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Industry Spotlight > Women in Wealth

10 Worst Districts for Women’s Pay Revealed; Senators Push Paycheck Fairness Act

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Senate democrats gathered on Capitol Hill Wednesday to push for passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act, legislation that would help close the pay gap between women and men working equivalent jobs.

Indeed, the National Partnership for Women & Families recently released an analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data showing that the gender-based wage gap affects women in nearly every part of the country. In 97% of congressional districts—423 out of 435 districts—the median yearly pay for women is less than the median yearly pay for men, the analysis found. The data does not compare pay for similar jobs but for pay in all jobs between men and women.

Top 10 Worst Legislative Districts for Women's PayThe data also listed the top 10 worst state districts for women’s pay compared to men (see chart on left; see also Page 2 of this story for some cities in those districts*).

The Paycheck Fairness Act builds upon the first bill President Barack Obama signed into law on Jan. 29, 2009, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which overturned the 180-day statute of limitations for women to contest pay discrimination, as well as the Equal Pay Act signed into law in 1963.

Senate Republicans blocked a similar paycheck fairness bill last July.

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., dean of the Senate women, stated on the Senate floor Wednesday morning that 50 years after passage of the Equal Pay Act, “we are still fighting for equal pay for equal work.” The fight, she said, “continues now, and that’s why we need this Paycheck Fairness Act. Women are harassed if they even ask how much the guys get paid.”

The legislation, Mikulski said, helps close the wage gap between women and men working equivalent jobs, which costs women and their families $434,000 over their careers. Today, she said, women make on average just 77 cents for every dollar made by a man for equal work.

While closing the loopholes that allow pay discrimination to continue, The Paycheck Fairness Act will also, with Ledbetter, “provide employees the rights they need to challenge and eliminate pay discrimination in the workplace,” Mikulski said.  

The Paycheck Fairness Act would require employers to show pay disparity is truly related to job performance, not gender, and prohibit employer retaliation for sharing salary information with coworkers. “Under current law employers can sue and punish employees for sharing such information,” Mikulski said. In addition, the act “strengthens remedies for pay discrimination by increasing compensation women can seek, allowing them to not only seek back pay, but also punitive damages for pay discrimination.”

The act also “empowers women in the workplace through a grant program to strengthen salary negotiation and other workplace skills and requires the Department of Labor to enhance outreach and training efforts to eliminate pay disparities,” Mikulski added.

Democratic senators from different states joined Mikulski on the Senate floor to voice their support for the Paycheck Fairness Act.

“Pay disparity still exists between men and women,” said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash.

“One third of the families headed by women in my state are in poverty,” she said. “We must end unequal pay and level the playing field.”

Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said in her comments that women in Michigan are paid only 74 cents for every dollar a man makes. “Most women are the sole breadwinners in their families,” she said. “In Michigan, that 74 cents [versus $1] difference equals over a half-million dollars in pay that’s lost” during a lifetime.  

Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska, the one male senator on hand, said the Paycheck Fairness Act “provides women with the tools to close this longstanding gap.”

While the U.S. Census data analysis released by the National Partnership for Women & Families compared all pay earned by women in various types of jobs, a U.S Census analysis conducted last year on the difference in wages earned by women and men selling securities showed some startling results.

The analysis found that the gap in 2010 was 41.6% for women classified as personal financial advisors by the U.S. Census and 37.3% for those classified as securities, commodities and financial-services sales agents. In other words, for every $100,000 earned by a male colleague, a woman in these job categories earned $58,400 and $62,700, respectively.

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*Below are some of the cities that are represented by the congressional districts listed in the chart on Page 1:

1. Louisiana, District 3: Laplace, Houma

2. Louisiana, District 7: Lafayette

3. Virginia, District 10: McLean, Winchester

4. New Jersey, District 11: Morristown

5. West Virginia, District 3: Huntington

6. Illinois, District 13: Decatur, Urbana

7. Indiana, District 1: Gary

8. Wyoming, At-Large District

9. Utah, District 1: Ogden

10. Illinois, District 12: Belleville


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