Comp Home | BLR Home | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com | Free Newsletters
Login Become a Member
BLR -- Business & Legal Reports Compensation.BLR.com -- Where Employers Go for Reliable Compensation Data and Tools
You are NOT logged in
 
Library
Salary Center

Benefits Center

Performance Appraisals
Advanced Search


Site Navigator
State-Specific Compensation Compliance Information


Compensation Topics
 
 A to Z Topic List
Topics by Category:
 • General
 • Minimum Wage
 • Overtime & Exemptions
 • Benefits
 • Wage & Payment Laws
 

Compensation Library
 
 Legal Analysis
 • State/Federal Differences
 Survey Reports
 • Pay Budgets
 • Exempt Compensation
 • Nonexempt Compensation
 

 
 Tools
 • Salary Center
 • Calculators
 • Job Descriptions
 • Performance Appraisals
 • Forms
 • Model Policies
 • Checklists
 

 
 Best Practices
 • Feature Articles
 • White Papers
 

 
 Daily News
 

 
 Compensation Ezine
 

 
 Compensation Links
 

Ask the Compensation Experts

RSS Compensation News Feed

HR Conferences

Tell a Friend

Related Websites
BLR
HR.BLR.com
Enviro.BLR.com
Safety.BLR.com
 
Equal Pay—News


07/05/2006
Worker Claims Salary-Setting Practice Violates Equal Pay Act

 Related Resources
Feature Articles
Questions & Answers
Job Descriptions
Send this article to a friend
Print this article

A worker argued that the method her employer used to determine her salary was discriminatory because male employees were paid more for performing the same work.

What happened. In 1998, Jenny Wernsing started working as an internal security investigator II for the Department of Human Services (DHS) for the state of Illinois. Before landing this job, she had been earning $1,925 monthly with the Southern Illinois Enforcement Group. In her new role, she was paid $2,478 per month--nearly 30 percent more, but the lowest pay rate for her job classification. The highest possible rate was $4,466.

DHS pays lateral entrants at least the same amount they had previously been earning, plus a raise, if possible, under the pay scale for the new position. Others hired by the department made more money than Wernsing because they came from higher-paying jobs. For example, Charles Bingaman, who was hired at the same time as Wernsing, was given a monthly salary of $3,739, up from $3,399 at his previous job with the state. Wernsing and Bingaman performed the same work in their new capacities despite a $1,261 difference in their monthly pay.

Wernsing claimed that this salary-setting practice violates the Equal Pay Act of 1963. However, a district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, which covers Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin, disagreed with her allegations.

What the court said. The appeals court noted that while the Equal Pay Act prohibits differences in pay that are based on gender, it also exempts pay differentials that are "based on any other factor other than sex." Citing three previous 7th Circuit decisions, the appeals court said that prior wages are considered a "factor other than sex."

The appeals court disagreed with Wernsing's argument that DHS doesn't have an "acceptable business reason" for its salary-setting practice. This practice is advantageous to the department because the higher pay makes the job more appealing to the most qualified candidates, the court noted.

The court also wasn't convinced by Wernsing's argument "that because women earn less than men from private employment, all market wages must be discriminatory and therefore must be ignored when setting salaries." Although research has shown that women make less than men on average, there are other factors involved, such as the fact that women tend to step out of the workforce to raise children for longer amounts of time than men, thus giving them less experience, according to the court.

If women who worked in "feeder" jobs for DHS were paid less than their male counterparts on the basis of sex, "then using those wages as the base for pay at the Department would indeed perpetuate discrimination and violate the Equal Pay Act," the court said. However, Wernsing didn't offer evidence to support such an argument (Wernsing v. Department of Human Services, State of Illinois, No. 04-2225, U.S. Court of Appeals, 7th Cir., 10/21/05).

What to remember. Here are ways to prevent charges of salary-setting:

  • Review your pay practices. Make sure male and female employees are paid equal wages for performing the same work. If not, make sure any pay differentials are due to merit, seniority, previous salary, or other "acceptable business reason"--not gender.
  • Look at the whole picture. When checking your pay practices for mid- and upper-level positions, don't forget to review salary-setting practices for entry-level jobs as well, especially if you use those initial wages as the basis for determining pay at higher levels. In this case, the court noted that if salaries in the department's "feeder" positions were set on the basis of gender, this would create equal pay issues with higher-level positions.
  • Put your policy in writing. Clearly explain the guidelines of your merit, seniority, bonus, or commission programs, and make sure all affected employees have a thorough understanding of the programs.

View more resources on Equal Pay.

Compensation Ezine
See this week's issue
Compensation Ezine
Find out how your company's pay and benefits policies stack up against the competition. Each issue features free compensation news, a timely poll, a tool of the week, in-depth white papers, a compensation Q&A and our popular "Odd Jobs" feature.
 
 
 



Compensation Ezine
Compensation news & best practices
HR Daily Advisor
Daily newsletter of quick HR tips, news, and practical advice
Strange But True
Weekly reports from HR's humorous side
Think you know a lot? Try the all-new HR Challenge!






We respect your privacy

Highlight
2008 BLR National Employment Law Update

 Weekly Poll
 
Are employees expressing their political views more during this election than in 2004?

Yes, they are much more outspoken

Yes, they are slightly more outspoken

No, it is about the same

No, they are expressing themselves less

 




spacer
spacer

 Plain-English... Practical... FREE!
  HR Daily Advisor
Compensation Ezine
  Safety Daily Advisor
Environmental Ezine
   

        We respect your Privacy

spacer
spacer
Comp Home | HR Conferences | Site Map | About this Site | BLR Home | About BLR | FAQs | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Related Links | Advertise
Questions? Call: 1-800-454-0404


Compensation Categories:
General Compensation | Minimum Wage | Overtime and Exemptions | Benefits | Wage and Payment Laws

Resource Types:
Compliance Resources: Regulatory Analysis | Overview |
Best Practices: White Papers | Feature Articles |
News: News |
Tools: Calculators | Checklists | Policies | Forms |
Other Resources: Questions & Answers | Job Descriptions |

Regulatory Analysis, News, and Training Resources for Every State

Other Web Centers:
BLR Home | Online Catalog | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com

Surveys:
Employee Survey

©1997-2008 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. All Rights Reserved
No part of this site may be reproduced in any form without permission of Business & Legal Reports, Inc.