[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR720.901]

[Page 12-16]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
          CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (Continued)
 
PART 720--AFFIRMATIVE EMPLOYMENT PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
   Subpart J--Equal Opportunity Without Regard to Politics or Marital 
                                 Status
 
Sec. 720.901  Equal opportunity without regard to politics or marital status.


    (a) In appointments and position changes. In determining the merit 
and fitness of a person for competitive appointment or appointment by 
noncompetitive action to a position in the competitive service, an 
appointing officer shall not discriminate on the basis of the person's 
political affiliations, except when required by statute, or on the basis 
of marital status
    (b) In adverse actions and termination of probationers. An agency 
may not take an adverse action against an employee covered by part 752 
of this chapter, not effect the termination of a probationer under part 
315 of this chapter, (1) for political reasons, except when required by 
statute, or (2) because of marital status.

(5 U.S.C. 2301, 2302, 7202, 7203, 7204)


[44 FR 48149, Aug. 17, 1979]

   Appendix to Part 720--Guidelines for the Development of a Federal 
 Recruitment Program to Implement 5 U.S.C. Section 7201, as Amended \1\
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    \1\ This section originally was section 701(b) (2nd Proviso) of the 
Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Pub. L. 88-352, July 2, 1964), codified as 5 
U.S.C. 7151. Section 7151 was further amended by section 310 of the 
Civil Service Reform Act of 1978. This Act also redesignated section 
7151 as section 7201, effective January 11, 1979. (Sec. 703(a)(1) of the 
Act.)
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    I. Background Information. A. In 1964 the Congress adopted a basic 
anti-discrimination policy for Federal employment, stating:

    It is the policy of the United States to insure equal employment 
opportunities for employees without discrimination because of race, 
color, religion, sex or national origin. [5 U.S.C. 7151] \2\
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    \2\ Ibid.
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    In 1978, Congress reaffirmed and amended this policy as part of the 
Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 [Sec. 310 of Pub. L. 95-454], requiring 
immediate development of a recruitment program designed to eliminate 
underrepresentation of minority groups in specific Federal job 
categories. Section 310 directs the Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission:
    1. To establish Guidelines proposed to be used for a program 
designed to eliminate such underrepresentation;
    2. To make, in consultation with OPM, initial determinations of 
underrepresentation which are proposed to be used in this program; and
    3. To transmit the determinations made under (2) above to the 
Executive Agencies, the Office of Personnel Management and the Congress, 
within 60 days of enactment.
    The Office of Personnel Management (OPM)\3\ is directed by this 
amendment:
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    \3\ This Office was created by Reorganization Plan No. 2, issued 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 901 et seq. It will assume personnel management 
functions of the present Office of Personnel Management on January 1, 
1979.
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    1. To issue regulations to implement a program under EEOC Guidelines 
within 180 days after enactment, which shall provide that

