Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 853)
UK government’s emergency plan for Fukushima based on higher radiation levels than Chernobyl

As the nuclear crisis unfolded in Japan British scientists devised a worst case scenario response to protect UK citizens with iodine pills and screenings The British government made contingency plans at the height of the Fukushima nuclear crisis which anticipated a “reasonable worst case scenario” of the plant releasing more radiation than Chernobyl, new documents released to the Guardian show. The grim assessment was used to underpin plans by the British embassy in Tokyo to issue protective iodine pills to expats and visitors. It also prompted detailed plans by Cobra, the government’s emergency committee, to scramble specialist teams to screen passengers returning from Japan at UK airports for radioactive contamination. The UK government’s response to the unfolding crisis is revealed in documents prepared for Sir John Beddington, the chief scientist and chair of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE), and released to the Guardian under the Freedom of Information Act. The haul of 30 papers includes advice from the National Nuclear Laboratory on damage to the plant, public safety assessments from the Health Protection Agency (HPA), computer models of the radioactive plume from Defra’s Radioactive Incident Monitoring Network (RIMNET), and the worst case scenario that might unfold at the plant. A substantial number of documents were withheld on grounds that they contained “information which, if disclosed, would adversely affect international relations,” the government’s civil contingencies team said. The earthquake and tsunami which hit Japan in March, knocking out critical cooling systems at the Fukushima plant, prompted immediate fears that nuclear fuel in the reactors could melt through their pressure vessels and drop onto the concrete floor beneath, causing a “corium explosion” and major release of radiation. There were similar concerns over hundreds of spent fuel rods packed into storage pools above the reactors. To avert nuclear meltdown, Japanese emergency teams worked frantically to rig up mobile power supplies and pump water into the reactors, while the storage ponds were doused with water from helicopters, military fire trucks and an enormous remote-controlled concrete pump. The documents reveal how the government scrambled to build up a clear picture of the crisis and the danger it posed in the days and weeks after the earthquake struck. In the first week, advisers wrestled with conflicting information on the amount of spent fuel at the Fukushima site, but settled on a figure of 4,500 fuel rods in six ponds, or enough to power eight reactor cores. A separate fuel pond, known as the common pool, was “full to the gunnels,” one unnamed adviser wrote. Another fear raised in one document was that spent fuel rods might overheat, melt and slump to the bottom of their storage pools where enough could gather to “go critical”, that is, restart nuclear reactions. The likely result would be spikes in criticality, releasing fresh radioactive material, “which could continue for some time,” the paper states. In further statements, government advisers admitted insufficient expertise to work out how high an explosion might blast radioactive material, but warned that an explosion at one reactor or fuel pond could trigger a domino effect as other reactors and the spent fuel ponds became too dangerous to tend to. The “reasonable worst case scenario” envisaged ruptures at all three reactors in operation before the earthquake, and radiation leaks from six spent fuel ponds at the Fukushima site. The Nuclear Installations Inspectorate estimated this would release ten percent of the radioactive caesium-137 and iodine-131 in the cores and one third of the caesium-137 in the spent fuel ponds. Under the scenario, wind currents carried the plume directly towards Tokyo at a speed of five metres per second. Had the event happened, it could have released the equivalent of 9.92 million terabecquerels of radiation from iodine-131 into the open air, nearly double the 5.2 million terabecquerels released by the fire at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor in Ukraine in 1986 . Even in this worst case scenario though, the accident was expected to cause less harm than Chernobyl, where the reactor’s burning graphite core threw radioactive material high into the atmosphere, and local populations were not evacuated quickly or barred from consuming contaminated milk and other products. The documents show how seriously the risk to British nationals in Tokyo and Sendai was taken. A week into the crisis, the British embassy distributed iodine pills as a contingency measure. Meanwhile, the HPA prepared advice to be published in case a major leak occured. It explained what time the radioactive plume would reach either Tokyo or Sendai, depending on the wind direction and stated: “When the Japanese authorities instruct you to shelter you should take the first dose, or if the UK government gives you additional information.” On 25 March, two weeks after the tsunami struck, the government’s emergency Cobra committee asked the Health Protection Agency to draw up detailed plans to monitor air passengers for radioactive contamination as they arrived from Japan. The agency proposed monitoring all passengers if a major leak arose that could cause “some health concern”, and limited monitoring to reassure the public at the government’s request. Documents from the Health Protection Agency show it had a team ready to monitor passengers landing at Heathrow airport within 24 to 36 hours of Cobra’s request. The agency expected to start passenger screening if a major radiation leak from the plant led to predicted doses of more than six milliseverts in people beyond the 80km exclusion zone. But the agency warned it would struggle to monitor all passengers arriving from Japan at more than two airports in the UK, even if it borrowed radiation detectors from the Atomic Weapons Establishment in Berkshire. In April, the Fukushima incident was upgraded to a level seven , the maximum,on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale. According to Japan’s Nuclear Safety Commission, the accident led to a release of radiation equivalent to 630,000 terabecquerels of iodine-131. That month, a joint paper to SAGE from the Office of Nuclear Regulation, the Met Office, the HPA and RIMNET stated: “The mechanism that could lead to a serious release remains unchanged, ie, molten fuel coming into contact with the concrete base of a pond or reactor causing an explosion.” Other papers prepared for the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies outline the possible long term impact of the accident, which could see restrictions on food supplies in place for years and some regions around the plant ruled permanently out of bounds. Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Energy Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Wisconsin: The GOP’s meth lab of democracy

