skip Navigation Menu
FEORP PDF Version
Home
Data Coverage and Definitions
Executive Summary

Federal Workforce
Total Employment

Blacks
Employment
Occupational Category
GS & Related/Senior Pay
Executive Department
Independent Agencies
    Hispanics
    Employment
    Occupational Category
    GS & Related/Senior Pay
    Executive Department
    Independent Agencies
      Asian/Pacific Islanders
      Employment
      Occupational Category
      GS & Related/Senior Pay
      Executive Department
      Independent Agencies
        Native Americans
        Employment
        Occupational Category
        GS & Related/Senior Pay
        Executive Department
        Independent Agencies
          Women
          Employment
          Occupational Category
          GS & Related/Senior Pay
          Executive Department
          Independent Agencies

            Feorp Accomplishments Overview
            Nine Point Plan
            Agencies Required to Report
            Bar image
            Annual Report to Congress
            Federal Equal Opportunity Recruitment Program
            October 1, 2000 - September 30, 2001


            This is a bar moving image



            DATA COVERAGE AND DEFINITIONS

            On-board Federal employment statistics used in this report are as of September 30, 2001. All data are produced from the Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM) Central Personnel Data File (CPDF). The Federal workforce (FW) referred to in this report covers permanent employees in those nonpostal Federal executive branch agencies participating in the CPDF. The FW is limited to workers in General Schedule and Related (GSR) pay plans, total blue-collar pay plans, and most employees at Senior Pay levels. All reference made to the General Schedule or “GS” in this report actually refers to GSR pay plans. Senior Pay level employment includes employees in the Senior Executive Service (SES), Senior Foreign Service, and other employees earning salaries above grade 15 of the General Schedule, but excludes those employees under the Executive Schedule (pay plan EX). Only those agencies with 500 or more permanent employees are displayed in this report. Note that some agencies like the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Transportation have large numbers of permanent employees in non-GSR, blue-collar, and executive pay plans, not covered by the Federal Equal Opportunity Recruitment Program

            The Civilian Labor Force (CLF) data are derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics September 2001 Current Population Survey (CPS) and the 1990 Decennial Census. The CPS is a sample of 50,000 households across the nation and the sample changes from year-to-year. Because of the changing sample, there can be wide fluctuations in a group, like Hispanics, depending on which households are selected. Due to the small sampling size, the CPS does not have separate counts for Asian/Pacific Islanders or Native Americans. Each group’s percentage representation in the CPS was extrapolated using the 1990 census to calculate their proportional representation from the CPS “Black and Other” category. The CLF data cover every non-institutionalized individual 16 years of age and older, employed and unemployed, while Federal employment data exclude temporary, intermittent, or term-specific workers. The CLF data include employed and unemployed U.S. citizens and noncitizens, while the CPDF data are predominantly Federally-employed U.S. citizens.

            The Relevant Civilian Labor Force (RCLF) is the Civilian Labor Force (CLF) data that are directly comparable (or relevant) to the population being considered in the FW. For example, if we were analyzing representation of Black engineers employed in the Federal workforce, we would compare them with Black engineers reported in the CLF. The Black engineers in the CLF represent the RCLF in this example. In the FEORP report, FW comparisons to the RCLF are the basis for occupational analysis.

            Underrepresentation, as defined in 5 CFR, Section 720.202, means a situation in which the number of women or members of a minority group within a category of civil service employment constitutes a lower percentage of the total number of employees within the employment category than the percentage that women or the minority group constitutes within the civilian labor force of the United States.

            Occupational categories discussed in this report are White-Collar and Blue-Collar. The White-Collar category contains Professional, Administrative, Technical, Clerical or “Other” White-Collar occupations. Professional occupations typically call for a baccalaureate degree and, along with Administrative occupations, are the usual sources for selections to senior management and executive positions. Positions in Technical, Clerical, Other, and Blue-Collar occupations are usually are limited to lower grades with limited opportunity for promotion to management levels. Advancement in these occupations often depends on individual attainment of further education or advanced skills. Employment data in this report are presented by occupational category and grade groups, in order to show a more informative profile.

            NOTE: STATISTICS IN THIS REPORT MAY VARY FROM OTHER RELEASES BECAUSE OF DIFFERENCES IN COVERAGE (e.g., AGENCY, WORK SCHEDULE, TENURE, and DATES).