May 26, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - An aerospace
manufacturer has agreed to a $1.25 million settlement of a
lawsuit alleging that 12 Hispanic workers at a Grand
Junction, Colorado facility were harassed because of their
national origin.
The US
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) said the agreement reached with Hamilton Sundstrand,
also provides for:
training on the requirements of
federal anti-discrimination laws, with appropriate
levels of information presented to non-supervisory
employees, managers, and human resource
employees.
the appointment of an EEO Coordinator
to ensure compliance with the consent decree and
oversee the company’s investigation of employee
complaints of discrimination, including retaliation
complaints made by employees after reporting possible
violations of anti-discrimination laws.
a review of policies and procedures
to ensure compliance with federal anti-discrimination
laws, as well establishing and maintaining an
effective complaint procedure for all
employees.
The Windsor Locks, Connecticut-based
company, which averages $3.9 billion in annual sales and
employs approximately 16,000 worldwide, designs and
manufactures aerospace systems for commercial, regional,
corporate and military aircraft.
May 25, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - A prominent US
House Democrat is sponsoring what is believed to be the first
online hearing ever conducted by a House member - in this
case regarding problems with the US private pension
system.
>In the wake of the United Airlines pension struggle,
US Representative George Miller (D-California) kicked off a
weeklong e-hearing in which interested parties can submit
testimony via e-mail. The forum, which lacks
the official blessing of a House committee, was
initiated after a bankruptcy court decision earlier this
month that allowed the parent company of United
Airlines to transfer $6.6 billion in pension liabilities to
the nation’s private
pe
nsion insurer (See
United Pension Hearing Delayed, But Okayed
By Court
).
“By employing e-mail and the Internet, we can hold a
hearing at any time, on any subject; we can invite the most
well-informed participants, regardless of their ability to
travel or the congressional schedule,” wrote US
Representative George Miller, (D-California), on the
e-hearing home page
.
>Miller, the senior Democrat on the House Education
and the Workforce Committee, sponsored the e-hearing with
Representative Jan Schakowsky, (D-Illinois). “This Congress
is consistently ignoring economic issues of great
importance to American workers and their families, from
health insurance, to wages, to the trouble with United and
other companies’ pension plans,” Miller said in a
statement. “Because the Republican majority will not hold
hearings into these crucial matters, Democrats will use
technology to give Americans a forum for better informing
their Congress.
>Miller and Schakowsky are inviting online statements
through Friday from United employees and retirees, United
management, pension experts, and executives from the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp (PBGC). The testimony will
eventually be entered into the Congressional Record.
>So far, statements from 42 United employees and
retirees have been posted online, as well as comments from
Teresa Ghilarducci, an economics professor at the
University of Notre Dame who has testified on pension
issues before.
“It’s so cool. I’m so glad I don’t have to get on an
airplane,” said Ghilarducci, whose teaching schedule would
have made it impossible to travel to the Capitol, in an
interview with the Hartford Courant. “This was terrific for
me, who had something to say but just could not get there
to testify,” she said.
“I think it’s appropriate for the first e-hearing to be
on this issue,” she continued. “This is an issue that
concerns people who aren’t normally heard from. It touches
every single worker who’s concerned about their retirement
security. The only way their voices can be heard is through
the Internet.”
>But the electronic forum does have drawbacks,
according to a Courant news report. To begin with, House
rules require all formal hearings to be conducted in
person, with witnesses sworn in and with an opportunity for
members of Congress to question those testifying. The
unofficial online forum, by contrast, provides no
opportunity for questions and answers, and no way to verify
the identity of those submitting statements, the newspaper
said.
>A spokesman for Representative John Boehner,
(R-Ohio), chairman of the Education and the Workforce
Committee, called that notion that Republicans were
blocking hearings into issues such as pension reform
“absurd.”