State Supreme Court Reverses Age Discrimination Ruling

The West Virginia Supreme Court has reversed a previous ruling it made that dismissed a lawsuit alleging age discrimination.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that the court on Thursday reversed its decision to uphold a judge’s ruling which dismissed 65-year-old Martha Knotts’ lawsuit against her former employer.

Knotts had petitioned for a rehearing, arguing that the judge didn’t consider the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in O’Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp. In that case, the court found that a determination about whether a replacement is substantially younger than a plaintiff is a more reliable indicator of age discrimination.

The state Supreme Court’s decision also overrules a 2010 case that stated that a person over 40 couldn’t allege age discrimination if the person who replaces him or her is also over 40.

Mon General Accused of Age Discrimination in Lawsuits

Two former workers at Mon General Hospitals say they were forced out of their jobs in favor of younger employees.

The Dominion Post reports that 61-year-old Concetta Chipps and 59-year-old Mary Alkire made the claim this week in lawsuits filed in Monongalia County Circuit Court.

The women said they had worked at the hospital for more than 20 years, and each said they were harassed and the target of other actions aimed at getting them to quit.

A spokeswoman said Mon General does not comment on personnel matters.

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