Showing posts with label Affirmative Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Affirmative Action. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2013

OFCCP Puts Teeth In EEOC Criminal Record Policy for A/A Employers

  At the end of January, the OFCCP issued Directive 306 concerning the consideration by affirmative action employers of the criminal records of applicants for employment.  As faithful readers may recall, last April 15, the EEOC issued its Enforcement Guidance on the Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions Under Title VII.  The OFCCP has unsurprisingly adopted the EEOC’s position. Moreover, the OFCCP has gone into more detail about how this will affect affirmative action employers that are required  by the Vietnam Era Readjustment Assistance Act to list all job openings at “an appropriate local employment service office of the state employment security agency wherein the opening occurs" or "the appropriate employment service delivery system where the opening occurs."  Last May, the DOL required these government employment agencies to begin place conditions on the listing of job openings.  In short, they require notices to be provided to employers that list jobs and to applicants about the possible unlawful disparate impact (i.e., discrimination) that can occur from any employer’s disqualification of an applicant on the basis of his or her criminal record.  Therefore, these notices will go to many applicants for employment with an affirmative action employer which considers an applicant’s criminal record.

As you may recall, the EEOC reminded employers last April that consideration of criminal record histories has an adverse impact on certain minorities and is lawful only when justified by business-relatedness and business necessity.   The EEOC indicated that employers should conduct an individualized assessment of the circumstances surrounding a criminal conviction such as “notice to the individual that he has been screened out because of a criminal conviction; an opportunity for the individual to demonstrate that the exclusion should not be applied due to his particular circumstances; and consideration by the employer as to whether the additional information provided by the individual warrants an exception to the exclusion and shows that the policy as applied is not job related and consistent with business necessity.” 

As indicated by the OFCCP, screening applicants out because of a criminal record may invite closer scrutiny.  Moreover, employers and applicants will be reminded of the EEOC’s policy as follows:

·        When employers register with the government employment agency (like a One-Stop Career Center), they will be sent Notice #1, “explaining that the covered entity must comply with federal civil rights laws which, due to the likely adverse impact of criminal record exclusions on protected groups, generally prohibit categorical exclusions of individuals based solely on an arrest or conviction history.”   This notice also explains limits placed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act on the consideration of criminal records and federal Work Opportunity credits for hiring individuals with criminal records.   

·        Employers will also be required to identify job announcements “that include hiring restrictions based on arrest and/or conviction records.”  Once any job vacancy announcement is so identified, the employer will be sent Notice #2 encouraging the employer to remove or edit the vacancy announcement.

·        Employers will only be permitted to list job vacancies where criminal record histories will be considered as long as the applicants receive Notice #3, “explaining that the exclusions in the posting may have an adverse impact on protected groups and informing them that individuals with criminal history records are not prohibited from applying for the posted position.” Employees of the government employment agencies are forbidden from screening applicants based on their criminal record history and cannot refuse to refer an applicant because of his/her criminal history.

NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Affirmative Action Employer Agrees to Pay $1.5M to Settle OFCCP Allegations of Discriminatory Hiring Process

Today, the U.S. Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) announced that Dallas-based Vought Aircraft Industries Inc. would be settling “allegations of hiring discrimination based on race and gender and agreed to pay $1.5 million in back wages to 1,045 applicants. . . . OFCCP investigators found that Vought's hiring process disproportionately eliminated African American and Asian males, as well as all females, applying for the assembly trainee/aircraft assembly beginner jobs. OFCCP concluded that two steps in Vought's hiring process — an application screening and a test — were primarily responsible for the discrimination. Under the terms of the consent decree, Vought will pay the 1,045 rejected applicants $1,377,500 in back pay with interest. The company also will pay about $70,000 for applicants interested in participating in a four-week aircraft assembly training program, and from that program 35 applicants will be hired into assembly trainee/aircraft assembly beginner positions. Additionally, in lieu of retroactive seniority salary, the new hires will be paid $1,500 each.”


According to the OFCCP, “Vought, a manufacturer of aircraft parts and auxiliary equipment contracts with the U.S. Department of Defense, has discontinued its use of the test and modified its screening procedures, and will undertake extensive self-monitoring measurements for two years to ensure that all hiring practices fully comply with federal law. Additionally, the company will ensure compliance with recordkeeping requirements.”


The OFCCP is an agency within the United States Department of Labor's Employment Standards Administration and enforces Executive Order 11246 and other laws that prohibit employment discrimination by federal contractors. The agency monitors contractors to ensure that they provide equal employment opportunities without regard to race, sex, color, religion, national origin, disability or veteran status.


Insomniacs can read the OFCCP’s full press release at http://www.dol.gov/opa/media/press/esa/esa20080418.htm.

NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.

Monday, November 19, 2007

When an Affirmative Action Plan Constitutes Evidence of Reverse Discrimination.

Last month, the Ohio Court of Appeals in Dayton rendered a decision which highlights the need to conduct a focused availability analysis when preparing an affirmative action plan. In that case, the Court reversed a directed verdict in favor of the employer and reinstated a reverse race and gender discrimination claim for trial by a jury based, in part, on a sloppy affirmative action plan which relied simply on census data instead of a focused availability analysis. Mitchell v. Lemmie, 2007 Ohio 5757 (10/26/2007).


