The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) announced that Outback Steakhouse has agreed to pay $19 million
and furnish significant remedial relief to settle a major class lawsuit
alleging sex discrimination against thousands of women at hundreds of
its corporately-owned restaurants nationwide.
According to the EEOC, Outback discriminated against its female
employees with respect to the terms and conditions of employment, and
denied women equal opportunities for advancement. The EEOC alleged in
the lawsuit that female employees hit a glass ceiling at Outback and
could not get promoted to the higher-level profit-sharing management
positions in the restaurants. Moreover, the EEOC also alleged that
women were denied favorable job assignments, particularly kitchen
management experience, which was required for employees to be
considered for the top management job in the restaurants.
“There are still too many glass ceilings left to shatter in
workplaces throughout corporate America,” said EEOC Acting Chairman
Stuart J. Ishimaru. “The EEOC will continue to bring class lawsuits
like this one against employers who engage in gender discrimination on
a systemic scale. Hopefully this major settlement will remind employers
about the perils of perpetuating promotion practices that keep women
from advancing at work.”
The settlement stems from a lawsuit filed by the EEOC in September
2006 under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act in U.S. District Court for
the District of Colorado (EEOC v. Outback Steakhouse of Florida, Inc., and OS Restaurant Partners, Inc. d/b/a Outback Restaurants, No. 06-cv-01935).In
addition to the monetary relief, the settlement, contained in a
four-year consent decree signed by Federal Court Judge Christine M.
Arguello, requires that Outback:
- Institute an online application system for employees interested in managerial and other supervisory positions;
- Employ a human resource executive in the newly created position of Vice President of People;
- Employ an outside consultant for at least two years who will
determine compliance with the terms of the decree and analyze data from
the online application system to determine whether women are being
provide equal opportunities for promotion; and
- Report every six months to the EEOC on carrying out the terms of the decree;
EEOC Regional Attorney Mary Jo O’Neill of the agency’s Phoenix
District, which has jurisdiction for Colorado, said, “We are pleased
with the initiatives that Outback has agreed to in this settlement and
look forward to seeing its efforts to promote women into management
positions realized. Ensuring that all of the talent in a workforce is
fully utilized simply makes good business sense.”
Rita Byrnes Kittle, senior trial attorney in the agency’s Denver
Field Office, who jointly led the litigation effort added, “The EEOC
brokered this far reaching and comprehensive settlement in the public
interest to foster a discrimination-free workplace at Outback. We are
particularly pleased about Outback’s commitment to a new process for
employees to apply for promotion online and for hiring managers to make
their selections from the online applications. We think this new
process will help give women a fair opportunity to advance in the
company.”
The $19 million in monetary relief contained in the settlement will
be administered through a claims process in which an administrator will
send letters to all female workers employed at corporately-owned
Outback restaurants from 2002 to the present who have at least three
years of tenure.
EEOC Denver Trial Attorney Stephanie Struble, who jointly led the
litigation effort, said, “We encourage women who believe they were
discriminated against by Outback to come forward and complete the
claims form to obtain monetary relief. We also encourage all current
female employees at Outback to take advantage of the new application
process and let Outback know that they are interested in promotion.”
According to company information on its web site, “Outback
Steakhouse was founded in Tampa, Florida in 1988. There are over 950
Outback Steakhouse restaurants throughout the world.”