The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Republican­s seek to strengthen work discrimina­tion definition

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MISSOURI. — The Missouri House is considerin­g a Bill that would make it harder to prove discrimina­tion when someone is fired from work.

Under the measure, an employee would have to prove his or her race or gender was the main factor for dismissal. That’s a shift from the current law, which says an employee only has to prove race or gender contribute­d to his or her dismissal.

Republican lawmakers sent similar Bills to former Governor Jay Nixon several years ago, but he vetoed them each time.

Joseph Sklansky, an attorney with Washington University’s office of general counsel, testified on Monday in favour of the Bill. He said businesses are unfairly punished under the current definition of discrimina­tion.

“The result is a regime where allegation­s trump evidence, where proof that the defendant actually caused the alleged harm is no longer required, and where defendants have no choice but to either pay money to settle baseless allegation­s, or else expend substantia­l financial and other resources to defend such claims all the way through trial and appeal,” he said.

Sklansky noted that his testimony was his own and did not reflect the university’s position.

Opponents argue that the Bill would weaken Missouri’s discrimina­tion definition and make it harder for the “little guy” to obtain justice.

Rep. Mark Ellebracht, D-Liberty, criticised the Bill for containing exceptions for who can be sued in various situations.

“Let’s say one of your constituen­ts calls you up, and they say ‘I work at this golf club, and my supervisor said if I don’t perform this sexual favour, he’s going to fire me. What can I do?’ If this Bill takes effect, now she can’t only not sue her employer, she wouldn’t be able to sue the country club, either,” Ellebracht said. “What’s her recourse?”

He also said the bill could limit a fired employee’s legal options.

“They’re then forced to go to federal court, which is great if you’re an attorney who’s licensed to practice in that federal district,” he said. “You’re going to be able to charge far more for those attorneys’ fees.”

The House Special Committee on Litigation Reform took no action on the Bill on Monday. — KRCU.

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