OPINION
I. Introduction
The primary issue we address in this appeal is whether Appellant Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport Board (DFW Board) is immune from suit for alleged violations of the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act (TCHRA or the Act). See Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.002(8)(D) (Vernon Supp.2005), §§ .051, .106, .252, .254 (Vernon 1996). 1 Because we hold that Appellant falls within the TCHRA’s definition of “employer” as a “state instrumentality” and because the TCHRA waives sovereign immunity from suit as to the entities defined by the Act as employers, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment denying Appellant’s plea to the jurisdiction.
II. Factual and Procedural Background
Appellee Sharon Funderburk claims that her employer, the DFW Board, discriminated against her on the basis of her gender by repeatedly refusing to give her promotions and pay raises. Funderburk has over thirty-two years’ experience with and service for the DFW Board’s Department of Public Safety and repeatedly made the top score on the captain’s test. She is also the only female lieutenant on the DFW Board’s master rolls. After Funder- *235 burk was passed over for the position of captain in the Anti-Air Piracy Division, she filed a charge of discrimination with the Texas Workforce Commission’s Civil Rights Division, alleging gender discrimination. The Commission issued a Notice of Right to File a Civil Action, and Fun-derburk filed the present suit.
The DFW Board filed a plea to the jurisdiction, claiming that it was immune from suit for any violations of the TCHRA. Following a hearing, the trial court denied the DFW Board’s plea to the jurisdiction, and the DFW Board perfected this interlocutory appeal. In two issues, the DFW Board claims that the trial court erred by denying its plea to the jurisdiction because no legislative consent to suit exists and because the TCHRA does not clearly and unambiguously waive governmental immunity as to the DFW Board.
III. Standard of Review
We review the trial court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction based on immunity from suit under a de novo standard of review.
Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
IV. The TCHRA Waives Immunity as to State Instrumentalities, and The DFW Board is a “State Instrumentality”
The TCHRA prohibits employers from discriminating on various grounds, including gender.
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. §§ 21.051, .106. “Employer” is defined, for purposes of the statute’s prohibition of discrimination, as including “a county, municipality, state agency, or state instrumentality, regardless of the number of individuals employed.”
Id.
§ 21.002(8)(D). Thus, the law is settled that the TCHRA clearly and unambiguously waives governmental immunity for the governmental entities that are statutorily defined as employers.
See, e.g., Little,
The Beaumont court in Sauls succinctly explained that the TCHRA clearly and unambiguously constitutes a waiver of sovereign immunity as to those governmental entities meeting the Act’s definition of “employer.”
The right to bring suit is established in section 21.254, which provides, ‘Within 60 days after the date a notice of the right to file a civil action is received, the complainant may bring a civil action *236 against the respondent.” Tex. Lab.Code ANN. § 21.254. “Respondent” is defined as “the person charged in a complaint filed under this chapter and may include an employer. ...” [Id.] § 21.002(13) (emphasis added). “Respondent,” thus, includes Montgomery County and Williams, as both are “employers” as defined by the Act. Hence, the language of the Act allows for suits to be brought against governmental entities such as Montgomery County and against elected officials such as Williams. Further, the Act allows for courts to award both compensatory and punitive damages, except that punitive damages may not be recovered from a governmental entity. [Id.] § 21.2585. This exception would not be necessary if the Legislature did not intend for governmental entities to be sued under the Act. Moreover, we do not presume the Legislature included language without a purpose.
Thus, the only question presented here is whether the DFW Board falls within the TCHRA’s definition of an employer. Counties, municipalities, state agencies, and state instrumentalities are all statutorily defined as employers for purposes of the TCHRA. See Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.002(8)(D). Funderburk contends that the DFW Board is a state instrumentality, and the DFW Board contends that it is not. 2 The term “state instrumentality” is not defined in the TCHRA. Accordingly, we apply rules of statutory construction and look to controlling case law to determine whether the DFW Board is a state instrumentality. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 311.001-.034 (Vernon 2005) (the Code Construction Act).
Before engaging in a statutory construction analysis, we examine the origins of the DFW Board. The DFW Board is statutorily created pursuant to Chapter 22 of the Texas Transportation Code, “County and Municipal Airports.”
See
Tex. TRAnsp. Code Ann. § 22.074 (Vernon 1999
&
Supp. 2005) (discussing creation of joint board);
see generally id.
§§ 22.001-901. The functions performed by the DFW Board include public and governmental functions exercised for a public purpose.
Id.
§ 22.002. Additionally, a joint board like the DFW Board may “plan, acquire, establish, construct, improve, equip, maintain, operate, regulate, protect, and police an airport ... jointly operated,” and if the constituent agencies of a joint board are populous home-rule municipalities, like the DFW Board’s constituent agencies, the powers quoted above are exclusively the powers of the board, not of the constituent municipalities.
Id.
