Oрinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Continental Airlines generally promotes its pilots based on seniority. The Federal Aviation Administration’s Age 60 Rule, however, bars airlines from employing pilots aged 60 years or older. 14 C.F.R. § 121.383(c). Because training to pilot new aircraft may take months, an airline might find itself training a pilot at considerable expense who would have little or no opportunity to use the acquired skills flying the airline’s planes. To avoid thаt, Continental negotiated with its pilots union not to promote pilots aged 58 or older to positions requiring new training, but to give those pilots “pay protection” — the salary they would have earned on promotion. Under the resulting provision, 1998 Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”) § 9(3)(K)(2), Continental would “pay protect ]” a pilot aged 58 or older not accepted for promotion from the day the junior pilot who was awarded the slot assumed his new position after training.
Plaintiffs, three retired pilots not accepted for promotion at age 58 and thus covered by § 9(3)(K)(2), contrast that provision with another section of the CBA, § 3(12)(B), which gives pay protection to a pilot who is accepted for promotion but is leapfrogged by a junior pilot, starting from the day the junior pilot begins training. Plaintiffs brought an “opt-in” class action suit against Continental, requesting accelerated pay protection akin to that of § 3 rather than delayed pay protection under § 9. The district court deemed their claims time-barred and granted Continental’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the relevant facts are as follows. Plaintiffs Law, Davis, and Krichbaum bid for captaincies that Continental made available in May 1999. Continental awarded the captaincies two months later, selecting junior pilots because plaintiffs would retire fewer than two yеars after promotion. The junior pilots awarded bids over Law and Davis began training in September 1999, while Krichbaum alleges the awarded junior pilot in his case began training in December 1999. Davis bid unsuccessfully for another cаptaincy in January 2000, for which the awarded junior pilot began training that same month.
Under § 9(3)(K)(2) of the CBA, “[a] pilot ... 58 years old or older on the effective date of a system staffing will not be awarded a higher status ... but will be pay protеcted ... on the effective date of the bid.” (emphasis added). The bid’s ef *332 fective date is the date the junior pilot formally assumes his new position after completing training. Pursuant to § 9, Continental pay protected plaintiffs for the May 1999 openings beginning in June 2000, and pay protеcted Davis for the January 2000 opening beginning in January 2001. By contrast, a pilot accepted for promotion and covered by § 3(12)(B) “will be pay protected when a junior pilot is advanced to his new sub-base and status bеfore a more senior pilot is advanced to the same sub-base and status on the same system staffing award.” (emphasis added). Advancement to a new sub-base corresponds to the first day of pre-promotion training. Continental and the union eventually revised § 9 to match the timetable of § 3, but too late — December 2000 — to apply to plaintiffs. Letter of Agreement 12.
On learning that Continental, in response to 1996 grievances, had pay protected two 58-year-old pilots from the day the promoted junior pilots began training, Law and Davis filed grievances, which Continental denied in February 2000. Law and Davis then filed charges of age discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Cоmmission (“EEOC”) in January 2001 and April 2001, respectively. Krichbaum appears to have filed no grievance; he attempted to file a charge at the EEOC in September 2001, but we are told that the EEOC rejected the filing because it rеpeated Law’s charge. Law and Davis received right to sue letters, and plaintiffs filed a complaint in the district court in . August 2001.
The court granted Continental’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the suit with prejudice. Plaintiffs’ claims were time-barred, the court held, because plaintiffs did not file EEOC charges within 300 days of Continental’s alleged discrimination, as the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) requires. 29 U.S.C. § 626(d)(2). The court found no discrimination within the statutory window because the two relеvant sections of the CBA did not treat similarly situated employees differently. On appeal, we review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Apotex, Inc. v. FDA,
* * *
Plaintiffs revised their main argument between briefs. Compare Appellants’ Brief аt 21-24, with Reply Brief at 11-12. The apparently final version is that “each paycheck within the 300 day limitations period is separately actionable, but those falling outside of the limitations period are time-barred.” Reply Briеf at 12. Each paycheck under § 9 was discriminatory, they contend, because § 9 denies pilots 58 years or older the benefits of § 3’s general rule of accelerated pay protection. Accordingly, Continentаl allegedly owes plaintiffs for the months within the ADEA window during which the awarded junior pilots were training but had not yet assumed their new captaincies. That period evidently comprises April and May 2000 for Law, and June to December 2000 fоr Davis. EEOC did not accept Krichbaum’s attempted filing, and nothing in the record in any event indicates he is entitled to relief within what would have been the ADEA window.
Plaintiffs rely principally on
Bazemore v. Friday,
Continental regards
Bazemore
as inapt, arguing that the plaintiffs here were nоt “similarly situated” to the pilots who enjoyed § 3 pay protection. Continental also argues that any discrimination conceivably playing a role in the paycheck differential must have occurred in the time-barred period when the plaintiffs were not accepted for promotion. Continental cites in support
Taylor v. FDIC,
According to
Morgan,
“[e]ach discrete discriminatory act starts a new clock for filing charges alleging that act.”
Plaintiffs argue the CBA is facially discriminatory because § 9 “den[ies] pay рrotection to pilots each month solely because of their age.” Appellants’ Brief at 38. This is incorrect. By the CBA’s terms, pilots enjoying pay protection under § 9 have “not be[en] awarded a higher status” (emphasis added), whereas those subject to § 3 have been “awarded” a promotion and will be “pay protected” until they are “advanced” to the promoted position. In other words, § 3 applies to a senior pilоt who is awarded promotion and therefore ultimately will advance, and it bases pay protection not on the senior pilot’s age, but on the fact that he will be advanced. Plaintiffs instead urge us to read § 3 as a “general rule” of accelerated pay protection, Appellants’ Brief at 19, by which they evidently mean a rule extending accelerated pay protection to pilots who are not accepted for promotion. But such a reading violates the language of § 3.
Plaintiffs seek help from Letter of Agreement 12, which revised § 9 to render covered pilots “pay protected, in accordance with § 3.” But, assuming the Letter’s admissibility, its language only confirms that pilots under § 9 were previously beyond § 3’s reach. Sections 3 and 9 are therefore not facially discriminatory, and *334 cannot in themselves render the paychecks within the 300-day window aсtionable.
The present case is thus quite distinct from
Bazemore
and our own decision in
Anderson v. Zubieta,
Plaintiffs are thus left with an allegation that Continental discriminated against them by denying them advancement to new positions, which would have made them eligible for § 3’s relatively early pay protection. But that act occurred in the time-barred period, and even if discriminatory, is like plaintiff flight attendant’s forced resignation because of her marriage in
United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans,
Morgan
does, however, contain one cavеat that plaintiffs do not raise. It allows plaintiffs to use “prior acts as background evidence in support of a timely claim.”
Morgan,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