enlarge Sometimes it’s useful to take a peak at what the Republican Party is doing in the states just so can get a preview of what they’ll do should they regain both the Senate and the White House in 2012. Sure, we all know about the very ugly fight the Wisconsin GOP has picked by denying public-sector unions the right to collectively bargain for better wages and benefits. But as the Wisconsin senate recall elections loom next month, the state party is also plowing ahead trying to pass the most obscene ideological horsecrap they can before democracy rides into the rescue. I mean, just look at this : Republican lawmakers voted Tuesday to trim taxes for corporations and investors while further cutting tax credit programs for the working poor. The Joint Finance Committee also voted to shut down two youth correctional institutions and repeal early-release provisions for state prisoners. The pair of 12-4 party-line votes came as the powerful committee entered a marathon week of work that could stretch into Saturday as GOP lawmakers strive to approve the budget by the end of June. The bill must still be approved by both houses of the Legislature and signed by Gov. Scott Walker. The committee also made changes to taxes on moist snuff tobacco, the state’s system for distributing beer and a child care program for the poor. When reading stuff like this I actually wish that Republicans really did ask themselves, “What would Jesus do?” I mean, yes, you can argue based on the New Testament that Jesus would have probably been a staunch foe of legalized abortion. But if anyone of these guys had ever read the Bible at all — and I was raised Christian so I know what I’m talking about here — they would know that Jesus would similarly disapprove of taking away resources from poor people to fund another tax cut for rich people. “What would Jesus do?” you ask. My hope is that He will float down from the sky, land on top of the Madison Capitol building and shout out, “What the hell do you crazy-assed crackers think you’re doing in My name?” But since I’ve learned recently that betting on the Rapture occurring is a bad business move, I doubt we’ll ever see this happen. Of course, while the GOP is making big spending cuts for anti-poverty programs, there is one level of government spending they’re more than happy to increase: Vos said Republicans would include ending early release for prisoners as part of the budget. Republicans say higher spending on prisons was justified, saying a prison building boom in Wisconsin in the 1990s has helped lower crime rates since then. I mean for God’s sake. Forget asking what Jesus would do, it’s like the Wisconsin GOP gathered around in a circle, sacrificed a goat, raised Satan through a pentagram and said, “What would you wish of us, Dark Lord?” Let’s recap exactly what the Wisconsin GOP is proposing here: Taking away collective bargaining rights from workers. Giving Corporate America another tax cut. Cutting important anti-poverty programs. Increasing spending on prisons to keep all of the wicked looters off the streets so their very presence won’t offend the delicate sensibilities of our corporate masters. I’m really hard-pressed to think of any system of morality where all of these actions are considered a net plus. It’s like the GOP read Foucault’s “Discipline and Punish” and thought, “Hey, this Panopticism thing sounds super sweet!” But wait! There’s more : The state budget bill now in Gov. Scott Walker’s hands would leave schools with roughly $900 million less in state aid and property tax authority over the next two years, state figures show. Going beyond simple cuts in state aid to schools, the budget bill would also end up requiring many districts – perhaps two-thirds of them statewide – to cut their property tax levies, according to one analysis by a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor. Aaaaah, cutting school budgets! What would a GOP budget plan look like without that? After all, why do Wisconsin’s children need an education when they have a terrific career lined up for them stamping license plates in prison? I’ve been trying for a long time to think of what America will look like if the GOP completely gets its way. I tried to imagine what the country would look if there were no labor laws, if there were no environmental protections and if corporations could simply run amok and trample people with impunity. Oh, and of course there would have to be well-funded prison system to keep the plebs in check. Then it occurred to me: The GOP watches Blade Runner and sees its ideal society: Behold, paradise! Anyway, I’d like to ask y’all to make a donation to the Wisconsin recall effort if you can. The Wisconsin GOP needs to be punished for the crime of being evil SOBs. Throwing them out of office is the very least they deserve.

