Tribute: The Legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and WRP Staff (3/7/2006)
WRP gratefully acknowledges the work
of intern Sandra Pullman in researching and drafting this Tribute.
The Pioneer
In
the words of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court Justice and co-founder of the
Women's Rights Project at the ACLU, "Women's rights are an
essential part of the overall human rights agenda,
trained on the equal dignity and ability to live in
freedom all people should enjoy."
Ginsburg has been a pioneer for gender equality
throughout her distinguished career. While singular
in her achievements, she was far from alone
in her pursuits and received much support from
talented, dedicated women all along the way.
Celia Bader provided a strong role model for her
daughter at an early age. Ginsburg recalls, "My
mother told me two things constantly. One was to
be a lady, and the other was to be independent.
The study of law was unusual for women of my
generation. For most girls growing up in the '40s,
the most important degree was not your B.A., but
your M.R.S."
Ginsburg attended law school, not originally for
women's rights work, but "for personal, selfish
reasons. I thought I could do a lawyer's job better
than any other. I have no talent in the arts, but I do write fairly well and
analyze problems clearly."1
Although she arrived without a civil rights
agenda, the treatment Ginsburg received as a
woman in law school honed her feminist instincts.
One of only nine women at Harvard Law School in
1956, Ginsburg and her female classmates were
asked by the dean why they were occupying seats
that would otherwise be filled by men. Despite her
discomfort, self-doubt, and misgivings, Ginsburg
proved to be a stellar student, making law review
at Harvard in 1957, and then again at Columbia
Law School, where she finished her studies in
order to keep the family together when her husband
graduated from Harvard and accepted a job
in New York. (Her daughter was born 14 months
before Ginsberg entered law school.) This major
accomplishment at two top schools was unprecedented
by any student, male or female. Upon
graduating from Columbia in 1959, Ginsburg tied
for first in her class. Still, when she was recommended
for a clerkship with Supreme Court Justice
Felix Frankfurter by Albert Sachs, a professor
at Harvard Law School, Frankfurter responded
that he wasn't ready to hire a woman and asked
Sachs to recommend a man.
Ginsburg had worked for a top law firm in New
York during the summer of her second year in
law school. "I thought I had done a terrific job,
and I expected them to offer me a job on graduation,"
she recalled.2 Despite her performance,
there was no job offer. Nor was there an offer from any of the twelve firms
with which she interviewed; only two gave her a follow-up interview.
In the end, Ginsburg was hired to clerk for Judge
Edmund L. Palmieri of the U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New York from 1959 to
1961. She received offers from law firms after that
job, but she chose to work on Columbia Law
School's International Procedure Project instead,
co-authoring a book on Sweden's legal system and
translating Sweden's Judicial Code into English.
Continuing in academia, Ginsburg joined the
faculty of Rutgers Law School in 1963, but her status
as a woman still put her at a disadvantage.
When she discovered that her salary was lower
than that of her male colleagues, she joined an
equal pay campaign with other women teaching at
the university, which resulted in substantial
increases for all the complainants.
Prompted by her own experiences, Ginsburg
began to handle sex discrimination complaints
referred to her by the New Jersey affiliate of the
American Civil Liberties Union. Ginsburg envisioned
that men and women would "create new
traditions by their actions, if artificial barriers are
removed, and avenues of opportunity held open to
them."3 The ACLU Women's Rights Project
was born in 1972 under Ginsburg's leadership, in
order to remove these barriers and open these
opportunities. That same year, Ginsburg became
the first woman to be granted tenure at Columbia
Law School.
The Trailblazers
 |
Dorothy Kenyon
Photo: Int'l News Photo |
Ginsburg's experiences with sex discrimination
inspired her to lead the ACLU's campaign for gender
equality, but she was not the first person to
see the need for the ACLU to dedicate its efforts
to women's rights. Pauli Murray and Dorothy
Kenyon, longtime members of the Board of
Directors beginning in 1930 and 1965, respectively,
had worked to put gender equality work on
the ACLU's agenda.
Dorothy Kenyon was appointed to the League
of Nations Committee on the Legal Status of Women
from 1938 to 1940 and from 1947 to 1950 served
as the first U.S. delegate to the U.N. Commission
on the Status of Women. A New York City municipal
justice from 1939 to 1940, she claimed the title
for life. "Judge Kenyon" later wrote the ACLU amicus
brief in Hoyt v. Florida, 386 U.S. 57 (1961), a
Supreme Court case that considered (and
rejected) a challenge to a state law that required
men to serve on juries but excluded women
unless they volunteered.
Pauli Murray became an activist by fighting
racial discrimination, when she defended an indigent
black sharecropper accused of murder, agitated
against lynching, and was jailed for her
protests as a freedom rider in the 1960s. As Murray
explained, "I entered law school preoccupied
with the racial struggle and single-mindedly bent
upon becoming a civil rights lawyer, but I graduated
an unabashed feminist as well."
 |
Pauli Murray
Photo: Univ. of Tenn. Press |
Informed by her own experiences as a black
woman, she drew
connections between the legal status of women
and that of African-Americans, using the term "Jane Crow" in her scholarship.
She joined the ACLU Equality Committee, where she pushed the
organization to focus on sex discrimination and to
use the Constitution to challenge it. In 1961, Murray
was appointed to the President's Commission
on the Status of Women's Committee on Civil and
Political Rights, and in 1966, along with Betty
Freidan, she was one of thirty co-founders of the
National Organization for Women (NOW), which
she labeled "the NAACP for women."
Throughout Murray's and Kenyon's careers,
opposition to women's rights remained pervasive
and powerful. When the Equal Rights Amendment
was re-proposed in the late 1940s -- having been
introduced almost annually since it was initially
proposed in 1923 -- even the ACLU voted to oppose
it. Kenyon and Murray worked intensely behind the
scenes and in 1970 convinced the Board to reconsider
its regressive position.
