In
Budde v. Travelers Insurance Company,
I
From early October of 1981 until March 8,1982, Miles & McManus employed Budde as a secretary and provided a comprehensive group medical insurance policy underwritten by Travelers in conjunction with Budde's employment. 1 This insurance policy provided benefits for complications of *1360 pregnancy, but excluded reimbursement of medical expenses resulting from normal pregnancy. 2 In late January or early February of 1982, Budde informed her employer that she was pregnant. On March 8, 1982, Budde's employment was terminated. She experienced a normal pregnancy and childbirth, and incurred medical expenses of $1,751.29. When Budde filed a claim with Travelers for reimbursement of these expenses, Travelers denied the claim on the basis that the costs of her normal pregnancy and childbirth were not covered by the employer’s policy.
On March 10, 1982, Budde filed charges with the Commission alleging that the failure of Miles & McManus to provide an insurance policy affording benefits for normal pregnancy constituted discrimination and that Travelers aided and abetted in this allegedly discriminatory practice by issuing a policy lacking coverage for expenses incurred as a result of normal pregnancy. After investigating the charges, the Commission Director determined that there was probable cause to credit Budde’s allegations of discriminatory practice. 3 The Commission subsequently filed complaints against Miles & McManus and Travelers, and the two actions were consolidated by the Commission hearing officer.
The Commission hearing officer granted a motion for summary judgment in support of the complaint. The hearing officer concluded that the insurance policy provided to Budde was discriminatory in nature in violation of section 24-34-402(l)(a), 10 C.R.S. (1982 & 1987 Supp.) (proscribing discrimination on the basis of sex in matters of compensation), and the Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, section 80.8(b), 3 C.C.R. 708-1 (requiring that pregnancy or childbirth be treated by employer in same manner as other disabilities for purposes of accrual of benefits or payment of health or disability insurance). Also concluding that Travelers aided and abetted in the discriminatory employment practice, the hearing officer ordered Miles & McManus and Travelers to pay Budde the medical expenses she incurred as a result of her pregnancy and ordered Miles & McManus to adopt a benefits plan that provided coverage for normal pregnancy.
The Commission reviewed the decision of the hearing officer on its own motion and affirmed. The Commission adopted the hearing officer’s findings and conclusions and, as an additional basis for its determination, observed that the Equal Rights Amendment, Colo. Const, art. II, § 29, required the conclusion that “all health insurance plans must treat pregnancy as [they] would any other sickness or disability.” The Commission also concluded that although section 10-8-122, 4A C.R.S. (1987) (requiring that sickness and accident insurance policies provide coverage for a sickness, disease or accident which is a complication of pregnancy in the same manner as any other sickness, disease or accident is covered under the policy), established a minimum insurance coverage requirement, section 24-34-402 and the Equal Rights Amendment established an additional requirement. The Commission reasoned that Travelers could not disclaim responsibility for aiding and abetting a discriminatory employment practice under section 24-34-402(l)(e), 10 C.R.S. (1982), simply because it had offered Miles & McManus the option of selecting a policy providing comprehensive coverage for pregnancy.
*1361 Both Miles & McManus and Travelers appealed the Commission’s order. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals set aside the order, concluding that section 24-34-402 does not require that insurance benefits be provided for expenses incurred as the result of a normal pregnancy and that the Commission’s interpretation of section 80.8(b) of the Commission Rules as requiring such benefits was inconsistent with section 24-34-402. The Court of Appeals majority also concluded that the Equal Rights Amendment does not proscribe exclusion of insurance benefits on the basis of a difference in gender.
II
A
The Commission urges that pursuant to the Equal Rights Amendment, Colo. Const, art. II, § 29, and section 24-34-402, 10 C.R.S. (1982 & 1987 Supp.), an employer discriminates on the basis of sex by providing employees as part of a total compensation package a group health insurance policy providing coverage only for complications of pregnancy and excluding from coverage expenses incurred during a normal pregnancy. We agree.
