The Second Circuit affirmed a jury verdict finding that Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory's reduction-in-force had a discriminatory impact on employees over 40 under the ADEA, despite rejecting the intentional discrimination claim. The jury found the employer could have accomplished its business goals through less discriminatory means and that the defendants acted willfully.
What This Ruling Means
**What Happened**
Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory conducted layoffs that disproportionately affected older workers. Several employees over 40 who lost their jobs sued the company, claiming the layoffs violated age discrimination laws. While the workers couldn't prove the company intentionally targeted older employees, they argued the layoff process had an unfair impact on people over 40, even if that wasn't the company's stated goal.
**What the Court Decided**
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the workers. A jury had already found that while the company didn't deliberately discriminate based on age, their layoff process still had a discriminatory effect on older workers. The court agreed, ruling that the company could have achieved its business objectives through methods that wouldn't have disproportionately harmed older employees. The court also found that the company acted willfully in how it conducted the layoffs.
**Why This Matters for Workers**
This case shows that employers can be held responsible for age discrimination even when they don't intentionally target older workers. If a company's policies or practices disproportionately harm employees over 40, workers can challenge those practices in court. Companies must consider whether there are less discriminatory ways to achieve their business goals during layoffs.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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