Ginsburg too was a
strong supporter of the ERA, explaining, "The
amendment would eliminate the historical impediment
to unqualified judicial recognition of equal
rights and responsibilities for men and women as
constitutional principle; and it would serve as a
clear statement of the nation's moral and legal
commitment to a system in which women and men
stand as full and equal individuals before the law."4 Kenyon
was also one of the strongest advocates for the establishment of the Women's
Rights Project at the ACLU. At Kenyon's funeral in 1972, just
after the WRP was founded, Murray reflected, "I
think when future historians assess the important
issues of the twentieth century they may well
conclude that Judge Dorothy Kenyon was one of
the giants who stood in bold relief against the
American sky."
Recognizing their efforts on behalf of women's
equality at the ACLU and elsewhere, Ginsburg
listed both Murray's and Kenyon's names on the
groundbreaking brief she authored for the ACLU
in Reed
v. Reed (off-site), 404 U.S. 71 (1971), even though
Murray and Kenyon did not directly contribute to
it. In Reed, the United States Supreme Court
invalidated an Idaho statute that automatically
gave preference to men for appointment as
administrator of a deceased person's estate. In so
doing, the Court extended the Constitution's
Equal Protection guarantee to women for the first
time. Ginsburg has said that her credit to Murray
and Kenyon was a symbolic gesture to reflect "the
intellectual debt which contemporary feminist
legal argument owed [them]."5
Ginsburg's Supporting Cast
In the early '70s, observes Susan Deller Ross,
who joined WRP as a staff attorney in 1975, the
ACLU was "lukewarm towards women's rights
issues; it took someone of Ginsburg's vision and leadership to establish
the Women's Rights Project."
 |
Brenda Feigen
|
According to one contemporary observer,
the Reed opinion was "a call to arms" and Ginsburg
was the "General" leading this foray.6 Under
her guidance, "Troops were assembled, and a
strategy for attack was painstakingly planned."7
In 1972, as part of this effort, Brenda Feigen
was contacted by Mel Wulf, the legal director of
the ACLU; Ruth Bader Ginsburg was looking for a
co-director for the newly formed Women's Rights
Project. "It was a great honor," Feigen remembers.
Still, she needed time to consider. Feigen,
whose legal expertise had previously proved
invaluable in her work as legislative vice president
of NOW, had just launched Ms. magazine
with Gloria Steinem, and she hesitated to leave
her fledgling publication. Finally, with a "blessing
from Gloria," as Feigen puts it, she joined
WRP in late 1972.
The two founding directors sought out an
unused area in the ACLU office, where they hung
the sign: "WOMEN WORKING." In those early
years, there was much work to be done. "We
knocked down a lot of barriers for women, not
only on the substantive level. We also challenged
what type of judicial scrutiny applied to gender
discrimination under the Equal Protection Clause
of the 14th Amendment," Feigen explains.
Kathleen
Peratis, who became WRP's director in 1974,
agrees that establishing heightened scrutiny for
sex classifications under the Equal Protection
Clause was perhaps the decade's greatest achievement. Prior to that time,
while the government's
discrimination based on race was subject
to the strictest scrutiny, discrimination based on
gender was permissible if any reason at all could
be hypothesized for the differential treatment. In
Frontiero
v. Richardson (off-site link), 411 U.S.
677 (1973), the first case that Ginsburg argued before the
Supreme Court, WRP advocated for the application
of strict scrutiny to gender discrimination just
as the concept applied to race discrimination.
Four Justices supported this view, one vote shy of
a majority. Through a series of decisions in the
wake of Frontiero, an intermediate standard of
review was established, a standard requiring the
government to show that any sex classification it
defended had a "substantial relationship" to an
"important state interest."
In describing Frontiero, which she co-counseled,
Feigen expresses great respect for Ginsburg's
advocacy. "It was brilliant," she gushes.
"I've never heard an oral argument as unbelievably
cogent as hers." Ginsburg spoke from memory,
citing cases and speaking about women's
history without ever turning to her notes or
checking any citations. "Not a single Justice
asked a single question; I think they were mesmerized
by her," Feigen declares.
Ginsburg herself describes the experience as a
bit more tumultuous. "I was terribly nervous. In
fact, I didn't eat lunch for fear that I might throw
up." Yet she eventually found her rhythm. "Two
minutes into my argument, the fear dissolved. Suddenly, I realized that here
before me were the nine leading jurists of America, a captive audience.
I felt a surge of power that carried me
through."8 In the end, Ginsburg seemed physically
drained by the effort. As Feigen left the courtroom
with her, Ginsburg seemed hardly able to process
directions to the airport shuttle, and Feigen gladly
escorted her home to New York. Feigen laughs,
thinking back on her colleague's behavior. "Literally,
her head is in the law, and sometimes in the
opera," she remarks of Ginsburg.
Deb Ellis, a WRP staff attorney in the mid-80s,
applauds Ginsburg's tactic of occasionally using
male plaintiffs in equal protection cases, including
Frontiero, to demonstrate that sex-based distinctions
harm men and women -- indeed, entire
families. Sharron Frontiero's husband, Joseph,
wasn't eligible for spousal benefits from her work
in the uniformed forces because he failed to prove
economic dependency on his wife, a condition not
required for wives of male members to qualify
for the same benefits. While some would have
focused solely on the injustice such rules work
on women, Ginsburg rejected differential treatment
based on gender as inherently harmful to
all involved.
In Weinberger
v. Wiesenfeld (off-site), 420 U.S. 636 (1975),
Ginsburg continued to develop this analysis when
she successfully argued against a provision in the
Social Security Act that denied to widowed fathers
benefits afforded to widowed mothers. She made
the case that the classification discriminated against working women, whose social
security
taxes garnered fewer family benefits than the
taxes paid for working men. She also argued that
the law denied men the same opportunity as
women to care personally for their children.