Section 24-34-402 provides in pertinent part as follows:
Discriminatory and unfair employment practices. (1) It shall be a discriminatory or unfair employment practice:
(a) For an employer to refuse to hire, to discharge, to promote or demote, or to discriminate in matters of compensation against any person otherwise qualified because of handicap, race, creed, color, sex, age, national origin, or ancestry....
§ 24-34-402, 10 C.R.S. (1982 & 1987 Supp.). 4 This statutory language unambiguously proscribes discrimination in matters of compensation on the basis of sex; it is undisputed that the provision of group health insurance to Budde in conjunction with her employment constituted a matter of compensation.
The language employed in section 24-34-402 is similar to that found in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Pub.L. No. 88-352, 78 Stat. 253 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e (1982)). 5 Although there are close parallels between section 24-34-402 and Title VII, Colorado’s antidiscrimination legislation antedated the federal statute. See C.R.S.1953, §§ 81-19-1 to -8. The provision proscribing discrimination on the basis of sex in matters of employment was added to C.R.S.1963, section 80-21-6(2), the immediate predecessor to section 24-34-402, in 1969. See Act approved July 1, 1969, ch. 205, § 1, 1969 Colo.Sess.Laws 667. 6
In concluding that the health insurance policy provided here did not violate section 24-34-402, the Court of Appeals majority relied upon the United States Supreme Court decision in
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
The Gilbert decision was in effect nullified by the 1978 Congressional enactment of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, Pub. L. No. 95-555, 92 Stat. 2076 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e (1982)). That statute amended the definitional section of Title VII by the addition of a provision stating that discrimination “because of sex” included discrimination on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions and that women affected by such conditions must under benefits programs provided by employers be treated the same as those individuals not so affected. The Court of Appeals majority nonetheless applied the Gilbert rationale to conclude that exclusion of normal pregnancy benefits under an employment benefits plan does not violate Colorado statutory or constitutional provisions. The court relied on the fact that the General Assembly has not amended section 24-34-402 to include the language added to Title VII by the federal Pregnancy Discrimination Act.
A review of the legislative history of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act supports the conclusion that in amending Title VII in 1978 Congress did not intend to extend Title VII beyond those areas originally covered but rather sought only to clarify the original intent that Title VII proscribed the exclusion of pregnancy benefits in fringe benefit packages provided as employment compensation.
E.g.,
H.R.Rep. No. 95-948, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 3,
reprinted in
1978 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 4749, 4751; S.Rep. No. 95-331, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 3;
see also Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n,
Prior to the Court of Appeals decision in this case, no Colorado appellate court had adopted the restrictive view of sex discrimination espoused in
Gilbert.
A majority of state courts have rejected the
Gilbert
rationale altogether in construing provisions of state statutes and city ordinances proscribing sex discrimination in employment matters,
e.g., Quaker Oats Co. v. Cedar Rapids Human Rights Comm’n,
Reliance on the Gilbert rationale is particularly inappropriate as a means of interpreting the provisions of section 24-34-402 in light of the fact that Colorado constitutional provisions provide additional prohibitions against sex discrimination not present in the United States Constitution. In 1972, the people of Colorado adopted as a constitutional amendment article II, section 29 (the Equal Rights Amendment), which provides as follows:
Equality of the sexes. Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the state of Colorado or any of its political subdivisions on account of sex.
This constitutional provision prohibits unequal treatment based solely on circumstances of sex,
People v. Salinas,
Central to the Court’s conclusion in
Gilbert
is the reasoning that an employer who does not provide coverage for pregnancy expenses, but does provide comprehensive coverage of all male-specific disabilities, does not discriminate against women, because in such situation “ ‘[tjhere is no risk from which men are protected and women are not.’ ”
General Elec. Co. v. Gilbert,
The policy provided to Budde by Miles & McManus excluded coverage for pregnancy, well baby care and conditions caused by war or international armed conflict and placed some restrictions on benefits respecting treatment for mental illness or alcoholism. The pregnancy coverage ex-
*1364
elusion did not apply to the members of both sexes equally. The argument that such a plan did not discriminate because all pregnant people are treated alike is refuted by the plan’s inherently discriminatory designation of the recipient class — the exclusion of all women from reimbursement for the costs of treatment of a physiological condition affecting only women.