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Executive agencies conduct continuing recruitment programs to carry out 
the anti-discrimination policy in a manner designed to eliminate 
underrepresentation in identified categories of civil service;
    2. To provide continuing assistance to Federal agencies in carrying 
out such programs;
    3. To conduct a continuing program of evaluation and oversight to 
determine the effectiveness of such programs;
    4. To establish occupational, professional and other groupings 
within which appropriate recruitment will occur, based upon the 
determinations of underrepresentation pursuant to these Guidelines; and
    5. To report annually to the Congress on this program, not later 
than January 31 of each year.
    Congress further directed that the recruitment program must be 
administered consistent with provisions of Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 
1978.\4\
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    \4\ Conference Report on Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, No. 95-
1272, p. 145.
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    B. In framing these Guidelines and making its initial determinations 
of underrepresentation, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 
(Commission) is acting pursuant to its obligations and authority under 5 
U.S.C. 7201, as amended; Section 717 of title VII of the Civil Rights 
Act of 1964, as amended; Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1978 (issued 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 901 et seq.) and Executive Order 12067, issued 
under this Plan (43 FR 28967, June 30, 1978). This Commission must 
develop and/or ensure the development of uniform, coherent and effective 
standards for administration and enforcement of all Federal anti-
discrimination and equal employment opportunity laws, policies and 
programs, and to ensure the elimination of duplication and inconsistency 
in such programs.
    C. A review of the legislative history of Federal equal employment 
opportunity policy provides further guidance on the scope and nature of 
determinations and guidelines to be issued for this program.
    The basic policy statement on Federal equal employment policy 
enacted by the Congress in 1964 (5 U.S.C. 7151, redesignated as section 
7201) gave the President authority for implementation. Executive Order 
11246 (1966), expanded and superseded by Executive Order 11478 (1969) 
with respect to Federal employment, required Federal agencies to develop 
affirmative action programs designed to eliminate discrimination and 
assure equal employment opportunity.
    In 1972, Congress found that serious discrimination persisted in 
Federal employment. It found that minorities and women were 
significantly absent at higher levels in Federal employment, and 
severely underrepresented in some Federal agencies and in some 
geographic areas where they constituted significant proportions of the 
population. After a detailed review of Federal employment practices and 
statistics, the Congress concluded that:
    The disproportionate distribution of minorities and women throughout 
the Federal bureaucracy and their exclusion from higher level policy-
making and supervisory positions indicates the government's failure to 
pursue its policy of equal employment opportunity.\5\
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    \5\ Legislative History of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 
1972, p. 83. See pp. 82-86 and 421-425 for Congressional Findings.
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    Congress found that this exclusion resulted from overt and 
``systemic'' discriminatory practices.
    These findings, among others, led Congress to extend title VII 
coverage to Federal employment in Section 717 of the Equal Employment 
Opportunity Act of 1972.
    The Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 clearly states, for the first 
time, that ``it is the policy of the United States * * * to provide * * 
* a Federal workforce reflective of the Nation's diversity * * *'' \6\ 
The Act establishes in law as the first merit principle that recruitment 
should be designed to achieve a Federal workforce from ``all segments of 
society.'' Among the personnel practices prohibited by the Act is 
discrimination prohibited under title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 
1964, as amended.\7\ Therefore, the Civil Service Reform Act and its 
directive for a special recruitment program clearly unite requirements 
for basic Federal personnel policy with requirements for Federal equal 
employment policy.
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    \6\ Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, Section 3.
    \7\ Section 101(a) of the Act, 5 U.S.C. 2301(b)(1) and 
2302(b)(1)(A), as amended.
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    It is clear from the legislative history of Federal equal employment 
policy that the legal standards of title VII must be applied to Federal 
employment. Thus, guidelines for a recruitment program designed to 
eliminate underrepresentation in Federal agency employment must be 
developed consistent with the framework of affirmative action programs.
    D. Guided by the review of the legislative history, and the 
responsibilities and authorities cited in I(B) of this appendix, the 
Commission is issuing these Guidelines to provide a framework for 
development of recruitment program regulations by OPM. The Commission 
may later provide more detailed guidance, through consultation with OPM, 
designed to achieve an overall Federal equal employment program which is 
consistent with, and which effectively implements title VII 
requirements.

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    II. Initial Determinations of Underrepresentation. A. Pursuant to 
Section 7201, underrepresentation exists when the percentages of 
minority and female Federal employees in specific grades are less than 
their percentages in the civilian labor force. ``Minority'' refers only 
to those groups classified as ``minority'' for the purpose of data 
collection by the Commission and OPM in furtherance of Federal equal 
employment opportunity policies. The civilian labor force includes all 
persons 16 years of age and over except the armed forces, who are 
employed or seeking employment. Such a determination of 
underrepresentation is designated in these Guidelines as ``below the 
Section 7201 level''.
    B. The Commission has examined existing data on Federal employment 
and the civilian labor force and has made initial determinations of 
underrepresentation of groups by race, national origin and sex in 
specific grades of the major Federal pay systems, under the legal 
authorities cited in I(B), of this appendix.
    C. The Table which follows shows the grades at which the percentage 
of each group in the Federal workforce falls below its percentage in the 
civilian labor force. The table covers four major Federal pay systems 
which account for more than 95 percent of Federal employees, excluding 
the Postal Service.\8\
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    \8\ The initial determinations are based on data for only those 
agencies covered by the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978. The Commission 
will make subsequent determinations on other agencies covered by title 
VII, e.g. the U.S. Postal Service, TVA, Central Intelligence Agency, 
Federal Reserve Board.

