Correction: Pregnancy Discrimination story
In an Oct. 12 story about pregnancy discrimination, The Associated Press misspelled the name of the Neal Gerber and Eisenberg law firm. A corrected version of the story is below:
Pregnancy discrimination continues, 41 years after US ban
For 41 years, federal law has banned pregnancy discrimination in the workplace. But the stories tumbling out this week show it's far from eradicated. Scores of women have shared their experiences on social media, prompted by Elizabeth Warren's claim that she was forced out of a teaching job in 1971 because she was pregnant.
By DEE-ANN DURBIN
AP Business Writer
For 41 years, federal law has banned pregnancy discrimination in the workplace. But the stories tumbling out this week show it's far from eradicated.
Prompted by presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren's claim that she was forced out of a teaching job in 1971 because she was pregnant, scores of women have shared similar experiences on social media. Police officers, academics, fast food workers, lawyers, flight attendants, administrative assistants and others say they hid pregnancies on the job or during interviews, faced demeaning comments and were demoted or even fired after revealing a pregnancy.
When some raised doubts about Warren's account — noting a 2007 interview in which she gave different reasons for leaving her job — women pushed back on Twitter and Facebook. Many say they accept Warren's explanation that she has grown more comfortable since 2007 sharing the real reason she resigned from the school was because the principal hired someone else once Warren became visibly pregnant.
"Pregnancy discrimination is real, and I believe Elizabeth Warren," tweeted Dr. Diane Horvath, an obstetrician and gynecologist who works at Whole Woman's Health, a clinic in Baltimore.
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