Affirmative Action and Nondiscrimination Obligations of
Contractors and Subcontractors; Equal Opportunity Survey
[09/08/2006]
Volume 71, Number 174, Page 53032-53042
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
41 CFR Part 60-2
RIN 1215-AB53
Affirmative Action and Nondiscrimination Obligations of
Contractors and Subcontractors; Equal Opportunity Survey
AGENCY: Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) is
publishing a final rule rescinding the Equal Opportunity Survey (EO
Survey) requirement in order to more effectively focus enforcement
resources and eliminate a regulatory requirement that fails to provide
value to either OFCCP enforcement or contractor compliance. This rule
allows OFCCP to better direct its resources for the benefit of victims
of discrimination, the government, contractors, and taxpayers.
DATES: Effective Date: September 8, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Director, Division of Policy,
Planning, and Program Development, Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Room N3422,
Washington, DC 20210. Telephone: (202) 693-0102 (voice) or (202) 693-
1337 (TTY).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On January 20, 2006, OFCCP published a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM), proposing to rescind a rule requiring designated
nonconstruction contractors to prepare and file an EO Survey with
OFCCP. 71 FR 3374. Created in 2000, the EO Survey was intended to
further the goals of Executive Order 11246, as amended. The Executive
Order requires that Federal Government contractors and subcontractors
``take affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and
that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their
race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.'' Section 202(1).
Affirmative action under the Executive Order means more than passive
nondiscrimination; it requires that contractors take affirmative steps
to identify and eliminate impediments to equal employment opportunity.
The affirmative steps include numerous recordkeeping obligations
designed to assist the contractor, in the first instance, and also
OFCCP in monitoring the contractor's employment practices.
The EO Survey contains information about personnel activities,
compensation and tenure data, and certain information about the
contractor's affirmative action program. OFCCP recordkeeping rules
require contractors to maintain information necessary to complete the
EO Survey, although not in the format called for by the survey
instrument. See 65 FR 26100
[[Page 53033]]
(May 4, 2000). The specific objectives of the EO Survey were:
(1) To improve the deployment of scarce federal government
resources toward contractors most likely to be out of compliance;
(2) To increase agency efficiency by building on the tiered-review
process already accomplished by OFCCP's regulatory reform efforts,
thereby allowing better resource allocation; and
(3) To increase compliance with equal opportunity requirements by
improving contractor self-awareness and encourage self-evaluations.
See 65 FR 68039 (Nov. 13, 2000); see also 65 FR 26101 (May 4,
2000).
OFCCP has carefully analyzed the extent to which the EO Survey has
accomplished its stated objectives. This analysis included two studies
that focused on the predictive ability of the EO Survey. The first
study, the Bendick & Eagan Report,\1\ analyzed whether the pilot EO
Survey results could be used to predict whether a contractor would have
findings of non-compliance. The Bendick & Eagan Report did not
demonstrate that the EO Survey is a good predictor of noncompliance \2\
because as the Report acknowledged, data problems and other
methodological issues prevented Bendick & Eagan from conducting a full-
scale analysis of the pilot EO Survey's predictive power. Although the
report stated that the EO Survey results might in the future be a way
of finding contractors that are not in compliance, the report
identified four ``handicaps'' that allowed it to present ``only a
preliminary examination'' of the data's ability to differentiate
between non-compliant and compliant establishments.\3\
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\1\ The Bendick & Eagan Report was produced by Bendick & Eagan
Economic Consultants, Inc., and was entitled The Equal Opportunity
Survey: Analysis of a First Wave of Survey Responses (September
2000) (It was referred to in the NPRM as the Bendick Report, but is
referred to here as the Bendick & Eagan Report to distinguish it
from the comment submitted by Dr. Marc Bendick on March 2, 2006).
\2\ The Executive Summary to the Bendick & Eagan Report
concluded that the EO Survey ``can enhance the efficiency and
effectiveness in OFCCP's monitoring of contractors' compliance with
Executive Order 11246,'' but later acknowledges that its report
provides ``only an exploratory, rather than a full-scale analysis of
the Survey's predictive power.'' Bendick & Eagan Report at i-ii. The
Bendick & Eagan Report did find ``preliminary positive indications
of predictive power,'' which suggest that ``predictors based on the
EO Survey are likely eventually to demonstrate substantial power.''
(Bendick & Eagan Report at 25) (emphasis added). The exploratory
nature of its analysis, however, prevented a definitive finding on
any correlation between predictive variables, generated from the EO
Survey, and determinations of noncompliance.
\3\ Bendick & Eagan Report at 18-27.
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The second study, the Abt Report,\4\ analyzed whether EO Survey
data could be used to develop a model to more effectively target those
contractors engaging in systemic discrimination. The following summary
of the key findings of the Abt Report was presented in the NPRM (71 FR
3374):
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\4\ The Abt Report was produced by Abt Associates of Cambridge,
Massachusetts and was entitled An Evaluation of OFCCP's Equal
Opportunity Survey.
Abt found the model's predictive power to be only slightly
better than chance. Screening on the basis of the model produced
large numbers of false positives, that is, the model predicted
numerous instances of systemic discrimination in the sample where
OFCCP identified none. Specifically, using a cutoff for the
probability that an establishment discriminates near the overall
rate, the model suggests that 637 out of the 1,888 establishments in
the study discriminate, yet only 42 (6.5%) of these are true
positives. Thus, of 637 establishments that would be classified by
the EO Survey results as suspected of having systemic
discrimination, 93% would be false positives. Abt Report at 33. Even
at a higher cutoff rate, where only 143 establishments are
inspected, 127 were found to have no systemic discrimination, so the
false positive rate remains high at 89% (i.e., 127/143).
Furthermore, the EO Survey model wrongly classifies a
significant portion of true discriminators as non-discriminators,
and thus would not target them for compliance evaluations. If the
637 establishments were chosen for review on the basis of the EO
Survey model, 1,251 establishments would not have been reviewed.
This group of 1,251 predicted by the EO Survey to lack
discriminators would, in fact, have contained 21 of the 63 cases
(33%) of systemic discrimination. Under the higher cutoff rate,
about 75% of the establishments (47 contractors) that were found to
have systemic discrimination would not have been reviewed under the
EO Survey model.\5\
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\5\ Abt Report at 33-35. See also NPRM at 71 FR 3375-76.
Based on the results of the studies, and the evaluation of new
initiatives implemented by OFCCP to accomplish the same objectives of
the EO Survey but in different ways,\6\ OFCCP concluded that the EO
Survey failed to meet its objectives, and proposed removing the EO
Survey requirement from covered contractors' obligations under the
Executive Order. The preamble to the proposed rule discusses in depth
the results of the studies and the reasons for OFCCP's proposal to
rescind the EO Survey. 71 FR 3374-78.
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\6\ For an explanation of these initiatives, see the discussion
in Section C below.
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OFCCP received a total of 2,736 comments on the NPRM. Of those,
1,707 comments (62%) supported the proposal to discontinue the EO
Survey and 1,029 comments (38%) opposed the proposed rule. Most of the
comments focused on (1) The Abt Report; (2) the alleged intrinsic value
of the EO Survey; and/or (3) the implications of rescinding the EO
Survey.
After considered review of the comments, OFCCP concludes that the
objectives of the Executive Order 11246 program can be better
accomplished through means other than the EO Survey, and publishes this
final rule to rescind the EO Survey filing requirement. There are no
differences between the proposed rule and the final rule.