Continue reading …

Danilo Restivo, accused of killing neighbour and placing lock of hair in her hand, admits habit of secretly snipping hair A man accused of brutally murdering a mother and placing a lock of hair in her hand has admitted in court he got a thrill from cutting women’s hair without their knowledge. Danilo Restivo is accused of battering his neighbour Heather Barnett around the head before mutilating her and leaving someone else’s hair in her right hand. Restivo, 39, who denies murder, said he developed a habit for secretly snipping hair from women’s heads after cutting a girl’s hair for a bet when he was a teenager and discovering he enjoyed feeling and sniffing it. The Italian national said it was not sexual behaviour but conceded he became so concerned that he saw a psychologist to break his habit. Seamstress Barnett, 48, was found at home in Bournemouth, Dorset, in 2002 with the hair in her right hand and with hair cut from her own head below her left hand. Restivo also faces allegations in Italy that he murdered schoolgirl Elisa Claps in the town of Potenza, southern Italy, in 1993. The jury has heard that locks of her hair were also left near her body. Giving his evidence at the start of the defence case through a translator, Restivo said: “The hair-cutting first happened when I was about 15 or 16. I was studying at a scientific secondary school and it started as a bet between school friends. “I was trying to get accepted into this group and the first three times I cut hair it was as a bet, but then I started liking it and I kept doing it. I meant no harm. “The problem was that I liked touching the hair and also smelling it. Afterwards I would throw it away in the street. I never knew it was an offence to cut women’s hair and if it is I apologise. It was not a sexual attraction. “It occurred to me these women and girls might find it frightening and intrusive. I tried to stop but was unsuccessful and carried on doing it after I came to England. I tried various ways and even went to a psychologist.” Restivo, who moved to Dorset six months before Barnett’s death, said he had met her once to ask her to make some curtains for his partner as a surprise Christmas present. He claimed a bloodstained green towel found at the murder scene, which the prosecution said could be linked to him through DNA tests, had been given to Barnett as a colour match for the curtains. The jury has been told that Barnett’s murder bore “remarkable similarities” to that of 16-year-old Elisa Claps. She had also been brutally stabbed and locks of hair were left close to her body. Her body was found in a loft of the Most Holy Trinity church in Potenza last year, 17

