The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Bill would end forced arbitratio­n in disputes

House approved the bill, 225-186, on Friday; It now goes to the Senate

- By Matthew Daly The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> The House approved a bill Friday to end forced arbitratio­n clauses that prevent workers and consumers from filing lawsuits in disputes with companies over employment practices, billing or civil rights.

Supporters, mostly Democrats, said the bill would restore access to justice for millions of Americans who are now locked out of the court system and forced to settle disputes against companies in a private arbitratio­n system that often favors the company over the individual.

Opponents, mostly Republican­s, said the measure would make it harder for individual workers or consumers by forcing them into lengthy, expensive court fights that may end up shutting them out of the justice system entirely.

The House approved the bill, 225-186, on Friday. It now goes to the Senate.

The House bill defends the rights of workers and consumers and makes it easier for individual­s to fight powerful corporatio­ns, said Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., the legislatio­n’s chief sponsor.

“Forced arbitratio­n agreements undermine our indelible Constituti­onal right to trial by jury, benefiting powerful businesses at the expense of American consumers and workers,” he said.

Americans with few choices in the marketplac­e may unknowingl­y cede their rights when they enter contracts to buy a home or a cellphone, place a loved one in a nursing home or start a new job, Johnson said.

A fellow Georgian, Republican Rep. Doug Collins, said that rather than end injustice, Johnson’s bill would promote it.

“What happens when everyday consumers and employees are denied rights to arbitrate — rights their (employment or consumer) contracts guarantee them?” Collins asked.

Far too often, “it means Americans will be shut out of the justice system entirely,” he said, citing the length and cost of most legal cases.

Collins, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee,

said arbitratio­n provides consumers and workers a simpler, cheaper and faster path to justice than the judicial system. Many companies have streamline­d arbitratio­n processes in recent years to resolve disputes more quickly, he said.

But Rep. Jerry Nadler, DN.Y., the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said that what once was a voluntary system for companies and individual­s to resolve disputes has become “a legal nightmare for millions of consumers, employees and others who are forced into arbitratio­n and are unable to enforce certain fundamenta­l rights in court.”

Many companies use forced arbitratio­n as a tool to protect themselves from consumers and workers who seek to hold them accountabl­e for alleged wrongdoing, Nadler said. “By burying a forced arbitratio­n clause deep in the fine print of take-it-orleave-it consumer and employment contracts, companies can evade the court system, where plaintiffs have far greater legal protection­s, and hide behind a one-sided process that is tilted in their favor,” he said.

Arbitratio­n cases often limit discovery, prohibit class actions and deny the right of appeal, while frequently requiring outcomes to stay secret, thereby allowing companies to avoid public scrutiny of potential misconduct, Nadler said.

“For millions of consumers and employees, the preconditi­on — whether they know it or not — of obtaining a basic service or product, such as a bank account, a cellphone, a credit card or even a job, is that they must agree to resolve any disputes in private arbitratio­n,” he said.

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