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August 24, 2010
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Labor Law News

 

EEOC And BNSF Railway Agree To Settle Age Discrimination Lawsuit For $800,000

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and BNSF Railway Company (BNSF) today announced that they had agreed to settle an age discrimination lawsuit brought by the Commission on behalf of 137 present and former employees who were allegedly denied benefits under exit incentive programs offered by the railroad because they were eligible to retire.

In its lawsuit (Case No. 2:06-CV-2069), filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the EEOC asserted that BNSF discriminated against employees eligible for Railroad Retirement by denying them benefits under exit incentive plans offered to clerical employees in certain of its facilities. The lawsuit also alleged that BNSF and the Transportation Communications International Union (TCU), a union representing the railway’s clerical employees, discriminated against older employees in their labor contract by eliminating their “protected” status, which afforded them certain benefits, when they became eligible to retire and reached age 70. The latter allegations were settled by the filing of a partial consent decree with the court on August 28, 2006, in which BNSF and TCU agreed to remove the provision at issue from the contract. TCU was then dismissed from the case.

The EEOC alleged that between 2002 and 2005, BNSF, in an attempt to reduce its clerical workforce, offered exit incentive plans to clerical employees in Topeka and Kansas City, Kansas, Fort Worth, Texas, and Alliance, Nebraska, but excluded any employee who was eligible for retirement. BNSF employees could retire at age 60 with 30 years of service. Under the exit incentive plans, participating employees ceased working and received $2,500 per month for three years or a lump sum of $90,000. The Commission argued that thirty-five employees over the age of 60 were denied the opportunity to participate in the exit incentive plans offered by the railroad because they were eligible to retire and receive federal Railroad Retirement benefits. Read more at eeoc.gov.

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News about Labor Law cases in Kansas and nationwide:

U.S. Labor Department Settles With Accounting Firm
The U.S. Department of Labor has obtained a consent judgment and order requiring the firm of Ahlstrom & Baker CPAs in Los Alamitos, California,...
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Job Bias Charges Edged Up In 2006, EEOC Reports
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) last year received a total of 75,768 discrimination charges against private sector employer...
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Unemployment Insurance Advisory Council
EAU CLAIRE – The public is invited to comment on and to suggest improvements to Wisconsin’s Unemployment Insurance (UI) program at a public hearing...
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Labor Law Terms

 


Today's Terms

Objectivity of investigation

Definition:
Were investigations only guided by the goal to prove someone's fault or were all other possible explanations considered?

Laissez-faire

Definition:
French phrase meaning "leave alone." In economics and politics, a doctrine that the economic system functions best when there is no interference by government.

Asset

Definition:
A possession of value, usually measured in terms of money.

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Topics Related to Labor Law:

  • Collective Bargaining
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  • Fair Labor Standards Act
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