Outcome
The court affirmed the trial court's finding that Main Street Liquors violated the Illinois Equal Pay Act of 2003 by paying female employee Mary Arrington less than a male employee for substantially similar work. Main Street Liquors was ordered to pay $4,061.25 in back wages plus additional penalties totaling $12,683.75.
What This Ruling Means
**What Happened:**
The Illinois Department of Labor sued Main Street Liquors (2000 W. Madison Liquor Corp.) for paying a female employee, Mary Arrington, less money than a male coworker who was doing basically the same job. This violated Illinois's Equal Pay Act of 2003, which requires employers to pay men and women equally for substantially similar work.
**What the Court Decided:**
The court ruled in favor of the Department of Labor and the female employee. The appeals court upheld the original trial court's decision that Main Street Liquors had illegally discriminated by paying unequal wages based on gender. The company was ordered to pay $4,061.25 in back wages to make up for what the employee should have earned, plus additional penalties, bringing the total damages to $12,683.75.
**Why This Matters for Workers:**
This case shows that Illinois takes equal pay laws seriously and will enforce them. Workers who believe they're being paid less than coworkers of the opposite sex for similar work have legal protections. The state can investigate these cases and force employers to pay back wages plus penalties, making discrimination costly for businesses.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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This ruling information is sourced from public court records via CourtListener.com. It is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.