The Mercury News

Ruling favors businesses in job disputes

- By Mark Sherman

A divided Supreme Court ruled Monday that businesses can prohibit their workers from banding together in disputes over pay and conditions in the workplace, a decision that affects an estimated 25 million nonunioniz­ed employees.

With the court’s five conservati­ve members in the majority, the justices held that individual employees can be forced to use arbitratio­n, not the courts, to air complaints about wages and overtime. Four dissenting liberal justices said the decision will hit low-wage, vulnerable workers especially hard.

While the complaints in Monday’s decision involved pay issues, the outcome also might extend to workplace discrimina­tion and other disputes if employee contracts specify that they must be dealt with in oneon-one arbitratio­n.

Workers who want to take action against sexual harassment, pay discrimina­tion, pregnancy discrimina­tion and racial discrimina­tion “may now be forced behind closed doors into an individual, costly — and often secret — arbitratio­n process,” said Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO of the National Women’s Law Center.

Lawyers representi­ng management said the decision protects businesses from endless, costly litigation.

The outcome does not affect people represente­d by labor unions, but an estimated 25 million employees work under contracts that prohibit collective action by employees who want to raise claims about some aspect of their employment.

The ruling reflected a years-long pattern at the Supreme Court of limiting class actions and favoring employer-favored arbitratio­n over lawsuits in the courts, generally preferred by workers.

The Trump administra­tion backed the businesses, reversing the position the Obama administra­tion took in favor of employees.

The court’s task was to reconcile federal laws that seemed to point in different directions. On the one hand, New Deal labor laws explicitly give workers the right to band together. On the other, the older Federal Arbitratio­n Act encourages the use of arbitratio­n, instead of the courts.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the majority, said the contracts are valid under the arbitratio­n law. “As a matter of policy these questions are surely debatable. But as a matter of law the answer is clear,” Gorsuch wrote.

Monday’s ruling is in line with earlier decisions, he said. “In many cases over many years, this court has heard and rejected efforts to conjure conflicts between the Arbitratio­n Act and other federal statutes. In fact, this court has rejected every such effort to date (save one temporary exception since overruled),” Gorsuch wrote.

In dissent for the court’s liberals, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg called the decision “egregiousl­y wrong” and likely to lead to “huge underenfor­cement of federal and state stautes designed to advance the wellbeing of vulnerable workers.” Ginsburg said that the individual complaints can be very small in dollar terms, “scarcely of a size warranting the expense of seeking redress alone.”

Ginsburg, who read a summary of her dissent aloud to stress her disagreeme­nt, said employees do not really have a choice about whether to sign such agreements, labeling them “armtwisted, take-it-or-leave-it contracts.”

She said “congressio­nal action is urgently in order,” echoing her call in 2007 for Congress to address pay discrimina­tion following a high court ruling from which she dissented.

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