Continue reading …
Sudan leaders reach peace deal over disputed Abyei region

Ex-South African president Thabo Mbeki helps secure agreement which will allow Ethiopian peacekeeping force role Leaders from north and south Sudan signed an agreement in Ethiopia on Monday to demilitarise the disputed central region of Abyei and allow an Ethiopian peacekeeping force to move in. The former South African president, Thabo Mbeki, who is helping to lead peace talks, said the agreement provided for the full demilitarisation of the fertile region near oilfields that both north and south claim as their own. Troops from northern Sudan moved into the region last month, resulting in the exodus of tens of thousands of people aligned with the south. “The Sudan armed forces will pull out and will be deployed outside Abyei,” said Mbeki. The agreement comes three weeks before the south is set to secede from the north and create the world’s newest country. Heavy violence has broken out along the north-south border in the runup to the south’s independence declaration. The United Nations security council will decide at a meeting in New York what the size of the Ethiopian force will be and what action it will be mandated to take. Shortly after the agreement was reached, Mbeki told the UN in a video conference that both parties wanted the UN to move quickly to see the agreement implemented. Mbeki said urgent action would allow the displaced people of Abyei to return after military forces left, allowing the humanitarian situation to be addressed. Mbeki said: “It will also bring to an end this threat of violence, and actual violence in the area, so we are really hoping that [the] security council will look at this agreement as early as possible and take all the necessary decisions so that the various provisions in the agreement can be implemented.” Tens of thousands of people fled Abyei after northern troops moved in last month. More recently, tens of thousands of people aligned with the south have fled attacks by the northern military in the state of South Kordofan. Talks on the violence in that region are set to begin on Tuesday. The civil war in Sudan lasted decades and resulted in about two million deaths. It ended with a 2005 peace deal that gave the south the right to hold a self-determination vote. The region voted overwhelmingly in January to secede, but the north and south have yet to work out all the details. Pagan Amam, the leader of the southern delegation, said the south was happy with the agreement, particularly the part calling for the withdrawal of northern forces from Abyei. Sudan Africa Ethiopia Thabo Mbeki guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Hospitals will be forced to admit medical errors, says government

New duty of candour to be written into third-party NHS provider contracts following government’s ‘listening exercise’ The Department of Health has published its full response to last week’s NHS Future Forum report , accepting many of the forum’s recommendations and introducing a drive for transparency that will require hospitals to admit errors. A written ministerial statement said hospitals would have a new “duty of candour”, requiring them to tell patients when they had made mistakes – a key demand from the “listening exercise”. Providers of NHS services would have the duty written into their contracts in a drive to increase transparency. The government has moved to eliminate the chances for “cherry-picking”, whereby private providers seek to take on the most profitable operations. Royal colleges – professional bodies for health professionals – would be enlisted to develop safeguards to eliminate this. The document added to the modifications the government had already said it would make to the controversial health and social care bill, including watering down requirements on competition . Having resolved major differences between the coalition partners, the government hopes the bill will clear the House of Commons before the summer recess, and go to the Lords early in the autumn. High profile Liberal Democrats, such as former MP Dr Evan Harris, have voiced continuing concerns about the new direction of the bill. They have three concerns that could threaten a new rebellion like the one that saw the Lib Dem leader, Nick Clegg, forced to insist on a pause in the bill’s progress. Harris has highlighted the danger of essential NHS services being undermined by large numbers of more straightforward cases – and the income that goes with them – being farmed out to private or third sector providers, leaving more expensive A&E or intensive care units unviable. “The NHS doesn’t need any favours on a level playing field, but in the end it has to provide these emergency and rescue services and it can’t do that in a free market,” Harris said. A second concern is the potential for clinical commissioning groups to outsource work to private companies with vested interests, beyond the scope of full public scrutiny. Harris is also concerned that the government is still only placing a responsibility on the secretary of state to have a “duty to promote” rather than the stronger duty to “provide or secure the provision of” a comprehensive NHS service. The health secretary, Andrew Lansley, said the response to the report built on changes already agreed to the health bill. The government has said doctors and nurses will be involved in planning and buying care, while a 2013 deadline for commissioning consortiums to take on budgets has been scrapped and the NHS regulator, Monitor, now has a duty to promote the interest of patients when it comes to competition. Explaining the “duty of candour” principle, the response statement says: “We heard through the listening exercise the suggestion that we could strengthen transparency of organisations and increase patient confidence by introducing a ‘duty of candour’: a new contractual requirement on providers to be open and transparent in admitting mistakes. “We agree. This will be enacted through contractual mechanisms and therefore does not require amendments to the bill. We will set out more details about this shortly.” The “candour” pledge comes as new research suggested basic failures in co-ordinating care led to errors in medication and other forms of treatment. The study, published in the International Journal of Clinical Practice, included 1,434 British patients. Some 9% reported medication or medical errors, with 23% saying poorly co-ordinated care was involved – increasing the likelihood of error by 160%. Lansley said: “We want to deliver continuous improvements in the quality of NHS care. Too often, data about what goes wrong in the NHS is not used to drive improvements. That’s why we are introducing a requirement on providers to be open and transparent in admitting mistakes. “In addition, we are asking foundation trusts to hold their board meetings in public. This will help to foster a culture of openness in the NHS and improve patient confidence. A transparent NHS is a safer NHS.” Have your say on our NHS reforms coverage Health policy NHS Health Andrew Lansley Public services policy Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

