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Jennifer Siebel Newsom Champions Equal Pay for Women in 1st Initiative as California’s First Partner

First partner of California Jennifer Siebel Newsom speaks at the Women's March in Los Angeles on Jan. 19, 2019. (Credit: Sarah Morris / Getty Images)

Jennifer Siebel Newsom on Monday backed her first initiative since her husband became governor in January, a drive to promote equal pay for women.

“California has the strongest equal pay laws in the nation — but there is still more work to do,” said Siebel Newsom in a statement.

California women as a group are paid 89 cents for every dollar men make, according to a 2019 report by Mount Saint Mary’s University on the status of women and girls in California.

White women are paid 80 cents of what men make on average; Asian American women 75 cents; African American women 60 cents; and Latinas 43 cents, according to the report.

Former Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law in 2015 that the author, Democratic state Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson of Santa Barbara, said has become a model for 41 other states. California now requires equal pay, regardless of gender, for “substantially similar work.” It also prohibits retaliation against employees who invoke the law, protects those who discuss wages and allows claims based on salaries at different workplaces.

Jackson is promoting another bill this year that would require California employers with 100 or more employees to report pay data to the state each year, including compensation and hours worked broken down by gender, race, ethnicity and job category.

But equal pay laws are only the first step, said California Labor Secretary Julie Su. Employees need to be aware of their rights, employers of their responsibilities, and enforcement agencies must be committed to investigating violations, she said in a statement.

They joined lawmakers and advocates at a Capitol news conference announcing an education campaign, #EqualPayCA, on the gender pay gap and ways to close it. A state website also has tips for employers, employees and unions.

They also announced 13 corporations that have promised to conduct an annual gender pay analysis, review their hiring and promotion practices to avoid any unconscious bias, and follow what are considered best practices to make sure all employees are treated equally.

The corporations include Airbnb, Apple and AT&T Communications Inc.

The drive comes one day before National Equal Pay Day, the day that represents how far into the new year women must work to earn what men did in the prior year.

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