In 2008, a woman applied to be a coal miner at Mach Mining in Marion, Illinois. She didn’t get the job. No woman ever had.
Was Mach Mining systematically discriminating against women? The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency that enforces employment discrimination laws, filed suit against the company in 2011 saying it was.
“Women miners are out there, they were applying at Mach Mines, and they had a right to be considered on their qualifications and merits,” the agency said in a press release then.
RELATED: 2015’s top Supreme Court cases
But that’s not the question before the Supreme Court today. Instead, the Court is hearing arguments on a seemingly arcane procedural issue in the case that could make it much easier for employers to get rid of such discrimination lawsuits. A victory for Mach Mining would be yet another hurdle for victims of employment discrimination, from a court that has in recent years erected several of them.
Before filing a lawsuit on behalf of someone who has been discriminated against, usually under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the EEOC can negotiate a settlement, a process known as “conciliation.” Mach Mining wants to open up that process to the scrutiny of a court, in part because it claims that the EEOC treated it unfairly in the conciliation process. There’s no mystery as to why: In other cases, like the pregnancy discrimination suit brought against Bloomberg LP, judges have dismissed some or all of the case after finding fault with the EEOC’s settlement process.