E.g., Quaker Oats Co. v. Cedar Rapids Human Rights Comm’n,
Also underlying the
Gilbert
rationale is the conclusion that pregnancy should be treated differently from other disabilities because pregnancy is not typically classifiable as a “disease” and is often a voluntarily undertaken condition.
General Elec. Co. v. Gilbert,
The conclusion that pregnancy benefits need not be provided because pregnancy is a voluntary condition is similarly unpersuasive.
E.g., Franklin Mfg. Co. v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n,
Miles
&
McManus asserts that any interpretation of section 24-34r-402 requiring coverage of pregnancy benefits would essentially mandate greater benefits for female employees than for male employees and would, therefore, constitute discrimination against male employees. Although the risks of one class may not be precisely the same as the risks of the other class, an insurance policy which provides benefits comprehensively to males and females for medical conditions to which each class is separately subject cannot be deemed to discriminate against either class on the basis of sex.
E.g., Franklin Mfg. Co. v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Miles & McManus discriminated on the basis of sex, in violation of the requirements of the Equal Rights Amendment and section 24-34-402, by providing employees as part of a total compensation package a group health insurance policy which excluded from coverage medical expenses associated with normal pregnancy.
B
Both Miles & McManus and Travelers argue that section 80.8(b) of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, 3 C.C.R. 708-1, has no applicability to the payment of medical expenses associated with normal pregnancy, but rather requires only that employees disabled due to pregnancy be paid income maintenance benefits in the same manner as employees disabled due to other reasons. We are not persuaded by this argument.
Section 80.8 provides in pertinent part as follows:
Section 80.8. Pregnancy and Childbirth:
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(b) Disabilities caused or contributed to by pregnancy, miscarriage, abortion, childbirth, and recovery therefrom, are for all job related purposes, temporary disabilities and should be treated as such under any health or temporary disability insurance or sick leave plan available in connection with employment. Written or unwritten employment policies and practices involving matters such as the commencement and duration of leave, the availability of extensions, the accrual of seniority and other benefits and privileges, reinstatement, and payment under any health or temporary disability insurance or sick leave plan, formal or informal, shall be applied to disability due to pregnancy or childbirth on the same terms and conditions as they are applied to other temporary disabilities.
§ 80.8(b), Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, 3 C.C.R. 708-1. The argument that section 80.8(b) is inapplicable to the facts of this case is predicated upon an interpretation of section 80.8(b) that disabilities caused by pregnancy must be treated as other disabilities are treated, not that the condition of pregnancy itself must be treated as a disability. However, section 80.8(b) by its terms provides that employment “policies and practices involving ... payment under any health ... insurance ... plan” must be applied to disability due to pregnancy or childbirth “on the same terms and conditions” as those policies and practices are applied to other disabilities. The salient similarities between pregnancy and other medical disabilities include the potential for losing income due to temporary inability to perform job duties and the potential for incurring medical expenses. Section 80.8(b) on its face requires that medical expenses incurred as a result of pregnancy and childbirth be covered under a health insurance plan provided by the employer in the same manner as are medical expenses incurred as a result of other temporary disabilities. 8 *1366 The coverage of medical expenses under a comprehensive health insurance policy is, then, merely one aspect of treating pregnancy in the same manner as other medical disabilities.
