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OPINION AND COMMENTARY


Editorials and other Opinion content offer perspectives on issues important to our community and are
independent from the work of our newsroom reporters.

EDITORIALS

In Miami-Dade, underpaying women for the


work they do undermines the economy |
Editorial
BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD

UPDATED SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 2:34 PM

   

Schuyler Smith, a Miami attorney, learned that a male colleague at a previous job made about $20,000 more than she did, even though their
experience, qualifications and workload were pretty much equal. EMILY MICHOT emichot@miamiherald.com

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We’re not going back


Women were hit the hardest by the pandemic. Now things have to change. Here’s what the Miami Herald
Editorial Board says needs to happen next in South Florida.

EXPAND ALL

This editorial continues the Miami Herald Editorial Board’s examination of


challenges women face in the workplace and at home as they emerge from the
pandemic.

Schuyler Smith’s pay-inequity story had a happy ending: The young Miami lawyer
pointed out the approximately $20,000 discrepancy between what she made, versus
a male colleague, who made more doing the same job — and whom she had
recommended for the position.

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And her boss fixed it.

Yes, there was some drama in between. When she found out about the pay gap,
“Instead of going to ask about it, I looked for another job,” she told the Editorial
Board. “But when you jump around, from pillar to post, just to get another $10,000, it
doesn’t look good to employers.”

She did receive a job offer and told her boss that she was leaving. “Luckily for me,
my boss said, ‘I’m not letting you quit.’ We went to the next layer of management,
and they gave me close to a $30,000 raise,” Smith said.

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“They rectified the issue, and I decided not to go to the other firm.”

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This is not typical. Not in United States, and not in Miami-Dade, where pay-inequity
numbers indicate that women’s jobs are concentrated in lower-paying areas such as
service, sales and office work and that they are often paid less than male colleagues
doing the same job.

To its credit, Miami-Dade has spawned some robust efforts to fight back.

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Still, the issue of equal pay remains an intractable challenge for women in the
workforce, no matter their education level or area of endeavor. It’s grossly unfair,
sexist, bad for families and damaging to our economy. And the problem persists —
despite the Equal Pay Act of 1963, and despite the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act signed
into law by President Obama more than four decades later. The former prohibits
sex-based wage discrimination between men and women in the same establishment
who perform jobs that require substantially equal skill, effort and responsibility
under similar working conditions; the latter allows workers to challenge ongoing
pay discrimination, even if they were initially unaware that they were being
underpaid.

‘BE NICE’

“I amplified the Obama policies,” Millie Herrera told the Editorial Board. She is the
Miami-based owner and CEO of The Miami Group & Associates, a business and
management consulting firm that she founded in 2001. In 2012, she left temporarily
to serve as the U.S. Department of Labor southeast regional representative for then-
Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis.

Pay equity was big on her agenda. “My focus was chambers of commerce,” Herrera
said. “The first thing they would say is ‘Pay equity is going to cost us.’ “

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Herrera always pushed backed: “I told them, ‘But you are training half of your
employees so that they are going to be looking for another job. It’s costing you
already, losing human capital, losing the investment you are making in training
these employees.’”

“ ‘Sooner or later, they are going to leave and take that knowledge.’ “

Plus, she told them, it’s illegal.

“All it takes is for one of those employees to file a complaint . . . and the Department
of Labor (DOL) has subpoena power. It can come and open your books for 10 years,”
Herrera said.

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12/17/22, 1:28 AM Businesses must fix the Miami pay gap for working women | Miami Herald

“DOL will look at everyone you underpaid, hit you with penalties,” she told business
owners. “It will take you to court and fine you for discrimination. So be nice.”

Her guidance to them? “Take home a little less pay as an owner, because, in the end
you will have sustainable long-term gains in earnings and profitability.”

Sounds like a convincing argument. But even with the force of federal law behind it,
it’s an argument that still doesn’t have the traction that it should.

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None of this is a surprise to Maria Ilcheva, assistant director of planning and


operations at Florida International University’s Metropolitan Center.

“From 2010 to 2019, the 19% gap is the largest it has ever been in a decade in Miami-
Dade,” Ilcheva said of the pay disparity between men and women. “Astounding,
right?”

OFFENSIVE STEREOTYPES

She said at the start of the recession in 2007, the wage gap was 14%. It went up and
down the next couple of years but finally, when “the economy was going
gangbusters, wages were finally outpacing inflation — that is when the pay gap
increased.”

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Yes, astounding — as are the intractable stereotypes that continue to factor into how
the work women do is undervalued.

“Women are still not considered — I’m generalizing here — the primary
breadwinners of their families,” Ilcheva said. Even when they are.

In addition, she said, looking at 2019 data, the most recent available, “Not only are
women not employed in high-wage occupations, even those who hold high-wage
jobs, managers, attorneys, nurses — there is a pay gap for nurses, as well. It’s quite
astounding, these disparities.”

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The 2019 “Status of the Women in Miami-Dade County” report tells the story:

“Men earned more than women in Miami-Dade County at all levels of education. The
largest gap was between those with less than a high-school diploma (31.2%), with
men earning a median of $24,858 and women earning $17,098.”

However, the 29.8% gap between men and women with graduate or professional
degrees was a close second, with men earning a median of $72,300 and women
earning $50,763.

There is some encouraging news: Since 2010, women in Miami-Dade have


experienced higher median earnings in all occupations. Still, according to the report,
the gender gap persists in all occupations, including double-digit gaps in the top 10
highest-paid occupations for women.

