California company refused to hire ‘non-Hispanics,’ feds say. It will now pay $2 million

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Marquez Brothers, a company that manufactures Mexican-style cheese and other food products, has agreed to pay $2 million to settle a federal lawsuit filed more than two years ago over alleged racial discrimination.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced the settlement Wednesday. The suit stemmed from the experience of two African-American job applicants who alleged they sought job applications at the Marquez Brothers facility in Hanford, but were refused the paperwork.

The federal agency charged that one of the applicants had several years of experience in dairy goods production, but “was not hired despite having been better qualified than those ultimately hired.”

The second man also sought to apply several times for work at Marquez Brothers, but “was repeatedly discouraged from applying and told that Marquez Brothers International was not hiring.”

The lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Fresno alleged that over the past decade, Marquez Brothers discriminated against non-Hispanic job applicants, including “refusing to accept [employment] applications from non-Hispanic applicants,” at its California plants in Hanford, Fresno, Sacramento, Los Angeles and San Diego, and at plants in Colorado, Nevada and Texas.

While the two men identified in the lawsuit were black, a subsequent investigation by EEOC reportedly found other instances of discrimination against white, Asian and other races by the company.

Kurgen

Article URL : https://www.fresnobee.com/news/local/article235256567.html