II. Discussion of the Comments
A. Comments on the Abt Report
Many of the commenters who support the proposal to rescind the EO
Survey cited the Abt Report and the conclusions that OFCCP drew from
it. For example, the Silicon Valley Industry Liaison Group stated:
[I]t is clear to our member companies that the EO Survey has no
internal value to the company * * *. Abt Associates, indicated that
the EO Survey does not accomplish what it was constructed to do:
find systemic discrimination. * * * In the Jan. 20, 2006 Proposed
Rule, OFCCP states ``that the EO Survey misdirects valuable
enforcement resources and does not meet any of its three objectives
set out in the November 13, 2000 preamble.'' Since the EO Survey
lacks efficacy and has no internal value to the contractor, we
applaud the Agency for its recommendation to withdraw its use.\7\
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\7\ Silicon Valley Industry Liaison Group (SVILG) March 17, 2006
letter. The SVILG comprises one of the largest liaison groups in the
country with 272 members, including many leading high-tech, bio-tech
and other major employers in Northern California.
Likewise, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce stated, ``The Abt study--an
impartial, comprehensive and statistically sound assessment of the
value of the Survey--provides a sound regulatory basis for OFCCP to
eliminate the Survey and search for new ways to select establishments
for audit.'' \8\ Noting the Abt Report's findings concerning the false
positive and false negative rate generated by the EO Survey data, the
National Association of Manufacturers commented:
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\8\ Crowell & Moring LLP March 28, 2006 letter at 4-5
(representing the U.S. Chamber of Commerce).
Simply stated, any system that targets compliant contractors for
audit, thus punishing those employers striving to comply with their
affirmative action and non-discrimination obligations, while
allowing non-compliant contractors to avoid detection, utterly fails
to serve any legitimate regulatory or enforcement purpose and should
be eliminated. Indeed, continuing a system that consciously targets
a significant
[[Page 53034]]
number of compliant contractors violates fundamental principles of
due process.\9\
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\9\ Fortney & Scott, LLC March 27, 2006 letter at 4
(representing the National Association of Manufacturers).
Conversely, many commenters who support retention of the EO Survey
suggest that the Abt study is flawed, and thus no valid inferences
regarding the EO Survey's predictive power can be drawn from the Abt
study.\10\ For example, the Florida Federation of Business and
Professional Women's Clubs, Inc. stated:
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\10\ Leadership Conference on Civil Rights March 20, 2006 letter
at 2.
The proposal to eliminate the EO Survey cites the findings from
a research consultant. However, the consultant's analysis was based
upon a skewed sample because contractors who did not respond or
provided questionable information were not included.\11\
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\11\ Florida Federation of Business and Professional Women's
Clubs, Inc. March 21, 2006 letter.
The National Women's Law Center noted:
OFCCP attempts to justify its proposal with findings from the
study it commissioned by Abt Associates. Essentially, OFCCP
concludes that the Survey's predictive power is little better than
chance, and produces so many false positives and false negatives as
to be virtually useless in targeting those contractors that have
engaged in systemic discrimination. However, neither these nor any
other conclusions about the EO Survey's predictive power can be
validly drawn from the Abt study, because the study sample given to
Abt by OFCCP, and on which these conclusions are based, was
hopelessly skewed and unrepresentative of the contractor
community.\12\
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\12\ National Women's Law Center March 28, 2006 letter at 3-4.
Given the significance of the Abt study, the commenters' major
critiques of the study are addressed below. For presentation purposes,
these critiques have been grouped into three areas:
1. The Abt study should have been based upon a larger group of
federal contractors.
2. The sample used by Abt was skewed.
3. The Abt study inappropriately focused on systemic
discrimination, rather than all violations.
1. The Abt Study Should Have Been Based Upon a Larger Group of Federal
Contractors
Some of the comments in opposition to the proposal maintain that
the Abt study is flawed because it was not based upon a larger group of
federal contractors. Other commenters focused on the decline in the
number of EO Surveys OFCCP distributed each year. For example, the
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights stated:
The EO Survey's distribution was dramatically reduced--from
50,000 contractors to 10,000--thus undermining the reach of the
instrument and raising questions about OFCCP's commitment to carry
out the intent of the law. Further, to our knowledge, the data
collected through the EO Survey has never been used by OFCCP for
targeting of compliance reviews.\13\
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\13\ Leadership Conference on Civil Rights March 20, 2006 letter
at 2.
In contrast, Maly Consulting LLC suggested that OFCCP should not
have sent out any EO Surveys before OFCCP did ``a complete job to
determine its viability.'' \14\
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\14\ Maly Consulting LLC March 27, 2006 letter at 2.
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OFCCP acknowledges that the number of EO Surveys sent out declined.
In fact, the NPRM specifically notes that ``OFCCP mailed 53,000 EO
Surveys between December 2000 and March 2001, 10,000 in December 2002,
10,000 in December 2003, and 10,000 in December 2004.'' (71 FR 3375)
The reason for this decline was noted in the January 2003, OFCCP notice
in the Federal Register seeking a two-year extension of the Paperwork
Reduction Act clearance (68 FR 4797) and the NPRM to this final rule.
That is:
Time constraints and a number of data problems affected an
earlier pilot study of the EO Survey data [the Bendick & Eagan
Report] in such a way so as not to be able to assess the Survey's
predictive power. To perform a study that is not limited by these
obstacles, OFCCP has engaged an outside contractor to study the
Survey data. The contractor will assess data from the EO Survey
submissions as part of its study. * * * OFCCP requests a two-year
extension of PRA authorization for the EO Survey, involving 10,000
EO Surveys per year. The two-year extension will permit OFCCP to
complete the ongoing study of the EO Survey. Ten-thousand Surveys is
the number the outside contractor needs to assess the Survey's
reliability for finding employers that discriminate against their
employees.\15\
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\15\ 68 FR 4797, 4798 (2003). See also NPRM at 71 FR 3375.
Without a complete validation study of the utility of the EO
Survey, it would not have been useful to send EO Surveys to the broader
contractor community. Indeed, it was logical and consistent with the
Paperwork Reduction Act to send only a sufficient number of EO Surveys
to develop the predictive model and to fully test and validate the EO
Survey.
Regarding the Abt study, the limiting factor was not the number of
EO Surveys sent out but rather the number of compliance evaluations
that could be completed. As the Bendick & Eagan Report noted, one of
the Bendick & Eagan Report's methodological shortcomings was its
inability to compare compliance evaluations with EO Survey results.\16\
Undertaking such a comparison was one of the essential goals of the Abt
study. Regardless of the number of EO Surveys, OFCCP expected to be
able to conduct only 2,250 compliance reviews for the study. Thus, it
was expected that only about 2,250 EO Surveys could be linked to
completed compliance evaluations. This linkage is crucial to the study
because without it there is no possibility of modeling the data on the
EO Survey to a systemic discrimination outcome.
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\16\ Bendick & Eagan Report at 20-21.
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Based on the 2,250 estimate, Abt determined that about 10,000 EO
Surveys would have to be sent out. (This is the number that was sent
out in December 2002, 2003 and 2004.) As detailed in Chapter 2 of the
Abt Report, the selection of the establishments was done in the
following manner:
The target population consisted of a subset of the 95,961
establishments with EEO-1 contractor records for FY2000. The subset
excluded the following categories:
Establishments that were sent EO Surveys the previous
year.\17\
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\17\ In addition to minimizing the burden on a single
contractor, this avoided the problem cited in the Bendick & Eagan
Report of contaminating the EO Survey data by conducting compliance
evaluations prior to collection of EO Survey responses.
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Establishments that the OFCCP reviewed within the last
two years (FY2001 and FY2002).
Establishments associated with a parent company for
which the OFCCP has approved a Functional Affirmative Action
Program.
Any establishment that had the same parent company as
an establishment that had asserted that the OFCCP lacked
jurisdiction (for reasons that comprised five categories).
A small number of establishments that had very
questionable records.
Establishments that were among the 6,863 to which EO
Surveys were sent in April 2000, in connection with the pilot study.
All establishments of two large companies that have
traditionally contested jurisdiction and were not sent EO Surveys on
the previous round.