We conclude that section 80.8(b) governs the circumstances of this case. We also conclude, contrary to the arguments .of Miles & McManus and Travelers, that this rule properly effectuates the requirement of section 24-34-402, 10 C.R.S. (1982 & 1987 Supp.), that pregnancy be treated in the same manner as other medical conditions resulting in medical expenses. 9
C
Arguing that section 80.8(b) of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, 3 C.C.R. 708-1, is void for vagueness, Miles & McManus asserts that the application of section 80.8(b) to require coverage of expenses associated with normal pregnancy violates its rights to due process of law under the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution and article II, section 25, of the Colorado Constitution. We disagree.
Statutes and administrative regulations are presumed valid, and the burden is upon the party attacking such provisions to establish their invalidity beyond a reasonable doubt.
E.g., Pigg v. State Dep’t of Highways,
The Commission declined to adopt the
Gilbert
rationale in interpreting the provisions of section 24-34-402, 10 C.R.S. (1982
&
1987 Supp.), and section 80.8(b).
See Red Seal Potato Chip Co. v. Colorado Civil Rights Comm’n,
Ill
The Commission argues that because Travelers offered an employer a discriminatory insurance policy, and underwrote such policy, it must be deemed to have violated section 24-34-402(l)(e), 10 C.R.S. (1982), proscribing the aiding and abetting of discrimination. We agree.
Section 24-34-402, 10 C.R.S. (1982), provides in pertinent part as follows:
Discriminatory and unfair employment practices. (1) It shall be a discriminatory or unfair employment practice:
[[Image here]]
(e) For any person, whether or not an employer, an employment agency, a labor organization, or the employees or members thereof to aid, abet, incite, compel, or coerce the doing of any act de *1367 fined in this section to be a discriminatory or unfair employment practice, or to obstruct or prevent any person from complying with the provisions of this part 4 or any order issued with respect thereto, or to attempt, either directly or indirectly, to commit any act defined in. this section to be a discriminatory or unfair employment practice....
It is undisputed that Travelers is a “person” within the meaning of section 24-34-402(l)(e). See § 24-34-301(5), 10 C.R.S. (1982). Travelers nonetheless asserts that it cannot be held liable for aiding and abetting discrimination pursuant to section 24-34-402 because pursuant to section 10-8-102, 4A C.R.S. (1987), the discriminatory insurance form provided to Budde had been approved by the Insurance Commissioner as complying with the requirements of law. Section 10-8-102, 4A C.R.S. (1987), provides in pertinent part as follows:
Approval of policy forms. (1) On and after January 1, 1952, no policy of sickness and accident insurance shall be delivered or issued for delivery in this state, nor shall any endorsement, rider, or application which becomes a part of any such policy be used, until a copy of the form and of the premium rates and of the classification of risks pertaining thereto are filed with the commissioner; nor shall any such policy, endorsement, rider, or application be so used until the expiration of thirty days after the form has been filed unless the commissioner shall sooner give his written approval thereto. The commissioner shall notify in writing the insurer which has filed any such form if it does not comply with the requirements of law or if it contains any provision which is deceptive, ambiguous, or misleading, specifying the reasons for his opinion; and it shall thereafter be unlawful for such insurer to use such form in this state. In all other cases the commissioner shall give his approval....
However, a Colorado Division of Insurance supervising analyst, deposed as the designated representative of the Insurance Commissioner, testified that a review under section 10-8-102 of whether an insurance policy form complied with the requirements of law was limited to a review of Title 10 statutes and the regulations promulgated pursuant to those statutes.
Travelers also denies liability on the basis that it complied with the provisions of the Colorado insurance statutes and the regulations of the Insurance Commissioner specifically pertaining to coverage for pregnancy benefits — section 10-8-122, 4A C.R.S. (1987), and Colorado Insurance Regulation 78-16, 3 C.C.R. 702-6. Section 10-8-122, 4A C.R.S. (1987), provides as follows:
Complications of pregnancy and childbirth. (1) Any sickness and accident insurance policy providing indemnity for disability due to sickness shall provide coverage for a sickness or disease which is a complication of pregnancy or childbirth in the same manner as any other similar sickness or disease is otherwise covered under the policy. Any sickness and accident insurance policy providing indemnity for disability due to accident shall provide coverage for an accident which occurs during the course of pregnancy or childbirth in the same manner as any other similar accident is covered under the policy.