[Keith Ellison gives the Netroots keynote on Saturday: the Minnesota politician the Star-Tribune chose to ignore.] I sat down to have a nice departing breakfast at my hotel in Minneapolis yesterday morning after a satisfying Netroots Nation, and as is my custom on such occasions, I bought the local Sunday paper. In this case, that meant buying a copy of the Star-Tribune. Now, I will admit I am impressed that the paper has thus far refused to succumb to the Shrinkage phenomenon that is reducing modern papers to the size of postage stamps. The Star Tribune is still printed on standard old broadsheet paper, and it is graphically quite appealing as well. But what I went there to read was to see what coverage they had of Netroots — easily the largest gathering of political bloggers in the country, and one of the most powerful gatherings of progressive activists in the country as well. Now, I expect that local readers will tell me that the Minneapolis paper is a long-established right-wing Republican rag, and gauging from their Sunday editorial-page lineup, that certainly is the impression I came away with. And no doubt it is despised by the PowerLines of the world for not being right-wing enough, which then becomes their excuse — “See? Both sides hate us! Therefore, we must be exactly right in the middle!” So to be honest, I wasn’t really surprised to see that the Star-Tribune, as I perused it over my coffee and hashbrowns this morning, had actually completely ignored the presence of Netroots Nation in their city and carried not a single word about events there. And indeed, if you check their archives, they couldn’t even be bothered to send a single reporter over to the convention center this week to write about the many luminaries there. Instead, their coverage consisted entirely pieces filed by Associated Press reporters. Oh, wait — there was one piece by a columnist that talked about Netroots and its deeper meaning without any indication he’d ever set foot in the convention. That’s just embarrassing. But then I nearly blorted my coffee out onto the rag when I came across Bob Von Sternberg’s loving coverage of the Republican luminaries at the Right Online conference, complete with big pictures of Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty, which meant that they not only sent a reporter, there was a Star-Trib photographer there as well. ( Von Sternberg wrote a second piece, for online readers, about Right Online as well. There was no indication whatsoever that the Star-Trib was aware that Right Online has ALWAYS been a deliberately imitative gathering — they follow Netroots Nation around like a pathetic wannabe girlfriend, a creepy stalker, setting up shop in whatever city we gather in. Which means that next year, they’ll be in Providence, Rhode Island too, no doubt. Previous gatherings were truly pathetic. They first tried this in Austin, and it was hilariously tiny. The same thing happened in Pittsburgh and in Vegas last year. But this year they made it ridiculously cheap for anyone to attend, thanks to heavy Koch Brothers underwriting, as Tina Dupuy observes. So they were able to boast some decent attendance numbers — I saw one site claim there were in excess of 1,200 people, and my independent sources inform me that’s probably correct (and not in the realm of the mythical 1.7 million who marched at the GlennBeckpalooza in Washington that in fact gathered about 90,000 people). Moreover, the story did end with this nugget that in fact is almost completely wrong: Meanwhile, a couple of blocks away, at the Minneapolis Convention Center, RightOnline’s liberal counterpart, Netroots Nation, was holding its own conference with Sen. Al Franken headlining. Yep, that’s the entirety of the Star Tribune reporting staff’s coverage of Netroots Nation. Meanwhile, Right Online gets two long pieces, photos in the print edition, and several videos in the online edition. Moreover, it’s true that Franken was indeed the keynote speaker Saturday morning — but he was only one of several keynoters throughout the conference weekend. The “headliner” at the convention, if anyone, was Rep. Keith Ellison on Saturday night . Now, I can just hear the Star-Trib’s reporters and editors explaining their thinking: Pawlenty and Bachmann are from Minnesota, after all, and deserve priority for their readers, right? That sounds good. Until you realize that both Franken and Ellison are from … wait … I need to look this up … oh yeah! Minnesota! Huh! Whoda thunk? You know, I love when mainstream reporters whine that blogs ruined their business and made them irrelevant. Incidents like this demonstrate just how they have managed to do that all by themselves. Bloggers just are filling the vacuum created by the black holes remaining in the spaces that were supposed to be occupied by their journalistic standards. You may want to share your thoughts with the folks at the Star-Tribune about those standards. You can call their front desk at (612) 673-4000, or you can write Von Sternberg at vonste@startribune.com and let him know what you think. It might be useful to make your feeling known to Political Editor Patricia Lopez too. Please be polite and thoughtful. It makes a difference.