The resulting subset contained 26,451 establishments. A sample
of approximately 10,000 establishments was drawn from this sampling
frame, according to an allocation among a detailed set of
strata.\18\
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\18\ Abt Report at 3.
The strata were based upon three factors: region, industry and
establishment size. The details of the strata are presented on page 4
of the Abt Report. Page 5 of the Abt Report presents the number of
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establishments in each stratum:
Because of the random rounding in the allocation procedure, the
actual total sample
[[Page 53035]]
size was 10,018 establishments. The actual sample was obtained by
selecting a simple random sample of establishments from each of the
276 final strata. * * * The subsample [for review] was selected in
three parts, an initial sample of 3,300 and two supplementary
samples (of 1,000 and 2,100, respectively), as experience with the
reviews led to revisions in the initial assumptions. Thus, the total
size of the subsample was 6,400.
The 6,400 random review subsample was reported in footnote 2 on
page 3375 of the NPRM. As was also reported in that note:
Of these 6,400, only 3,723 establishments responded to the EO
Survey. Of these 3,723, only 2,651 had data that allowed OFCCP to
complete a compliance evaluation. Thus, OFCCP completed about 2,651
compliance evaluations. However, of the 2,651, a significant number
(763) had missing or incoherent data on the EO Survey, and were not
used in the study. Ultimately the study focused on 1,888 cases that
had completed compliance reviews and had reliable EO Survey data.
The number of completed evaluations on contractors that returned
the EO Survey (2,651) actually exceeded OFCCP's original goal of
completing 2,250 evaluations for the study by almost 18%. Moreover, the
3,618 establishments that were not ``used'' by Abt \19\ could not have
an impact on the results of their analysis because the original 10,018
establishments (both the 6,400 review subsample and the 3,618 non-
review subsample) were drawn in a random fashion.
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\19\ Abt Report, Appendix E, Table A.
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If EO Surveys had been sent out to all establishments with EEO-1
contractor records for FY2000, OFCCP still would have only been able to
complete about 2,651 compliance evaluations. Thus, it is unlikely that
sending the EO Survey to more contractors would have altered the
results of the study. On the contrary, the approach of sending out the
minimum number of EO Surveys necessary to conduct a statistically valid
study not only reduced the burden on federal contractors but also
minimized the burden on OFCCP and its resources. The selection strategy
utilized by Abt produced a representative sample of federal contractors
while avoiding the contamination issues mentioned in the Bendick &
Eagan Report. In sum, an adequate number of establishments were sent
the EO Survey.
2. The Sample Used by Abt Was Skewed
The second major criticism of the Abt Report concerned whether the
sample it used was representative. Despite the efforts by Abt to
produce a representative sample of Federal contractors for the study,
several commenters opposing the proposal maintain that the Abt study
was flawed because it did not use the data from all of the contractors
who were sent the EO Survey. For example, the National Women's Law
Center stated:
The integrity of OFCCP's sample was compromised from the
beginning. Any contractor that refused to respond to the EO Survey
(10%), asserted that OFCCP lacked jurisdiction (27%), or went out of
business (5%) was simply dropped from the sample. * * * Another 15%
of the contractors were dropped from the sample because they had
submitted responses to the Survey that contained internal
inconsistencies too extreme to address with ``suitable cleaning.''
As a result, more than half of the original sample of 10,000
contractors was dropped before the study even began and before Abt
built its model of predictive power. Ultimately, the study sample
was whittled down to 1,888 contractors for whom Abt had both a
Survey containing adequate data and the results from a CR conducted
by OFCCP.\20\
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\20\ National Women's Law Center March 20, 2006 letter at 4.
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Similarly, the Bendick Comment stated:
[T]his OFCCP conclusion is not justified by the Abt Report
because the sample of employers OFCCP provided to Abt was not
appropriate for the study of the Survey's predictive power. The
sample consisted of 2,226 firms for which both a compliance audit
and a Survey response was available. If the employer refused to
answer the EO Survey or provided only apparently-incorrect data,
then that firm was simply dropped from the sample. Firms which were
not included in the sample totaled 3,352 of 6,400 firms which could
have been included in the study. That is, 52.4%--more than half--of
firms were omitted from the data before Abt began its analysis.\21\
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\21\ Dr. Marc Bendick March 2, 2006 comment at 3 (footnote
omitted) (emphasis in original) (hereinafter ``Bendick Comment'').
The Bendick Comment also asserted that the 2000 Bendick & Eagan
Report ``found exactly the reverse of what the [NPRM] says it
found,'' pointing specifically to the NPRM's statement that the
Bendick & Eagan Report ``failed to find a correlation between the
predictive variables, generated by the EO Survey, and determinations
of noncompliance.'' Id. at 2 (citing 71 FR 3374). Despite the 2006
Bendick Comment, the 2000 Bendick & Eagan Report specifically
stated: ``The EO Survey data collected in the April 2000 wave does
not offer circumstances in which the full predictive power of the
survey can be revealed. Four handicaps are important to note. * * *
Considering these four circumstances, this report presents only a
preliminary examination of the ability of selected variables drawn
from the EO survey to differentiate establishments likely to have
non-compliance findings from those not likely to have such
outcomes.'' Bendick & Eagan Report at 20-23. In the EO Survey NPRM,
OFCCP acknowledged that ``data problems prevented Bendick from
conducting a full-scale analysis of the pilot EO Survey's predictive
power. The report stated that the EO Survey results might in the
future be a way of finding contractors that discriminate, but the
pilot EO Survey did not.'' 71 FR 3374-75 (citing Bendick & Eagan
Report at 18-27).
Numerous commenters, including American Federation of Government
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Employees, Local 12, AFL-CIO, echoed the following sentiment:
The proposal to eliminate the EO Survey cites the findings from
a research consultant. However, the consultant's analysis was based
on a skewed sample because contractors who did not respond or
provided questionable information were not included. Earlier
research by a different consultant concluded that the very
contractors who did not comply with the EO Survey in the first place
were more likely to be in violation of the law.\22\
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\22\ American Federation of Government Employees, Local 12, AFL-
CIO March 17, 2006 letter at 1.
To address these concerns about the Abt sample, it is necessary, as
a preliminary matter, to examine the composition of the 6,400
establishments that were sent the EO Survey and in the review subsample
used by Abt. Table B presented in Appendix E of the Abt Report provides
a breakdown of the 6,400 establishments in the review subsample
selected by Abt.
Of the 6,400 contractors sent EO Surveys and in the subsample used
by Abt, 2,004 were either out of business or asserted that they did not
have to respond (e.g., they were not federal contractors with at least
50 employees). These establishments were excluded from the analysis
because it would have been difficult and an inefficient use of
resources to include them in the model. It would have been nonsensical,
if not impossible, for OFCCP to complete compliance evaluations on the
330 establishments who were out of business. Further, including the
small number of establishments that claimed they didn't have to respond
to the EO Survey, but should have in the Abt study, could not have
significantly skewed the results of the analysis given they were also
randomly selected.
Of the remaining 4,396 contractors, 3,723 (about 85%) responded to
the EO Survey with data that either passed the initial OFCCP check with
an ``OK'' status or submitted data that generated an ``edit condition
report.'' However, OFCCP had not completed compliance evaluations on
all of these contractors. As stated in the NPRM, OFCCP completed
compliance evaluations on only 2,651 of the contractors that responded
to the EO Survey with data (about 71% of 3,723). This represented the
pool of available matches of EO Survey data and systemic discrimination
determinations.
As was discussed in the NRPM, after further evaluating the data,
Abt focused on the set of 1,888 cases that had completed compliance
reviews and
[[Page 53036]]
what Abt considered reliable EO Survey data. The results of Abt's
analysis of these cases were presented in the NPRM. See 71 FR 3375 n. 2
and Abt Report, Appendix E, Table B.
