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Can states legislate their way out of gender pay differences?

California is about to find out. State legislators introduced one of the strictest equal pay laws in the country on Tuesday.

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Rich Pedroncelli/AP
A woman bags groceries at Compton's Market in Sacramento, Calif., Oct. 6. Gov. Jerry Brown signed an equal pay measure Tuesday that lets female employees challenge pay discrimination based on the wages a company pays to male employees who do similar work.

Maybe California got the memo that聽 in 2 out of 5 American households.

Or maybe it鈥檚 simply the right time to start paying men and women equally for doing the same job.

For these and many other reasons, California Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday signed into law tough equal pay protections for women. Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson (D) Santa Barbara, the author of the California Fair Pay Act,聽calls it the .

"Equal pay isn鈥檛 just the right thing for women, it鈥檚 the right thing for our economy and for California," said Senator Jackson in a statement. "Families rely on women鈥檚 income more than ever before. Because of the wage gap, our state and families are missing out on $33.6 billion dollars a year."

The fair pay law strengthens and broadens and a 52-year-old federal law that requires employers pay men and women equally for doing the exact same job.

But now, the law requires employers to pay equally for "substantially similar work" and shifts the burden of proof to employers to justify why they provide different pay to聽. Employers also cannot retaliate against employees for discussing or asking how much their peers are paid.

For example: If a male chef earns more than a female chef because he works weekends, the employer would have to prove, if sued, that the weekend shifts are busier and require more work and thus account for the difference in wages, explains Jackson鈥檚 office. The restaurant would also have to show that the weekend shift was open to all chefs, and that the male chef got the job because he was the most qualified or willing to work that shift.

"罢丑别听聽and have burdened women forever are slowly being resolved with this kind of bill," Governor Brown said at a ceremony on Tuesday at Rosie the Riveter National Historical Park, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The new law is supported by the California Chamber of Commerce and most state Republican lawmakers, the LA Times reports. But opponents say that it goes too far and will encourage more women to sue their employers and companies to move operations out of state.

"It is going to lead to lots more litigation, which further weakens the business climate in California," said J. Al Latham Jr., a labor lawyer and lecturer at the University of Southern California's law school.

Geoff DeBoskey, California labor lawyer to Fortune 500 companies, said the change from requiring equal pay for equal work, to equal pay for substantially similar work, is both significant and damaging to business, reports the Times.

"If an employer is going to build a new call center, they are just not going to build that in California," said Mr. DeBoskey.

Time will tell. But what鈥檚 clear now is that nationally, women who work full-time earn , according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. It is unclear how much of the disparity is the result of wage discrimination, and how much of it is caused by other societal trends.

In California, according to Sen. Jackson鈥檚 office, a woman working full time in 2013 made a man earned.

A number of other states , including Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, North Dakota,聽and Oregon. A handful of others have pending equal pay legislation, according to the American Association of University Women.

"Women, especially women of color and mothers, continue to lose precious income to a pervasive, gender-based wage gap," said聽Jennifer Reisch, legal director for Equal Rights Advocates, a San Francisco-based civil rights organization. The bill signed today "will make California鈥檚 equal pay law clearer, stronger, and more effective."

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