(2) Any sickness and accident insurance policy providing coverage for sickness on an expense-incurred basis shall provide coverage for a sickness or disease which is a complication of pregnancy or childbirth in the same manner as any other similar sickness or disease is otherwise covered under the policy.
At the time the policy was offered to Miles & McManus, Colorado Insurance Regulation 78-16, 3 C.C.R. 702-6, provided in pertinent part as follows:
Rule:
All insurers marketing sickness and accident insurance within the State of Colorado shall employ in each insurance policy or certificate of insurance issued covering a resident of the State of Colorado a definition of the term “complications of pregnancy” no more restrictive than that which follows:
“Complications of pregnancy” means any disease, disorder or condition *1368 whose diagnoses are distinct from pregnancy but are adversely affected by pregnancy or are caused by pregnancy, and (1) require physician prescribed supervision; and (b) result in a loss or expense which would, if not related to pregnancy, be covered by the applicable indemnity or expense incurred provisions of the contract.
It is undisputed that Travelers complied with section 10-8-122 and Insurance Regulation 78-16 in underwriting the group insurance policy provided to Budde. 10
Section 10 — 3—1104(l)(f)(III), 4A C.R.S. (1987), a provision prohibiting insurance companies from “making or permitting to be made any classification solely on the basis of marital status or sex, unless such classification is for the purpose of insuring family units or is justified by actuarial statistics,” was enacted contemporaneously with section 10-8-122. See Act approved July 14, 1975, ch. 85, § 1, 1975 Colo.Sess. Laws 341. Travelers asserts that the contemporaneous enactment of section 10-3-1104(l)(f)(III) and section 10-8-122 indicates that the General Assembly concluded that the provision of an insurance policy covering only complications of pregnancy would not constitute a classification solely on the basis of sex. Observing that a review of the legislative history of section 10-8-122 indicates that the General Assembly considered including a mandatory maternity benefits provision in section 10-8-122, Travelers also asserts that the General Assembly never intended that the coverage of normal pregnancy expenses be mandated as part of group insurance plans provided as employment compensation. We do not find these arguments persuasive.
Section 10-8-122 was enacted subsequent to the enactment of section 24r-34-402 and the promulgation of section 80.8(b), Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, 3 C.C.R. 708-1. A presumption exists that the General Assembly enacts legislation with full knowledge of extant statutes.
Ingram v. Cooper,
Applying these principles, it is reasonable to conclude that the General Assembly intended by the enactment of section 10-8-122 to address a problem independent of that previously addressed by section 24-34-402 and section 80.8(b). The latter two sections addressed the extent of insurance coverage necessary as a matter of equal treatment in matters of compensation in the employment sector. Section 10-8-122 by its terms addressed the minimum requirements of all sickness and accident insurance policies, whether issued as employment compensation or on the basis of an individual contract. In addition, the legislative history of section 10-8-122 indicates that the General Assembly was aware that some health insurance policies excluded from coverage any costs for complications *1369 of pregnancy and intended by enacting section 10-8-122 to establish a minimum requirement that all health insurance policies provide coverage for the potentially catastrophic costs associated with treatment of complications of pregnancy. E.g., Hearing on H.B. 1437 Before the Senate Comm. on Business Affairs & Labor, 50th Gen. Assembly, 1st Reg.Sess. (May 20, 1975); Hearing on H.B. 1437 Before the House Comm, on Health, Environment, Welfare & Institutions, 50th Gen. Assembly, 1st Reg.Sess. (March 31, 1975). Although the General Assembly deleted from the proposed legislation a provision mandating that all health insurance policies must provide maternity benefits, in view of the legislative history as a whole, this isolated fact does not warrant the conclusion urged by Travelers that the General Assembly intended that benefits for normal pregnancy would never be required as a matter of equal compensation in employment. E.g., Debate on House floor (June 13, 1975) (Representative Webb, a sponsor of H.B. 1437, observing that even with amendment the intent of the bill remained basically the same — to provide such coverage for complications of pregnancy as was not already provided by existing legislation).
Similarly, we conclude that Insurance Regulation 78-16 constitutes a regulation to effectuate a uniform definition of “complications of pregnancy” and thereby to ensure uniformity in the provision of benefits for medical complications arising out of pregnancy. 11 The regulation does not, as Travelers argues, establish the maximum obligations of an insurance company.
For the foregoing reasons, we cannot conclude that section 24-34-402 has no applicability to Travelers in the context of this case and that section 10-8-122 and Insurance Regulation 78-16 form the sole bases of insurance company responsibility. Moreover, we also conclude that Travelers cannot avoid responsibility for conduct aiding and abetting a discriminatory act on the ground that it had no intent to discriminate.
Our Court of Appeals has consistently recognized that direct evidence of discriminatory intent is not invariably a prerequisite to establishing a violation of state statutory provisions proscribing discriminatory practices.
Saint Luke’s Hosp. v. Colorado Civil Rights Comm’n,
The prohibition of section 24-34-402(l)(e), 10 C.R.S. (1982), against aiding and abetting discriminatory acts of others does not by its terms or its purpose require an intent to discriminate by the aider or abettor. The conduct proscribed is simply conduct that assists others in their performance of prohibited acts.
See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
3, 44 (1976 ed.). Courts of other jurisdictions
*1370
interpreting aiding and abetting provisions of antidiscrimination statutes and ordinances proscribing discriminatory employment advertisements also have reached this conclusion. In the absence of direct evidence of discriminatory intent on the part of newspaper publishers, courts have uniformly held publishers liable for aiding and abetting discrimination by publishing discriminatory advertisements placed by employers or by arranging employment advertisements in sex-designated columns.
E.g., Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Comm’n on Human Relations,
Section 24-34-402(l)(e) seeks not only to eliminate the discriminatory practice of unequally compensating employees on the basis of sex but, by providing that persons who assist such discrimination commit independent discriminatory acts, also seeks to eliminate all practices leading to and facilitating discriminatory compensation.
See id.
The prohibition against aiding and abetting discriminatory acts of others reflects a reasoned legislative determination to further public policy proscribing sex discrimination in employment by simultaneously attacking the evils of such discrimination on several fronts. Moreover, a causal relationship often exists between practices of aiding and abetting and the fostering of sex discrimination in employment. For example, in this case the provision of the insurance policy to an employee is inherently an integrated transaction; the insurance company’s conduct in underwriting such an inherently discriminatory policy played a prominent role in the employer’s unlawful act.
See, e.g., Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Comm’n on Human Relations,
When the conduct being assisted is patently discriminatory, one need not have an intent to discriminate to be considered an aider or abettor.
See, e.g., Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Comm’n on Human Relations,
We conclude that Travelers aided and abetted a discriminatory practice in violation of section 24-34-402(l)(e) by offering a discriminatory insurance policy to Miles & McManus and underwriting such policy.
IV
Both Travelers and Miles & Mc-Manus argue that the Commission exceeded its jurisdiction in requiring that Budde be reimbursed for medical expenses incident to a normal pregnancy. We disagree.
In
World Wide Construction Services, Inc. v. Chapman,
If, upon all the evidence at a hearing, there is a statement of findings and conclusions in accordance with section 24-4-105, together with a statement of reasons for such conclusions, showing that a respondent has engaged in or is engaging in any discriminatory or unfair practice as defined in parts 4 to 7 of this article, the commission shall issue and cause to be served upon the respondent an order requiring such respondent to cease and desist from such discriminatory or unfair practice and to take such action as it may order in accordance with the provisions of parts 4 to 7 of this article.
