The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Tamer pay equity bill passes state House

- By Jack Kramer ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> A bill to help increase pay equity for women in the workforce easily passed the House of Representa­tives Wednesday by a 139-9 vote.

But the bill that prompted name-calling between lawmakers from different parties was substantia­lly different than the bill Democratic leadership in the House wanted to run last week.

The original language that would have prohibited employers from asking prospectiv­e employees about their salary history was stripped from the legislatio­n. The bill that passed the House Wednesday would prohibit gender wage discrimina­tion, ensure workers maintain their seniority following maternity leave, and give the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunit­ies the ability to hear wage complaints. Currently, that responsibi­lity lies with the Department of Labor. Last week, House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, delayed voting on the legislatio­n saying the lawyers were still working on language.

Aresimowic­z insisted the opposition expressed by House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, and the comments made by state Rep. Matt Lesser, D-Middletown, had nothing to do with the decision to delay debate.

At a press conference last week Lesser said objections to the pay equity bills are rooted in two things: “that’s the way we’ve always done it and bigotry. There is no other possible objection to this.”

Klarides, the first female elected to head the House Republican caucus, was offended by the comments and took them personally.

She said she’s disappoint­ed Aresimowic­z would let one of his members call someone who opposes the legislatio­n a bigot. “The fact that they are

using an important issue like pay equity for political purposes to start is disgusting,” Klarides said about Lesser’s comments. “Then they say the only reason you would not want to vote for their crappy bill is because you’re bigots.”

While the bill easily passed, several legislator­s who said they were in favor of pay equity wondered if the legislatio­n would really make a difference.

“Discrimina­tion is any form is ugly,” state Rep. Prasad Srinivasan, RGlastonbu­ry, said. But Srinivasan, who is running for governor, said he wasn’t clear how it could be determined “what is equal work on the job.” He asked several questions about if it was fair to pay a woman less than a man if the woman didn’t put in the extra hours and instead went home to take care of her family.

Before the vote Wednesday, Aresimowic­z said it was important to move the bill forward and that the people of Connecticu­t “expect us to not be petty.”

“We’re not taking our ball and going home,” Aresimowic­z said.

Klarides who hadn’t seen the final language of the bill Wednesday morning didn’t know how she planned to vote. She still had concerns about the legislatio­n, but she eventually voted in favor of the bill.

On Wednesday, on the House floor, Klarides said she, herself has “experience­d gender inequity, gender discrimina­tion.”

“We want to protect women from this problem,” Klarides added. “We want it to be fair.”

Klarides said politics had no place in the issue.

“We need to work together. Unless we take these issues head on as a group we aren’t doing them justice,” Klarides said.

The business community through their lobbyists opposed the original version of the legislatio­n.

Rep. Robyn Porter, DNew Haven, who in answer to concerns that the bill might be perceived as antibusine­ss, said: “We want to be pro-business; but we want to be pro-people.”

Aresimowic­z stated that in his experience­s talking with constituen­ts and people across the state, he found job growth and sustainabi­lity were their main concerns.

“This is not exclusivel­y a women’s issue, it is a family issue with families increasing­ly relying on two incomes,” Aresimowic­z said. “Women in Connecticu­t earn 83 cents for every dollar paid to men, which amounts to an annual wage gap of $10,679. More households are headed by women.”

 ?? CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? State Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, brings out the bill.
CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE State Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, brings out the bill.

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