Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) |
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1. Why does the Census Bureau produce a Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation?
The Census Bureau produces the Census 2000 Special EEO file for those Federal agencies responsible for monitoring employment practices and enforcing civil rights laws in the workforce, and for all employers so they can measure their compliance to the laws. The Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation serves as the primary external benchmark for conducting comparisons between the racial, ethnic, and sex composition of each employer's workforce to its available labor market.
2. What are the characteristics shown in the Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation?
The datasets on the Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation will present data on race and ethnicity cross-tabulated by other variables such as detailed occupations, occupational groups, sex, worksite geography, residence geography, education, age, and industry.
3. What is "worksite geography"?
The Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation will present data according to where people worked at the time of Census 2000. These datasets will provide the number of people by occupation, sex, and race and ethnicity who work in a given county or place, who live in the same county or place, and who commute from surrounding counties and places.
4. What is "residence geography"?
The Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation will also present data according to where people lived at the time of Census 2000, regardless of where they worked.
5. What are worksite/residence datasets?
The worksite/residence datasets focus on where people work but provide additional information on where people commute from.
6. Are county data available as in past EEO tabulations?
In order to protect the confidentiality of Census 2000 respondents, EEO tabulations will not provide data for counties of less than 50,000 population (or 100,000 in some instances) when the datasets in the Census 2000 Special EEO file contain very detailed information or a large number of cells. For example, for worksite/residence datasets that contain information for 471 or 268 detailed occupational categories, county data will not be available. However, for worksite/residence datasets with more highly aggregated occupational categories, such as the EEO occupational groups, data will be available for all counties.
Yes, disclosure rules will apply since the Census Bureau must avoid disclosing information about individual respondents in the Census. The disclosure rules listed below were approved by the Census Bureau’s Disclosure Review Board (DRB).
Any number
that already ends in 5 or 0 stays as is.
Any totals or subtotals needed are constructed before rounding. This assures that universes remain the same from dataset to dataset, and it is recognized that cells in a dataset will no longer be additive after rounding.
The residence-based datasets have 472 occupational categories and the worksite-based and worksite/residence datasets have 471 categories. The difference is because the residence-based datasets contain a Census occupational category for the unemployed with no work experience since 1995 (Census code 992) - people in this category have a place of residence but no worksite.
9. Will the Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation be available to the public?
Yes, the public has access to selected data via the Internet at www.census.gov/eeo2000 or all data by purchasing a CD-ROM (to order call 301-763-INFO (4636)).
Basic data tabulations from Census 2000 have priority over this special tabulation; long form data were first released in the summer of 2002.
11. How much did the Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation cost to produce?
The Census 2000 Special EEO Tabulation was created through an interagency agreement between a Federal consortium (consisting of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; the Department of Justice, Civil Rights Section; Department of Labor, Office of Federal Contract Compliance; and the Office of Personnel Management) and the Census Bureau. The overall cost is approximately $1,000,000 which is equally divided among the consortium members.
The Census 2000 Special EEO file will contain a total for the Civilian Labor Force (CLF). A total for the CLF is created from the sum of (1) the employed, at work during the enumeration week; (2) the employed, not at work during the enumeration week; and (3) the unemployed, including both experienced and new-entrant jobless who were seeking work. The occupational code for the unemployed is code 992.
The education, age and earnings datasets are based on labor force data. However, the worksite/residence and worksite datasets do not include the unemployed (Census occupational code 992). The residence datasets do include the unemployed.
The SOC groups occupations according to the nature of the work performed, and relates these occupations to others of a similar nature. There are 23 major groups in the SOC and 821 detailed occupations within those groups. This classification system provides a mechanism for cross-referencing and aggregating occupation-related data collected by social and economic statistical reporting programs. The Census Bureau has adapted the SOC to create the occupation categories used in Census 2000, and shown on the Census 2000 Special EEO file. In some cases the Census categories are groupings of the more detailed SOC categories.
The Census 2000 industry and occupation classifications are completely revised from the ones used in 1990. They are now based on the 1997 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and the 1998 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) coding structures. The 1990 system was based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification Manual (SIC) and the 1980 Standard Occupational Classification Manual (SOC). To aid data users, crosswalks are available on this website for both the industry and occupation coding systems.