Ginsburg and Feigen practiced an egalitarian
approach not only in their legal arguments, but
also in their own family lives.
"Both of us agreed
that we didn't want to deprive the fathers of our
children of the experience of being fathers -- or
the children of having fathers involved in their
daily lives," Feigen explains. In fact, she recalls
Ginsburg's annoyance one day with officials at her
son's school, who invariably called her at work
when he was sick or, more often, in trouble. Ginsburg
told them that day that her son had two parents.
She would appreciate it if they would alternate
calls. That time, it was her husband's turn.
As a staff attorney from 1976 to 1979, Jill Goodman
also remembers Ginsburg negotiating her
roles as a lawyer and a mother. On one occasion
Ginsburg was doing final edits on a Supreme
Court brief the evening before Thanksgiving with
an eye on the clock, keenly aware of just when her
college-age daughter would be arriving home --
obviously eager to see her daughter, but steadfastly
committed to finishing the work at hand
without compromise.
 |
| Margaret Moses |
Margaret Moses, who came to WRP as an attorney
in 1978, taught a gender discrimination class
at Columbia in conjunction with Ginsburg during
her time there. She recalls the example her co-teacher set in the home. For
the last class in the
fall of 1979, Moses invited all the students over to
her apartment for dinner. "Ruth's husband, Marty,
and mine cooked in the kitchen while we taught
the class," Moses reminisces. "It was a nice way
to end a gender discrimination seminar!"
Emerging Leadership Under Ginsburg's Guidance
Brenda Feigen left WRP in 1974 to
pursue fulltime advocacy for the Equal Rights Amendment.
That same year, Ginsburg joined the ACLU Board
of Directors, having become General Counsel in
1973. Though Ginsburg remained heavily involved
in WRP's work until 1980, the original directors
had moved on; in their place, Kathleen Peratis
took over the helm of WRP.
As director, Peratis continued to find great success
in gender discrimination litigation. She
recalls that employers were unprepared for such
lawsuits and were ill equipped to mount valid
defenses. "It was a time when we filed a case and
practically got a result in the return mail!" she
exclaims. Peratis admits that the tide seemed to
be going so strongly in her favor, she once considered
a lawsuit against the entire state of Georgia
and its employers at all levels for discrimination
against women.
In the press, WRP and its new leader's preeminence
in advancing women's rights was duly noted. The victory in Turner
v. Dept. of Employment
Security (off-site), 423 U.S. 44 (1975), which struck down a
law making pregnant women ineligible for unemployment
benefits, was covered on the front page
of the New York Times. Peratis was quoted in the
article and described as being pregnant during
the litigation. Later, Aryeh Neier, then executive
director of the ACLU, remarked, "Only the queen
of England and Kathleen Peratis have their pregnancies
announced in the Times!"
Pregnancy discrimination cases were a key
part of WRP's agenda during this period; however,
one of the most successful efforts mounted by
WRP began with a setback. In General
Electric Co. v. Gilbert (off-site), 429 U.S. 125 (1976), the Supreme Court
rejected the reasoning of WRP's friend-of-thecourt
brief that pregnancy discrimination in the
workplace was tantamount to sex discrimination.
 |
| Susan Deller Ross |
Such discrimination, the Court concluded, did not
treat women and men differently; rather, it
treated pregnant women differently from nonpregnant
persons. After losing that battle, WRP
staff attorney Susan Deller Ross helped rally
WRP's supporters to form the Coalition to End Discrimination
Against Pregnant Workers. Ginsburg
and Ross co-authored a column for the New York
Times, calling for legislators to mend the law
post-Gilbert, and they continued lobbying, reporting,
and testifying in Congress. The result of their
efforts was the passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination
Act in 1978, an amendment to
Title VII that established that pregnancy discrimination in the workplace is unlawful
sex discrimination.
During these years, WRP set an example of
accommodating working mothers at the office. To
balance the competing demands of family and
career, women brought their newborn children to
work with them. "We established a little day care
center in the office for Kathleen [Peratis], who
also had a new baby, and me," recalls Susan
Deller Ross, who was hired in August 1975 and
gave birth that November. College students were
hired to look after the infants, and the lawyers
would breastfeed during the day.
"It was wild," Jill
Goodman recalls of the lawyers working with
their children by their side. "Now that I've had my
own children, I realize how really wild that was."
Though Goodman didn't then have any children,
she contributed to the day care on occasion. "I can
remember taking a stroller out when Susan
needed to work," she recalls.
This tradition continued in later years. Joan
Bertin gave birth to two children that she
describes as "ACLU babies" in her fifteen years
with the WRP from 1979 to 1994. She kept a crib
and baby's swing in her office and took occasional
nursing breaks from round-the-clock depositions.
Bertin considered the setup a "very workable
compromise." But not everyone at the ACLU
shared that point of view. Ross recalls hearing
others complain, "If we brought our babies to
work, then they should be able to bring their
dogs." Nevertheless, Mary Heen, who as a staff
attorney in the early 80s occupied the office next door to Bertin and her baby,
insists that the
arrangement worked out quite well: "For me it
was no problem; I love the fact that she was able
to do that -- but I imagine it was exhausting."
At work in the bustling ACLU office in the 1970s,
WRP staff addressed a host of issues before legislators
and administrators as well as in the courts.
One of the major battles was over forced sterilizations,
particularly for poor women in the South.
Many women had been told that they had to
undergo surgical sterilization or risk losing their
jobs or welfare benefits and were thus coerced
into giving up their right to bear children. In the
late 1970s, Feigen helped Senator Edward
Kennedy's staff formulate federal regulations on
sterilization procedures, specifically establishing
consent requirements.
