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End Damage Caps for Workers Now
Contact Us
Testimonials
John Hayes
Aaron Jensen
Wynona Mixon
Maureen McPadden and Cynthia Haddad
Fariba Moeinpour
Randy Oden
FAQs
Infographic
Legislative Language

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End Damage Caps for Workers Now
Contact Us
Testimonials
John Hayes
Aaron Jensen
Wynona Mixon
Maureen McPadden and Cynthia Haddad
Fariba Moeinpour
Randy Oden
FAQs
Infographic
Legislative Language

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Contact Us
Folder: Testimonials
FAQs
Infographic
Legislative Language
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John Hayes
Aaron Jensen
Wynona Mixon
Maureen McPadden and Cynthia Haddad
Fariba Moeinpour
Randy Oden


PROTECT WORKING PEOPLE HARMED BY EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION.


END CONGRESS’ UNFAIR LIMITS ON WHO GETS JUSTICE 

THE PROBLEM:

Workers who win employment discrimination cases cannot receive a jury’s full
award for the harm they suffer because of an outdated and unfair provision in a
1991 law that caps such damage awards. Victims continue to suffer while their
employer continues business as usual, undeterred.

THE SOLUTION:

Congress should pass the “Equal Remedies Act of 2024” and eliminate the
statutory damages caps in cases of intentional employment discrimination. The
“Equal Remedies Act of 2024” would also modernize the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act (ADEA) to allow age discrimination victims the opportunity to
argue to receive compensatory and punitive damages,  like other victims of
discrimination.  


SHARE YOUR STORY AND JOIN THE FIGHT.

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First Name
Last Name
Email(required)
Subject(required)
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DAMAGE CAPS IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CASES



Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, an employer may not
discriminate against someone with respect to hiring, firing, compensation, or
other terms of employment, or segregate/categorize based on race, color,
religion, gender, or national origin.  

The Americans with Disabilities Act similarly protects workers with disabilities
and requires employers (with limited exceptions) to provide reasonable
accommodations to workers who have an impairment that substantially limits a
major life activity.  The law also protects workers’ privacy interests against
intrusive inquiry by employers about their medical concerns.

When a jury finds that an employer violated the employment anti-discrimination
law, and determines punitive and compensatory damages, the statute limits how
much the court can award the worker.  

The current limits — unchanged since 1991 — vary depending on the size of the
employer:

 * For employers with 15-100 employees, the limit is $50,000.

 * For employers with 101-200 employees, the limit is $100,000.

 * For employers with 201-500 employees, the limit is $200,000.

 * For employers with more than 500 employees, the limit is $300,000.

HISTORY

After several United States Supreme Court decisions weakened employment
discrimination protections under Title VII, Congress passed civil rights
legislation to reverse the Court and make it easier for plaintiffs to vindicate
their rights in discrimination cases. President George H.W. Bush vetoed the 1990
bill.  Later, in a compromise with civil rights leaders and business interests,
Congress and President Bush enacted a law to allow for compensatory and punitive
damages in discrimination cases, but included damages caps in the final version
of the Civil Rights Act of 1991, strengthening civil rights protections but
curtailing the ability of harmed employees to recover the full amount of their
damages.  

Senator Ted Kennedy introduced the Equal Remedies Act of 2007 to eliminate Title
VII and ADA damage caps (co-sponsors included Sens. Patty Murray, Maria
Cantwell, Hillary Clinton, and Barack Obama). However, since that time Congress
has not addressed the harms caused by damage caps.






HARMS CAUSED BY CAPS

Often, juries will award plaintiffs damages well above the statutory caps for
victims of discrimination. However, a judge then must reduce that award — in
many cases by more than 90%! Companies know this and recognize discrimination as
a cost of doing business.

What’s worse is that inflation has risen by 124% since 1991. Caps have not,
however. Every year the Equal Remedies Act is not passed, the spending power of
jury awards becomes less and less; exacerbating these worker harms. 



Testimonials


 * WYNONA MIXON
   
   Wynona was raped on August 12, 2011 at the federal penitentiary in Tucson,
   AZ. In her own words, “the rape was not the worst thing to happen to me.”
   
   Read her story


 * RANDY ODEN
   
   After working for Wellfirst Technologies for a little over a year, I got to
   the point where my injured knee had to be replaced. When I gave notice to the
   company of my intent to have the surgery my direct supervisor commented that
   he had also had a knee replacement and that I should return to work 4 weeks
   after the surgery. While I was still off work and doing physical therapy on
   my knee, the company sent someone to my house to terminate me. I immediately
   lost my health insurance and ability to afford the physical therapy I needed
   to rehab my knee.
   
   Read his story


 * FARIBA MOEINPOUR
   
   Ms. Moeinpour’s ordeal began when she was transferred to a University of
   Alabama research lab led by Dr. Clinton Grubbs. Shortly after, she began to
   face relentless racial harassment from a colleague, Mary Jo Cagle. In her bid
   to report this abuse, her supervisor, Grubbs, went to unimaginable lengths to
   silence her: he called the police and physically attacked her. The terror
   didn't end there—Ms. Moeinpour was wrongfully arrested for domestic violence
   and spent 30 harrowing hours in jail. Though the charges were dismissed, she
   was diagnosed with PTSD and needed therapy to cope with the aftermath of her
   supervisor's retaliatory actions. 
   
   Read her story


 * AARON JENSEN
   
   Aaron’s is a long and sad story, starting well before the litigation. He was
   so devastated by all the losses surrounding the horrible treatment by West
   Jordan - he lost his home, his marriage, his career, his friends - that he
   became deeply depressed and suicidal. At trial in 2017, Aaron, his dad, and
   his therapist all testified about his extreme depression, which I believe is
   why the verdict for emotional distress was so high. Sadly, these damages were
   capped and Aaron lost his life in 2022.
   
   Read his story


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