  Civilian Labor Force and Federal Employment Grades at Which Minorities and Women Are Below the 7201 Level, by
                        Selected Pay Systems, and by Sex, Race, and National Origin--1977
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                              Percent of                        Grades Below the 7201 Level
                               Civilian  -----------------------------------------------------------------------
  Sex/Race/National Origin       Labor      Gen Sched and      Non-spvsry      Leader Regular    Spvsry Regular
                                 Force       Equivalent       Regular Wage          Wage              Wage
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Number of Grades............  ..........                18                15                15                19
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Women.......................        41.0                9+                2+                2+               All
White.......................        34.0                9+               All               All               All
Black.......................         4.6               11+                5+                5+                5+
Hispanic....................         1.7                6+               All             2, 4+               All
AsAm/PacIs..................          .6            1, 10+                2+                2+               All
AmIn/AlNa...................          .1               13+                9+       1, 5, 6, 9+         4, 9, 11+
Minority Men................         8.9                3+               13+           11, 14+               13+
Black.......................         5.3             4, 6+               12+               11+               11+
Hispanic....................         2.8               All               14+             1, 15        13-15, 17+
AsAm/PacIs..................          .7      1-8, 10, 16+            9, 14+   1, 3, 8, 9, 12+   1, 3, 8, 9, 17+
AmIn/AlNa...................          .2              None                14            1, 13+               17+
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Notes.--1. Comparable data for white men shown below are for reference.


White Men...................        50.1               1-8               1-4               1-5               1-3

2. + means ``and all grades above''.
3. Detail may not add to total because of rounding.

Sources: Civilian Labor Force information based on data from the Current Population Survey, Bureau of Labor
  Statistics, Employment and Earnings, Vol. 25, No. 1, January 1978.
Information on grades below 7201 level based on Office of Personnel Management data from Equal Employment
  Opportunity Statistics, November 20, 1977 (publication in process).

    D. The initial determinations of underrepresentation were based upon 
average 1977 labor force data from the Current Population Survey 
published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (Employment and Earnings, 
January 1978), and 1977 Federal workforce statistics from Equal 
Employment Opportunity Statistics (publication in process).
    The labor force figures are published annually; the Federal 
employment statistics semiannually. These measures, and any 
modifications agreed upon by the Commission and OPM, will be updated 
annually.
    Regional and area Federal employment statistics are available from 
the Office of Personnel Management. The latest reliable local labor 
force data by race, national origin, and sex is from the 1970 Census. 
The Commission and OPM will consult on appropriate labor force measures 
to be used for local analyses.
    E. These initial determinations are based upon a preliminary 
analysis of the data, and may be further refined by the Commission, in 
consultation with OPM, to include geographic and occupational 
underrepresentation. It is further recognized that for the purpose of 
developing regulations, the OPM, in consultation with the Commission, 
will undertake more specific analyses of data use

