July 21, 2003 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Ceridian
Corporation has tapped Robert "Bo" Ewald as president of
Human Resource Solutions, an HR outsourcing provider in the
US, Canada, and the UK.
He will report to Ronald Turner, chairman, president and
chief executive officer of Ceridian.
Turner has been acting president of the US segment of
Ceridian’s Human Resource Solutions business since
September 2002. Bruce Thew, president of Ceridian
International Human Resource Services, which includes
Ceridian’s HR businesses in Canada and the UK, will report
to Ewald.
Ewald has served as a member of Ceridian’s Board of
Directors since 1998 and will remain on the Board as an
uncompensated director.
Ewald, 55, previously served as chairman and CEO of
Scale Eight, Inc., a file storage solutions company, and
executive chairman of Learn2 Corporation, an e-learning
company. He earned a Bachelor of Science in civil
engineering from the University of Nevada and a Master of
Science in civil engineering/applied mathematics from the
University of Colorado.
EEOC Files Religious Discrimination Suit Against
Airline
July 18, 2003 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The US Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has filed a lawsuit
against regional commuter airline Trans States Airlines, Inc.
alleging the company discriminated against one of its pilots
on the basis of his religion.
>The alleged discrimination was against Mohammed
Hussein, a pilot employed as a First Officer, because of
his Islamic religious beliefs and his Arabic appearance.
Further, the agency says in the suit filed in US District
Court for the Eastern District of Missouri that such action
constitutes a violation of Title VII of the 1964 Civil
Rights, according to a news release.
>Hussein, who is a native of Fiji, was fired one week
after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks despite an
excellent work record.
After being terminated and being refused a reason by the
company for his dismissal,
Hussein filed a charge of religious, race and
national origin discrimination with the EEOC in St.
Louis.
>During EEOC’s investigation, Trans States asserted
that it discharged Hussein on the basis of an anonymous
report that he was in a “drinking establishment” while in
uniform.
However, the EEOC alleges that contrary to the company’s
established policy, Trans States did not investigate the
alleged report or even identify the person who made it.
In addition, it refused to inform Hussein of the
allegations against him or provide him a chance to respond
to the purported accusation.
The EEOC filed the suit after its conciliation
efforts to reach a voluntary pre-litigation settlement
proved futile and
is seeking a permanent injunction prohibiting the company
from engaging in employment discrimination.
Also, the agency
seeks reinstatement, back wages, compensatory
damages, punitive damages, and other relief for
Hussein.
Post 9/11 Pressure
In the weeks after 2001’s terrorist attacks, some
Arab-American groups were critical of the
commission for what the critics said was a
lukewarm response to widespread reports of workplace
discrimination against Arab Americans. Agency officials
countered by insisting they stood ready to enforce
anti-bias laws.
The commission has since filed national-origin
lawsuits against six employers, including:
Robert Johnson, regional attorney of the EEOC’s St.
Louis District Office, said, “The tragic events of 9/11
cannot be used to justify discrimination against innocent
individuals because of their religion, national origin, or
appearance. Even in times of great national distress,
employers must uphold our freedoms and guard against
unlawful discrimination”
Johnson’s comments also echo statement made by the
agency at the end of 2002, warning against post-September
11 discrimination (See
EEOC Repeats Post 9/11 Discrimination
Warnings
).
Since September 11, 2001, the EEOC has received
more than 800 charge filings nationwide alleging
post-9/11 backlash discrimination by individuals who are
– or who are perceived to be – of Middle Eastern descent.
Nearly 100 individuals aggrieved by 9/11-related
employment discrimination have received over $1.45
million in monetary benefits through EEOC’s
enforcement, mediation, conciliation, and litigation
efforts, the agency said.