Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Asking Job Applicants Their Salary Could Become Illegal
Asking Job Applicants Their Salary Could Become Illegal Earlier this month, Massachusetts became the first state to prohibit employers from asking applicants about their salary history during the job interview process. Now, a trio of Congressional Representatives announced Tuesday that they plan to introduce a bill that would extend that same right to job-seekers across the country. Eleanor Holmes Norton, delegate from Washington, D.C. (and also the first female chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission), along with Rosa DeLauro and Jerrold Nadler, Democratic Representatives from Connecticut and New York, respectively, say theyâll introduce a bill when Congress returns from its summer recess that will prohibit employers from asking about salary history before they make a job offer or specifying a salary. Read More: Itâs Illegal to Ask How Much You Make in a Job Interview in This State âThe bill seeks to eliminate the wage gap that women and people of color often encounter,â Holmesâ office said in a news release. âBecause many employers set wages based on an applicantâs previous salary, workers from historically disadvantaged groups often start out behind their white male counterparts in salary negotiations and never catch up.â In the meantime, experts suggest that job-seekers can wiggle around the question by stating a range of what theyâd like to be paid, or telling the hiring manager your total compensation, including benefits â" as long as youâre clear that this isnât just your salary.
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