San Francisco Chronicle

Court: Law covers all public workers

- By David G. Savage David G. Savage is a Los Angeles Times writer.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court in its first decision of the new term ruled Tuesday that the federal ban on age discrimina­tion applies broadly to state and local government­s, even to a small fire department that has only few employees.

The unanimous decision clears the way for two laid-off firefighte­rs in Mount Lemmon, Ariz., to sue the fire department for age discrimina­tion. They were the two oldest full-time firefighte­rs, but the city’s lawyers argued the federal law did not cover them.

At issue was how to read the definition of an employer in the 1974 law. It defines an employer as someone who is engaged in commerce and has 20 or more employees. It also says an employer is a “state or a political subdivisio­n of a state.”

Writing for the court, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said those two provisions “combine to establish separate categories.” For private employers, small firms with fewer than 20 employees are not covered. However, all state and local government­s are covered, she said, regardless of how small they are.

“Congress did not repeat the ‘twenty or more employees’ qualifier when referencin­g state and local government entities. This court is not at liberty to insert the absent qualifier,” she wrote in Mount Lemmon vs. Guido.

The ruling upheld a decision of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, but several others, including the 7th Circuit in Chicago and the 10th Circuit in Denver, had ruled earlier that the federal age bias law did not cover employees in small local government agencies.

 ?? Olivier Douliery / Tribune News Service ?? Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said all state and local government­s are covered, regardless of size.
Olivier Douliery / Tribune News Service Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said all state and local government­s are covered, regardless of size.

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