
$450,000 less than men. And get this: Women with a college degree, or
more, face an even wider gap of more than $700,000 over a lifetime
compared with men with the same higher education. So, again, the
consequences are enormous, impacting not just women but their families
as well, and not just impacting women during their working lives, but
keep this in mind: When a woman is making that much less, then a woman
is getting that much less in her retirement, in her Social Security, or
maybe her 401(k), or a defined benefit, whatever it might be. So women
get whacked twice during their working life and then when they retire
because they have made substantially less than men.
Again, I congratulate Senator Mikulski for bringing this bill forward
and for her indefatigable work on this issue. It is time to pass the
Paycheck Fairness Act. It is simple, commonsense legislation to make
sure we have procedures and processes that are in place, to make sure
the Equal Pay Act, passed in 1963, has some teeth, so employers can't
just skirt around it anymore, and so there will be avenues for women to
take to make sure they are not discriminated against in terms of pay.
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For example, right now it can be a violation of company policy if a
woman wants to talk to another person about what their salary is. Some
companies say employees can't do that. This bill says, yes, employees
can do that. Employees can talk to someone else. They don't have to
tell--we don't force anybody to tell what their salary is--but an
employee can make inquiries and can discuss it with other fellow
employees, and an employer cannot retaliate against an employee for
doing that. That is a huge step forward, by the way: a little bit of
transparency, a little bit of knowledge that a woman can have to
understand whether she is being discriminated against in her
employment.
Of course, we have a good deal of anecdotal evidence and many
examples of employers retaliating against women for discussing salary
information. So this bill is long overdue and we need to pass it.
We can't just stop there on this paycheck fairness bill. We have to
pass it and then we have to do a few other things. We have to tackle
the more subtle discrimination that occurs when we systematically
undervalue the work traditionally done by women. The fact is millions
of female-dominated jobs--jobs that are equivalent in skill, effort,
responsibility, and working conditions to similar jobs dominated by
men--pay significantly less than male equivalent-type jobs. For
example, why is a housekeeper worth less than a janitor? Think about
it: Eighty-four percent of the maids such as those who clean our rooms
in hotels--are female; 75 percent of janitors are male. While the jobs
are equivalent in terms of skill, effort, responsibility, and working
conditions, the median weekly earnings for a maid are $399. For a
janitor, it is $484.
Truckdrivers--a job that is 96-percent male--have median weekly
earnings of $730. In contrast, a childcare worker--a job that is 93-
percent female--has median weekly earnings of $390. Why do we value
someone who moves products more than we value someone who looks after
the safety and well-being of our children? I am not saying that
truckdrivers are overpaid; I am just saying that jobs we consider
``women's work'' are often underpaid, even though they are equivalent
in skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions. Quite
frankly, some of the jobs women do, such as nursing or home health
aides, require a lot more physical effort than being a truckdriver.
Maybe in the old days truckdrivers had to be strong to muscle those
trucks around. Now everybody has power steering and power brakes and
everything else. A person doesn't have to be some big, heavy-weight
giant to drive trucks anymore. But to be a nursing aide, if you are
rolling people who weigh over 250 pounds and doing other things, that
can take quite a bit of effort. So why are nursing and home health
aides paid so much less than truckdrivers?
That is why in every Congress since 1996 I have introduced the Fair
Pay Act, which would require employers to provide equal pay for
equivalent jobs. My counterpart in the House is Delegate Eleanor Holmes
Norton, and together we have introduced it in every Congress since
1996. It requires employers to provide equal pay for jobs that are
equivalent in skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions,
but which are dominated by employees of a different gender, race, or
national origin.
People may say maybe that is a stretch. Well, in 1983, the
legislature of my State of Iowa, working with a Republican Governor,
passed a bill stipulating that the State of Iowa could not discriminate
in compensation between predominantly male and female jobs. They had to
pay equivalent wages. So they hired Arthur Young & Company and they
evaluated 800 job classifications in State government and, finally, in
April of 1984, determined that 10,751 employees should be given a pay
increase. Since 1984 in Iowa we have had that equivalency.
