The Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society (Woodmen) sought to compel its employee, Louella Rollins, to arbitrate her Title VII claims and to stay the cross-claims she brought as an intervenor in the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) enforcement action filed against Woodmen. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f). The district court ultimately denied Woodmen’s motion, and it allowed Rollins to intervene in the EEOC action despite her agreement to arbitrate. Woodmen appeals, and we reverse.
I.
Louella Rollins worked for Woodmen from 1989 to 2001 pursuant to a written employment agreement that included an agreement “to resolve any and all claims, demands, causes of action, charges and disputes of any nature whatsoever, ... in any way related to the relationship established by this contract, based on any theory ... including ... any claims of or for ... discrimination based on ... sex ... under any state' or federal law ...” through alternative dispute resolution, including binding arbitration. (
The EEOC commenced a Title VII enforcement action against Woodmen in April 2003, and the district court granted Rollins’ motion to intervene in that action in October 2003. Concurrent with the motion to intervene, Rollins filed a cross-claim against Woodmen that was nearly identical to the EEOC’s enforcement action. In August 2004, the district court granted Woodmen’s motion to compel Rollins to arbitrate the individual claims that she raised as an intervenor against Woodmen in the Title VII action. The district court also stayed Rollins’ participation in the EEOC’s enforcement action. Thereafter, Woodmen and Rollins entered into an agreement in November 2004 entitled “Agreement to Binding Arbitration,” which set out the procedural details of the arbitration. Discovery proceeded concurrently in the EEOC enforcement action and in the arbitration proceeding, and an arbitration hearing was set to begin on May 24, 2005. Prior to the hearing, Rollins filed a motion seeking relief from the district court’s order compelling arbitration on the basis that the cost of the arbitration made it inequitable to force her to arbitrate. Woodmen filed a renewed motion to compel arbitration. The district court granted Rollins’ motion and denied Woodmen’s renewed motion in an August 25, 2005, order, allowing Rollins to avoid arbitration and to proceed in the EEOC suit.
Meanwhile, Rollins filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in July 2005 in the Middle District of Pennsylvania. In October 2005 the district court stayed the EEOC’s current suit pending action by the Bankruptcy Court, which lifted the automatic stay as it applied to this litigation in December 2005. On February 3, 2006, the district court denied Woodmen’s motion to amend the court’s August 25, 2005, order denying the motion to compel arbitration, and the district court reissued the August 2005 order. Woodmen appeals. We have jurisdiction over the appeal of the denial of a motion to compel arbitration pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(C).
II.
The issue before this court is whether the district court properly excused Rollins from arbitrating her individual discrimination claims and allowed her to proceed in the EEOC’s enforcement action as an in-tervenor. The district court granted Rollins’ requested relief on three bases: (1) because Rollins could not afford arbitration, (2) because forcing Rollins to arbitrate would interfere with the EEOC’s ability to pursue its interests on behalf of the public, and (3) because Rollins had filed for bankruptcy protection, listing the lawsuit in her bankruptcy schedules. 1 On appeal, Rollins asserts that once the EEOC filed its enforcement action, she lost any right to litigate her individual claims other than as an intervenor in the EEOC action, leaving nothing for her to *565 arbitrate. Rollins further asserts that the “external circumstances” of her inability to pay for the arbitration proceeding foreclose enforcement of the arbitration agreement. Woodmen contends that Rollins should be bound by her agreements to arbitrate.
We review
de novo
the district court’s denial of Woodmen’s motion to compel arbitration.
Suburban Leisure Ctr., Inc. v. AMF Bowling Prods., Inc.,
The validity of the arbitration agreement is determined by state contract law. Id. We construe the district court’s reliance on Faber as raising a concern about the conscionability of the arbitration agreement based on the fee structure. Id. at 1051 (noting that the arbitration agreement at issue required the parties to each pay one half of the arbitrator’s fees and their own attorney’s fees). The Faber court looked to Iowa contract law to determine whether the fee-splitting provision in the arbitration agreement there at issue was unconscionable, thus invalidating the agreement under state contract law. Id. at 1053. Both the original arbitration agreement contained in Rollins’ employment contract and the subsequent “Agreement to Binding Arbitration” provide that the parties will share the costs of arbitration. Rollins introduced evidence in the district court about the costs associated with the private arbitrator chosen to conduct the arbitration proceeding and about her impending bankruptcy. The district court determined that the spiraling costs, coupled with Rollins’ financial situation, relieved her of her obligation to continue the *566 arbitration, particularly where she could piggyback on the EEOC’s discovery and litigation and avoid incurring those expenses personally.
Under Nebraska law, “the term ‘unconscionable’ means manifestly unfair or inequitable.”
Myers v. Neb. Inv. Council,
To the extent that
Green Tree
provides a basis for avoiding an arbitration agreement beyond that allowed by general state contract law, Rollins has failed to meet that standard as well.
Cf. Pro Tech Indus., Inc. v. URS Corp.,
The arbitration agreements here at issue allocate the costs of arbitration equally between the parties, and Rollins
*567
has introduced evidence of what those costs will be relative to her financial position. However, Woodmen has agreed to waive the fee-splitting provision and pay the arbitrator’s fees in full. Further, the arbitration agreement contained in Rollins’ employment agreement includes a sever-ability clause, such that the fee-splitting provision can be severed and the remainder of the arbitration agreement enforced, even absent Woodmen’s offer.
