DENVER MINT SUIT COVERED BY WALL STREET JOURNAL Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 13, March 26, 2006, Article 8

    DENVER MINT SUIT COVERED BY WALL STREET JOURNAL

    We've been following the story of the Denver Mint employee suit
    for some time now. On March 22 The Wall Street Journal covered
    the story in a page-one article. Here are a few short excerpts.
    Certain words which might trigger spam filters have been replaced
    with alternate terms in brackets [].

    "Neither the EEOC nor officials of the mint will discuss particulars
    of the allegations. The proceedings are "closed to protect the
    integrity of the process and those involved," said David Lebryk,
    acting director of the U.S. Mint..."

    "The Denver Mint opened in 1862. It employs 414, including 93
    women. Most who complained to the EEOC -- women with jobs such as
    running coin-counting machines and coin presses -- earn about
    $31,000 to $43,000 a year."

    "Linda Kemp, while inspecting a men's room for cleanliness,
    noticed a loose ceiling tile, moved it, and found 40 to 50
    [naughty] magazines. Ms. Kemp, who described her experiences
    in a statement given to the U.S. Mint, also told of making
    another discovery months later.

    She said she was checking for rats in an attic above the plant
    engineering division. What she found there, she said, were
    "countless stacks of [naughty] magazines," a jury-rigged bare
    light bulb above and a chair with a desk-arm. It was, she wrote,
    "what appeared to be [a place for doing something boys are
    told will affect their eyesight]."

    [So THAT'S where those "carbon" spots came from ... -Editor]

    To read the complete article (subscription required): WSJ

    Another copy of the article (no subscription needed) is available at:
    post-gazette.com

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2006-03-26
Volume
  • 9

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