14th Amendment Equal Protection: Discrimination Various Criteria: Basic assumption that government acted lawfully: victim has burden of proof, common law - “simple rationality test” - typical merit requirements “Suspect classifications”: race, alien status, religion brings “strict scrutiny”: government must have at least a “compelling interest”: constitutional law Middle ground: reasonableness: gender, age, minor interests, disabilities: statutory law - Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009: pay discrimination due to gender can be contested long after initial pay decision was made if lower pay is ongoing 1 Public Employment: Equal protection de jure v. de facto discrimination 2 Public Employment: Equal protection Evolving race criteria: Adarand v. Pena (1995): compelling interest needed for affirmative action. Narrowly tailored remedy expected Ricci v. DeStefano (2009): City of New Haven violated Title VII by refusing to certify test results when no black firefighters passed. Cannot reject open fair process solely on disparate results Comcast v. National Association of African-American Owned Media(2020) : “But for cause”: 3 Public Employment: Equal protection Equal Protection in College admission indicates court’s continual evolution: Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action (2014) States can ban consideration of race in college admissions or other public programs But already the court had banned any form of affirmative action that created any sort of quotas or operated mechanically. Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin(2016): left basic law race-based preferences inherently suspect but legal if schools -- and by extension, employers -- provide strong evidence their affirmative-action programs are narrowly tailored to achieve the goal of diversity. 4 Recent notable movement on discrimination(not administrative law) Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & Sch. v. EEOC (2012) Courts cannot tell religious organizations who can they can fire as ministers: “ministerial exception” In hiring and firing of Sunday school teacher, first amendment trumps employment laws The Hobby Lobby case (2014): cannot require private employees to provide birth control 5 Public Employment: Equal protection: Gender Title VI of 1964 Civil Rights Act: forbids discrimination based on race, sex, religion, and national origin Title VII: applies Title VI to state and local governments - Retirement programs cannot discriminate 6 Public Employment: Equal protection: Gender Feeney v. Personnel Administrator of Massachusetts (1979) - veteran’s preference challenge – public interest in rewarding veterans outweighed gender impact Supreme Court has struck down discrimination of gays/lesbians if there was no public purpose United States v. Windsor (2013) : Federal Defense of Marriage Act overturned 7 Employment: Equal protection: Gender Harassment: Harris v. Forklift Systems (1993): “hostile environ ...
14th Amendment Equal Protection: Discrimination Various Criteria: Basic assumption that government acted lawfully: victim has burden of proof, common law - “simple rationality test” - typical merit requirements “Suspect classifications”: race, alien status, religion brings “strict scrutiny”: government must have at least a “compelling interest”: constitutional law Middle ground: reasonableness: gender, age, minor interests, disabilities: statutory law - Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009: pay discrimination due to gender can be contested long after initial pay decision was made if lower pay is ongoing 1 Public Employment: Equal protection de jure v. de facto discrimination 2 Public Employment: Equal protection Evolving race criteria: Adarand v. Pena (1995): compelling interest needed for affirmative action. Narrowly tailored remedy expected Ricci v. DeStefano (2009): City of New Haven violated Title VII by refusing to certify test results when no black firefighters passed. Cannot reject open fair process solely on disparate results Comcast v. National Association of African-American Owned Media(2020) : “But for cause”: 3 Public Employment: Equal protection Equal Protection in College admission indicates court’s continual evolution: Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action (2014) States can ban consideration of race in college admissions or other public programs But already the court had banned any form of affirmative action that created any sort of quotas or operated mechanically. Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin(2016): left basic law race-based preferences inherently suspect but legal if schools -- and by extension, employers -- provide strong evidence their affirmative-action programs are narrowly tailored to achieve the goal of diversity. 4 Recent notable movement on discrimination(not administrative law) Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & Sch. v. EEOC (2012) Courts cannot tell religious organizations who can they can fire as ministers: “ministerial exception” In hiring and firing of Sunday school teacher, first amendment trumps employment laws The Hobby Lobby case (2014): cannot require private employees to provide birth control 5 Public Employment: Equal protection: Gender Title VI of 1964 Civil Rights Act: forbids discrimination based on race, sex, religion, and national origin Title VII: applies Title VI to state and local governments - Retirement programs cannot discriminate 6 Public Employment: Equal protection: Gender Feeney v. Personnel Administrator of Massachusetts (1979) - veteran’s preference challenge – public interest in rewarding veterans outweighed gender impact Supreme Court has struck down discrimination of gays/lesbians if there was no public purpose United States v. Windsor (2013) : Federal Defense of Marriage Act overturned 7 Employment: Equal protection: Gender Harassment: Harris v. Forklift Systems (1993): “hostile environ ...