When Joan Bertin arrived at WRP in 1979, sterilization
was still a major issue. One of the cases
in which she was most emotionally invested
involved a lawsuit against American Cyanamid,
which had required its female workers to be sterilized
to keep their jobs -- and later eliminated
those very jobs. Bertin worked closely with the
women's union to fight for their rights and the
rights of all employees to a safe workplace,
securing a favorable settlement out of court.
Bertin and WRP continued to remain heavily
involved in similar cases, and the issue was ultimately
resolved favorably in the Supreme Court.
In addition, the ACLU
Reproductive Freedom Project was founded as a separate entity to handle cases pertaining to women's
reproductive rights
and control over their bodies.
Marjorie Mazen Smith joined WRP in late 1976,
and though she describes herself as a "jack of all
trades" because of the variety of cases she litigated
in her sixteen months on staff, two of her
major cases dealt with gender restrictions in the
United States Navy.
In 1977, in Beeman v. Middendorf,
425 F. Supp. 713 (D.D.C. 1977), WRP successfully
challenged a rule barring women in the
customs service from working aboard navy ships.
One year later, in Owens v. Brown, 455 F. Supp. 291
(D.D.C. 1978), Smith challenged a similar ban that
excluded all women from working on navy vessels
in any capacity. Ginsburg oversaw Smith's work,
and the two received a summary judgment ruling
in their favor from the federal district court. Later,
when Smith wrote to congratulate Justice Ginsburg
on her appointment to the Supreme Court in
1993, Ginsburg thanked her in writing and
included the line: "Recent press reports about the
Navy recalled for me the great job you did before
Judge Sirica." Smith was surprised and flattered
to hear the praise of her work recalled so many
years later. She framed the letter and keeps it to
this day.
During this period, in cases representing
women in the military and in other nontraditional
occupations, such as policing and firefighting,
WRP began its work to help women gain entry to
traditionally "male" jobs that continues to this
day. Kathleen Peratis had a particular interest in employment-related issues
and the protection of
working women. One of the many employment
discrimination cases she brought at WRP was a
challenge to the City of Philadelphia's refusal to
hire women as police officers in Brace v. O'Neil,
1979 WL 157 (E.D. Pa. 1979). In the case, WRP
successfully rebutted the City's assertion that
women couldn't do the job.
Susan Deller Ross also worked to champion
the rights of women in the workplace, fighting not
only for those women who wished to do jobs traditionally
held by men, but for the rights of women
in traditionally female occupations. In Christensen
v. Iowa, 563 F.2d 353 (8th Cir. 1977), the University
of Northern Iowa's own job evaluation showed
that the all-female secretarial workforce's wages
should be the same as those of the all-male
groundskeepers because the jobs were of equal
value to the University. The University nevertheless
paid the men more than the women, claiming
that the market required them to do so. Ross and
Peratis represented the female clerical employees
in their sex discrimination lawsuit. Ross's
appellate brief to the Eighth Circuit advanced the
idea of comparable worth in the workplace, using
the employer's own evaluation to argue that the
secretaries were in fact entitled to the same pay
with the groundskeepers, despite the fact that
they performed different tasks. Although WRP
lost this case, the influential comparable worth
theory was first formulated here.
By the end of Ginsburg's tenure at the ACLU, her reputation preceded her,
recalls Margaret
Moses, who came to WRP in 1978 specifically to
join her favorite law professor. At the time, the
U.S. Attorney's office had also made Moses a job
offer, and her prospective boss dismissed the
ACLU as a valid alternative. Yet when Moses
explained that she was considering the Women's
Rights Project because Ruth Bader Ginsburg was
one of the four general counsels, she noticed a
funny look on his face. "He'd had Ruth as a professor
at Rutgers," Moses recalls. "And at that
point, I think he understood that I really might
turn down the U.S. Attorney's office for the WRP."
She did just that. Moses did not regret her decision,
as the experience of working with Ginsburg
proved to be illuminating. "She was an excellent
role model -- that combination of being brilliant
and working very hard set a high standard to do
the very best you could, to try to emulate her,"
Moses explains.
 |
| Isabelle Katz Pinzler |
Isabelle Katz Pinzler, who worked at WRP from
1978 to 1994, arrived toward the end of Ginsburg's
tenure and recalls being somewhat intimidated by
her at first. She remembers that the staff would
work very hard on a brief, but would hand it to
Ginsburg labeled "rough draft" because they had
learned that even the most thoroughly edited brief
would come back as "a sea of red." Jill Goodman
also admits that at times "it was scary" working for
Ginsburg, describing her as "meticulous" about
everything she did. Ginsburg acknowledges that
she is, in general, "fussy about the quality of the product."9
Goodman
puts it another way: "Ruth was
almost a different species," she jokes, describing
the unbelievable level at which Ginsburg worked.
It was not that Ginsburg did not appreciate their
work, Pinzler is quick to explain; rather, Ginsburg
taught them to write crisp sentences and get to
the heart of a matter. "She taught me so much
about using words precisely, to mean exactly what
I want them to mean, no more, no less," agrees
Goodman. Overall, Goodman felt she had learned
much about the profession from Ginsburg. "She
has an aura about her, of intelligence and care --
care about the law, and the craft of lawyering, and
the trajectory of the law."
These qualities did not go unnoticed outside the
ACLU. In 1980, Ginsburg was appointed a Judge of
the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit, marking the end of her time
as an ACLU litigator. More than a decade later,
President Clinton nominated her as an Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court, and she took her
seat August 10, 1993.
WRP was conceived by Ruth Bader Ginsburg to
fight for equal treatment of both genders. "The
Project was so integral in establishing the principle
of equal rights," asserts Mary Heen. She
describes Ginsburg's vision of "filling the empty
cupboard." The way the WRP co-founder saw it, the
Constitution contained grandly general clauses
(Due Process, Equal Protection) that could be
used to advance women's full citizenship stature.