Before the report was finalized, OFCCP asked Abt to analyze the
data with ``relaxed'' edits due to this very concern that the cases
being omitted from the analysis would bias the results. Appendix E
presents Abt's findings with the relaxed edits and, ``The result, in
brief, was that [Abt] emerged with the same four predictor variables.
The coefficients were somewhat different, but not greatly so. The
qualitative interpretation is pretty much the same.'' \23\
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\23\ Abt Report, Appendix E, at 1-2.
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Based upon this analysis, OFCCP concluded that Abt's data quality
standards did not have a significant impact on the results of the
study. In short, OFCCP concluded that excluding those establishments
from the sample which Abt ultimately analyzed would not have changed
Abt's conclusion regarding the predictive power of the EO Survey.
There remains a group of 673 non-respondents out of the subsample
of 6,400, or 10.5%. The supposition by many commenters is that this
omitted group contains a high portion of noncompliant contractors. Such
speculation cannot be verified. In fact, there could be any number of
reasonable explanations for the number of non-respondents. For example,
contractors may have been unable to properly complete the EO Survey or
simply may not have returned it to OFCCP.\24\ Moreover, one could just
as easily speculate that the non-respondents are not under the
jurisdiction of OFCCP and chose to ignore the EO Survey. Whatever the
reason, because the review subsample was randomly drawn, the relatively
low non-response rate is unlikely to have a statistically significant
impact on the results of the Abt Report.
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\24\ In a related comment, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
observed: ``Many Survey responses had to be disregarded due to
clearly erroneous data, demonstrating the difficulties that
employers had in providing accurate information.'' Crowell & Moring
LLP March 28, 2006 letter at 4 (representing the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce).
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Finally, some commenters who argue for retaining the EO Survey cite
the difference in the results of the Bendick & Eagan and Abt reports as
evidence that the Abt Report is flawed. For example, the Bendick
Comment stated:
In the sample studied by Abt, only 3.0% of firms were found out
of compliance (engaged in systemic discrimination). In the sample
analyzed in the Bendick Report, 38.4% of the firms surveyed were
found out of compliance. Thus, the data set Abt analyzed was clearly
not representative of all federal contractors.\25\
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\25\ Bendick Comment at 3 (footnote omitted).
The reason for this difference is not because the Abt Report is
flawed or skewed, but because the Abt Report appropriately focused on
systemic discrimination, which is the focus of OFCCP's enforcement
strategy, while the Bendick & Eagan Report studied non-compliance in
its broadest sense, of which systemic discrimination is only one part.
Directly comparing the results of the two studies is not really
appropriate and can be misleading.\26\ Since systemic discrimination
violations are a subset of the types of non-compliance that OFCCP finds
in its reviews, and the most harmful to workers, it is not at all
surprising that the rate of systemic discrimination in the sample used
by Abt is lower than the rate of non-compliance in the sample used by
Bendick & Eagan, which included both a wide variety of paperwork
violations and systemic discrimination violations.
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\26\ The National Women's Law Center acknowledges that a
comparison of the findings of the Bendick & Eagan Report and Abt
Report may not be appropriate, but submits that it should have led
OFCCP to question the Abt sample: ``This comparison of noncompliance
rates may not be an apples-to-apples comparison because of the
narrow scope of violations OFCCP used in framing its study and in
conducting [compliance reviews] * * *. Still, the dramatic
difference in rates of noncompliance found through OFCCP's
[compliance reviews] should have led OFCCP, at a minimum, to
question the representativeness of the sample it was using.''
National Women's Law Center March 28, 2006 Letter at 5, n. 22. It
should be noted that OFCCP did review the sample and methodology
used by Abt and determined it to be statistically valid.
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In short, the sample Abt used was appropriate, statistically valid,
and did not skew the results.
3. The Abt Report Inappropriately Focused on Systemic Discrimination,
Rather Than All Violations
The third major criticism of the Abt Report was its focus on
systemic discrimination. Several commenters who support retaining the
EO Survey assert that the Abt Report inappropriately focused on
systemic discrimination, rather than all violations. They believe that
by focusing only on systemic discrimination, the study underestimated
the true benefit of the EO Survey. A typical example of this comment is
that from Schaeffer and Schaeffer LLC:
OFCCP expressed its intent during the formal rulemaking in 2000
when the agency said that the data in all three parts of the EO
Survey were intended ``to provide indicators of potential compliance
problems for which further inquiry may be appropriate.'' OFCCP also
stated ``The survey responses do not prove that a problem exists,
but rather are used as an indicator to guide OFCCP compliance
evaluations.'' * * * While OFCCP's emphasis on systemic compensation
discrimination is a very positive development in many respects for
which the agency should be commended, the question remains whether
it is the proper standard for the EO Survey to meet.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Schaeffer and Schaeffer LLC March 28, 2006 letter at 4-5
(emphasis in original).
The National Women's Law Center emphasized, ``Systemic
discrimination may be OFCCP's enforcement focus, but it is not the sum
total of OFCCP's legal mandate nor the EO Survey's only purpose. This
cordoning off of the Survey's scope itself may bias the Abt study's
findings.'' \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ National Women's Law Center March 28, 2006 letter at 4, n.
14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Systemic discrimination is indeed the proper standard for the EO
Survey to measure. OFCCP's mission is based on the underlying principle
that employment opportunities generated by Federal dollars should be
available to all Americans on an equitable and fair basis. To fulfill
this mission, it is OFCCP's stated policy to focus on increasing
outreach efforts and targeting systemic discrimination in order to make
better use of its resources. This policy has proven to be very
effective. For example, in September 2004, OFCCP secured $5.5 million
in salary adjustments and other financial remedies for 2,021 current
and former female employees of a major financial institution who had
been subjected to illegal compensation discrimination. This was OFCCP's
fourth largest case in terms of monetary recovery, and was the first
systemic compensation discrimination case to be filed in a quarter
century. In FY 2005, OFCCP recovered a record $45.2 million for 14,761
American workers who had been subjected to unlawful employment
discrimination--a 56 percent increase over recoveries in FY 2001.
Central to this policy is scheduling and focusing OFCCP's
compliance evaluations on those cases most likely to result in findings
of systemic discrimination and the recovery of make whole relief for
victims of discrimination. It has long been widely recognized that
compliance evaluations consume significant resources, that OFCCP can
only conduct evaluations on a portion of all federal contractors, and
that a large portion of the evaluations conducted do not result in
findings of systemic discrimination.\29\ Therefore, it
[[Page 53037]]
is crucial to OFCCP's policy that the evaluations that are conducted be
better targeted. Since OFCCP is focusing its compliance evaluations on
systemic discrimination and, as noted by Schaeffer and Schaeffer, the
stated purpose of the EO Survey was to provide an indication when
further inquiry may be appropriate,\30\ it was appropriate for the Abt
Report to focus on cases of systemic discrimination rather than
generally on all types of non-compliance (including, largely,
affirmative action program paperwork requirements).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See, e.g., Bendick Comment at 5.
\30\ Schaeffer and Schaeffer LLC March 28, 2006 letter at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters also cite the Bendick & Eagan Report to show that
the EO Survey has value. For example, National Employment Lawyers
Association stated:
The Bendick study found a correlation between the predictive
variables generated by the EO Survey and determinations of non-
compliance. That report examined 31 predictive variables and found
28 of them (90.4%) to have some predictive power, including 11
(35.5%) in which the predictive power was ``statistically
significant.'' \31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ National Employment Lawyers Association March 20, 2006
letter at 2.
