
Editor’s note: This article is by Kelsey Neubauer, of the Vermont Cynic, in which it was first published Dec. 2, 2015.
[U]VM is being sued by a former employee on the grounds that she was paid less than her male counterparts based on her gender, according to documents obtained by the Cynic from the Vermont Superior Court.
A civil lawsuit was filed Dec. 12, 2014, against the university on behalf of former UVM employee Cynthia Ruescher alleging they had violated equal pay law, according to the lawsuit.
UVM employed Ruescher as an IT professional in Enterprise Technology Services in February 2001, according to university officials.
UVM strongly denies the allegations of unfair pay, university communications Director Enrique Corredera said in a Nov. 30 email.
Ruescher and her attorney have not responded to the Cynicโs requests for comment.
UVM has an โinternal processโ to deal with discrimination, Corderra stated in the email.
โWe work hard to ensure that our employment and compensation practices are fair and equitable, and we are confident we will prevail in court,โ he stated in the email.
The case will be ready for trial by April 1, 2016, according to the lawsuit.
UVM hired Ruescher in 2001, Corredera stated in the email.
There were disparities in pay, title and training opportunities, according to the lawsuit. Opportunities were offered to Ruescherโs male counterparts but not to her, the lawsuit stated.
UVM asserts that a project position, which included training, was offered to all employees in the department, according to the universityโs Feb. 25 answer to the lawsuitโs initial complaint.
Ruescher claims she was denied this opportunity, according to the lawsuit.
Ruescher claims that there was โillegal retaliationโ when she asked UVM why there was a difference between her pay and her counterpartโs pay in 2012, the lawsuit stated.
UVM denies these claims in their answer, which states that her complaint did not go through UVMโs โgrievance procedure.โ
Situations in which a person is being discriminated against for their sex is โexpressly excludedโ from UVMโs grievance process, according to UVMโs employment grievance policy.
Ruescher claims in the lawsuit that she filed requests for Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigations twice in 2013, according to the lawsuit.
The EEOC is โresponsible for enforcing federal lawsโ that make it illegal to discriminate in the workplace, according to their website.
An EEOC investigator was sent to UVM to look into this claim in June 2014, according to the lawsuit.
