Home / Full timeline / The Justice Department announces that a federal judge in Cleveland, Ohio, has issued a consent decree requiring Roadway Express Company, the nation’s third largest trucking concern, to implement an equal employment program.
The Justice Department announces that a federal judge in Cleveland, Ohio, has issued a consent decree requiring Roadway Express Company, the nation’s third largest trucking concern, to implement an equal employment program.
1970 (Sep 1)
The Justice Department announced that a federal judge in Cleveland, Ohio, had issued a consent decree requiring Roadway Express Company, the nation's third largest trucking concern, to implement an equal employment program. The order ended the department's first efforts to prohibit job discrimination throughout the company's nationwide operation. Judge Thomas D. Lambros had specifically prohibited Roadway from engaging in any act or practice that had the purpose of denying Blacks equal employment opportunities in hiring, upgrading, and promotions. The decree also ordered Roadway, which had freight terminals in twenty-eight states, to offer job opportunities on a first-available-vacancy basis to 105 individuals with seniority and other benefits for forty-five of them. The Justice Department had filed suit against Roadway in May 1968, charging that Blacks had been discriminated against in job placement and other opportunities.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.