Aside from the data issues discussed on pages 20 to 23 of the
Bendick & Eagan Report, OFCCP has determined that the report's use of
the broad term ``non-compliance'' instead of systemic discrimination
inflates the predictive power of the variables. Since it was never
OFCCP's intention to issue violations solely based upon the EO Survey,
OFCCP is required to follow-up the EO Survey results with a compliance
evaluation to actually make a finding of ``non-compliance.'' The
correlation of the broad definition of non-compliance used in the
Bendick & Eagan Report with the predictor values in the EO Survey would
do little to advance OFCCP's goal of targeting systemic discrimination
and recovering make whole relief for those who suffered from
discrimination. On the contrary, by including other violations in the
definition of non-compliance, this approach would divert resources from
investigating the potential cases of systemic discrimination toward
cases involving just paperwork violations. The Bendick Comment
acknowledges that ``OFCCP resources permit only a very small proportion
of federal contractors to be reviewed each year--at the time the
Bendick Report was completed, less than 4 percent of contractors each
year.'' \32\ Thus, it is critical to OFCCP's enforcement strategy that
these resources be used efficiently to protect workers actually harmed
by discrimination, remedy that discrimination, and bring violators into
compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Bendick Comment at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Conclusion
After careful consideration of these comments, OFCCP continues to
believe that the Abt Report is statistically sound and supports its
conclusion that the EO Survey data does not, in any meaningful way,
improve OFCCP's ability to target for review those contractors engaging
in systemic discrimination.
B. Comments on the Alleged Intrinsic Value of the EO Survey
The second major area discussed by commenters is the alleged
intrinsic value of the EO Survey. This view, as articulated by the
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights is that ``Even if the data
collected [on the EO Survey] does not automatically prove
discrimination, it provides a picture of a contractor's workforce that
otherwise would not be available. It is the potential for this
increased level of scrutiny that provides the incentive for contractor
self-examination.'' \33\ By contrast, the National Association of
Manufacturers ``heartily endorses elimination of the EO Survey as an
overly burdensome, expensive, and wholly ineffective regulatory
requirement that unnecessarily duplicates other equal employment
opportunity (``EEO'') and affirmative action reporting obligations.''
\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Leadership Conference on Civil Rights March 20, 2006 letter
at 3.
\34\ Fortney & Scott March 27, 2006 letter at 2 (representing
the National Association of Manufacturers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The main points raised by supporters of the EO Survey about its
alleged intrinsic value are:
1. The EO Survey is the only reliable method to collect
compensation data.
2. The EO Survey enhances the tiered review process.
3. The EO Survey facilitates effective self-evaluations by federal
contractors.
1. The EO Survey Is the Only Reliable Method to Collect Compensation
Data
The concern that the EO Survey is the only reliable method to
collect compensation data was expressed by numerous commenters,
including the National Employment Lawyers Association, which stated:
The Notice indicates that if the EO Survey is discontinued,
OFCCP will use the EEO-1 data to predict the likelihood of whether a
contractor will be found out of compliance. Although EEO-1 counts
are useful, the data from the EO Survey are even more useful. * * *
The EO Survey also contains compensation data that EEO-1 counts do
not provide. Eliminating the EO Survey would jettison an extremely
useful tool for identifying discrimination.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ National Employment Lawyers Association March 20, 2006
letter at 3.
The Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations suggested
that the compensation data on the EO Survey is useful to OFCCP for
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
targeting purposes:
The EO Survey is a particularly important tool because it, for
the first time, would provide OFCCP with pay data from all federal
contractors every two years. That information could be used by OFCCP
to help identify unequal pay practices, and better target its
limited enforcement resources.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations March
20, 2006 letter.
While the EO Survey collects data on compensation by EEO-1
category, the Abt Report indicates that the data have no relation to
the determination of systemic discrimination and contrary to these
assertions is not a useful tool for enforcement purposes. The
proponents of the EO Survey apparently believe that the mere collection
of this data will have some beneficial effect. However, there is no
evidence that the specific compensation data collected by the EO Survey
can be used to predict compensation discrimination. Rather, the data is
collected in such a raw and aggregate form that it cannot be used to
compare similarly situated employees, and thus has negligible value in
predicting compensation discrimination. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
agreed with OFCCP's assessment of the predictive value of the
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
compensation data collected by the EO Survey:
[T]he compensation data required by the Survey, submitted on an
EEO-1 category basis, fails to provide any information useful to
OFCCP in identifying contractors appropriate for audit. Because the
data is reported on a broad EEO-1 category basis, the OFCCP cannot
use the data to assess the compensation of similarly-situated
employees. The data likewise cannot be subjected to a valid
statistical analysis, and the Survey ignores the myriad non-
discriminatory factors that may impact compensation. Indeed, any
methodology that could be employed with respect to compensation data
generated by the Survey would be wholly at odds with the draft
guidance issued by OFCCP in November 2004 regarding systemic
analyses of compensation.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Crowell & Moring LLP March 28, 2006 letter at 3
(representing the U.S. Chamber of Commerce).
Even if there were some small marginal utility to EO Survey
compensation data, the minimal benefit of the data would be outweighed
by the
[[Page 53038]]
burden on the contractor to complete the EO Survey, and on OFCCP to
process and use the EO Survey. Moreover, the obligation to expend
resources to complete the EO Survey could discourage contractors from
conducting a more thorough and useful evaluation of their personnel
data. The necessity to collect and process EO Survey data could divert
scarce OFCCP resources from more vigorously enforcing equal employment
laws in a more effective manner.
OFCCP believes that remedying compensation discrimination is
important to its mission. But the EO Survey fails as a means of
targeting it. As previously discussed, the Abt Report demonstrated that
using the EO Survey for targeting would direct compliance officers away
from contractors who are discriminating. In addition, the EO Survey
would direct them--93% of the time--to contractors who are not
discriminating.
Further, the EO Survey is not the only source of compensation data
available to OFCCP. First, OFCCP collects compensation data pursuant to
Item 11 of the Scheduling Letter sent out to contractors selected for a
compliance evaluation. The compensation data collected at initial desk
audit stage is vastly superior to EO Survey compensation data. The data
collected at the desk audit is more refined than the EO Survey data and
is also specifically tailored to the contractor's job groups. In
contrast, the EO Survey data is collected by EEO-1 category, which are
likely too aggregate and result in the grouping of dissimilar jobs. As
demonstrated by the Abt Report, studying the differences in pay
averages for aggregate-level employee groups, which is the only type of
compensation analysis the EO Survey data permits, is not even
predictive of compensation discrimination. Finally, the desk audit data
is likely to be more current and accurate, due to the interaction
between the compliance officer and the contractor. In contrast to the
computer program-based EO Survey, during a desk audit, a compliance
officer reviews the compensation data, and can inquire about issues
with the data, thus providing the contractor with the opportunity to
correct any erroneous data submissions.
In addition to the compensation data produced at the desk audit,
other tools are available for pay assessments. Each Federal contractor
is required by regulation to conduct a compensation self-analysis as
part of its mandated affirmative action plan. See 41 CFR 60-2.17(b)(3).
Certain covered contractors are required, pursuant to 41 CFR 60-2.1 to
create and annually update an Affirmative Action Program evaluating the
impact of all of their employment practices, including compensation, on
women and minorities and to correct any problems identified.
In sum, the EO Survey is not reliable and it is not the only means
available for collecting such data. OFCCP collects compensation data as
part of the desk audit process, and contractors are required to collect
such data as part of its affirmative action obligations. The Paperwork
Reduction Act specifically requires that the data collected have
utility. 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(3)(A). It does not appear that the EO Survey
meets this threshold. It is unnecessary to maintain the EO Survey to
collect compensation data, as other tools accomplish the same purpose,
with better results for the agency.