Continue reading …
Walmart sex discrimination class action rejected

Retail giant victorious in gender bias case as US supreme court rules against 1.6m workers’ collective claims The US supreme court has rejected the biggest sex discrimination case in history, ruling it was too large to bring to trial. The massive gender bias case against retail giant Walmart claimed that 1.6 million of the firm’s current and former employees were subject to discrimination. The suit began nearly 10 years ago when it was originally filed on behalf of employee Betty Dukes and five of her co-workers. The women claimed they had been passed over for promotions and paid less than male employees. After a lower US court said the case could go to trial, Walmart appealed to the supreme court. The case could have cost the firm billions of dollars and would have set a precedent for gender discrimination at many corporations. Companies including Microsoft and General Electric wrote to the court expressing concern about the case. The court rejected arguments that there was a common policy of discrimination against women at Walmart. The plaintiffs had provided statistical evidence that women earned less money and were promoted less often across the company. But Walmart argued there was no discrimination at the firm. Its lawyers argued that a class action representing women from across the country would imply a uniform policy of discrimination, but as individual managers made hiring and promoting decisions independently there was no class-action case to answer. Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion for the court’s conservative majority sided with Walmart. He said there needed to be common elements tying together “literally millions of employment decisions at once”. He said that such a common element was “entirely absent here”. TDukes and the handful of women who brought the original lawsuit may now pursue their claims on their own. Legal expert Stuart Slotnick of New York law firm Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney said: “This changes everything in Walmart’s favour.” Slotnick added that large-scale class actions would now be far harder to bring against other companies, and that greater proof of system-wide discrimination would be needed before a major class-action lawsuit could be brought. Often such proof is only available after a case has been granted class-action status and the process of discovery – where lawyers can demand access to sensitive internal documents – begins. “Walmart was facing tremendous pressure from a case where so many claims were being made against it in one case before one judge,” said Slotnick. “Now each individual will have to find a lawyer to fight their case and I would question whether most individuals will want to do that,” he said. Walmart Gender Retail industry Discrimination at work Work & careers United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Walmart sex discrimination class action rejected

Retail giant victorious in gender bias case as US supreme court rules against 1.6m workers’ collective claims The US supreme court has rejected the biggest sex discrimination case in history, ruling it was too large to bring to trial. The massive gender bias case against retail giant Walmart claimed that 1.6 million of the firm’s current and former employees were subject to discrimination. The suit began nearly 10 years ago when it was originally filed on behalf of employee Betty Dukes and five of her co-workers. The women claimed they had been passed over for promotions and paid less than male employees. After a lower US court said the case could go to trial, Walmart appealed to the supreme court. The case could have cost the firm billions of dollars and would have set a precedent for gender discrimination at many corporations. Companies including Microsoft and General Electric wrote to the court expressing concern about the case. The court rejected arguments that there was a common policy of discrimination against women at Walmart. The plaintiffs had provided statistical evidence that women earned less money and were promoted less often across the company. But Walmart argued there was no discrimination at the firm. Its lawyers argued that a class action representing women from across the country would imply a uniform policy of discrimination, but as individual managers made hiring and promoting decisions independently there was no class-action case to answer. Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion for the court’s conservative majority sided with Walmart. He said there needed to be common elements tying together “literally millions of employment decisions at once”. He said that such a common element was “entirely absent here”. TDukes and the handful of women who brought the original lawsuit may now pursue their claims on their own. Legal expert Stuart Slotnick of New York law firm Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney said: “This changes everything in Walmart’s favour.” Slotnick added that large-scale class actions would now be far harder to bring against other companies, and that greater proof of system-wide discrimination would be needed before a major class-action lawsuit could be brought. Often such proof is only available after a case has been granted class-action status and the process of discovery – where lawyers can demand access to sensitive internal documents – begins. “Walmart was facing tremendous pressure from a case where so many claims were being made against it in one case before one judge,” said Slotnick. “Now each individual will have to find a lawyer to fight their case and I would question whether most individuals will want to do that,” he said. Walmart Gender Retail industry Discrimination at work Work & careers United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Walmart sex discrimination class action rejected