The specific provision addressing relief for discriminatory and unfair employment practices, section 24-34-405, 10 C.R.S. (1982), found at part 4 of article 34, provides as follows:
Relief authorized. In addition to the relief authorized by section 24-34-306(9), the commission may order a respondent who has been found to have engaged in an unfair or discriminatory employment practice to take affirmative action regarding hiring, reinstatement, or upgrading of employees, without or without back pay, the referring of applicants for employment by any respondent employment agency, the restoration to membership by any respondent labor organization, the admission to or continuation in enrollment in an apprenticeship program, on-the-job training program, or a vocational school, the posting of notices, and the making of reports as to the manner of compliance.
Miles & McManus relies upon this court’s decision in
World Wide Construction Services, Inc. v. Chapman,
Statutes should be construed to give effect to each provision in the statutory scheme.
E.g., Martinez v. Continental Enters.,
As this court has recognized, the provision in section 24-34-405 authorizing an award of back pay to a complainant is an integral, incidental part of the equitable remedy provided by the statute.
Continental Title Co. v. District Court,
Miles & McManus asserts that Budde should receive no reimbursement because Budde’s insurance coverage ceased at the time her employment was terminated and, therefore, a finding of unlawful termination is a prerequisite to an award of reimbursement. However, a review of the insurance policy provided Budde indicates that had Miles & McManus chosen to include pregnancy benefits within the policy those benefits would have been extended after termination of employment and would
*1373
have applied “to a pregnancy which exist[ed] at the date of termination, as evidenced by a written statement from the attending physician.” Had the conduct of Miles & McManus not violated section 24-34-402, Budde would have received as employment compensation the sum which the Commission ordered she be paid. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the Commission did not exceed its jurisdiction by requiring reimbursement of pregnancy expenses.
See Colorado Civil Rights Comm’n v. ConAgra Flour Milling Co.,
V
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the case is remanded to the Court of Appeals with directions to reinstate the Commission’s order.
Notes
. The record does not disclose whether the premiums for the insurance policy were paid entirely by Miles & McManus.
. The policy specifically provided that "[cjharg-es not covered” included “those ... resulting from pregnancy except Complications of Pregnancy." The policy defined "complications of pregnancy" in pertinent part as "[c]onditions requiring medical treatment prior or subsequent to termination of pregnancy whose diagnoses are distinct from pregnancy but are adversely affected by pregnancy or are caused by pregnancy...." The parties do not suggest that expenses of childbirth are not expenses resulting from a normal pregnancy.
Travelers also offered Miles & McManus the option of selecting a policy providing comprehensive coverage of expenses associated with a normal pregnancy.
. The Commission Director also determined that there was probable cause to credit Budde’s allegation that she was discharged from her position because of her pregnancy. However, no complaint was filed respecting this allegation; such issue is not, therefore, before this court.
. Although subsequent to the time of the activities involved in Ais case § 24-34-402 was repealed and reenacted in amended form, the amendments do not address issues pertinent to this case. See Act approved May 8, 1986, ch. 179, § 4, 1986 Colo.Sess.Laws 930, 931.
. Although Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 applies only to employers with 15 or more employees, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b) (1982), no such limitation is found in §§ 24-34-401 to -406.
. In addition to Title VII, the state legislatures had before them for consideration in 1969 the Model Anti-Discrimination Act, promulgated by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1966 and also proscribing discrimination in employment on the basis of sex. See Committee of State Officials on Suggested State Legislation, Council of State Governments, Suggested State Legislation D-38 (1967). The parties agree that no legislative history exists respecting the origin of Colorado's statutory prohibition against discrimination on the basis of sex.
. Title VII provided that it was an unlawful, employment practice for an employer "to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."
General Elec. Co.
v.