2. The EO Survey Enhances the Tiered Review Process
Some commenters assert that the EO Survey enhances OFCCP's tiered
review process. For example, the AFL-CIO stated:
The EO Survey enhances the effectiveness of the tiered-review
system by enabling OFCCP to more accurately determine which level or
type of compliance review is appropriate for a particular
contractor. * * * [T]he tiered-review program is designed to ensure
that the agency bases its level of review of a contractor on the
likelihood of uncovering substantive violations, as determined at
the early stages of review. Thus, is it [sic] essential that those
early-stage targeting determinations are as accurate as possible,
and the initial data collected by the EO Survey helps ensure that
accuracy by providing essential information about each contractor in
a format intended for such targeting. Based on that information, the
agency can then more accurately decide what level of review would be
a most effective expenditure of its resources, be it an off-site
review of contractor records, targeted on-site reviews at a
contractor's facility that focus on specific issues, or full-scale
on-site reviews that concentrate on multiple issues. Without the EO
Survey, the agency is less able to decide what level of review is
most appropriate, and risks expending resources on a level of review
inappropriate for that contractor.
* * * * *
OFCCP contends that it can better build upon the tiered-review
process through use of new procedures such as Active Case Management
(used in connection with desk audit reviews) and proposed standards
for identifying systemic compensation discrimination * * *
[H]owever, these procedures would seem to factor into the tiered-
review process only after the initial selection stages. The EO
Survey would accordingly surpass these procedures in terms of its
capacity to build upon the tiered-review process by identifying
contractors with systemic pay discrimination issues before deciding
what level of review to conduct. * * * Thus, not only is the EO
Survey an effective tool for research management, but the
alternatives proposed by [OFCCP] are wholly inadequate.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ AFL-CIO March 28, 2006 letter at 7-9 (emphasis in
original).
As discussed above, the EO Survey data is not useful in the
selection process. And it is precisely at those early-stage targeting
determinations that the AFL-CIO deemed ``essential'' that the EO Survey
fails. Nor is its data useful in the tiered review process.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Assuming even minimal utility, such utility is outweighed
by the cost to OFCCP to send out, process, input, and use the EO
Survey data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The desk audit data is collected at the initial stages of the
compliance review process and can be used to determine the appropriate
level or type of review, as it is presented in a more timely, accurate,
detailed, and less-aggregated form than the EO Survey data. Under its
Active Case Management (ACM) procedures, OFCCP opens a larger number of
reviews than in the past, uses automated statistical methods, and ranks
and prioritizes establishments for a full review based on the
probability that discrimination would be uncovered during a more in-
depth review. OFCCP closes cases during the desk audit if no
statistical indicators are found that imply the presence of
discrimination and thereby warrant further attention. More resources
are then focused on full scale compliance evaluations of establishments
where statistical indicators of systemic discrimination are found. In
other words, using the ACM procedures and desk audit data is far
superior in the tiered review process than using the EO Survey data.
Furthermore, as discussed in the EO Survey NPRM, the findings of
the Abt Report support OFCCP's conclusion that the EO Survey does not
enhance the tiered-review process: ``[B]ecause the EO Survey has
limited utility in predicting which contractors are engaged in systemic
discrimination, it follows that EO Survey data would have limited
utility in predicting whether and how the selected contractors are
discriminating.'' 71 FR 3377. In sum, the aggregate nature of the data
collected in the EO Survey, along with OFCCP's review of the Abt
Report, demonstrate that the EO Survey does not enhance the tiered
review process.
3. The EO Survey Facilitates Effective Self-Evaluations by Federal
Contractors
Some of the commenters opposed to the proposed rule assert that the
very process of responding to the EO Survey can cause federal
contractors to perform
[[Page 53039]]
self-evaluations, which will reduce discrimination without the need of
a direct action by OFCCP. For example, the Leadership Conference on
Civil Rights stated:
By requiring contractors to report information they already are
obligated to maintain, the EO Survey aims to give contractors
greater incentive to undertake regular self-analysis--or self-
audits--without placing a heavy resource burden on OFCCP.
Encouraging such proactive self-audits helps promote contractor
compliance with existing legal obligations without adding on new
responsibilities. * * * \40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Leadership Conference on Civil Rights March 20, 2006 letter
at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee stated:
Particularly with respect to pay inequities based on race or
gender, the EO Survey created documentation of pay data that allowed
employees complaining of pay inequities to precisely pinpoint such
inequities, while also allowing employers to point to their EO
Survey responses to counter allegations of pay inequities. Without
the EO Survey, the task of identifying problem employers becomes
more difficult, and discrimination problems can only be addressed
retroactively, after the harm has been done and via an often
prohibitively expensive and time-consuming process.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee March 20, 2006
letter at 1-2.
The effectiveness of the EO Survey in promoting self-evaluations,
however, is undermined by EO Survey data itself, which is presented in
such an aggregate form that it cannot be used to identify
discrimination. As previously explained, the data gathered by the EO
Survey include information, in summary form, about personnel
activities, compensation and tenure data, and information about the
contractor's affirmative action program. None of this information alone
is sufficient to indicate discrimination or the lack thereof in any
contractor establishment. The data is aggregated, which makes it
virtually impossible to determine whether similarly situated employees
or applicants are treated equally.
Commenters noted the lack of utility of EO Survey data in
performing self-evaluations. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP stated:
Because the EO Survey does not group similarly situated
employees and includes no data regarding employees' qualifications
or the qualifications of any position, no analysis of EO Survey data
will satisfy the referenced legal standards for assessing unlawful
discrimination. With respect to grouping of employees, the EO Survey
aggregates positions into general EEO-1 occupational categories such
as Officials and Managers and Professionals. The EEO-1 occupational
categories do not only contain employees who are similarly situated
in terms of hiring, promotions, compensation, and termination
decisions, but countless other non-similarly situated categories * *
*. In addition to comparing dissimilar employees, the EO Survey does
not capture any data on applicants' or employees' qualifications.
Because the EO Survey data does not group similarly situated
employees and fails to address qualifications, it does not serve as
a useful basis for conducting a self-evaluation of personnel
practices to ensure nondiscrimination. * * * \42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP March 27, 2006 letter at 4-5.
Morgan, Lewis further claims that remedying perceived disparities
resulting from an analysis of the EO Survey data may cause
contractors to inadvertently violate Title VII. Id. at 5-6.
Specifically referencing compensation self-analyses, the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, as described previously, noted that the data is
reported on a broad EEO-1 category basis, which OFCCP cannot use to
assess the compensation of similarly-situated employees and that the
data cannot be subjected to a valid statistical analysis. The U.S.
Chamber of Commerce also stated that the EO Survey ignores the myriad
non-discriminatory factors which may affect compensation.\43\ Indeed,
the EO Survey compensation data cannot be used to comply with OFCCP's
new voluntary guidelines for performing compensation self-evaluations.
See Voluntary Guidelines for Self-Evaluation of Compensation Practices
for Compliance With Nondiscrimination Requirements of Executive Order
11246 With Respect to Systemic Compensation Discrimination, 71 FR 35114
(June 16, 2006) (``Voluntary Guidelines''). Specifically, EO Survey
compensation data is reported in EEO-1 category groupings, whereas the
Voluntary Guidelines require contractors to group employees who are
similarly situated, which means they perform similar work and occupy
positions which are similar in responsibility level, and similar in the
skills and qualifications involved in the positions. 71 FR 35120. The
compensation data, as reported on the EO Survey, cannot satisfy the
standards of the Voluntary Guidelines.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Crowell & Moring LLP March 28, 2006 at 3 (representing the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce).
\44\ The broad EEO-1 category groupings under the EO Survey will
also not be useful for OFCCP when it investigates compensation
discrimination, as the groupings are too aggregate to satisfy the
``similarly situated'' standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ``similarly situated'' standard is also used in the recently
published Interpreting Nondiscrimination Requirements of Executive
Order 11246 With Respect to Systemic Compensation Discrimination, 71 FR
35124 (June 16, 2006) (``Systemic Standards''). The Systemic Standards
are standards OFCCP uses in investigating potential systemic
compensation discrimination. These Systemic Standards will make OFCCP
more effective at rooting out systemic pay discrimination.
