Social Security May Owe Millions To Employees
     From the 
Federal Times:
 The Social Security Administration may be forced to fund millions of 
dollars in additional back pay to black male employees who say the 
agency breached the terms of a 2002 class action discrimination 
settlement, according to the Federal Times. 
 In a ruling issued
 on Dec. 18, Carlton Hadden, the director of the Office of Federal 
Operations at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, ordered an 
administrative judge to oversee distribution of back pay to black males 
working at SSA’s office in Baltimore from April 1, 2003, through Sept. 
30, 2005. Hadden said that the agency must “correct any misapplications 
of its policies for granting performance awards,” and instructed the 
agency to provide written notification to a compliance officer. ... 
 In a statement, Michael Kator, the employees’ lawyer, said that the 
ruling would mean that SSA would be forced to pay a steeper penalty than
 if they had followed the terms of the original settlement. As many as 
2,200 current and former employees would likely be affected, according 
to the settlement documents.   
 “While it may ultimately be for the experts to decide, SSA’s liability 
could well exceed by 10 times the amount of the original settlement,” 
Kator wrote. 
 Kia Anderson, a spokeswoman for the Social Security Administration, told the Federal Times
 that the agency “disagreed with the ruling” and would “defend its 
position” to the administrative judge, who will determine the final sum 
the agency owes the employees.
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2 comments:
It was BS then and it's BS now.
Kator certainly embellishes the judges order to make it sound like more than it is! These class action complaints are out of control.
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