The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Bill aims to boost older workers in Connecticu­t

Employers could be banned from asking job applicants their age

- By Mark Pazniokas

With one in four workers now aged 55 and older, Connecticu­t lawmakers of both parties are rallying around a relatively modest bill aimed at age discrimina­tion: a prohibitio­n on employers requiring prospectiv­e employees to list their age, birth date or graduation year on an applicatio­n.

The broad and bipartisan support for the measure reflects the political clout of a baby boomer generation whose median age is now 62, the lack of opposition from industry and the fact that it reinforces longstandi­ng age-discrimina­tion prohibitio­ns.

“Essentiall­y it closes a very costly loophole that exists right now for older workers, because if you think about it, employers in a job interview cannot ask the job applicant their age. They cannot ask, ‘How old are you?’” said Sen.

Derek Slap, D-West Hartford.

Slap, the lead sponsor and newly appointed co-chairman of the legislatur­e’s Aging Committee, was joined at a news conference Thursday by supporters, including the ranking Republican­s on the committee and representa­tives of the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n and AARP.

The legislatio­n is the latest effort by lawmakers to prohibit employers from using screening questions on applicatio­ns. In 2016, they passed a “ban-the-box” bill barring questions about criminal history. In 2018, they barred applicatio­n questions about pay history. The age-discrimina­tion bill cleared the Labor and Public Employees Committee but did not come to a vote in either chamber.

The goal of the salary history

bill was pay equity. The theory is that women historical­ly earn less than men, so relying on pay history to set future compensati­on only would continue inequities. But the AARP said it also had a benefit for older workers.

Older workers seeking employment after being downsized from high-paying managerial jobs complain that many companies

won’t consider them for lower-paying, non-managerial roles once they know their pay history.

The national growth in the number of older workers in the workforce represents a striking demographi­c shift: The percentage of 55-and-older employees — essentiall­y the postwar Baby Boom generation — has doubled since 2000.

The youngest of the 78 million Baby Boomers born between 1946 and 1964 are 56. About 10,000 Boomers

are reaching retirement age every day, but only 5,900 will retire then, according to the AARP.

Slap said the impact is especially stark in Connecticu­t, the state with the sixth-oldest workforce.

A similar age-discrimina­tion bill cleared the Labor and Public Employees Committee on a 12-2 vote last year, but did not come to a floor vote in either chamber. The new version makes clear that applicatio­ns can require a disclosure of age when

relevant, such as for commercial truck driving jobs.

Rep. David Rutigliano, R-Trumbull, who voted against the measure last year in committee, said Slap reached out to a range of lawmakers and interest groups to produce a bill with broad support.

“It is a fundamenta­l principle of mine and others, and I’m sure everybody here, that our job is to remove barriers to opportunit­y in employment,” Rutigliano said. “And if an age on an applicatio­n stops

somebody from the ability to get an interview and let their light shine in front of an employer, then I would be for getting rid of it.”

Rep. Mitch Bolinsky, R-Newtown, a member of the Aging Committee, said he had difficulty getting interviews once he lost a marketing executive post at age 54. He said his experience motivated him to run for the General Assembly.

By 2022, 35 percent of the American workforce are going to be over age 50, said Nora Duncan, the state director of AARP in Connecticu­t. A 2018 AARP survey of 3,900 workers age 45 and older found 61 percent had either experience­d or seen age discrimina­tion in the workplace.

“The two fastest-growing population­s in the workforce are those age 75-plus, by leaps and bounds, and ages 65 to 74,” Duncan said. “So, this is real. These are folks who are in our workforce. They are also the folks who are telling us their experience in age discrimina­tion.”

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