Some commenters who support the proposed rulemaking stated that the
EO Survey is not an effective self-evaluation tool or that there are
more effective means to induce contractors to perform self-evaluations.
For example, the Equal Employment Advisory Council (EEAC) asserts that
based on its own survey: ``[T]he EO Survey simply does not `provide
contractors with a useful tool for self-evaluation,' evidenced by the
fact that 96% of all establishments responding to a survey conducted by
EEAC reported that `completing the Survey was not useful in monitoring
company EEO and affirmative action compliance.' '' \45\ Morgan, Lewis &
Bockius LLP states that Title VII, and its potential to result in
punitive damages liability, is a more effective incentive for self-
evaluation than the EO Survey.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ EEAC March 21, 2006 letter at 7 (emphasis in original).
\46\ Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, LLP March 27, 2006 letter at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters point to OFCCP's recent initiatives as more
effective inducements for self-evaluation. For example, the American
Bakers Association stated:
ABA supports the premise of the EO Survey as it requires baking
companies who have federal contracts to take affirmative steps to
identify and eliminate impediments to equal employment opportunity.
However, the Survey imposes a significant administrative burden on
ABA members who are required to complete the EO Survey. * * * Any
beneficial role that the EO Survey was intended to provide through
reinforcement of contractor obligations has, in recent years, been
accomplished through other agency initiatives. For example, outreach
seminars and workshops, recommendations as to self-evaluation
methods, and enhanced reference (and instructional) material on the
OFCCP Web site all have contributed greatly to the awareness of
contractors and their ability to access the important information
relevant to their programs.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ American Bakers Association March 13, 2006 letter at 1-2.
It also stated that numbers of false positives and false negatives
generated by the EO Survey demonstrate that the EO Survey has
minimal benefit in improving contractor self-awareness and
encouraging self-awareness. Id.
Likewise, the National Association of Manufacturers stated, ``[We]
support OFCCP's continuing efforts to provide accessible compliance
resources, particularly through its website, which are far more
effective in assisting federal contractors in mastering their
[[Page 53040]]
compliance obligations than expending time and resources on completing
a non-useful EO Survey.'' \48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ Fortney & Scott, LLC March 26, 2006 letter at 6
(representing the National Association of Manufacturers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indeed, as detailed in the NPRM, OFCCP has significantly increased
its compliance assistance efforts in recent years to heighten
contractors' awareness of their equal opportunity obligations and to
encourage self-evaluations through methods other than the EO Survey.
OFCCP's compliance assistance includes over 1,000 regular compliance
assistance seminars and workshops conducted throughout the country
every year, and an extensive amount of compliance assistance material
has been updated and added to OFCCP's Web page since 2001.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ In FY2005, OFCCP developed and made available to
contractors on its Web page an elaws advisory. The elaws advisory is
an interactive electronic tool that permits contractors to determine
whether they are covered by the laws enforced by OFCCP and, if so,
identifies their specific obligations. The OFCCP Web page contains
extensive guidance about complying with OFCCP's laws, including a
copy of the OFCCP compliance manual, OFCCP directives, compliance
guides, and responses to frequently asked questions. OFCCP has
established a National Office telephone help desk and an e-mail
mailbox contractors can use to obtain specific compliance
information tailored to their individual needs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OFCCP compliance assistance materials include guidance about
performing contractor self-analyses. For example, OFCCP has made
available a sample affirmative action program on its Web page, as well
as a link to Census data that provides contractors with easy access to
statistical data on the availability of women and minorities in
particular occupational categories and geographic areas. This Census
data helps contractors to develop required availability analyses.
Furthermore, as previously described, OFCCP has recently developed
and published the Voluntary Guidelines that contractors can use to
evaluate their compensation practices. 71 FR 35114. Pursuant to OFCCP
regulations (41 CFR 60-2.17(b)(3)), covered contractors must evaluate
their compensation system(s) to determine whether there are disparities
based on gender, race or ethnicity. The Voluntary Guidelines are
intended to provide suggested techniques for complying with this
compensation self-evaluation requirement.
In sum, the EO Survey is an ineffective method of promoting self-
evaluations, as the data on the EO Survey is too aggregated to permit
meaningful self-analyses. Further, in recent years OFCCP has
implemented more effective program initiatives for encouraging thorough
and meaningful self-analyses by contractors.
4. Conclusion
OFCCP has concluded that the value of the EO Survey alleged by many
commenters does not justify its continued use. The EO Survey data is
not reliable or useful in targeting enforcement resources. Other more
effective methods for collecting and analyzing compensation data exist.
The EO Survey does not enhance the tiered review process. More
meaningful self-analyses by contractors are being encouraged through
other means. OFCCP has initiated more promising compliance assistance
and enforcement programs that have resulted in more vigorous and
efficient enforcement of equal employment opportunity laws.
C. Rescinding the EO Survey Sends a Negative Message and Indicates That
the Department of Labor Is Not Serious in Opposing Discrimination
Many commenters supporting the retention of the EO Survey assert
that rescinding the EO Survey sends a negative message and indicates
that the Department of Labor is not serious about enforcement of equal
employment opportunity laws.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ See, e.g., American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees March 28, 2006 letter at 1; National
Organization for Women March 21, 2006 letter at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rescission of the EO Survey requirement should not be viewed in any
way as demonstrating a lack of commitment to equal employment
opportunity. To the contrary, OFCCP is deeply committed to improving
the enforcement of equal employment opportunity laws by developing and
implementing the most effective enforcement tools to identify and
remedy discrimination.\51\ It is precisely because of this commitment
to effective enforcement that OFCCP is discontinuing the use of the EO
Survey, a tool that failed to meet its objectives and often
misidentified violators.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Numerous Asian-American groups and individuals requested
that OFCCP perform ``an Asian-specific analysis on the collected
data to understand the strongly perceived and statistically proven
discrimination against Asian American[s].'' See, e.g., Michelle Chen
March 16, 2006 letter. As previously described, the EO Survey data
is not useful for performing meaningful comparisons between
similarly-situated individuals, and thus would not permit an
accurate Asian-specific analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As previously described, in FY 2005, OFCCP recovered a record $45.2
million for 14,761 American workers who had been subjected to illegal
employment discrimination--a 56 percent increase over recoveries in FY
2001. In two recent hiring discrimination cases against a major
manufacturing plant and a dairy, OFCCP obtained substantial relief,
including $1.17 million back pay and 69 jobs. OFCCP remains vigilant,
and within recent months, sued another major manufacturing facility,
alleging hiring discrimination against women. In the area of
compensation discrimination, in September 2004, OFCCP secured $5.5
million in salary adjustments and other financial remedies for 2,021
current and former female employees of a major financial institution
who had been subjected to illegal compensation discrimination. This was
the first systemic compensation discrimination case filed in a quarter
century.
In addition, OFCCP has instituted many initiatives, demonstrating
its commitment to equal employment opportunity. As previously
described, OFCCP recently published in the Federal Register two final
documents regarding compensation discrimination, the Systemic Standards
and the Voluntary Guidelines. The Systemic Standards establish, for the
first time, a uniform OFCCP procedure for investigating systemic
compensation discrimination. 71 FR 35124. The Voluntary Guidelines
provide contractors, for the first time, with suggested techniques for
complying with 41 CFR 60-2.17(b)(3), which requires contractors to
analyze their compensation systems to determine if there are race-,
gender- or ethnicity-based disparities. 71 FR 35114. Furthermore, OFCCP
has, for the first time, established an Office of Statistical Analysis,
staffed by Ph.D. statisticians in the national office and in several of
the regions, that has facilitated the investigation and resolution of
compensation and other types of discrimination cases.
OFCCP has been and continues to be committed to ensuring the
vigorous enforcement of equal employment opportunity laws. OFCCP is
demonstrating that commitment by developing the most effective
enforcement tools and abandoning ineffective tools to focus agency
resources on the most effective and efficient methods to ensure equal
opportunity for all.