Retail giant victorious in gender bias case as US supreme court rules against 1.6m workers’ collective claims The US supreme court has rejected the biggest sex discrimination case in history, ruling it was too large to bring to trial. The massive gender bias case against retail giant Walmart claimed that 1.6 million of the firm’s current and former employees were subject to discrimination. The suit began nearly 10 years ago when it was originally filed on behalf of employee Betty Dukes and five of her co-workers. The women claimed they had been passed over for promotions and paid less than male employees. After a lower US court said the case could go to trial, Walmart appealed to the supreme court. The case could have cost the firm billions of dollars and would have set a precedent for gender discrimination at many corporations. Companies including Microsoft and General Electric wrote to the court expressing concern about the case. The court rejected arguments that there was a common policy of discrimination against women at Walmart. The plaintiffs had provided statistical evidence that women earned less money and were promoted less often across the company. But Walmart argued there was no discrimination at the firm. Its lawyers argued that a class action representing women from across the country would imply a uniform policy of discrimination, but as individual managers made hiring and promoting decisions independently there was no class-action case to answer. Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion for the court’s conservative majority sided with Walmart. He said there needed to be common elements tying together “literally millions of employment decisions at once”. He said that such a common element was “entirely absent here”. TDukes and the handful of women who brought the original lawsuit may now pursue their claims on their own. Legal expert Stuart Slotnick of New York law firm Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney said: “This changes everything in Walmart’s favour.” Slotnick added that large-scale class actions would now be far harder to bring against other companies, and that greater proof of system-wide discrimination would be needed before a major class-action lawsuit could be brought. Often such proof is only available after a case has been granted class-action status and the process of discovery – where lawyers can demand access to sensitive internal documents – begins. “Walmart was facing tremendous pressure from a case where so many claims were being made against it in one case before one judge,” said Slotnick. “Now each individual will have to find a lawyer to fight their case and I would question whether most individuals will want to do that,” he said. Walmart Gender Retail industry Discrimination at work Work & careers United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Walmart sex discrimination class action rejected

Retail giant victorious in gender bias case as US supreme court rules against 1.6m workers’ collective claims The US supreme court has rejected the biggest sex discrimination case in history, ruling it was too large to bring to trial. The massive gender bias case against retail giant Walmart claimed that 1.6 million of the firm’s current and former employees were subject to discrimination. The suit began nearly 10 years ago when it was originally filed on behalf of employee Betty Dukes and five of her co-workers. The women claimed they had been passed over for promotions and paid less than male employees. After a lower US court said the case could go to trial, Walmart appealed to the supreme court. The case could have cost the firm billions of dollars and would have set a precedent for gender discrimination at many corporations. Companies including Microsoft and General Electric wrote to the court expressing concern about the case. The court rejected arguments that there was a common policy of discrimination against women at Walmart. The plaintiffs had provided statistical evidence that women earned less money and were promoted less often across the company. But Walmart argued there was no discrimination at the firm. Its lawyers argued that a class action representing women from across the country would imply a uniform policy of discrimination, but as individual managers made hiring and promoting decisions independently there was no class-action case to answer. Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion for the court’s conservative majority sided with Walmart. He said there needed to be common elements tying together “literally millions of employment decisions at once”. He said that such a common element was “entirely absent here”. TDukes and the handful of women who brought the original lawsuit may now pursue their claims on their own. Legal expert Stuart Slotnick of New York law firm Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney said: “This changes everything in Walmart’s favour.” Slotnick added that large-scale class actions would now be far harder to bring against other companies, and that greater proof of system-wide discrimination would be needed before a major class-action lawsuit could be brought. Often such proof is only available after a case has been granted class-action status and the process of discovery – where lawyers can demand access to sensitive internal documents – begins. “Walmart was facing tremendous pressure from a case where so many claims were being made against it in one case before one judge,” said Slotnick. “Now each individual will have to find a lawyer to fight their case and I would question whether most individuals will want to do that,” he said. Walmart Gender Retail industry Discrimination at work Work & careers United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …