Texarkana Gazette

Harris would toughen penalties on employers who underpay women

- By Michael Finnegan

Los Angeles Times

Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Kamala Harris released a plan Monday to overhaul U.S. discrimina­tion laws to ensure women and men are paid equally for the same work.

Companies would be required to obtain a federal certificat­ion showing they are not underpayin­g women, under Harris’ proposal. Those that fail to do so could be fined billions of dollars.

Employers would have to show that any gap in pay between women and men is based on merit, performanc­e or seniority. Companies that discrimina­te against women would be fined at 1% of their average daily profits for every 1% gap that exists between the pay of male and female employees doing the same job.

The junior senator from California provided the broad outlines of the proposal Sunday at a rally of roughly 1,000 supporters at Southwest College in South L.A. She told them that women who work full time are paid on average 80 cents for every dollar paid to men; for black women,

61 cents; and for Latinas, 53 cents.

“This has got to end, and it is an outrage,” she told the crowd, prompting a roar of cheers. She released details of the proposal Monday morning.

Harris’ gathering of volunteers and other backers in the college gymnasium was her first public campaign stop in Los Angeles since she launched her run for president in January at a rally in Oakland.

Harris’ pay equity proposal comes at a time when women are a crucial constituen­cy in the Democratic contest. After months of debate over discrimina­tion and sexual harassment in the workplace, women strongly favored Democrats in the November midterm election, and record numbers of women were swept into office.

Harris said her plan was aimed at strengthen­ing protection­s against discrimina­tion by shifting the burden of proof from women—who sometimes have to file lawsuits to get equal pay—to the companies that employ them.

 ?? Richard Vogel/Associated Press ?? ■ Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., talks during her first campaign organizing event on Sunday at Los Angeles Southwest College in Los Angeles.
Richard Vogel/Associated Press ■ Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., talks during her first campaign organizing event on Sunday at Los Angeles Southwest College in Los Angeles.

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