D. Conclusion
As discussed previously, the EO Survey had three major objectives:
(1) To improve the deployment of scarce federal government
resources toward contractors most likely to be out of compliance;
(2) To increase agency efficiency by building on the tiered-review
process already accomplished by OFCCP's
[[Page 53041]]
regulatory reform efforts, thereby allowing better resource allocation;
and
(3) To increase compliance with equal opportunity requirements by
improving contractor self-awareness and encourage self-evaluations.
See 65 FR 68039 (Nov. 13, 2000); see also 65 FR 26101 (May 4,
2000).
OFCCP has carefully analyzed to what extent the EO Survey has
achieved these objectives. Based on the results of two studies, and
careful review and consideration of the public comments, and the
development of other OFCCP initiatives to accomplish the EO Survey's
objectives, OFCCP has concluded that maintaining the EO Survey has no
utility to OFCCP or to contractors.\52\ In fact, valuable enforcement
resources are misdirected through the use of the EO Survey. Further,
the lack of utility of the EO Survey, the contractors' burden of
completing the EO Survey, and the burden to OFCCP to collect and
process EO Survey data that will yield such a poor targeting system are
too significant to justify its continued use.
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\52\ Numerous commenters, including the National Women's Law
Center, claim that the estimated 21 hours necessary to complete the
EO Survey is not burdensome. National Women's Law Center March 28,
2006 letter at 6. Conversely, other commenters contend that OFCCP
greatly underestimated the amount of time necessary to complete the
EO Survey. See, e.g., Fortney & Scott LLC March 27, 2006 letter at 5
(representing National Association of Manufacturers). Given the lack
of utility in the EO Survey, any hours spent on the EO Survey would
be burdensome.
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III. Overview of the Rule
OFCCP has concluded that the EO Survey has failed to provide the
utility anticipated when the regulation was promulgated in 2000, and
consequently does not provide sufficient programmatic value to be
maintained as a requirement. In light of the failure of the EO Survey
as an enforcement tool, OFCCP concludes that it is no longer of value
to accomplish the objectives it was designed to address. OFCCP has
developed, and will continue to develop, other more useful and cost
effective methods to accomplish these objectives. Therefore, OFCCP has
determined that continued use of the EO Survey cannot be justified and
eliminates this regulatory requirement as no longer of value to OFCCP.
Elimination of this requirement allows OFCCP to focus more effectively
its enforcement resources to further the overall goal of the OFCCP
program to promote and ensure equal opportunity for those employed or
seeking employment with Government contractors. 41 CFR 60-1.1.
OFCCP is eliminating the requirement under Section 60-2.18 that
nonconstruction federal contractors file the EO Survey. OFCCP removes
Section 60-2.18 from part 60-2. Elimination of the EO Survey
requirement will not affect any other regulatory obligation to collect
and maintain information or any other recordkeeping or
nondiscrimination requirement. See, e.g., 41 CFR 60-1.7, 60-1.4, 60-
1.12(a), 60-2.1, 60-2.10, and 60-2.17.
IV. Authority
Authority: E.O. 11246, 30 FR 12319, and E.O. 11375, 32 FR 14303,
as amended by E.O. 12086, 43 FR 46501.
V. Regulatory Procedures
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule eliminates an information collection which is subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The Equal Opportunity Survey was reviewed and
approved by OMB under OMB No. 1215-0196. The EO Survey burden is
estimated to be 21 hours per respondent. (The EO Survey does not impose
any recordkeeping requirements since the information required for the
EO Survey comes from the records contractors are required to retain by
41 CFR Part 60.) Based upon an estimated 10,000 respondents per year,
the rule would reduce the total burden by 210,000 hours per year (i.e.,
21 hours times 10,000 respondents).
In the NPRM, OFCCP estimated the annual cost reduction to the
respondents based on Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2004 National
Compensation Survey, which listed the hourly average wages for
executive, administrative, and managerial as $36.22 and the hourly
average wages for administrative support as $14.21. For the burden
estimates provided in the final rule, OFCCP estimated the annual cost
reduction based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2006 National
Compensation Survey, which lists the hourly average wages for
executive, administrative, and managerial as $31.58 and the hourly
wages for administrative support as $14.62. OFCCP then multiplied these
figures by 1.4 to account for fringe benefits to arrive at an annual
hourly cost of $44.21 for executive, administrative, and managerial and
the hourly average wages for administrative support as $20.47. As for
the 2000 final rule, OFCCP estimates that for the EO Survey, 25% of the
burden hours will be executive, administrative, and managerial and 75%
will be administrative support.
OFCCP has calculated the total estimated annualized cost of the EO
Survey as follows:
Executive, Administrative, and Managerial: 210,000 x 0.25
x $44.21 = $2,321,130.
Administrative Support: 210,000 x 0.75 x $20.47 x
$3,224,025.
Total Estimated Annual Reduction in Respondent Costs x
$5,545,155.
Thus, OFCCP estimates that the elimination of the EO Survey will
reduce the costs for the respondents by almost $5.5 million each year.
In addition, the distribution, collection, and processing of the EO
Survey has cost an average of $356,000 per year and this does not
account for the cost of validating the data, nor any of the time spent
by OFCCP personnel working on the EO Survey.
B. Executive Order 12866
This rule has been drafted and reviewed in accordance with
Executive Order 12866, section 1(b), Principles of Regulation. The
Department has determined that this rulemaking is a ``significant
regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866, section 3(f),
Regulatory Planning and Review. The Department has determined that this
rulemaking is not ``economically significant'' as defined in section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866. Based on an analysis of the data the
rule is not likely to: (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or state, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another agency;
or (3) materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof. As was discussed above in Section A, OFCCP estimates that the
elimination of the EO Survey will reduce the costs for respondents by
$6 million each year. Therefore, the information enumerated in section
6(a)(3)(C) of the order is not required. Pursuant to Executive Order
12866, this rule has been reviewed by the Office of Management and
Budget.
C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Department has concluded that the rule is not a ``major'' rule
under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5
U.S.C. 801 et seq.). In reaching this conclusion, the Department has
determined that the rule
[[Page 53042]]
will not likely result in (1) An annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more; (2) a major increase in costs or prices for consumers,
individual industries, Federal, State or local government agencies, or
geographic regions; or (3) significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or on the ability of
United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based
enterprises in domestic or export markets.
D. Executive Order 13132
OFCCP has reviewed the rule in accordance with Executive Order
13132 regarding federalism, and has determined that it does not have
``federalism implications.'' The rule does not ``have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government.''
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform
Executive Order 12875--This rule will not create an unfunded
Federal mandate upon any State, local, or tribal government.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995--This rule will not include
any Federal mandate that may result in increased expenditures by State,
local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, of $100 million or
more, or increased expenditures by the private sector of $100 million
or more.
List of Subjects in 41 CFR Part 60-2
Civil rights, Discrimination in employment, Employment, Equal
employment opportunity, Government contracts, and Labor.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 1st day of September, 2006.
Victoria A. Lipnic,
Assistant Secretary for Employment Standards.
Charles E. James, Sr.,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Federal Contract Compliance.
Text of Rule
0
In consideration of the foregoing the Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs, Employment Standards Administration, Department of
Labor, amends part 60-2 of Title 41 of the Code of Federal Regulations
as follows:
PART 60-2--AFFIRMATIVE ACTION PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 60-2 continues to read as follows:
Authority: E.O. 11246, 30 FR 12319, and E.O. 11375, 32 FR 14303,
as amended by E.O. 12086, 43 FR 46501.
Sec. 60-2.18 [Removed and Reserved]
0
2. Remove and reserve Sec. 60-2.18.
[FR Doc. E6-14922 Filed 9-7-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-CM-P
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