Lilly Ledbetter, whose lawsuit against Goodyear paved the way for the Fair Pay Act of 2009 and who dedicated decades of her life to fighting for equal pay, died in Alabama on Saturday, Oct. 12, her family said in a statement. She was 86.
The cause was respiratory failure, the statement said, and indicated she died “peacefully” and “surrounded by her family and loved ones.”
“Our mother lived an extraordinary life,” the family said. “We truly appreciate your respect for our privacy during this time of grief.”
I first met Ms. Ledbetter while covering politics and labor in Alabama in 2013 at a Democratic Party fundraiser in Anniston. She became a friend and fan of the New American Journal and endorsed Birmingham’s Doug Jones for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Donald Trump’s first attorney general, Jeff Sessions.
“She has been a fighter for equal pay for women and is a tireless advocate for change, traveling the country to urge women and minorities to claim their civil rights,” Jones said at the time in accepting her endorsement, calling her “a true American hero.”
Ms. Ledbetter got a job at the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in Gadsden, Ala. in 1979.
“We needed that money to pay college tuition and the mortgage,” she said at Forbes Magazine’s women’s summit in 2021.
Ledbetter’s activism led to the first bill Barack Obama signed into law after becoming president in 2009. The law, called the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Restoration Act, made it easier for workers to sue after discovering what they believed to be pay discrimination.
In signing the measure, Obama said that it sent the message “that there are no second-class citizens in our workplaces, and that it’s not just unfair and illegal, it’s bad for business to pay someone less because of their gender or their age or their race or their ethnicity, religion or disability.”
Ledbetter worked at Goodyear for nearly 20 years before discovering she was being paid less than men doing the same job.
The legislation effectively overturned a two-year-old, 5-4 Supreme Court decision that found that Ledbetter didn’t have grounds to sue because she didn’t discover the alleged pay discrimination within six months of it first taking place. The bill signed by President Obama changed the rules so Ledbetter and workers like her could sue within six months of discovering the alleged pay discrimination, regardless of when it began.
The former president paid tribute to Ledbetter in a post on X, saying she “never set out to be a trailblazer or a household name. She just wanted to be paid the same as a man for her hard work. But this grandmother from Alabama kept on fighting” until he signed the bill bearing her name.
“Lilly did what so many Americans before her have done: setting her sights high for herself and even higher for her children and grandchildren,” Obama said.
Among others also paying tribute, the AFL-CIO, which called her “a true hero” and Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff, who said she “forever changed my understanding with the simple but powerful phrase, “Equal pay for equal work.” It’s shocking that, as a CEO, I witnessed firsthand how wide the pay disparities were — not just in my own company, but across so many others we acquired. Lilly taught me the fight for equality starts with pay equity.”
Ledbetter continued her advocacy well after the law was signed.
She received the Future Is Female Lifetime Achievement Award from Advertising Week the week before her death.
And a movie about her life, “Lilly,” starring Patricia Clarkson, just premiered at the Hamptons International Film Festival.
According to The New York Times obituary, at first Ms. Ledbetter earned the same as her male counterparts, she said. But over time, her pay dropped “way out of line” compared to that of her male peers — unbeknown to her.
At the factory, she said in 2021, employees could lose their jobs for sharing information about their salaries. It was not until 1998 that Ms. Ledbetter found out, by receiving an anonymous note, that she in fact earned much less than men working the same position.
“I was devastated,” she said.
In a 2018 Opinion essay in the Times, Ms. Ledbetter wrote that she was also sexually harassed early on in her tenure at Goodyear.
After finding out about the pay discrepancy, Ms. Ledbetter went home and talked to her husband. “And we decided to fight,” she said in a speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2012.
Ms. Ledbetter filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1998 and a lawsuit against Goodyear in 1999. In 2003, she won her case at a federal court in Alabama, with the jury awarding her $3.8 million. (In a 2009 interview with NPR, Ms. Ledbetter said that the sum was reduced to a $300,000 cap and $60,000 in back pay.)
But she did not receive any of that money, she told NPR.
The case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, which in 2007 ruled in favor of Goodyear in a 5-4 decision, saying that Ms. Ledbetter had filed her suit too late (more than 180 days) after the initial decision to pay her less than men.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s dissenting opinion, Ms. Ledbetter said, inspired her to take the case to Congress. In 2009, Congress approved legislation that expanded workers’ rights to sue in such cases. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act changed the time limit so that each discriminatory paycheck — and not just the first one — resets the 180-day limit to file a claim.
“It is fitting that with the very first bill I sign, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, we are upholding one of this nation’s first principles: that we are all created equal and each deserve a chance to pursue our own version of happiness,” Obama said in signing the bill into law.
Ms. Ledbetter made it to the White House again in 2014, standing with a group of women behind President Obama as he signed two executive measures that would make it easier for women to learn whether they had been cheated by employers.
Ms. Ledbetter was born Lilly McDaniel in Alabama to J.C. McDaniel, a mechanic, and Edna Smith McDaniel. She is survived by a daughter, Vickie Ledbetter Saxon; a son, Phillip Ledbetter; and several grandchildren. Ms. Ledbetter’s husband, Charles Ledbetter, died in 2008.
Although Ms. Ledbetter would not see any money as a result of the 2009 legislation, she said that she had derived personal satisfaction from the bill.
“Goodyear will never have to pay me what it cheated me out of,” Ms. Ledbetter recalled saying after the signing ceremony. “In fact, I will never see a cent. But with the president’s signature today I have an even richer reward.”
Glynn Wilson is editor and publisher of New American Journal (NewAmericanJournal.net).
From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2024
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