Obama endorses Paycheck Fairness Act
10:15 AM
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http://www.usatoday.com/communities/theoval/Index




President Obama.
CAPTIONBy SAUL LOEB, AFP/Getty ImagesPresident Obama has issued a
statement endorsing a gender pay equity law, a topic our Mimi Hall
covered in today's USA TODAY.





Here's the statement:

In America today, women make up half of the workforce, and two-thirds
of American families with children rely on a woman's wages as a
significant portion of their families' income.

Yet, even in 2010, women make only 77 cents for every dollar that men
earn. The gap is even more significant for working women of color, and
it affects women across all education levels. As Vice President Biden
and the Middle Class Task Force will discuss today, this is not just a
question of fairness for hard-working women. Paycheck discrimination
hurts families who lose out on badly needed income. And with so many
families depending on women's wages, it hurts the American economy as
a whole. In difficult economic times like these, we simply cannot
afford this discriminatory burden.

My Administration has already begun to address this problem. In my
first week in office, I signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which
helps women who face wage discrimination recover their lost wages, and
in my State of the Union Address, I promised to crack down on
violations of equal pay laws. Today the Equal Pay Enforcement Task
Force will present its recommendations, which include ways to better
coordinate among enforcement agencies and inform employees about their
rights. These steps support women, and they also support businesses
that are doing the right thing and paying their employees what they
deserve.

We cannot do this work alone. So today, I thank the House for its work
on this issue and encourage the Senate to pass the Paycheck Fairness
Act, a common-sense bill that will help ensure that men and women who
do equal work receive the equal pay that they and their families
deserve. Passing this bill is one of the Task Force's key
recommendations, and I hope Congress will act swiftly so that I can
sign it into law.

Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Republican leader John Boehner of
Ohio, called the pay equity bill "a cruel hoax."

"It won't empower women who face pay discrimination," Steel said. "but
it will empower trial lawyers whose junk lawsuits will clog up the
courts and make it hard for businesses to grow and hire."

(Posted by David Jackson)
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