Alaska workers age 40+ are protected by the federal ADEA + state law from age discrimination — but the Supreme Court's Gross v. FBL standard requires "but-for" causation, making cases harder than other discrimination claims.
Published May 9, 2026
## Age discrimination in employment in Alaska
Federal + Alaska law protect workers age 40+ from discrimination based on age. The protections are real but practical challenges + legal hurdles make age cases harder than other discrimination claims.
## Federal protections — ADEA
**Age Discrimination in Employment Act (1967):**
- Workers age 40+ protected
- Employers with 20+ employees
- Includes employment agencies + unions
- Federal employees specifically covered
- Both private + public sector
**No upper age limit:**
- Even very young workers (over 40) protected
- Older workers (age 70+) increasingly common claims
## State law often broader
**${s.name} state law may:**
- Lower employer-size threshold (sometimes 1+ employees)
- Lower protected age (some states protect all ages)
- Higher damages
- Stronger remedies
- Different procedures
## Protected actions
**Cannot discriminate in:**
- Hiring
- Firing
- Promotion
- Compensation
- Job assignments
- Training opportunities
- Fringe benefits
- Layoffs / RIFs
- Recruitment
- Job advertising
## Protected from
**Age-based:**
- Stereotypes ("too old to learn," "slowing down," etc.)
- "Fresh blood" preferences
- "Cultural fit" code for younger workers
- Compensation-based age proxies ("too expensive")
- Educational requirements as proxy
- Technology requirements as proxy
- Job-title eliminations targeting older workers
- Performance review changes
- Mandatory retirement (mostly illegal)
## Common scenarios
**1. Hiring discrimination:**
- Job ads asking "recent grads" / "digital natives"
- Interview comments about age
- Concerns about "long-term commitment"
- Asking date of birth / graduation
- Background checks on age
**2. Promotion / training:**
- Younger employees promoted past older
- Training opportunities denied
- Mentorship reserved for younger
- High-profile projects denied
**3. Layoffs / RIFs:**
- Disproportionate older workers laid off
- Senior employees "streamlined"
- Position elimination targeting older
- Required retirement
**4. Constructive discharge:**
- Hostile environment for older workers
- Sudden negative reviews
- Demotions / job changes
- Pressure to retire
- Reduced responsibilities
**5. Compensation:**
- Pay cuts disproportionately to older
- Bonus structures favoring younger
- Different compensation reviews
## Causation standard — Gross v. FBL Financial
**The legal hurdle:**
- 2009 Supreme Court ruling
- ADEA requires "but-for" causation
- Plaintiff must prove age was THE deciding factor
- Higher than Title VII (sex, race, etc.) which uses "motivating factor"
- Makes cases harder than other discrimination
**Practical effect:**
- Mixed-motive cases harder
- Plaintiff must show age tipped balance
- Even if other factors matter, age must be decisive
## Proving age discrimination
**Direct evidence (rare):**
- "You're too old"
- "We need new blood"
- "You should retire"
- Written evidence (emails, memos)
- Recorded statements
- Most defendants smarter than this
**Circumstantial evidence (most cases):**
- McDonnell Douglas framework
- Adverse action against protected employee
- Younger replacement / continued advertisements
- Performance reviews change suddenly
- Pattern of similar treatment
- Statistical evidence
- Comments / atmosphere
- Employer's reasons not credible
**Statistical evidence:**
- RIFs disproportionately impact older
- Hiring patterns showing bias
- Promotion rates by age
- Compensation by age (controlling for other factors)
- Termination rates by age
## Pretext analysis
**Defending against age claims:**
**Common employer reasons:**
- Performance issues
- Position elimination
- Restructuring
- Cost reduction
- Skills mismatch
- Customer preferences
**Plaintiff must show pretext:**
- Reasons not credible
- Inconsistent with practice
- Recently created post hoc
- Different treatment of younger employees
- Documentary evidence contradicts
- Timing suspicious
## Damages
**ADEA remedies:**
- **Backpay** (lost wages)
- **Frontpay** (future lost wages, sometimes)
- **Reinstatement**
- **Liquidated damages** (DOUBLE backpay for willful violations)
- **Attorney's fees + costs**
- **Limited equitable relief**
**NOT available under ADEA:**
- Pain & suffering
- Emotional distress damages
- Punitive damages (state law sometimes)
**State law often higher:**
- Compensatory damages (emotional distress)
- Punitive damages
- Higher caps or no caps
- ${s.name} specific remedies
## Filing deadlines
**ADEA charge:**
- 180 days from discriminatory action
- 300 days in most states (deferral states)
- File with EEOC
- Right to sue letter
**Lawsuit:**
- 90 days from right-to-sue
- Federal or state court
**State law:**
- ${s.name} specific deadlines
- Different agency
- Coordinated procedures
## Severance + waivers — special protections
**Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA, 1990):**
- ADEA waivers must meet specific requirements
- 21 days to consider (45 in groups)
- 7 days to revoke
- Specific consideration beyond what owed
- Plain language
- Written agreement
- Advised to consult attorney
- Group RIF info disclosure
**Failure to comply** = waiver invalid + ADEA case still viable.
## Group layoffs / RIFs
**OWBPA disclosure requirements:**
- Specific job titles / ages of those selected
- Specific job titles / ages of those NOT selected
- Selection criteria
- Decisional unit description
- Time + factors considered
**Hidden in agreements often:**
- Reveals discrimination patterns
- Important for case evaluation
- Don't sign without review
## Class actions / collective actions
**ADEA collective actions:**
- Similar to FLSA (29 USC § 626(b))
- Opt-in mechanism
- Notice + consent forms
- Common patterns in mass layoffs
**${s.name} state class actions:**
- Standard Rule 23 procedures
- Different mechanism
- Sometimes preferred
## Defenses to age discrimination
**Common employer defenses:**
- **Bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ)** — narrow
- **Reasonable factors other than age (RFOA)** — burden
- **Bona fide seniority system**
- **Bona fide retirement plan** (limited)
- **Public safety exception** (police, firefighters — limited)
- **Performance-based decisions**
- **Skills-based decisions**
## Mandatory retirement
**Generally illegal:**
- ADEA bans mandatory retirement
- Specific exceptions:
- Bona fide executives (over 65, with $44K+ retirement)
- Public safety officers (some states)
- Tenured college faculty (limited circumstances)
- Pilots (FAA age 65 limit — federal preemption)
## Strategic considerations
**For employees:**
- Document everything (especially comments)
- Save communications + reviews
- Identify pattern of age comments
- Compare treatment to younger employees
- Don't sign waivers without review (especially severance)
- File EEOC charge promptly
- Consult employment attorney
**For employers:**
- Document legitimate reasons
- Consistent treatment across ages
- Train managers on age-neutral language
- Comply with OWBPA in severance
- Avoid age-coded language
- Statistical analysis of decisions
## Recent trends
**Increasing scrutiny:**
- Tech industry age discrimination
- "Cultural fit" claims
- Job ads with coded language
- Statistical analysis tools
- Class actions in tech
**EEOC focus:**
- Age discrimination strategic enforcement
- High-profile cases
- Public-private cooperation
## What you should do
If you face age discrimination in Alaska: document everything, file EEOC charge within 180-300 days, consult an employment attorney. Many Alaska employment attorneys offer free consultations + work on contingency. Don't sign severance / release without review — OWBPA may make it invalid. Group RIF documents may reveal pattern.
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*This guide is general information about federal + Alaska law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Age cases are technical + tough. Talk to a licensed Alaska employment attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.