San Francisco Chronicle

Past pay OKd as basis for new wage

- By Bob Egelko

An employer can pay a woman less than a man for the same work if the man was paid more at his previous job and if the employer had a reasonable policy to justify reliance on past salaries, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday.

Basing wages on an employee’s previous pay level does not violate federal laws against sex discrimina­tion, even though it may have the effect of maintainin­g a wage gap between men and women, said the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. The same policy could also be used to pay women more than men, if a woman’s past salary was higher.

The ruling, in a case from Fresno County, did not mention a new California law that prohibits paying different wages to men and women with

equal qualificat­ions by relying on their previous pay levels. The law took effect in January, and state courts have not yet considered whether it would apply retroactiv­ely to cases like this one.

The case involves Aileen Rizo, who had worked as a schoolteac­her in Arizona for 13 years before being hired by the Fresno County schools in 2009 as a consultant for math teachers in the county. She was paid $62,733, nearly $10,000 more than her previous salary in Arizona but near the bottom of the pay scale for her new job.

In 2012, Rizo said, a man who had just been hired for the same job told her he was being paid about $79,000 a year. When she learned that the other consultant­s, also male, were paid more than she was, she complained to county officials, who said the difference­s were based on the employees’ salaries at their most recent jobs, plus a guaranteed raise of at least 5 percent.

When Rizo sued, lawyers for the county offered several justificat­ions for their policy: It was based on objective facts, it was applied consistent­ly and without favoritism, and the minimum 5 percent raise would encourage candidates to apply for employment. The county also said some of its female employees had benefited from the policy.

A federal magistrate rejected those arguments and ruled that unequal pay for men and women, based entirely on past salaries, amounted to sex discrimina­tion. The appeals court overturned that ruling and said Thursday that the magistrate should decide whether the county’s justificat­ions were reasonable business practices.

The federal Equal Pay Act allows differenti­al pay based on “a factor other than sex,” and an employee’s past salary can fall into that category when it serves the employer’s business purposes, the court said in a 3-0 ruling by Lynn Adelman, a federal judge from Wisconsin temporaril­y assigned to the court. He said the same conclusion had been reached by the Ninth Circuit in a 1982 ruling, whose meaning was contested in Rizo’s case.

Two other federal appeals courts have interprete­d the same law to mean that reliance alone on prior salaries is banned, clearing the way for a possible Supreme Court appeal to resolve the conflict. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission has sided with Rizo in the case.

In anticipati­on of the new California law, Fresno County changed its salary practices and now pays Rizo as much as her male colleagues, said the county’s lawyer, Michael Woods.

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