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Press Release 10-24-2014

Waiting with Their Wings to Fight Workplace Sex Discrimination

Flight Attendants Were Instrumental in the Early Enforcement of Title VII's Prohibition of Sex Discrimination, Panel Explains at 50thAnniversary Event in Chicago

CHICAGO - Flight attendants were one of the first organized groups to challenge systemic-and routine-sex discrimination following the enactment of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, a panel of original plaintiffs and other experts explained at an event commemorating the 50th anniver­sary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 held Thursday, October 23rd.

The event, The Civil Rights Act @ 50: The Pioneering Role of Flight Attendants in Fighting Sex Discrimination was co-sponsored by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law's Institute for Law and the Workplace (Workplace Institute); and the Equal Employment Opportunity Committee of the American Bar Association's Section of Labor and Employment Law (ABA Committee). A video of the event is available online.

EEOC Chair Jenny R. Yang delivered opening remarks, and EEOC Commissioner Victoria Lipnic moderated a panel that included key plaintiffs in early Title VII cases challenging airline industry practices that discriminated against women.  Panelists included Mary Celeste Lansdale Brodigan, plaintiff in Lansdale v. United Air Lines, Inc.; Mary Pat Laffey-Inman,plaintiff in Laffey v. Northwest Airlines, Inc.; Patricia Friend,former international president, Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFL-CIO; Sonia Fuentes, former attorney, Office of General Counsel, EEOC; Kathleen Barry, author, Femininity in Flight: A History of Flight Attendants; and Mary Rose Strubbe, professor of law and assistant director of the Workplace Institute.  Ms. Fuentes was also EEOC's first woman in the Office of General Counsel and was deeply involved in the Commission's earliest efforts to enforce Title VII's prohibition of sex discrimination. Additionally, the audience saw an excerpt from the Association of Flight Attendants' documentary "Turbulent Romance: The History of AFA.

Flight attendants' fight for equal treatment began in the 1960s, with lawsuits such as Mary Celeste (Lansdale) Brodigan's challenge to United's policy of discharging female, but not male, employees upon marriage, which was subsequently overturned in court. Similarly, Mary Pat Laffey-Inman brought a case under Title VII and the Equal Pay Act, resulting in findings that Northwest treated male and female flight attendants differently in areas of hiring, pay, promotions, benefits, and weight monitoring.

"To give life to Title VII, it takes the commitment and tenaciousness of individuals willing to challenge injustice and go forward, often for many years, to vindicate their rights," Commissioner Lipnic reflected. "These women, through their legal actions, made workplaces better for all Americans, women and men.  They are a testament to the enduring power of the Civil Rights Act."

Chair Yang said, "Flight attendants' civil rights strides also extended beyond Title VII and the airline industry, as they prevailed in striking down arbitrary age restrictions for women in the workplace and began to change views about women's roles at home and in our society."

Chair Yang and other program participants noted, however, that despite our progress, the nation has not yet fulfilled the promise of Title VII's prohibitions against sex discrimination. The EEOC continues to see charges alleging unequal pay on the basis of sex, sex stereotyping, sexual harassment, and pregnancy discrimination.  To learn more about EEOC's efforts to combat workplace sex discrimination, visit http://www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/sex.cfm.

The Workplace Institute is a national center of the Illinois Institute of Technology's Chicago- Kent School of Law for "research, training, dialogue and reflection on the law that governs the workplace."

The ABA Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity Law within the section of Labor and Employment "concentrates on all aspects of equal employment opportunity under federal and state law in both private and public employment."

The EEOC enforces federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination. Further information about the agency is available at www.eeoc.gov.

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10-24-14
Panelists commemorating the 50th anniver­sary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964