not sure that Johnson was interested in furthering her career at Walmart. Johnson also alleged that when she talked to a second manager about what the first allegedly said, the second manager told her that the first manager should not have told you that.”
Shortly after she was denied the promotion, Johnson resigned.
She then filed an administrative charge of discrimination with the EEOC, which later sued Walmart to allege that it violated Title VII by denying her the promotion based on her sex.
The agency eventually sued Walmart on Johnson’s behalf, asserting a Title VII violation.
No Summary Judgment
In late July of 2023, an Iowa federal district court rejected Walmart’s bid for summary judgment.
It said a genuine dispute existed as to whether the two managers made the statements that Johnson said they did.
Drawing all inferences in Johnson’s favor, the court added that a reasonable fact finder could conclude that the managers engaged in sex stereotyping denying her the job based on the “pervasive presumption that women are mothers first, and workers second.”
That decision paved the way for the settlement, which the EEOC announced in a January press release.
In addition to paying $60,000, Walmart will train managers on federal law banning sex discrimination. It will also report any new complaints of sex discrimination in promotions to the agency for a set period of time.
“Discriminating against a woman because of stereotypes about working mothers is sex discrimination, plain and simple,” said EEOC regional attorney Gregory Gochanour in the release.
Information provided by: HR Morning
|