In Minnesota, our neighbor to the north and the neighbor of the
Presiding Officer to the east, they went even a step further. Minnesota
at that time passed a bill providing for equivalent pay not only in
State jobs but clear down to the local level. That was in Minnesota. So
it can be done. The women in this country are currently being paid less
not because of their skills, not because of their education, working
conditions, or responsibility, but simply because they are in what we
call female-dominated jobs. This bill would make sure they receive
their real worth. It will make a huge difference for them and their
families who rely on their wages.
What my bill would do basically is require employers to publicly
disclose their job categories and their pay scales. They wouldn't have
to publish what every employee is making; they would have to say here
are our job classifications and here are the pay scales in those job
classifications. So it would give women information about what their
male colleagues are earning or anyone who is in that pay scale, so they
can negotiate a better deal for themselves in the workplace. Right now,
women who believe they are a victim of pay discrimination must file a
lawsuit and endure a drawn-out legal discovery process to find out
whether they make less than the man working beside them, but with
statistics readily available, this could be avoided. The number of
lawsuits would go down if employees could see upfront whether they are
being treated fairly.
Several years ago our committee had Lilly Ledbetter come and testify
before our committee. We had provided her with a copy of the Fair Pay
Act that I have been introducing since 1996, and she took a look at it
and its description. I asked her, if the Fair Pay Act had been law when
she was hired, would it have obviated her wage discrimination case. She
said with the information about pay scales the bill provides, she would
have known from the beginning she was a victim of discrimination and
could have tried to address the problem sooner before it caused a
lifelong drop in her earnings and before she had to go all the way to
the Supreme Court to make things right.
So, again, it is time to get done and put some teeth in it, but it is
time to take the next step, because the biggest gap right now between
what women make and what men make--among the various known reasons for
the gap, like education, race, union status, and work experience--is
occupation; that is, the number of women who are in what we have
traditionally known as women's jobs--housekeepers, maids, child care
workers, nurse assistants, and so on. It is time to take the step that
my State and Minnesota--and there are other States; I just mentioned
those two because I am familiar with them--have taken to address this
problem of equivalency.
The next thing we need to do to make sure Equal Pay Day is not today
but is December 31, like when men get paid for a full year, is to raise
the minimum wage. Hopefully, we will be voting on that soon to raise
the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour.
Again, the majority of low-wage workers are women because of the
trends I just mentioned. Jobs primarily held by women are undervalued
and underpaid and most of the low-wage workers are women. So again we
have to raise that, and we need to raise tipped wages.
Tipped wages right now are $2.13 an hour. It has not been changed
since 1991. Who are most of the tipped workers? Women, and many of them
are providing income for their families, for their children. I said
this the other day to a group and they were astounded. They thought I
must be wrong about it, but I am not wrong. Do you know how someone
gets classified as a tipped worker? A lot of people do not know this.
How does someone get classified as a tipped worker? Under the law, if
their employer says they make more than $30 a month in tips, they can
be classified as a tipped worker. Think about that, $30 a month.
Let's say if someone works 5 days a week and they are working 20 days
a month, that is $1.50 a day. If they get $1.50 a day in tips, they can
be classified as a tipped worker and they can pay them $2.13 an hour--
unconscionable.
It has not been raised since 1991. Our minimum wage bill, which we
hope to have on the floor shortly, would raise that tipped wage over 6
years from its present level to 70 percent of the minimum wage, and
then it is indexed for the future.
So there are three things we need to do: pass the Paycheck Fairness
Act championed by Senator Mikulski, address and pass the Fair Pay Act,
and
[[Page S2210]]
raise the minimum wage. If we do those three things, Equal Pay Day will
not be today, it will be December 31 for everybody.
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