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Faces of Change: Lilly Ledbetter's Equal Pay Story - YouTube
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(Lilly Ledbetter) I grew up in one of the
poorest counties in Alabama during a time
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when we had very little.
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My mother felt that I should learn the work
ethic as a child.
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She had worked all her life.
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I had to chop cotton in the spring for my
Grandfather, and then you would have to drag
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that cotton sack on your shoulders down the
road.
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Picking that cotton as a child taught me that
you give a good daysâ work for a good daysâ
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pay.
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Iâm Lilly Ledbetter, and Iâm from Possum
Trot, Alabama.
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I hired in with Goodyear, February 5, 1979.
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I wanted to be a part of the radio plant in
Gadsden.
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We needed to work because we couldnât make
it just on one salary.
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We couldnât pay for our home and we couldnât
pay the mortgage.
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It took two people in the middle-class to
manage and earn enough money to sustain a
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family of four or more.
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I wanted more for my children than I had had.
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And thatâs why I worked so hard.
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There were not any women above me in management
at Goodyear in Gadsden.
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It had only been me.
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And most of the women who had had those positions,
they didnât last.
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I go into work one evening, and I look in
my mail, and hereâs this note.
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It has four names, and it was the three men
and myself.
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We had had the same job.
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The lowest paid one, he had less education,
less training, was younger, and he was already
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making 600 plus more a month than what I was.
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Goodyear paid me unfairly for 17 years, and
my family needed that money.
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It just floored me.
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All the way home the next morning, I debated:
Do I really want to take a stand?
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The easy thing to do was let it go.
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But thatâs not who I am.
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And I told my husband, âI have to file a
charge in Birmingham, AL, and I will tell
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you up front, if I start, Iâll be in it
at least eight years.â
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And he said âWhat time do you want to leave?â
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(Newswoman) Lilly Ledbetter.
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(Congressman) Lilly Ledbetter.
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(Professor) Lilly Ledbetter.
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(Newswoman) She worked 19 years at a supervisor
at a Goodyear tire plant.
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But, at the end of her career, says she discovered
she was paid far less than men doing the same
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job.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) I started getting calls
from all over the nation.
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This was not a Lilly Ledbetter story.
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It was everybodyâs story.
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(Newswoman) Ledbetter sued, but the US Supreme
Court threw out her case, saying she filed
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her lawsuit too late.
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(Rep. Steny Hoyer) The Supreme Court ruled
that even though Miss Ledbetter had suffered
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clear discrimination, and the law had been
broken, she had missed the time in which raise
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the issue.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) You can pray that it goes
your way, but oftentimes it does not.
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We live in a country where we can do something
about it.
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(Brian Williams) President Obama signed his
first bill into law.
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(Newswoman) Passing a law that says that the
180 day time period employees have to file
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a claim starts ticking every time they get
a paycheck.
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(Brian Williams) And the woman who inspired
it, a grandmother who took her case to the
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Supreme Court and lost, finally saw her goal
realized today.
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(President Obama) Itâs the story of women
across this country, still earning just 78
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cents for every dollar men earn.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) Starting with the Ledbetter
bill, that was a bold step.
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He and Michelle, they came up sort of like
I did.
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He has two daughters, and he wants things
better for them.
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(President Obama) Equal pay is by no means
just a womenâs issue.
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Itâs a family issue.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) And he understands how hard
it is on the lower class and the middle class
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people to raise themselves up and to pull
themselves ahead.
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(President Obama) The last thing they can
afford is losing part of each monthâs paycheck
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to simple and plain discrimination.
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Itâs a question of who we are, and whether
weâre truly living up to our fundamental
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ideas.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) It was just awesome.
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I mean, it was just awesome.
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When I walked up to the White House the morning
the bill was signed, my grandchildren looked
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up at me like I was a rock star.
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I believe the President keeps his promises.
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When you make health care easier for women;
when you make education possible for women,
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and their families, to advance themselves,
women have a fair shot.
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We need more bills in Congress.
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We need paycheck fairness.
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(President Obama) You see, an economy built
to last is one where we encourage the talent
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and ingenuity of every person in this country.
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That means women should earn equal pay for
equal work.
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(Lilly Ledbetter) And when we get paycheck
fairness, that will carry the womenâs cause
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down the road much farther, and give them
more benefits.
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My case is over, and itâs gone.
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Itâs decided.
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But I can make a difference for my daughter,
my granddaughter, and all the women across
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the nation.
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I believe history is important, and you should
never forget where youâve come from.
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And I think the President should be reelected
for the next four years because then he can
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finish what he has started.
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And thatâs why I get up every day, ready
to go.
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Because thereâs more work that needs to
be done.
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