In Mitchell, the Plaintiff had applied to be promoted to a division manager position. That position had been filled by an African-American female who had no prior experience in that division (unlike the Plaintiff), who had worked her way up from a secretarial position and who had been placed in the position without any competitive hiring process. She and the Department Superintendent recommended to Lemmie, the City Manager, that plaintiff be promoted to replace her, but Lemmie refused without any explanation and a national search was conducted to fill the position. (This woman was also promoted two more times without a competitive process). The Plaintiff was ultimately ranked second of the available candidates and presumably should have received the job after the top and third ranked candidates withdrew from consideration, but Lemmie again without explanation refused to promote the Plaintiff into the position. There was testimony that she only gave the Plaintiff a brief courtesy interview for the job. She posted the job again for another national search, this time with an emphasis on recruiting qualified African-Americans. The position was then offered to an African-American male, who turned it down because of the low salary. The other two top candidates were rejected for other reasons. Finally, a female African-American was recommended to Lemmie and she was hired after applying and interviewing for the position. The successful candidate was paid $15,000 more than the Plaintiff had been paid while serving in an interim capacity.

The qualifications for the position remained the same throughout all of the searches.

Many years before the events of the litigation, the employer had adopted an affirmative action plan which professed a goal of employing individuals in the same number as reflected by the demographics of the local population. “While no applicant should ever be accepted or rejected for employment or promotion based solely on race or gender, the City recognizes Affirmative Action as a moral and legal responsibility. The race or sex of an applicant is a legitimate factor to be considered in selecting appointees to positions where certain demographic categories are underutilized from a group of candidates with nearly equal qualifications.” Ten percent of the performance evaluation of each division manager was to be based on compliance with the AAP. “Each department was given yearly objectives, which were to be included in the performance contract of each department director. These objectives were computed by a specific method, based on the percentages of African-Americans and women in the total general workforce of the City of Dayton (37% and 46%, respectively).” The AAP also provided that “[t]he formula used to calculate the number of minorities and females in the workforce was based solely on demographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau, with the terms “population, working or seeking employment” and “general workforce” to mean the general population of working age.

The Court found that the defendant employer’s failure to calculate its hiring goals based on the number of qualified women and minorities in the workforce (instead of based on the general working age population) doomed the AAP. When an AAP “ simply calculated imbalances in all categories according to the proportion of women in the area labor pool, and then directed that hiring be governed solely by those figures, its validity fairly [can] be called into question. This is because analysis of a more specialized labor pool normally is necessary in determining underrepresentation in some positions. If a plan failed to take distinctions in qualifications into account in providing guidance for actual employment decisions, it would dictate mere blind hiring by the numbers, for it would hold supervisors to ‘achievement of a particular percentage of minority employment or membership ... regardless of circumstances such as economic conditions or the number of available qualified minority applicants.” quoting Johnson v. Transportation Agency, Santa Clara County, Cal. (1987), 480 U.S. 616, 636.

Unlike the Johnson AAP, the Court noted that the defendant employer’s AAP “failed to acknowledge that imbalance cannot, in itself, justify taking race or sex into consideration. Also unlike the plan in Johnson, Dayton’s Plan calculates imbalances based solely upon the respective proportion of African-Americans and women in the local labor force (37% and 46%, respectively), not upon the proportion of skilled workers.” None of the hiring goals were based on an analysis of the local workforce with the requisite skills or education. “As structured, Dayton’s Plan dictates “mere blind hiring by the numbers.”

The Court agreed that use of an AAP by itself does not constitute unlawful discrimination. However, “the existence of an affirmative action plan, when combined with evidence that the plan was followed in an employment decision, is sufficient to constitute direct evidence of unlawful discrimination unless the plan is valid. * * * Furthermore, even when a defendant denies having acted pursuant to its affirmative action plan, if there is evidence that it may have done so, a jury must decide whether the defendant in fact acted pursuant to its stated plan.” quoting Bass v.Bd of County Commrs, Orange County, Fla. (11th Cir, 2001), 256 F.3d 1095, 1111. In fact, “an affirmative action plan may constitute direct evidence, even when a defendant denies having acted pursuant to its stated plan.” Id. Even in a reverse discrimination case based on the indirect method of proof, the AAP could be used to show background circumstances supporting conditions for reverse discrimination.

In reversing the employer’s directed verdict, the Court was also influenced by a number of factors, including:



  • Lemmie’s failure to follow traditional hiring procedures. In particular, there had been evidence that the City Manager typically accepted the hiring recommendations of subordinates, but she rejected two recommendations to hire the Plaintiff;

  • The employer’s inconsistency in implementation of the hiring process, such as appointment of other promotional candidates (in other positions) without competition, while the division manager position was subjected to several competitions and searches;

  • Lemmie’s failure to articulate reasons to her subordinates (before the litigation commenced) for refusing to promote the Plaintiff. “While Lemmie may have felt that she was not obligated to explain her actions to anyone, the absence of an explanation at a time when it might logically have been expected is suspicious.”

  • Lemmie’s membership and leadership position in an organization designed to increase the number of African-Americans as public service executives. Lemmie was an officer of a professional association that professed a “commitment to strengthen the position of blacks within the field of public administration, to increase the number of blacks appointed to executive positions of public service organizations, and to groom and prepare young aspiring administrators for senior public management in the years ahead.” Most of the local members worked for the City and the City paid the dues for a number of the member employees. Lemmie eventually offered the job to a female African-American applicant recommended to Lemmie through this organization even though no other candidate was sought at that time.

  • The employer’s financial support of employee membership in NFBPA;

  • During Lemmie’s tenure, only African-American and females were sent to executive and leadership training at the Executive Leadership Institute and the Leadership America Institute.

  • There was also evidence that the successful candidate was not as qualified for the position as the Plaintiff.

  • Lemmie cited factors for her decision which were not included on (and had been actually crossed off ) the interview rating sheets and disclaimed factors (such as union relations) which were included on the rating sheet (and on which only the Plaintiff had significant experience).


    Insomniacs can read the full decision at http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/newpdf/2/2007/2007-ohio-5757.pdf.

    NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with an attorney.