Age Discrimination
The Age Discrimination in
Employment Act (ADEA) makes
it illegal for employers to
discriminate against
employees who are 40 years
of age or older, because of
their age.
In other words, employers
are forbidden from making
decisions regarding hiring,
promotion, demotion,
termination, compensation,
job training, or other terms
and conditions of employment
based on an employee’s
age. Age
discrimination is also
prohibited under the Illinois Human Right Act, and
Cook County and the City of Chicago ordinances.
Remedies available under the
ADEA include lost wages,
front pay or reinstatement,
and attorney’s fees and court costs. If the
employee can prove that the discrimination was
willful, the employee will be entitled to double
wage and benefit damages.
Age discrimination can be
proved through: (a) direct
evidence, such as smoking
gun statements or documents;
and/or through (b)
circumstantial evidence,
such as evidence that
younger, similarly situated
employees received more
favorable treatment or terms
and conditions of
employment.
Many employees have
a combination of claims,
such as an age
discrimination claim and a
retaliation claim for having
complained of age
discrimination. Even if
the court finds that the
employee was not in fact
discriminated against on the
basis of age, his/her
retaliation claim may
survive dismissal, as long
as the employee can prove
that: (a) s/he reasonably
believed that s/he was
discriminated against on the
basis of age; (b) s/he
complained to her employer or a
governmental agency about
age discrimination; and (c)
the reason that s/he
suffered adverse
consequences was because
s/he complained of age
discrimination.
Representative Cases
Our firm has handled numerous cases involving age
discrimination. What follows are a few brief
summaries of cases that represent the types of age
discrimination cases we have litigated and/or
negotiated to a favorable resolution.
Generally, privacy concerns
and confidentiality
provisions in settlement
agreements prohibit us from
identifying cases, named
parties, and the existence
and terms of settlement
agreements.
Action filed by a pre-school teacher
alleging age discrimination. After her
termination, she learned that the employer had
pressured a former manager to scrutinize the oldest
teachers and find a reason to justify their
termination. 07 C 4145, U.S. District Court,
Northern District of Illinois.
The employer terminated our
client,
the oldest sales
representative in the
company allegedly because he
had low sales, however,
younger sales
representatives were not
terminated even though they
made fewer sales. Shortly
before terminating our
client, his manager asked
whether he ever thought
about retiring.
The employer terminated our
client with more than 30
years seniority and replaced
him with a much younger
employee.
The employer placed our
client, a high-performing
sales representative, on a performance
improvement plan the first
time his sales fell below
plan. Younger sales
representatives who did not
meet their sales goals
received reduced sales goals
and were not placed on a
performance improvement
plan.
The employer terminated our
client, a long-term high
performer, and assigned his
responsibilities to a recent
hire, who was 40 years
younger.
If you
are concerned about age
discrimination, feel free to
contact us. |