Three female Allsteel employees will be compensated for gender-based wage discrimination, a jury decided.
Erin Dindinger, a safety and environmental manager for 11 years, and Elizabeth Fruend, a plant manager, both claimed they were paid less than male employees with the same title. Lisa Loring, a manager for five years, said she was denied a promotion based on her gender.
Allsteel claimed the employees were not paid more based on prior education and experience, seniority and poor job performance, according to court documents. The company also claimed that the women were paid less due to economic conditions - particularly the 2008 recession. The jury awarded the plaintiffs back-pay of $204,000 and attorney fees totaling $269,877.
Allsteel motioned for a new trial following the ruling, which was denied. They then appealed the ruling in April. The appeals court affirmed the previous ruling:
"The court concluded that the district court correctly instructed the jury that Allsteel could not rely on economic conditions to establish its affirmative defense to the Equal Pay Act claim that a factor other than sex justified the pay discrepancies between plaintiffs and their male comparators. Even if the court were to agree that economic conditions could be a factor other than sex justifying a pay differential in some circumstances, Allsteel did not present evidence to establish such a defense. Because Allsteel did not present evidence that economic conditions caused the pay differentials plaintiffs experienced, the district court did not abuse its discretion in instructing the jury that Allsteel could not rely on economic conditions to establish an affirmative defense.