Florida Senate - 2014                                     SB 206
       
       
        
       By Senator Joyner
       
       
       
       
       
       19-00013A-14                                           2014206__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to employment discrimination; creating
    3         the Helen Gordon Davis Fair Pay Protection Act;
    4         providing legislative findings and intent relating to
    5         equal pay for equal work for women; recognizing the
    6         importance of the Department of Economic Opportunity
    7         and the Florida Commission on Human Relations in
    8         ensuring fair pay; providing for the duties of the
    9         department and the commission; creating the Governor’s
   10         Recognition Award for Pay Equity in the Workplace;
   11         requiring that the award be given annually to
   12         employers in this state which have engaged in
   13         activities that eliminate the barriers to equal pay
   14         for equal work for women; requiring the executive
   15         director of the department and the chair of the
   16         commission to work cooperatively with the Executive
   17         Office of the Governor to create eligibility criteria
   18         for employers to receive the award; providing an
   19         effective date.
   20          
   21  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   22  
   23         Section 1. Fair pay recognition; awards.—
   24         (1)SHORT TITLE.—This section may be cited as the “Helen
   25  Gordon Davis Fair Pay Protection Act.”
   26         (2)LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.—
   27         (a)The Legislature finds that women have entered the
   28  workforce in record numbers over the past 50 years. Yet, despite
   29  the enactment of the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. s. 206(d),
   30  many women continue to earn significantly lower pay than men for
   31  equal work. These pay disparities exist in both the private and
   32  governmental sectors. In many instances, the pay disparities are
   33  the result of continued intentional discrimination against women
   34  or the lingering effects of past discrimination against women.
   35         (b)The Legislature finds that the existence of such pay
   36  disparities:
   37         1.Depresses the wages of working families who rely on the
   38  wages of all members of the family;
   39         2.Undermines the retirement security of women, which is
   40  based on wages that women earn while in the workforce;
   41         3.Prevents the optimum use of available labor resources;
   42         4.Spreads and perpetuates, through commerce and the
   43  instrumentalities of commerce, among workers in all states;
   44         5.Burdens commerce and the free flow of goods in commerce;
   45         6.Constitutes an unfair method of competition in commerce;
   46         7.Leads to labor disputes;
   47         8.Interferes with the orderly and fair marketing of goods
   48  in commerce; and
   49         9.Deprives women workers of equal protection on the basis
   50  of gender in violation of the Fifth and the Fourteenth
   51  Amendments to the United States Constitution.
   52         (c)The Legislature finds that artificial barriers to the
   53  payment of equal wages continue to exist decades after the
   54  enactment of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 29 U.S.C. ss.
   55  201 et seq., and the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. s.
   56  2000a. These barriers have resulted, in large part, because the
   57  Equal Pay Act has not worked as Congress originally intended.
   58  Improvements and modifications to the law are necessary in order
   59  to ensure that the act provides effective protection to those
   60  who are subject to pay discrimination on the basis of their
   61  gender. The Legislature finds that eliminating such artificial
   62  barriers would have positive effects, including:
   63         1.Providing a solution to problems in the economy created
   64  by unfair pay disparities;
   65         2.Substantially reducing the number of women workers
   66  earning unfairly low wages, thereby reducing dependence on
   67  public assistance;
   68         3.Promoting stable families by enabling all family members
   69  to earn a fair rate of pay;
   70         4.Remedying the effects of past discrimination on the
   71  basis of gender and ensuring that in the future women workers
   72  are afforded equal protection; and
   73         5.Ensuring equal protection under s. 2, Article I of the
   74  State Constitution.
   75         (d)The Legislature finds that the Department of Economic
   76  Opportunity and the Florida Commission on Human Relations have
   77  important and unique responsibilities to ensure that women
   78  receive equal pay for equal work. As a result of this section,
   79  wage data, increased information about the provisions added to
   80  the Equal Pay Act of 1963, and a stronger commitment by the
   81  Department of Economic Opportunity and the Florida Commission on
   82  Human Relations to their responsibilities and to more effective
   83  remedies, women will be better able to recognize and enforce
   84  their rights.
   85         (e)The Legislature further finds that certain employers
   86  have already made great strides in eradicating unfair pay
   87  disparities in the workplace and that their achievements should
   88  be recognized.
   89         (3) DUTIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY AND
   90  THE FLORIDA COMMISSION ON HUMAN RELATIONS.—
   91         (a)The Department of Economic Opportunity shall:
   92         1.Collect and make publicly available information about
   93  women’s pay;
   94         2.Ensure that companies receiving state contracts comply
   95  with antidiscrimination and affirmative action requirements of
   96  this state relating to equal employment opportunity;
   97         3.Disseminate information about women’s rights in the
   98  workplace;
   99         4.Help women who have been victims of pay discrimination
  100  obtain a remedy;
  101         5.Be proactive in investigating and prosecuting violations
  102  of laws requiring equal pay, especially systemic violations, and
  103  in enforcing all mandates of those laws; and
  104         6. Conduct studies concerning the means that are available
  105  to eliminate pay disparities between men and women and, in
  106  connection with such studies, shall:
  107         a.Promote research to develop the means to expeditiously
  108  correct the conditions leading to pay disparities;
  109         b.Publish and otherwise make available to employers, labor
  110  organizations, professional associations, educational
  111  institutions, the media, and the public findings resulting from
  112  studies and other materials relating to eliminating pay
  113  disparities;
  114         c.Sponsor and assist state and community informational and
  115  educational programs;
  116         d.Provide information to employers, labor organizations,
  117  professional associations, and other interested persons on the
  118  means of eliminating pay disparities; and
  119         e.Recognize and promote the achievements of employers,
  120  labor organizations, and professional associations that have
  121  worked to eliminate pay disparities.
  122         (b)The Florida Commission on Human Relations is the
  123  primary enforcement agency for claims made under the Equal Pay
  124  Act and shall adopt rules and issue guidance on appropriate
  125  interpretations of the law.
  126         (4)THE GOVERNOR’S RECOGNITION AWARD FOR PAY EQUITY IN THE
  127  WORKPLACE.—
  128         (a)The Legislature establishes the Governor’s Recognition
  129  Award for Pay Equity in the Workplace, which shall be given
  130  annually to employers in this state which have engaged in
  131  activities that eliminate the barriers to equal pay for equal
  132  work. The award ceremony to recognize employers shall be
  133  organized in such a way so as to encourage proactive efforts by
  134  other employers to equalize pay between men and women performing
  135  the same work.
  136         (b)The executive director of the Department of Economic
  137  Opportunity and the chair of the Florida Commission on Human
  138  Relations, in cooperation with the Executive Office of the
  139  Governor, shall create eligibility criteria for employers to
  140  receive the award. The criteria must include a requirement that
  141  an employer must have made substantial efforts to eliminate pay
  142  disparities between men and women. The executive director shall
  143  establish procedures for applications, regional ceremonies, and
  144  presentations of the award.
  145         Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2014.