See Faber,
We also reject Rollins’ claim that the attorney’s fees and litigation costs associated with the arbitration proceeding make the agreement unconscionable. We note first the obvious — that “attorney’s fees are not unique to arbitration.”
Faber,
Rollins asserts that unique circumstances^ — the arbitrator’s requirement that each party’s attorney personally guarantee payment of the arbitrator’s fees — make it nearly impossible for her to obtain the services of a contingency fee-based attorney, thus greatly increasing her out-of-pocket costs. However, Woodmen’s offer to pay the arbitrator’s fees in full negates the underlying premise of Rollins’ argument. Paying one’s own attorney’s fees and related litigation costs, particularly where there is no impediment to a contingency fee arrangement, cannot be said to be unconscionable.
The district court relied on the fact that Rollins could piggyback on the EEOC’s discovery and litigation to avoid duplicative costs in relieving Rollins of her agreement to arbitrate. While it may be more convenient and efficient to allow Rollins to proceed in the EEOC’s case as an intervenor rather than requiring her to arbitrate, that does not make the arbitration agreement unconscionable, and thus invalid, which is the proper standard for allowing a party to avoid her contractual obligation.
See Fa-ber,
Rollins next argues that the dispute at issue, which she characterizes as her rights as an intervenor in the EEOC’s enforcement action, does not fall within the terms of the arbitration agreement. She claims that she has no individual claims to pursue in arbitration because the EEOC preempted her individual cause of action by bringing its enforcement action.
See EEOC v. Waffle House,
First, we reject the district court’s conclusion that requiring Rollins to arbitrate her claims would interfere with the EEOC’s ability to pursue its enforcement action. The Supreme Court specifically held in
Waffle House
that an arbitration agreement between an employer and an employee did not prevent the EEOC from seeking all remedies available to it in its enforcement action, including victim-specific relief.
See id.
at 295-96,
We also reject Rollins’ assertion that once the EEOC filed its enforcement action she lost any claim to pursue in arbitration. Rollins places more weight on a single statement in
Waffle House
— that “an employee has no independent cause of action” — than that statement can bear.
2
Cf. Comer v. Micor, Inc.,
That an employee does not lose her substantive Title VII rights is made clear by comparing the Title VII enforcement scheme to the scheme applicable to claims under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). Under the ADEA,
*569
once the EEOC files an enforcement action, “the right of any person to bring such an action
shall terminate
upon the commencement of an action by the [EEOC].” 29 U.S.C. § 626(c)(1) (emphasis added);
see also EEOC v. Pan Am. World Airways, Inc.,
A complete reading of the Supreme Court’s analysis in
Waffle House
convinces us that the Supreme Court did not place the same significance on the statement upon which Rollins relies as does Rollins. The Supreme Court recognized that an employee’s conduct, such as the failure to mitigate damages or the acceptance of a settlement, may limit the relief that the EEOC ultimately may obtain in its enforcement action.
Waffle House,
The Court also noted that “[i]t is an open question whether a settlement or arbitration judgment would affect the validity of the EEOC’s claim or the character of relief the EEOC may seek.”
Id.
at 297,
An employee indisputably has a right to intervene in an EEOC enforcement action,
see
42 U.S.C. § 2000e — 5(f)(1), but she also has a right to contract for an arbitral forum within which to litigate her claims. While employers cannot require their employees to prospectively give up their substantive statutory rights,
see Rappaport, Hertz, Cherson & Rosenthal, P.C.,
Considering the Title VII enforcement regime as a whole, as well as the complete analysis in the Waffle House opinion, we conclude that neither Title VII nor Waffle House precludes Rollins from arbitrating her dispute with Woodmen, and that the FAA compels her to arbitrate the dispute. The FAA provides that suits pending in federal court based on issues referable to arbitration “shall [be] ... stay[ed] ... until such arbitration has been had.” 9 U.S.C. § 3. Rollins can bring all of the cross-claims she asserted as an intervenor in the arbitration proceedings. In fact, by entering into the arbitration agreements, she has bound herself to do so. Just as an employee’s agreement to arbitrate her claims mandates that claims that could be brought in an original Title VII federal action be decided in an arbitral rather than a judicial forum, so too does that agreement mandate that the cross-claims that Rollins attempts to bring as an intervenor in the EEOC’s enforcement action be decided in the arbitral forum.
III.
The district court’s judgment denying Woodmen’s motion to compel arbitration is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court for entry of an order compelling arbitration of the cross-claims and such further proceedings as are necessary. Pursuant to § 3 of the FAA, the district court shall stay Rollins’ cross-claims filed in the EEOC’s action, but there is no basis for staying the EEOC’s enforcement action itself.
Notes
. The district court’s reasoning based on Rollins’ bankruptcy filing was part of its August 25, 2005, order. As noted, the Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania subsequently determined that, to the extent it applied, the automatic stay would be modified with respect to the Title VII action to the extent necessary to litigate the case. In reinstating its August 25, 2005, order, the district court noted that the bankruptcy stay would not prevent litigation of the case. (
. Rollins is not alone in her thinking.
See EEOC v. Physician Servs., P.S.C.,