Until the 1970s, the document had rarely been recognized by courts as relevant
to women's
claim to equality. But Ginsburg sensed growth
potential. By the time Ginsburg took her place on
the bench, she had done much to stock the cupboard.
WRP was prepared to continue the fight for
women's rights into the next decade and beyond.
New Faces, New Issues
After the Ginsburg left the ACLU, WRP continued
to evolve. Its emphasis broadened from
Equal Protection litigation, which was a central
focus for Ginsburg, to include more extensive
efforts to secure the rights promised women by
Title VII and other antidiscrimination statutes.
Isabelle Katz Pinzler and
Jill Goodman: Women in the Military
Isabelle Katz Pinzler describes her tenure as the
Director of the WRP in the 1980s after Ginsburg's
departure as a time for a "consolidation of gains"
in the women's rights movement. "It wasn't as
dramatic or headline-making as when Ruth was
there," she acknowledges. Still, the period was an
important time to enforce recently earned rights.
"It was a lot of hard work with less glory," Pinzler
concludes.
One of the most important cases that Pinzler
worked on after Ginsburg left was Rostker
v. Goldberg (off-site),
453 U.S. 57 (1981), which she co-counseled.
The issue was whether requiring selective service registration
only of men violated the constitutional
guarantee of equal protection. WRP lost the
case, and the Supreme Court upheld Congress'
prerogative to classify on the basis of gender in
selective service registration. Nevertheless, Pinzler
believes that time and history have reduced
the loss. In today's all-volunteer army, the military
can no longer afford to overlook women's contributions.
She sees it as a triumph that most people
now honor "our men and women in uniform,"
rather than "our boys."
Jill Goodman also sought women's equal treatment
in the military, though she initially
approached this work with uneasiness. "I came of
age in an antiwar era," she explains. "We weren't
just antiwar. We were anti-military. But I learned
from our plaintiffs about the role of the military,
not just in society, but in the personal lives of citizens."
Goodman elaborates, "The military is a
remarkable opportunity for many people in this
country. It helps them to get out of small towns; to
gain education, job training and experience; to
serve; and to achieve status in their eyes and the
eyes of the world." With a predominately male
military that excludes women from combat,
"women are deprived of that credential." Goodman
describes how the experience of getting to
know her plaintiffs, both officers and enlisted
women, broadened her perspective. "I've never
felt the same way about the military since," she
acknowledges.
Mary Heen and Deb Ellis:
Equal Treatment in Insurance
In a series of cases, WRP relied on Title VII to
challenge employer-provided pension plans that
required women to pay more than men for the
same benefit, or that provided lower monthly benefits
to women than to men. These disparities
were purportedly justified by women's longer projected
life spans; individual women's contributions
or benefits were calculated based on
conclusions about how women on average would
fare under such plans.
In Manhart
v. Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (off-site), 435 U.S. 702 (1978),
a case in which WRP filed a friend-of-the-court
brief, the Supreme Court held that a retirement
plan that required women to contribute more than
men to obtain the same benefit violated Title VII.
WRP attorneys challenged the mirror version of
this discriminatory arrangement in Peters v.
Wayne State University, 463 U.S. 1223 (1983);
there, women and men paid equal sums into the
retirement plan, but women received lower
monthly benefits than their male counterparts
upon retirement. WRP lost on appeal, but immediately
thereafter, the Supreme Court decided Arizona
Governing Committee for Tax Deferred Annuity
and Deferred Compensation Plans v. Norris (off-site), 463
U.S. 1073 (1983) -- another case in which WRP had
drafted a friend-of-the-court brief -- and held that
this kind of arrangement violated Title VII. The Court reversed the appeals court's
decision in
Peters in light of Norris, and the case was resolved
favorably soon thereafter. The principles established
in these cases required all employer-sponsored
insurance and pension plans to treat men
and women equally.
Mary Heen is proud of her role in helping to
establish this Title VII precedent prohibiting discriminatory
employer-provided pension plans.
However, Title VII prohibits sex discrimination
only on the job. WRP was involved in an effort to
pass federal legislation to prohibit private insurers
from discriminating in other contexts. But as
Heen observes, "We were never successful in
public relations with regards to non-employment
insurers." Heen identifies the issue as "one huge
area still waiting for reform as a matter of principle."
Deb Ellis agrees that differential treatment
of men and women in private insurance policies
was one of the unresolved issues of her tenure at
WRP from 1986 to 1989. WRP attempted to use
the Equal Rights Amendments in state constitutions
to challenge such insurance plans. "We had
some success, but not a lot," Ellis recalls. The litigation
proved difficult, because in some cases,
differential rates benefit women, although in
other cases, women are disadvantaged.
"The difficulty
is that the difference to any one woman is
slight -- not enough to sue -- and the insurance
companies are extremely powerful," Ellis explains.
Even in 2005, private insurers still commonly use
sex-based rates for health and life insurance. "The principle is important," Ellis
maintains. "This is one
area of American life where companies are allowed
to make sex-based distinctions when distinctions
based on race or ethnicity would be unacceptable."
Though Ginsburg no longer had any formal
affiliation with the ACLU when WRP litigated
these issues in the 80s, she was pleased to see
the staff's continuing efforts in pursuit of gender
equality. As Heen recalls, "Ruth Bader Ginsburg
was appointed to the U.S. Court of Appeals in 1980
before I began as a staff counsel at the ACLU -- so I
never had the opportunity to work with her. However,
she sent me a brief note after seeing a letter
to the New York Times I had written arguing for
the elimination of sex discrimination in insurance.
It was a generous and encouraging thing for her to
do, and it meant a lot to me to receive it from her."