Gilbert,
. Terminology virtually identical to that of section 80.8(b) is also found in one of the guidelines on discrimination promulgated by the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 29 C.F.R. § 1604.10 (1987). Section 1604.-10(b) of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Sex provides in pertinent part as follows:
Disabilities caused or contributed to by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions, for all job-related purposes, shall be treated the same as disabilities caused or contributed to by other medical conditions, under any health or disability insurance or sick leave plan available in connection with employment. Written or unwritten employment policies and practices involving matters such as the commencement and duration of leave, the availability of extensions, the accrual of seniority and other benefits and privileges, reinstatement, and payment under any health or disability insurance or sick leave plan, formal or informal, shall be applied to disability due to pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions on the same terms and conditions as they are applied to other disabilities....
The terminology employed in the federal guideline was based upon recommendations of the Citizens Advisory Council on the Status of Women and was intended to emphasize the similarities between pregnancy and other medical con *1366 ditions and to avoid the semantic confusion inherent in attempting to identify pregnancy as a sickness or an accident. See B. Babcock, A. Freedman, E. Norton & S. Ross, Sex Discrimination and The Law — Causes and Remedies 314 (1975).
. Miles & McManus also argues that, because § 80.8(b) of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission Sex Discrimination Rules, 3 C.C.R. 708-1, allegedly applies only to insurance coverage of disability, the Commission’s interpretation of § 80.8(b) as applying to health insurance benefits constitutes unlawful rulemaking in violation of § 24-4-103, 10 C.R.S. (1982 & 1987 Supp.) (requiring notice and public hearing pri- or to rule adoption). Our conclusion that § 80.8(b) also applies by its terms to coverage of pregnancy benefits under health insurance plans disposes of this argument.
. In August of 1982, subsequent to the activities involved in this case, an amendment to Insurance Regulation 78-16 was promulgated. The amendment stated in pertinent part as follows:
NOTE: All insurers, nonprofit hospital and health service corporations under C.R.S.1973 10-16-101 et seq[.] as amended, and health maintenance organizations under C.R.S.1973 10-16-101 et seq. as amended, marketing group sickness and accident coverages within the State of Colorado should be aware that both the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, pursuant to C.R.S.1973, 24-34-402(l)(a) and (3), as amended, and the Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. 2000e(k), require that all such coverage provided to employees as an employment benefit treat a normal pregnancy the same as a sickness.
Colorado Insurance Regulation 78-16, 3 C.C.R. 702-6 (emphasis in original).
. Colorado Insurance Regulation 78-16, 3 C.C. R. 702-6, provides in pertinent part as follows:
Purpose:
The purpose of this regulation is to standardize the definition of the term "complications of pregnancy” as employed in sickness and accident insurance policies covering residents of this state consistent with the commonly perceived connotation of this term by the general public.
. Travelers seeks support for its position in the decisions of lower federal courts construing the liability of insurance companies under Title VII provisions. However, as Travelers concedes, the United States Supreme Court has recognized that Title VII primarily governs relations between employers and employees and has no direct application to third parties.
Arizona Governing Committee for Tax Deferred Annuity and Deferred Compensation Plans
v.
Norris,
Travelers also argues that the application.of § 80.8(b) of the Commission Rules and § 24-34-402 to an insurance company under the circumstances presented by this case would constitute a denial of rights to due process of law. Specifically, Travelers notes that in Valencia v. Mutual Benefit Life, Colorado Civil Rights Comm’n No. E84DR023 (1984), the Commission Director issued a finding of no probable cause concluding in part that there was no evidence that an insurance company “consciously conspired” with a charging party’s employer to deny the charging party insurance benefits covering the expenses of normal pregnancy. We conclude that Travelers could not have relied upon this decision, rendered after Travelers had issued the policy pertinent to this case. However, we also must disapprove the conclusion that an insurance company may be held liable for aiding and abetting under section 24-34-402(l)(e) only upon a showing of conscious conspiracy directed toward a particular employee. As we have noted, section 24-34-402(l)(e) contains no such requirement.