§ 22.074(c), (d);
City of Irving v. Dallas/Fort Worth Int’l Airport Bd.,
Moving to a statutory construction analysis concerning the meaning of the term “state instrumentality,” we may consider matters including (1) the object the legislature sought to obtain; (2) the circumstances under which the legislature enacted the statute; (3) the legislative history; (4) common law or former statutory provisions, including laws on the same or similar subjects; and (5) the consequences of a particular construction.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.023 (Vernon 2005). Two of the stated objectives the legislature
*237
sought to obtain through the enactment of the TCHRA were to “provide for the execution of the policies of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and its subsequent amendments” and to “make available to the state the full productive capacities of persons in this state.”
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.001(1), (5) (Vernon 1996). These stated objectives of the TCHRA express a legislative intent to eliminate workforce discrimination in Texas, not to whittle away and to narrow the group of employers prohibited from engaging in workforce discrimination.
See Purdin v. Copperas Cove Econ. Dev. Corp.,
(A) a board, commission, committee, council, department, institution, office, or agency in the executive branch of state government having statewide jurisdiction;
(B) the supreme court, the court of criminal appeals, a court of appeals, or the State Bar of Texas or another judicial agency having statewide jurisdiction; or
(C)an institution of higher education as defined by Section 61.003, Education Code.
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.002(14). The legislature’s adoption of a broad definition of the term state agency evidences an intent to prohibit discrimination in state government. A narrow, extremely limited construction of the term “state instrumentality” as not including the DFW Board would permit workplace discrimination at DFW International Airport, where hundreds of people work. This construction is inconsistent with the stated purposes of the TCHRA, as well as with the legislature’s prior actions that broadened the reach of the TCHRA by broadly defining “state agency.” Our statutory construction analysis compels the conclusion that the legislature intended to include organizations like the DFW Board within the scope of the term “state instrumentality.”
Other courts, including this court in
Tarrant County Hospital District v. Henry,
have likewise held that an entity created pursuant to Texas statutory authority, and whose purpose includes the performance of public and governmental functions are a state instrumentality.
See, e.g.,
The DFW Board contends that it is not a state instrumentality because it is an instrumentality of a municipality and therefore is not an employer under the Act. But the DFW Board took the opposite position in
City of Irving
— arguing it was an agent of the state of Texas — and in that case we upheld the constitutionality of Texas Transportation Code subsections 22.074(c) and (d), vesting power over the airport property exclusively with the DFW Board, to the exclusion of the municipalities.
City of Irving,
In 2001, the Legislature enacted the following provision as section 311.034 of the Code of Construction Act.
In order to preserve the legislature’s interest in managing state fiscal matters through the appropriations process, a statute shall not be construed as a waiver of sovereign immunity unless the waiver is effected by clear and unambiguous language. In a statute, the use of “person,” as defined by Section 311.005 to include governmental entities, does not indicate legislative intent to waive sovereign immunity unless the context of the statute indicates no other reasonable construction.
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.034. But here, there is no question — and the DFW Board does not contend otherwise — that the TCHRA clearly and unambiguously waives sovereign immunity when the governmental entity is one of the entities specifically listed in the TCHRA’s definition of employer.
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.002(8)(D) (defining employer as including “a county, municipality, state agency, or state instrumentality”);
see also, e.g., Little,
The DFW Board appears to argue that the TCHRA must clearly and unambiguously waive governmental immunity specifically as to it. We cannot agree with this contention. Such a holding would require the TCHRA to specifically list every state *239 employer subject to the Act’s prohibition against discrimination. The TCHRA defines an employer as including categories of governmental employers — counties, municipalities, state agencies, or state instru-mentalities. Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.002(8)(D). No state employer is specifically identified. See id. Thus, under the DFW Board’s position, the TCHRA would not waive sovereign immunity as to any governmental entity because none are specifically identified. The TCHRA clearly and unambiguously waives sovereign immunity as to the governmental entities defined as employers. A state instrumentality is defined as an employer, and the DFW Board is a state instrumentality.
We next address the DFW Board’s contention that the Texas Supreme Court’s decision in
Wichita Falls State Hospital v. Taylor
alters the analysis we are to apply.
See
We overrule the DFW Board’s first and second issues.
V. Conclusion
Having overruled the DFW Board’s first and second issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. When the TCHRA was recodified into the Texas Labor Code, the revised law omitted as unnecessary the short title of the act.
Little v. Tex. Dep’t of Criminal Justice,
. Funderburk also alternatively contends that the DFW Board satisfies the TCHRA's definition of a "person” and is therefore subject to the Act’s waiver of immunity. Because we hold that the DFW Board is a state instrumentality, we do not reach Funderburk's alternative argument that the DFW Board satisfies the Act’s definition of a person. See Tex. R.App. P. 47.1.
. The DFW Board’s contention that Taylor alters the analysis applicable to TCHRA claims is likewise undermined by the fact that the supreme court, after its decision in Taylor, issued Little reversing a summary judgment for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice on the plaintiff's TCHRA discrimination claim.