For instance, women earn the most in legal occupations — $58,861 — but the median
earnings for men were more than double: $121,935. Basically, women earned 51.5%
less than men. Deplorable.

Women also earned 25.5% less in life, physical and social science occupations, 36.3%
less in computer and mathematical occupations, and 24.3% less in architecture and
engineering. The only major occupational categories in which women earned more
were health technologists and technicians; arts, design and media; and construction.

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“If the pay gap closed completely, for the Miami-Dade economy, it would generate $3
billion,” said Ilcheva. “When women are paid less, that’s less money in circulation in
the economy.”

MAYOR STEPS UP

This is a reality not lost on many energized pay-equity advocates in Miami-Dade,


including the county’s first woman mayor, Daniella Levine Cava. In 2017, as a county
commissioner, she, along with co-sponsors Commissioner Sally Heyman and then-

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12/17/22, 1:28 AM Businesses must fix the Miami pay gap for working women | Miami Herald

Commissioner Barbara Jordan, pushed through a resolution that said individuals


and companies contracting with the county had to “demonstrate compliance with
the Equal Pay Act of 1963. In addition, an ordinance she sponsored requires the
Commission for Women to provide an annual report on the status of women and
girls in the county.

As mayor, she recently offered all union employees a long-overdue pay increase; she
also established an Office of Equity and Inclusion, which has provided a detailed pay
and demographic survey of county employees to ultimately ensure that men and
women working in the same job classifications with the same training are paid
equally.

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The county recently issued a request for proposals to hire a consultant to perform a
disparity analysis to determine if the county is equitably granting contracts to
women-owned businesses.

In 2017, The Women’s Fund created Equal Pay Miami-Dade, an ongoing community-
wide campaign that has taken the pay-equity challenge to government, local
businesses — and directly to the public. Witness the billboards along Interstate 95,
one of which depicts three wide-eyed young girls and the guilt-inducing question:
“Daddy, why do you pay women less?”

“We were getting firms and other organizations to sign a pledge for equal pay,” Janet
Altman, a principal and marketing director for Kaufman Rossin, told the Editorial
Board. Kaufman Rossin was first to sign. Others followed.

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She told the Editorial Board that Kaufman Rossin continues to be an equal-pay
company, committed to gender pay equity and inclusion and diversity initiatives.
Gloria Romero Roses, who signed the pledge, told her, “I definitely achieved equal
pay in my businesses and continue to steward other organizations under my
purview to do the same.” And Lynn White, executive vice president and chief talent
officer for Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., confirms that Norwegian also
remains an equal-pay company, and they “continually review our [compensation]
processes to ensure we remain so.”

“The thing about low pay, it’s the core of the problem of poverty,” Altman said. “If
women were paid equally to men, poverty would reduce 40%. it would create
opportunities and create money that could be spent in the economy.”

She says that the “U.S. poverty rate would decrease from 9.5% among working
women to 5.5% among working women. And in Florida, 9.5% to 5.4%. Still, it’s worse
for Black and Latino women, for working single mothers in the state.” Poverty

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12/17/22, 1:28 AM Businesses must fix the Miami pay gap for working women | Miami Herald

among working single mothers in Florida would be reduced to 15.3% from 25.1%,
she added.

MAKING CHANGE

And COVID-19 has brought its own set of obstacles. “The pandemic has been a really
difficult time for women. Women lost more jobs. Are you really going to say, ‘No, I
need to make as much as the guy?’ ”

Herrera, the consulting firm owner, wants more businesses to conduct salary
surveys to determine and then fix the disparities. “In federal government, there is
transparency. When I was with Labor, I was a GS 15. Everybody knew what my
salary was.”

Also, she says that employers must stop basing employees’ pay on what they earned
in their previous job. Women’s salaries will never catch up that way.

There are stumbling blocks along the path to pay equity that women — and their
male allies — are going to have to kick aside themselves:

▪ Learn your rights. “Not everyone is informed to go fight windmills. They don’t
know their rights. The majority of workers work for small businesses,” said
businesswoman Herrera.” Attorney Smith concurs: “You don’t know what you don’t
know.”

▪ Demand to know why. “At large corporations, pay inequity kicks in for higher-paid
employees unless it’s publicly traded,” Herrera said. “They still have that rule that
you are not supposed to talk about salary with co-workers.”

▪ Do your homework. “I did my research on how much should I ask for,” Smith said.
“I was doing good work. If they value you and you come at them with the right data,
they should do the right thing.”

▪ Speak up. “We’re not very comfortable asking for what we deserve in terms of pay
and accommodation. We’re nervous, not sure whether we are worth it,” Smith said.
“Women appear aggressive or greedy, but none of those words are applicable when
you are talking about your value and what you bring to the table.”

Smith offers additional advice for underpaid women in lower-paying, working-class


jobs, where their request for more money might be more easily rejected: Be good at
what you do and constantly ask for feedback. Find allies within or outside the
organization that you can talk to about salary matters. And document your
accomplishments and the good work that you’ve done, and communicate that at
coffee or lunch.

And she issued one warning: “In some places, that might not make a difference —
and it might not be the place to be.”

Business owners should join the movement by signing on to the Women’s Fund’s
equal-pay pledge. By doing so, they are promising to be “committed to taking action
individually and collectively to reduce the national pay gap and bring change to
Miami-Dade County.”

There should be absolutely no argument there.

This editorial has been corrected to reflect the correct title for Janet Altman, a
principal and marketing director for Kaufman Rossin.

This story was originally published September 10, 2021 6:00 AM.

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