From Oakland Tribune, 3/21/01

Lawsuit Accuses AT&T of Cheating Pregnant Women
Reduced Pensions Unfair, Retirees Say

By Josh Richman
STAFF WRITER OAKLAND TRIBUNE

3/21/01 OAKLAND—Four women and a labor union filed a federal class action lawsuit against AT&T on Tuesday, claiming the company cheated women out of pension benefits by discriminating against them for taking pregnancy leave more than 22 years ago.

An estimated 15,000 women who worked for AT&T and its subsidiaries and took pregnancy-related leave before April 29, 1979, could be affected, according to Equal Rights Advocates, a San Francisco-based nonprofit helping to represent the plaintiffs.

AT&T spokeswoman June Rochford said the company had not yet received a copy of the lawsuit and so could not comment.

The suit—filed in part by the Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO—claims that before the Pregnancy Discrimination Act took effect, AT&T workers who had to take disability leave were given “service credit” for their absences while pregnant women were forced to take “personal leaves” for childbearing. Because they were denied the credit for that time, many women were excluded from lucrative early retirement opportunities or were given lower pension benefits.

For example, plaintiff Noreen Hulteen—wife of former Hayward council member and mayoral candidate Ron Hulteen—was forced to take personal leave for her pregnancy and related disabilities in 1968. Because of this, she was denied eight months of service credit toward her pension. Since she retired in 1994, her pension checks have been reduced because of the lost leave time.

In a similar case against former AT&T subsidiary Pacific Bell, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the company. That case ended in 1998 with a multimillion dollar settlement including pension adjustments for thousands of women. All of the plaintiffs’ lawyers in this case were involved in that earlier case.



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