A Joint Effort:
Pregnancy Discrimination
When Ginsburg became an assistant professor of
law at Rutgers Law School in 1963, pregnancy
discrimination remained a tremendous barrier to
working women. Fearing that her year-to-year
contract would not be renewed if her pregnancy
showed, she took measures to conceal her state. "I got through the spring semester without detection,
with the help of a wardrobe one size larger
than mine, borrowed from my mother-in-law," she recalls. She ultimately gave
birth before the fall semester began.10
Fighting discrimination on the basis of pregnancy
has been an ongoing battle of the Women's
Rights Project since its inception, and almost
every staff member has been involved at one
point. The longest-running case has been Knox-
Schillinger v. TWA, which began in the 1970s.
"Kathleen Peratis left it on my doorstep like a
foundling," recalls Isabelle Katz Pinzler, who
joined WRP in 1978 and later took over as director
until 1994.
The suit challenged TWA's practice of
firing female flight attendants upon learning of
their pregnancies. To prove that impending motherhood
was not an indicator of incompetence, "we
made damn sure the lawyer who appeared in it
was pregnant," Pinzler declares. The case
dragged on for years and was passed on to whoever
was pregnant at the time, since the office
always seemed to have someone expecting. In
2003, more than twenty years after it was
launched, the case was back in court, to determine
TWA's obligations, in view of its bankruptcy,
to the flight attendants with whom it had long ago
settled. Upon hearing of the delayed resolution,
Mary Heen, who had worked as co-counsel on the
case, was amazed. "That's more than twice the
length of the Odyssey!" she exclaimed. "Let justice
be done!"
One of the most contentious women's rights
cases, which divided the ACLU, dealt with the
rights of pregnant women. In California Federal
Savings and Loan v. Guerra (off-site), 479 U.S. 272 (1987),
the question was whether Title VII permitted a state to require employers to
offer women childbirth
leave while requiring no leave for other disabilities.
The ACLU of Southern California (off-site) argued
that Title VII permitted this. WRP and the national
ACLU disagreed. They asserted that the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act's mandate that pregnancy
be treated like any other disability meant
that if leave were provided for childbirth, the same
entitlement to leave must be extended to all
employees temporarily disabled. The Court
agreed with the ACLU of Southern California. It
held that the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act (off-site) was a
floor, not a ceiling, for the rights of pregnant workers
and did not prohibit a state from requiring
childbirth leave.
Joan Bertin was particularly involved in pregnancy
discrimination cases during her tenure
from 1979 to 1994 at WRP. She focused on fighting
discrimination based on employer assertions that
a workplace posed a hazard to any fetus a woman
might conceive. This became a very specialized
area of litigation, and Bertin spearheaded a nearly
twelve-year campaign that resulted in an important
victory before the Supreme Court.
"We fought
tooth and nail on every ground," Bertin recalls. In
UAW v. Johnson Controls (off-site), 499 U.S. 187 (1991), a case
in which WRP filed a friend-of-the-court brief, the
Court held that Title VII prohibits employers from
keeping women out of jobs that might expose their
fetuses to hazardous substances. The key, Bertin
believes, was recognizing that the solution to workplace
hazards wasn't to eliminate pregnant workers, but to eliminate the hazards
they faced.
Jackie Berrien arrived at the ACLU in 1989, at
the height of WRP's challenges to employers' fetal
protection policies. She describes a suit against
the Odeon restaurant as her "personal favorite."
The case was brought on behalf of a maitre d' who
was removed from her position when her bosses
decided they didn't wish to employ a visibly pregnant
woman. In a deposition before the trial, the
owners justified their actions by insisting that a
pregnant woman shouldn't be near heat and
knives in the kitchen. "It was one of the oddest
justifications I'd ever heard," Berrien notes. "God
knows no pregnant woman has ever been
exposed to heat and knives in a kitchen!" Immediately
after that deposition, the case settled in the
woman's favor.
Berrien herself did much public education
work around the rights of pregnant teens in
schools, and she hoped to litigate cases establishing
these rights. "My gut always told me that
those cases existed, young women being forced
out of school [because of pregnancy], but we
couldn't identify many."
The good news was that
the threat of ACLU litigation was often enough to
resolve any such complaints; in general, a phone
call to explain the law was sufficient to protect the
rights of the pregnant student. Yet for civil rights
and civil liberties lawyers looking to set precedent
in this area, such easy settlements are not always
perfectly aligned with personal and professional
agendas.
"It was for me a real point of maturing as an attorney, recognizing
that the most important
thing is a favorable outcome for your client, though
sometimes that isn't reconciled with what you're
trying to do professionally," Berrien concludes.
Berrien points out that at the time of her and
Kary Moss's arrival at WRP, there was "an explosion
of the crack cocaine trade."
As a result, WRP
had much work to do addressing the application
of drug control policies to pregnant women, as
the allegedly unique harm from the drug to a
fetus in utero was thought to justify extreme
measures infringing on women's rights. Many
women were being criminally prosecuted for child
abuse or delivery of drugs to a minor due to drug
and alcohol addiction during pregnancy. In the
mid-80s, Berrien and Moss had published some
of the first literature on criminal prosecution of
expectant mothers for substance abuse. In Kentucky
v. Welch, 864 S.W.2d 280 (Ky. 1993), WRP
succeeded in persuading the Kentucky Supreme
Court to overturn a Kentucky woman's conviction
for child abuse when the conviction was based
solely on evidence that she had taken illegal
drugs while pregnant.
 |
| Kary Moss |
Moss also addressed access to health care for
pregnant women. One of her lawsuits challenged
a private hospital's refusal to accept pregnant
women for drug and alcohol treatment. "We need
to stop blaming women for their addictions,"
Moss insists. She brought in the health care community
to work with her, as a national debate
emerged on the issue. Years later, the work accomplished by WRP
staff and others on this issue continued to have a
positive impact.
