Business

Honeywell VP in China claims she was fired due to her age as she turned 55

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  • Former Honeywell VP Ji Li alleges age, race bias over abrupt contract termination.
  • Lawsuit claims mandatory Chinese retirement law misapplied to justify her firing.
  • Li seeks back pay and damages, citing strong past performance and pay reduction.

A former Honeywell executive is suing the Charlotte-based company over age discrimination claims for being fired after her 55th birthday, according to a lawsuit filed last week in federal court in Charlotte.

Ji Li was vice president and general counsel for Honeywell’s China branch. The company terminated her because she had turned 55, citing a mandatory retirement age in China, according to her suit.

However, Li alleged that this rule does not apply to foreign workers and that Honeywell’s action violated the U.S. Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Honeywell is a tech and electronics manufacturing giant.

The company denied Li a severance package or financial compensation because of the termination, the suit added. The People’s Republic of China did not have laws that denied her from getting a severance package because of her age.

Honeywell’s China subsidiary hired Li in May 2019 to serve as vice president and general counsel for its Aerospace Division in the Asia Pacific region.

Her responsibilities expanded to include corporate operations. Among her duties, Li led a China Steering Committee, a key part of Honeywell’s effort to demonstrate to U.S. regulators that it was serious about improving legal compliance.

Beyond compliance, Li was also responsible for reviewing and approving business contracts that generated billions of dollars in revenue, the suit claimed.

Based on her performance, recent promotion and expanded role, her employment contract was expected to be renewed, the suit stated. Her role was even set to expand late last year to oversee business practices across all of Asia, particularly in countries with known regulatory challenges, the suit claimed.

According to court records, her initial contract from May 2019 to May 2022 provided a base salary of more than $358,600, with a total annual compensation exceeding $798,000. After a promotion and a new contract beginning in January 2022 that ran through December 2024, her base salary increased to over $364,000 and total yearly compensation went up to more than $862,000.

In late September, just nine days before her 55th birthday, the company’s HR department in China informed her that her contract was ending due to the “mandatory” retirement age.

Honeywell offered Li a new, one-year consultant contract, which would’ve reduced her total compensation by about half, the suit claimed. Li also had believed her existing agreement was valid until the end of 2024.

The lawsuit also alleged that Honeywell discriminated against Li based on her Chinese ancestry, a violation of the U.S. Civil Rights Act. Honeywell used a “mandatory” Chinese retirement law to justify her firing but did not apply the same rule to other American employees of a different ethnicity, the filing claimed.

Li is a U.S. citizen, the suit said.

The lawsuit argues that Honeywell’s actions were based on racial and ethnic stereotypes, wrongly treating Li as a Chinese citizen rather than as an American citizen. This interfered with her contract and caused her significant financial and emotional damage, Li claimed.

Li is seeking compensation for back pay, front pay, and lost benefits, including any equity and bonus loss.

“Nothing in China law gives Honeywell an excuse to discriminate on the basis of age,” her San Francisco-based attorney, David Lowe, said in a statement to The Charlotte Observer Friday.

Honeywell did not provide a comment about the suit as of Friday to The Charlotte Observer.

More on Honeywell

Honeywell produces aerospace products, building technologies, performance materials and other technologies. It also provides safety and productivity services.

The company employs more than 100,000 people worldwide, which includes over 1,000 workers in Charlotte.

In 2018, Honeywell announced it would move its global headquarters from New Jersey to Charlotte, in part due to $87 million worth of state and local incentives. In December 2021, Honeywell officially opened its 23-story uptown headquarters on South Mint Street.

In February, Honeywell said it was separatting into three publicly traded companies.Those divisions are for automation, aerospace technology and advanced materials.

This story was originally published August 4, 2025 at 5:00 AM.

Chase Jordan
The Charlotte Observer
Chase Jordan is a business reporter for The Charlotte Observer, and has nearly a decade of experience covering news in North Carolina. Prior to joining the Observer, he was a growth and development reporter for the Wilmington StarNews. The Kansas City native is a graduate of Bethune-Cookman University.
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