The Women's Law Fund, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to eradicating gender discrimination through litigation and education, was incorporated in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1972. The fund was co-founded by attorneys Jane M. Picker and Lizabeth A. Moody, then colleagues at the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University. Primarily funded by the Ford Foundation, the Women's Law Fund first supported precedent-setting litigation regarding gender discrimination in employment, education, government benefits, and housing. The Women's Law Fund was not a law firm; rather, it was an organization securing attorneys and providing funding for litigation in its area of expertise. In fact, the Women's Law Fund was the first non-profit organization in the United States to address gender discrimination cases. Although located in Cleveland, the fund was a national organization.
Notably, the first case supported by the fund, LaFleur, et al. v. Cleveland Board of Education, et al., reached the United States Supreme Court to result in a landmark ruling. In 1974, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Board's policy of mandatory maternity leave penalized female teachers for deciding to bear children, thus violating the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Other litigation of note supported by the fund includes multiple cases involving the Cleveland Police Department. Litigation succeeded in allowing women to enroll as police cadets, broaden their police presence beyond desk jobs at the Women's Bureau of the Cleveland Police Department, and allowing female police officers to wear pantsuits instead of mandatory skirts. The following cases all relate to the Cleveland Police Department: Christ, et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al., Clayton, et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al., Loy, et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al., Lucas, et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al., and Parkinson, et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al.
As the fund's efforts produced change, the Women's Law Fund shifted its focus in the 1990s to new areas of discrimination, namely that of American women employed overseas by American companies and female age discrimination. The organization disbanded at the end of its 2006 fiscal year, largely due to the achievement of their mission.
One of the cases supported by the Women's Law Fund was Zamlen et al. v. City of Cleveland, et al. Barbara Zamlen and seven other plaintiffs initiated this suit on June 14, 1983. This group of women, unsuccessful applicants for entry-level firefighter positions in 1983, sued the City of Cleveland and various officials thereof, essentially for their role in gender discrimination against women in the profession of firefighting. According to a press release from the Women's Law Fund, "The Women sued on behalf of all women who applied for or took the 1983 and earlier firefighter tests, challenging both the physical and written tests as biased against women" (March 20, 1985). The city of Cleveland had never had a female firefighter up to this point.
On December 21, 1983, a Preliminary Injunction Order was set by the court to prevent the City of Cleveland from hiring any entry-level firefighters until the court could rule on the matter. This order was lifted in March 1985 after the city agreed to meet certain stipulations, including appointing between 15-19 women to the fire academy and that at least 15% of hires from each academy class for the duration of the 1983 eligibility list be women. This order resulted in the hiring of the first female firefighter for the City of Cleveland and also caused the city to re-develop its entry-level firefighter examination and to initiate a recruitment program for female applicants.
In 1987 much of the lawsuit was dismissed when Judge Alvin Krenzler found that the City of Cleveland had not intentionally discriminated against women through the use of its physical agility tests and at the same time it consolidated the suit with one filed by the United States Justice Department also alleging employment discrimination against women. On May 27, 1988 the court ultimately found for the defendants, saying, in summary, that plaintiffs failed to show that defendants intentionally discriminated against women applicants. One defendant, however, Dr. Norman D. Henderson, settled before this trial. The settlement amount was $100,000, and the disbursement of this money was argued through the court with an agreement finally reached in 1998.
The plaintiffs appealed the 1988 decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.
Sources used in creating this historical sketch include Cleveland
The Women's Law Fund Records, Series III, 1970-2003 and undated, consist of files related to the Zamlen et al. v. City of Cleveland, et. al. lawsuit that was supported by the Women's Law Fund. The collection includes appendices, balance sheets, brochures, cassette tapes, charts, consent decrees, contracts, correspondence, course catalogs, court documents, court opinions, court orders, depositions, dockets, exhibits, flyers, forms, handbooks, handouts, indices, journal articles, legal briefs, lists, magazines, manuals, memoranda, motions, newsletters, newspaper articles and clippings, notes, pamphlets, pleadings, printed case law, reports, statements, statistics, transcripts, trial summaries, VHS tapes, and workbooks.
This collection is of value to researchers interested in employment discrimination against women, especially in the municipal firefighting profession, or discrimination on the basis of gender through the legal case files and other research related to Zamlen et al. v. City of Cleveland et al. There are no other files of the Women's Law Fund contained in this collection, administrative or otherwise. For more information on the Women's Law Fund please see MS 4970 Women's Law Fund Records and MS 5125 Women's Law Fund Records, Series II.
Those interested in the profession of firefighting, women's roles in this profession, and the recruitment and training of women firefighters, in Cleveland, Ohio, specifically, as well as across the United States, during the late twentieth through the early twenty-first century will find this collection of interest. Those interested in the City of Cleveland's policies regarding female employees and gender discrimination issues duringthat late twentieth century also will find value in this collection.
Anyone interested in gender discrimination or employment discrimination in general or in other professions will find research on various cases from the late twentieth century from across the United States in this collection. Researchers of women's history, gender studies, legal studies, and the evolution of civil liberties will find this collection particularly valuable as well.
The collection is arranged in four series.
Researchers seeking administrative files and other case files of the Women's Law Fund should consult MS 4970 Women's Law Fund Records and MS 5124 Women's Law Fund Records, Series II. The researcher should also consult MS 5125 Women's Equity Action League Records.
The processing of this collection was made possible through the support of the Women's Law Fund and the Cleveland-Marshall School of Law at Cleveland State University. Processed by Hannah Kemp-Severence in 2014.
Access to this collection is restricted. All researchers will be asked to make an appointment with the WRHS Curator of Manuscripts to discuss these restrictions and sign a "Case Files Access Form" before using this collection.
[Container ___, Folder ___ ] MS 5255 Women's Law Fund Records, Series III, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio
Gift of the Women's Law Fund in 2005.
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.