In 2001, in Ferguson
v. City of Charleston (off-site), 532 U.S. 67 (2001), the Court held in
an opinion joined by Justice Ginsburg that a public
hospital's policy of testing all pregnant patients'
urine for cocaine and reporting positive results to
the police violated the Fourth Amendment. The
hospital had argued that the policy was motivated
by a special need to protect the health of the fetus.
(WRP and the Reproductive Freedom Project submitted
a friend-of-the-court brief in the case.)
Berrien notes, "I was struck by how much the
Court was rejecting" the hospital's justification
even at oral argument. Though the crack cocaine
crisis of the late '80s had precipitated many harsh
measures against drug users, by that time there
was a growing acknowledgment, Berrien explains,
that "the line between medical treatment and
prosecution was a dangerous one to cross."
More
people understood that prosecuting pregnant
drug users risked driving women away from medical
help, and almost all courts that had considered
the issue had overturned such prosecutions.
Nevertheless, this fight continues. For instance, in
2003, a full decade after the Welch case, WRP
attorneys returned to court to successfully defend
this precedent when another Kentucky woman
was prosecuted for child abuse based on evidence
that she had used drugs during her pregnancy.
Jackie Berrien: Intersectionality
Jackie Berrien explains that when she joined
WRP in 1989, "there was a very conscious and
deliberate effort to make the Project more overtly
and directly responsive to the needs of women of
color." The ACLU's legal director wanted to
advance the organization's progress on issues of
race and poverty, engaging constituencies not
traditionally involved with the ACLU. "Now it's
probably a routine part of thinking at the ACLU,
but it was not common in the early stages,"
Berrien notes. Describing the increased engagement
of WRP and the ACLU with questions of
racial inequality, Berrien explains, "Some of the
groundwork was laid when I was there."
Berrien, who is today the assistant director of
the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, explains, "I was
always interested in issues that connected race
and gender."
Even in cases with a traditional
women's rights focus, such as WRP's challenge to
the all-male admission policy of the Citadel, a
public military college in South Carolina, Berrien
was able to apply a unique lens. For instance, she
helped draft the comparison of sex segregation
and race segregation in education in WRP's legal
briefs. Later, in the legal battles over the all-male
admission policy of the Virginia Military Institute
(VMI), VMI attempted to defend its exclusionary
admissions by arguing that a women's leadership
academy created at another Virginia college constituted
a "separate but equal" opportunity for women.
Justice Ginsburg authored
the opinion in
United
States v. Virginia et al. (off-site), 518 U.S. 515 (1996), that
rejected this justification, just as similar "separate
but equal" arguments had been rejected in
Brown
v. Board of Education (off-site). "These parallels were
always very interesting to me," Berrien explains.
While Berrien was at the ACLU, a movement
began to create all-male public schools in inner
cities, under the assumption that single-sex education
would benefit African-American boys and
young men.
At a roundtable at the National Urban
League and in a publication for the Columbia
Teacher's College, Berrien argued against the
notion. Rather than a solution to the educational
needs for the black community, she saw the concept
as a "superficial quick fix" for what she identified
as a "broader problem not by any means
limited to boys." The push for single-sex education
in inner city school districts continues with
renewed strength today.
Sara Mandelbaum:
Equal Access to Education
Arriving in 1992, Sara Mandelbaum remained at
WRP after Isabelle Katz Pinzler and Joan Bertin
ended their 15-year terms. Mandelbaum had definite
ideas of what was needed in the area of
women's rights: "I wanted to do cases that could not
easily be done by private lawyers." She explains that
the private bar had taken on many Title VII cases
against large corporations, because that was where large financial settlements
could be obtained.
Mandelbaum
wanted WRP to represent women with few
legal resources, women of color, and poor women.
When women in Westchester asked her to bring a
suit against a country club that denied them golfing
rights on a par with men, she took a pass.
Education was a key area for Mandelbaum. She
represented teenage girls denied entrance to the
National Honor Society because they were pregnant
and girls who were told they were too fat to
be cheerleaders. And when it came to single-sex
education, she rigorously challenged gendersegregated
study in public schools. Mandelbaum
sought to discredit the widely held belief that men
and women are best served by separate academic
environments. The cases in the 1990s challenging
all-male schools, she explains, were very significant
in beginning to rebut this notion.
The most high-profile case brought by WRP in
this arena was Shannon Faulkner's against the
Citadel, which ended in victory in 1995. Faulkner
was a high school student who was initially admitted
to the all-male academy based on her qualifications,
and later denied entrance when the
Citadel realized she was a woman. The highly visible
litigation "gave the Project a real association
with education cases, which led to other opportunities
in that area." During this time period, WRP
attorneys also consulted with the U.S. Justice
Department in its challenge to VMI's all-male policy
and filed friend-of-the-court briefs in support
of women's admission. Both cases were ultimately successful, and "winning
was very, very exciting,"
Mandelbaum recalls.
In the Supreme Court decision
striking down VMI's all-male admissions,
Justice Ginsburg's opinion rejected the use of
social science data that purported to prove that
men and women learned differently, data from
which VMI was "drawing frightening conclusions,"
according to Mandelbaum. For Mandelbaum, an
important part of the case was the Supreme
Court's refusal to credit a technique she identifies
as one often used by anti-feminists -- reliance on
"pseudo-science" to justify discriminatory policies.
Continuing Careers
Beyond WRP, the former staff's paths have been
as varied as their interests while at the Project.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been on the federal bench
for twenty-five years. In 1993, she became the
second woman ever to serve on the United States
Supreme Court. Throughout that time she has
continued to be a leading voice for gender equality,
women's interests, and civil rights and liberties.
Before and since her elevation to the Court,
she has been a living illustration of the remarkable
power of precise and persuasive legal analysis
and has inspired women's advocates across
the country and the world.
