WASHINGTON
- The Age Discrimination in Employment Act outlaws
discrimination
against employees because of their age.
Seems simple enough. But is it illegal when the employee being
discriminated against is younger than the worker receiving
the
favored treatment?
Wednesday, the US Supreme Court takes up a major employment
case
examining whether the 1967 statute is intended exclusively to protect
older
workers, or whether it also authorizes so-called reverse-discrimination
claims by younger workers.
The case holds important implications for many retirement
benefit
plans and early-retirement packages. To the extent that such plans
offer
increasingly generous benefit levels triggered solely by age, they
could
become the litigation targets of younger employees complaining about
illegal
disparate treatment.
At its essence, the case is a clash between those who insist
on a
strict reading of the text of the ADEA and those who say the law must
be
considered in the broader context of congressional intent.
The ADEA makes it illegal to discriminate because of age
against
any worker 40 or older. But the law's wording leaves open to dispute
exactly
what kind of discrimination lawmakers sought to bar. Does it only
protect
"older" workers, or does the law also cover workers older than 40 but
younger than others receiving favored treatment because of their older
age?
"The ADEA protects individuals from being discriminated
against
because they are too old, not because they are too young," says Donald
Verrilli in his brief to the court on behalf of General Dynamics Land
Systems, the petitioner in the case.
Mark Biggerman counters in his brief for a group of General
Dynamics workers: "The plain language of the ADEA clearly and
unambiguously
provides that persons age forty and older may not be discriminated
against
because of their age."
The dispute stems from a class-action lawsuit filed by Dennis
Cline
and nearly 200 other employees at General Dynamics plants in Ohio and
Pennsylvania. The plants produce Abrams tanks for the US military. In
1997,
General Dynamics and the employees' union, the United Auto Workers,
reached
an agreement on a projected cutback in retirement benefits. Under the
plan,
all employees with 30 years of seniority who were age 50 or older by
July 1,
1997, would continue to receive full health benefits upon retirement.
Those
younger than 50 would not.
At the time, Mr. Cline was 47 years old and had already put in
28
years at the plant. Suddenly, his retirement benefit
disappeared.
In his suit, he charged that he'd been denied benefits solely
because of his age in violation of the ADEA. A federal judge threw the
suit
out. But in a 2-to-1 vote, a panel of the Sixth US Circuit Court of
Appeals
reinstated the suit. "By the law's plain language, an employer may not
discriminate against any worker age 40 or older on the basis of age,"
Circuit Judge James Ryan writes in the decision.
"If Congress wanted to limit the ADEA to protect only those
workers
who are relatively older, it clearly had the power and acuity to do so.
It
did not," Judge Ryan says. "Whatever the policy justifications for
holding
otherwise, we are bound by the plain language of the statute and have
no
occasion to look outside of the text."
Laurie McCann of AARP Foundation Litigation says the Sixth
Circuit
decision ignores Congress's clear intent in passing the ADEA. "They
were
concerned because about half the jobs had age limitations - no one over
35
need apply, no one over 45 need apply," she says.
Yet Ms. McCann, who filed a friend-of-the-court brief on
behalf of
neither side, says a reliance on seniority rather than age will not
solve
the issue. Higher levels of benefits are granted to older workers in
recognition that they may need those greater resources at that point,
she
says.
The US solicitor general is supporting the employees' position
in
the suit, urging a strict reading of the law's text. "[General
Dynamics]
contends that the term 'age' in the ADEA actually means 'old age,'
confining
the reach of the ADEA to discrimination because of an individual's old
age,"
writes Paul Clement in the government's brief. "But the original and
most
common meaning of 'age' is the length of time a person has lived, and
that
is the way Congress used the term throughout the ADEA."
General Dynamics has attracted an eclectic mix of
friend-of-the-court briefs from labor unions, the US Chamber of
Commerce, an
employment retirement organization, and the National Education
Association,
among others. Many employee benefit programs will not survive if the
Supreme
Court upholds the Sixth Circuit ruling, says Robert Chanin in the NEA
brief.
"Rather than stemming from age-based animus or stereotypes, such
differential allocation of benefits, in the areas of pensions, health
care,
severance pay, and the like, reflects the parties' attempt to target
scarce
resources to those employees who need them most," he writes.
Mr. Chanin adds, "Both law and society recognize the
particular
needs of older employees and the legitimacy of differential treatment
based
on advanced age."
The solicitor general's brief says that if the high court
embraces
its view of the law, the decision need not endanger all benefits
granted at
higher levels to older workers. The age-discrimination law provides
affirmative defenses that allow firms to legally justify benefit
programs
aimed at meeting the specific needs of older workers.
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