ACR 155, as amended, Campos. Equal Pay Day
This measure would proclaim April 12, 2016, as Equal Pay Day in recognition of the need to eliminate the gender gap in earnings by women and to promote policies to ensure equal pay for all.
Fiscal committee: no.
P1 1WHEREAS, More than 50 years after the passage of the Equal
2Pay Act, women, especially minority women, continue to suffer
3the consequences of unequal pay; and
P2 1WHEREAS, According to a report by the National Partnership
2for Women & Families, women in California earned a median of
3$0.84 for each dollar earned by men as of October 2014; and
4WHEREAS, As reported by the United States Census Bureau,
5women working full time, year round in 2013, typically earned 78
6percent of what men earned, indicating little change or progress
7in pay equity; and
8WHEREAS, According to “The Simple Truth about the Gender
9Pay Gap,” a report by the American Association of University
10Women (AAUW), the gender pay gap is even larger for women
11of color, where African American women earned 63 percent and
12Latina women earned 54 percent of what men earned in 2014; and
13WHEREAS, According to “Graduating
to a Pay Gap,” a 2012
14research report by the American Association of University Women
15(AAUW), the gender pay gap is evident one year after college
16graduation, even after controlling for factors known to affect
17earnings, such as occupation, hours worked, and college major;
18and
19WHEREAS, In 2011, the Georgetown University Center on
20Education and the Workforce found that college-educated women
21working full time earn $650,000 less than their male peers do over
22the course of a lifetime; and
23WHEREAS, In 2009, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act was signed
24into law, which gives back to employees their day in court to
25challenge a pay gap. Now we must pass the Paycheck Fairness
26Act, which would amend the Equal Pay Act by closing loopholes
27and improving the law’s effectiveness; and
28WHEREAS, In 2015, California passed SB 253, strengthening
29the state’s existing Equal Pay Act by eliminating loopholes that
30prevent effective enforcement of gender-based discrimination and
31empowering employees to discuss pay
without fear of retaliation,
32providing one more tool to tackle the problem; and
33WHEREAS, Nearly four in 10 mothers are primary breadwinners
34in their households and nearly two-thirds are primary or significant
35earners, making pay equity critical to families’ economic security;
36 and
37WHEREAS, A lifetime of lower pay means women have less
38income to save for retirement and less income counted in a social
39security or pension benefit formula; and
P3 1WHEREAS, Fair pay equity policies can be implemented simply
2and without undue costs or hardship in both the public and private
3sectors; and
4WHEREAS, Fair pay strengthens the security of families today
5and eases future retirement costs while enhancing the American
6economy; and
7WHEREAS, Tuesday, April 12, symbolizes the time in 2016
8when the wages paid to American women catch up to the wages
9paid to men from the previous year; now, therefore, be it
10Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
11thereof concurring, That the Legislature proclaims Tuesday, April
1212, 2016, as Equal Pay Day in recognition of the need to eliminate
13the gender gap in earnings by women and to promote policies to
14ensure equal pay for all; and be it further
15Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
16of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
O
98