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and applicability necessary to develop programs for the Federal agencies 
pursuant to Section 7201(a)(2)(C). The OPM may establish criteria for 
grouping agencies, for treating agency components separately and for 
grouping grades and pay systems. In addition, OPM may study other 
available data sources and use other techniques to assure statistically 
significant findings of underrepresentation. Based upon these studies, 
OPM may make recommendations to the Commission for future determinations 
of underrepresentation.
    III. Procedures for Developing Recruitment Programs. A. The program 
developed and implemented by OPM under Section 7201 should be designed 
to result in applicant pools with sufficient qualified members of 
underrepresented groups. Where the supply of such groups initially 
appears to be low for specific occupational, professional and other 
groupings, the program should be designed so that recruitment efforts 
stimulate interest of underrepresented groups in those occupations where 
there are realistic projections of Federal employment opportunities.
    B. In establishing groupings for determining underrepresentation, 
OPM should utilize broad occupational categories to the extent possible.
    C. The Commission recognizes that OPM's regulations should allow 
flexibility in development and design of each Federal agency's 
recruitment program. However, all statistical comparisons must be 
computed in a manner consistent with the method utilized in II C of this 
appendix.
    The Commission recommends that each agency program meet several 
minimum requirements. The program should be based on a determination of 
underrepresentation in the agency's total workforce, in appropriate 
geographic components; by grade; by broad occupational, professional and 
other groupings in comparison to the national civilian labor force, 
according to the criteria developed by OPM under these guidelines.
    Where an agency or major component thereof (such as Headquarters and 
Regional Offices) is located in a geographic area where the percentage 
of underrepresented groups in the area civilian labor force is higher 
than their percentage in the national labor force, the agency or 
appropriate component should conduct its recruitment program for that 
component on the basis of the higher level of representation in the 
relevant civilian labor force.
    Where an agency or major component thereof is located in a 
geographic area where participation of a particular underrepresented 
group in the area labor force is significantly lower than their 
participation in the national labor force, such agency or component may, 
in consultation with OPM, utilize the lower applicable civilian labor 
force percentage in determining underrepresentation for the component. 
In no event, however, may the agency utilize a figure lower than the 
regional or nationwide Section 7201 level for positions where 
recruitment on a regional or nationwide basis is feasible. Factors such 
as size of the agency or unit, nature of jobs and their wage or pay 
scale may be considered to set goals and to justify a recruitment 
program focused on various job categories.
    IV. Scope of Actions Covered by This Program. A. ``Recruitment'' 
under this program is defined as the total process by which the Federal 
Government and the Federal agencies locate, identify and assist in the 
employment of qualified or qualifiable applicants from underrepresented 
groups for job openings in grades and in occupational categories where 
underrepresentation has been determined. This process should include 
innovative internal, as well as targeted external, recruitment actions.
    B. Prior to developing regulations, the Office should review data on 
personnel actions and other information, to identify those job 
categories for which internal recruitment and external recruitment is 
most appropriate and feasible, and to provide guidance to the Federal 
agencies for targeting their recruitment programs, based on this 
information. OPM should advise all agencies that all job qualifications, 
personnel procedures and criteria must be consistent with the Uniform 
Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (43 FR 38290 August 25, 
1978) OPM should consider the following in providing guidance to 
agencies:
    1. External Recruitment Programs. a. Such programs should focus on 
grade levels and/or job categories where underrepresentation has been 
identified and where external recruitment realistically will result in 
hiring opportunities.
    Recruitment programs also should include a review of job functions 
to determine those jobs that may be better performed by persons who are 
bicultural and who have bilingual capabilities, and those jobs that can 
be performed by persons not fluent in English.
    b. Where eligibility lists are used for filling jobs, it is 
recommended that the regulations require, an analysis by race, national 
origin and sex, to determine whether the list contains sufficient 
candidates from groups underrepresented in those jobs. OPM should 
require that where the list does not have such representation, expanded 
recruitment procedures be designed to assure that members of 
underrepresented groups qualified to perform the job(s) are included in 
the pool of applicants from which the selecting official makes the 
selection. Such expanded recruitment procedures may include additional 
external recruitment or various actions (such as described in 2. below) 
to reach members of these groups within the Federal workforce

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who are qualified or qualifiable for these jobs.
    2. Internal Recruitment Programs. a. Internal recruitment programs 
should be designed by agencies to identify currently qualified or 
qualifiable persons for job categories and series where 
underrepresentation prevails, according to the national determinations 
and the determinations made by each agency under these guidelines.
    b. Further, OPM should work with Federal agencies to develop 
effective mechanisms for providing information on Federal job 
opportunities, targeted to reach Federal employees from underrepresented 
groups in all agencies in order to broaden the applicant pool.
    V. Consistency with Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1978. A. The Office 
shall develop regulations and implement this program in consultation 
with the Commission and with other affected agencies in such manner that 
their recruitment programs may be incorporated as a consistent and 
effective element of the agencies' national and regional equal 
employment opportunity plans. Each agency is required to implement such 
plans under the direction and guidance of the Commission in accordance 
with Section 717 of title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as 
amended, and Executive Order 12067.
    B. Procedures shall be established by OPM and the Commission to 
assure appropriate consultation in development of the regulations.
    C. Pursuant to Reorganization Plan No. 1 and to Executive Order 
12067 issued thereunder, the Commission will establish procedures to 
provide appropriate consultation and review of the program on a 
continuing basis, to maximize its effectiveness and eliminate any 
duplication, conflict or inconsistency in requirements for equal 
opportunity programs in the Federal agencies.
    D. In preparing its annual report to the Congress pursuant to the 
Act, OPM should do so in consultation with the Commission.

[44 FR 22031, Apr. 13, 1979; 44 FR 76747, Dec. 28, 1979]