Brenda Feigen has
published her memoirs, titled Not One of the Boys: Living Life as a Feminist,
and currently practices entertainment law in Los
Angeles. Learn more >>
Kathleen Peratis is currently a partner at the New
York law firm Outten and Golden, where she specializes
in sexual harassment and employment
discrimination cases. Learn
more >>
Susan Deller Ross considers her current
work for women's rights in Africa as "going forth in the
spirit of the ACLU Women's Rights Project." She is
Director of the International Women's Human
Rights Clinic at the Georgetown University Law
Center, following a stint at the U.S. Justice
Department's Civil Rights Division. Under her
guidance, students take cases involving domestic
violence, trafficking in women and girls, domestic
servitude, sex-based divorce laws, female genital
mutilation, and many other cases of institutionalized
male supremacy in African nations. Ross
describes her students' work as "just like early
sex discrimination cases under our Constitution." Learn
more >>
Marjorie Smith believes that she has
been "a general
citizen in the area" of women's rights since
leaving WRP. She has worked for the Department
of Consumer Affairs, Manhattan Family Court,
New York City's Legal Aid Society, and as a partner
in private practice for many years. Today,
Smith is an assistant professor at Brooklyn Law
School and Assistant Director of the Second Look
Program Clinic in charge of prisoner assistance. Learn
more >>
Jill Goodman took a job with
the Office of Civil
Rights in the U.S. Department of Education and
then worked for eight years at the New York Attorney
General's Office. Today, Goodman works for
the New York State Judicial Committee on
Women in the Courts, where much of her time is
spent addressing violence against women, including
domestic violence, sexual violence, and the
closely related issues of prostitution and trafficking.
WRP did not specifically confront these issues
during her tenure; however, Goodman says, "I have
come to believe they are at the root of the unequal
status of women, both as its cause and effect." The
WRP agrees, and fighting violence against women
is an important part of its agenda today. Learn
more >>
After leaving WRP, Isabelle
Katz Pinzler served
in the Department of Justice under President Clinton. She then became special
counsel to the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund and a visiting professor
at New York Law School. She recalls thinking
about the future of WRP when she was Director
and admits that there were times when she did not
think that the Project would survive. It was harder
to raise money without Ginsburg's fame and credibility
attached to WRP. Learn
more >>
 |
| Lenora Lapidus |
Yet today WRP forges on
stronger than ever, led by Lenora Lapidus,
who was once a WRP intern under Pinzler. "So that's a
little continuity for you," Pinzler points out.
Margaret Moses carried her feminist sensibilities
with her when she went to a small private firm. "I stayed involved in women's
rights," she explains,
pointing to her work for the Women's Equity
Action League in Washington, D.C., Moses worked
in private practice and then became a professor at
Loyola University of Chicago School of Law. "I've
liked it all," she says of her career. "It's all been
very good."
Joan Bertin declares, "I'm still a feminist!" She
believes that her background as a women's rights advocate benefits her today
in her work at the National Coalition Against Censorship. Learn
more >>
Mary Heen went into private practice
for three years, doing tax work, and completed an L.L.M. at
New York University Law School. Today she is a
professor at the University of Richmond Law
School, teaching tax and feminist legal theory. "I
love it," Heen says of teaching. WRP has had an
influence on her academic career: "My writings
explore the connections between tax policy and
social policy -- including issues related to workrelated
child care, welfare-to-work programs
implemented through the tax code, and budget
policy issues." Learn
more >>
Deb Ellis left
WRP in 1989 to become Legal Director of the ACLU of New Jersey. She then
became Legal Director of the NOW Legal Defense and
Education Fund, where in 1992 she argued Bray v.
Alexandria Women's Health Clinic, 506 U.S. 263
(1993), before the United States Supreme Court.
Today, Ellis is the Assistant Dean for Public Interest
Law at NYU Law School, where she teaches
Sex Discrimination Law. She believes the challenge
now is to make the gains of the women's
movement real for women with the least
resources, an effort she is glad to see the current
WRP pursuing on several fronts.
Learn
more >>
Kary Moss left WRP when she had her first
child; she decided she'd like to start a family in a "calmer environment." She and her husband
moved back to Michigan to be near her family.
Today she is the executive director of the ACLU of
Michigan. She believes that the biggest threat to
women's rights is "the public perceptions that the
struggle is over." Learn
more >>
Jackie Berrien departed from WRP in May 1992
because, she "was interested in getting a chance
to do more trial-level work." At the Voting Rights
Project of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights,
"I got it -- a ton of it!" Today Berrien is the assistant
director of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and
she looks back fondly on her time at the WRP. Learn
more >>
Sara Mandelbaum left WRP to stay home full-time
with her two children. "I love practicing law and
doing women's rights work," she acknowledges,
"but there are a lot of other things in life." Describing
her current pursuits in art and child rearing,
she comments, "I'm exercising the right side of my
brain." Mandelbaum is pleased with her work at WRP. "We made our
contributions to moving in the
right direction -- we leave it to people after us to
keep it up." Learn
more >>
ENDNOTES
1 ATHENA International, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, at
http://www.athenafoundation.org/award/bios/ruth.html.
2 ELINOR PORTER SWIGER, WOMEN LAWYERS AT
WORK 51, 58 (1978).
3 KENNETH M. DAVIDSON, RUTH BADER GINSBURG, & HERMA H. KAY, SEX-BASED
DISCRIMINATION: TEXT, CASE, AND MATERIALS xii-xiii (1974).
4 Id. at 116.
5 AMY LEIGH CAMPBELL, RAISING THE BAR: RUTH BADER GINSBURG
AND THE ACLU WOMEN'S RIGHTS PROJECT (2003).
6 SWIGER, supra note 2, at 51.
7 Id.
8 Id. at 52.
9 Id. at 64.
10 ATHENA INTERNATIONAL, supra note 1
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