If you're old enough to remember the passage of this act, then it definitely applies to you.
The law, passed (as you might have guessed) in 1967, prevents employers from discriminating against workers who are 40 years old or older. Basically, it bars companies from taking the age of an older worker into account when they make decisions about things like hiring, pay, promotion or firing.
The law has been amended and updated over the years, most notably in 1990 with the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act and in 1991, when parts of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 tweaked the age discrimination statutes.
Hmmm...first passed in 1967, just when the Greatest Generation types were starting to face some age discrimination...and then revised in the 1990s, just when the baby boomers were starting to get a little touch of grey, as the Grateful Dead used to say.
When do Millennials start to turn 40 again?
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is the Fair Credit Reporti...4 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is the Fair Credit Reporting Act? alright so think
old the Englande it's 1604 and your family is still working the barley [Family carrying barley]
fields because great-great-grandfather smeltwagon wasn't very good at rolling
the bones he lost a lot of money so yeah great-great grandpappy ended up with
gambling losses getting him into massive debt with over 97 farthings worth of [farthings drop into a bag]
debt accumulated after 20 years of bad gambling bones so in England well they
would either torture you until you found a way to pay off your debts either
legally or not or they would just throw you your family and your progeny into
essentially a work camp for generations and in fact it was this unfairness that
led to the notion of no taxation without representation in our own Constitution [US constitution appears]
so as the world turned the notion of credit fairness actually became a thing
and eventually the Fair Credit Reporting Act was established in 1970 and of
course it gave rise to the store Credit Reporting Act first adopted by Sears
where America well used to shop yeah I remember Sears catalog that was
called the Amazon back in the day all right with enormous abuse of the
credit system the haves or if the educated or the wealthy were able to get
away with nearly everything just shy of murder while the uneducated well they [Arrow points to uneducated people]
suffered the key driver in credit or an individual's access to borrowing money
revolves around the manner or form in which their credit scores were reported
and calculated in all that stuff so if you're educated you kind of know how to [Students playing video games]
game the system right and in fact with no structure behind credit reporting the
system was simply not trustworthy and it had to be codified or made into cookie
cutter nuggets each of which treated those seeking a credit score equally and
fairly individuals were able to petition to correct bad information that had
somehow leaked into their system like inaccurate information like it would do
that and sit there and haunt you for decades they were also allowed to
actually access their score and amazingly in the past people did not [Credit score rises]
necessarily have the right to view their own credit score how
weird and finally bad credit stopped being a cattle brand that lived with an
individual for their entire life new amendments allowed people to remove bad
credit annotations by paying off their debts along with the penalty and then
having good credit for three four five years after which time the negative
frowny faces were removed from their credit ratings sheets
so yeah credit reporting was finally fair and people were finally able to you [Cattle brand credit score appears]
know go in for cattle brand removal that's gotta hurt...
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