16. Why were the industry codes for Census 2000 changed from the SIC to the NAICS?
The North American Industry Classification System was developed as a joint effort by Canada, Mexico, and the United States, in order to have common industry definitions. This enables economists and others to compare the industrial statistics produced in each of the three different nations' labor force. For more information on the NAICS, go to the website http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/naics.html. The Census Bureau always uses the most recent standard classification to create its own classification for each census. For this reason it has based the Census 2000 classification on the NAICS rather than on the SIC.
The EEO data file is used by many organizations to develop and update their affirmative action plans. Depending on the level of detail that is required, some organizations use the most detailed occupation codes available (the Census codes) while others may use higher-level aggregations of occupation codes (such as the nine EEO-1 job categories). The Census Bureau created the EEO file according to the sponsors' specifications. Users who need assistance in developing plans and conducting analyses should contact the agency requesting the information.
Private companies who are working on their AAP and have questions can contact the Office of Federal Contract Compliance at the Department of Labor by emailing OFCCP-Public@dol.gov. State and local governments and organizations required to complete an EEOP can contact the Department of Justice. Federal agencies can contact the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission by calling Federal Sector Programs at 202-663-4518. If you have any questions on the EEO data tool or the data itself, call the Census Bureau at 301-763-3239.
18. How does NAICS compare to the SIC?
There are some differences between the 1997 NAICS and the 1987 SIC, but much of the layout is similar. The user is able to obtain data for more than two thirds of all 4-digit SICs from the new 6-digit NAICS. Either the new NAICS industries are subdivisions of the old SIC industries or the industry definitions have not changed. However, there are some very basic differences between the two. The SIC had only 9 divisions, while the NAICS has 20 sectors. Some of the NAICS sectors were created by splitting SIC divisions.
The NAICS includes advanced technologies and new and emerging industries, which the SIC did not. For example, the NAICS has an information sector not included in the SIC. There is a crosswalk that shows the relationship between SIC and NAICS. This crosswalk is available at http://www.census.gov/epcd/ec97brdg/index.html. If you are interested in a crosswalk showing the relationship between 1990 Census Codes, 2000 Census Codes, and the 1997 NAICS, it is available at http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/ioindex/indcswk2k.pdf.
The SOC was revised because it had not been updated since 1980. The revision was long overdue because of changes in the labor force and in the way economists view the labor force. Once the revision process was started, the SOC Revision Policy Committee quickly determined that, due to the extent of the changes being proposed, it was necessary to redesign the entire SOC. Go to the following website http://stats.bls.gov/soc/home.htm for more details.
20. How does the new SOC (1998) compare to the old SOC (1980)?
The old SOC was made up of 22 divisions organized into a 4-digit hierarchical structure. The new SOC uses a 6-digit structure for its occupational categories, divided into 23 major groups which are sometimes called "job families." The general concept behind "job families" is to put all people who work together into the same group regardless of their skill level. So, for example, in the new SOC doctors, nurses, and health technicians are all in the same group instead of in different groups. Similarly, first-line supervisors are in the same groups as the workers they supervise, and helpers are in the same groups as the workers they help.
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A: Marketing Services Office |
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Bureau of the Census |
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Phone: 301-763-INFO (4636) |
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Fax: 301-457-3842 |
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A: Statistical Information Staff |
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Industry, Occupation, and |
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Statistical Information Branch |
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Bureau of the Census |
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Phone: 301-763-3242 |
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Fax: 301-457-3500 |
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A: Vivian Toler |
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Employment Litigation Section |
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Civil Rights Division |
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Department of Justice |
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Phone: 202-514-3835 |
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Fax: 202-514-1105 |
A: Joseph R. Donovan OR |
Marc J. Rosenblum |
Director |
Chief Economist |
Research and Analytic Services, OGC |
Research and Analytic Services, OGC |
Equal Employment OpportunityCommission |
Equal Employment OpportunityCommission |
1801 L Street, N.W. |
1801 L Street, N.W. |
Washington, D.C. 20507 |
Washington, D.C. 20507 |
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Phone: 202-663-4745 |
Phone: 202-663-7110 |
Fax: 202-663-4196 |
Fax: 202-663-4196 |
A: James C. Pierce |
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs |
Department of Labor |
A: Mai Weismantle, Chief OR |
Katie Earle |
Industry, Occupation, and |
Industry, Occupation, and |
Statistical Information Branch |
Statistical Information Branch |
Bureau of the Census |
Bureau of the Census |
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Phone: 301-763-3239 |
Phone: 301-763-3239 |
Fax: 301-457-3500 |
Fax: 301-457-3500 |