U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or Commission) is responsible for issuing rules and orders governing the processing of equal employment opportunity (EEO) complaints filed by federal employees and applicants. This rule modifies the regulations for processing equal employment opportunity complaints by federal employees and job applicants to clarify and build on the improvements made by the last major revisions to 29 CFR Part 1614 in 1999.
A notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) was circulated to all agencies for comment pursuant to Executive Order 12067 and subsequently published in the Federal Register on December 21, 2009. 74 FR 67839 (2009). The notice proposed changes to the Commission’s federal sector EEO complaint processing regulations at 29 CFR Part 1614 to implement the recommendations of the Federal Sector Workgroup. It sought public comment on those proposals. The final rule was published in the Federal Register on July 25, 2012. The following questions and answers provide information on the changes made to the federal sector complaint process by the final rule.
Under section 717 of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, EEOC is responsible for the administration and enforcement of equal employment opportunity in federal employment. As such, EEOC is authorized to issue rules, regulations, orders, and instructions as necessary and appropriate to carry out its EEO responsibilities. 29 CFR Part 1614 governs the process for filing and adjudicating complaints of employment discrimination filed by federal employees and applicants. It also directs how agencies must administer their internal EEO programs.
Yes, substantial revisions to Part 1614 were published in 1999.
In an effort to be responsive to stakeholder input regarding the federal sector complaint process, EEOC established a Federal Sector Workgroup to explore ways to improve the federal sector complaints process. The Workgroup agreed on a number of procedural modifications which will enhance the overall processing of federal sector EEO complaints.
Federal executive agencies and a few other federal entities (such as the U.S. Postal Service, the Tennessee Valley Authority, and the Smithsonian Institution) must comply with the rules and procedures set forth in Part 1614. Thus, federal agencies must maintain EEO programs and establish EEO complaint processing procedures as set forth in Part 1614. Federal employees and applicants who believe they have been the victims of prohibited employment discrimination may file complaints and have them processed in accordance with Part 1614.
Part 1614 does not apply to the uniformed members of the federal government’s military departments, to non-U.S. citizens employed by federal agencies in locations outside the United States, to members of Congress, their staffs, and employees, or to employees of the federal court system. Additionally, Part 1614 does not apply to private sector employers, their employees, or applicants, or to state or local governments and their employees and applicants.
There are six main revisions. They are:
No. Section 717 of Title VII authorizes EEOC to issue regulations, orders and instructions as it deems necessary and appropriate to carry out its responsibilities under section 717. This revision simply makes clear that, as has been the case since 1979 (when EEOC was given authority over the federal sector EEO process), agencies must comply with Part 1614 and the compulsory instructions contained in EEOC’s Management Directives and Bulletins.
Yes. Executive Order 12067 provides that, before EEOC issues any final EEO rules, policies, procedures, or orders, EEOC must give federal agencies an opportunity to comment upon and consult with EEOC regarding such matters. Thus, EEOC will not issue a new federal sector EEO rule, directive, bulletin, or instruction without first affording agencies notice and the opportunity to comment.
No. When EEOC determines that an agency’s EEO program is non-compliant, it will give the agency a reasonable opportunity to cure the defects that have been found, provide a reasonable justification for its non-compliance, or establish that its program is in compliance. Therefore, a notice of non-compliance will be issued only when an agency fails to satisfy one of these criteria.
Not always. Under the rule, the EEOC Chair retains the discretion to determine whether a notice of non-compliance should be made public. Therefore, not every notice of non-compliance that is issued to an agency will be made public. EEOC is in the process of developing standards and guidance addressing compliance issues and the procedures EEOC will follow before it issues a notice of non-compliance. This guidance will include circumstances that would warrant the issuance of a public notice of non-compliance.
The criteria for pilot projects have not been established. EEOC intends to issue pilot project guidance in the near future, possibly in MD-110, which will include some mandatory standards. EEOC will be open to innovative proposals that protect certain basic rights of all parties.
In its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, EEOC proposed that pilot projects be approved only for a one-year period. The final rule specifies that a pilot project can run for two years, and that, for good cause shown, the project can be extended an additional year.
A complaint that alleges that a proposed action, such as a proposed removal, is discriminatory normally should be dismissed by an agency. The revisions made to Part 1614 by this Final Rule, however, state that a complaint alleging that a proposed action, or other preliminary steps to taking a personal action, is retaliatory can state a claim and therefore should not be dismissed automatically. As a result, challenges to proposed actions or other preliminary steps generally will be actionable when the complainant alleges that a proposed action was issued: 1) because the complainant had engaged in prior EEO activity; 2) because the complainant had opposed a practice which he or she believed violated one of the federal EEO laws; or, 3) to dissuade the complainant, or a reasonable person in the complainant’s circumstances, from engaging in protected EEO activity.
The longstanding general rule under Part 1614 is that, within 180 days from the filing of a complaint, an agency must complete its investigation and notify a complainant that she has the right to request a hearing, or, in the alternative, an immediate final decision. Part 1614, as revised by this Final Rule, states that, if an agency does not complete its investigation within the required time period, it must, within the same applicable time period, issue a written notice to the complainant informing her that the agency has been unable to complete its investigation within the required time limits. Additionally, an agency must now estimate a date by which its investigation will be completed and inform the complainant of that date. Further, the notice must explain that if the complainant does not want to wait until the agency completes the investigation, she may instead request a hearing, or file a civil action in an appropriate United States District Court.
The Final Rule makes two changes to the class complaint process. First, an appeal of the acceptance or dismissal of a class complaint will be processed by EEOC on an expedited basis. Thus, after an EEOC administrative judge (AJ) issues a decision whether to accept or dismiss a class complaint, the agency or the class agent can appeal the decision to accept or dismiss the class complaint. That appeal will now be processed within 90 days, rather than 180 days under the previous rule.
Second, the revised Final Rule makes an AJ’s decision on the merits of a class complaint a final decision, which the agency can fully implement or appeal in its final action. Under the previous rule, an AJ issued recommended findings and conclusions on the merits of a class complaint, which an agency could accept, reject, or modify in its final decision. With the current change, an AJ’s class complaint decision will have the same status and effect as an AJ decision on an individual complaint; it will be a final decision which the agency or class agent can appeal. If the agency does not fully implement the administrative judge’s decision, it only has to appeal the parts of the decision that it wishes to contest. For example, if an administrative judge finds that the agency discriminated against the class and awards reinstatement and backpay, and if the agency disagrees with the award of reinstatement, the agency’s appeal need only challenge the reinstatement award.
No. As is the case with an individual complaint, an agency need appeal only that portion of the AJ’s decision with which it disagrees. For example, if an AJ issues a decision finding that the class members were discriminated against with respect to training opportunities and promotions, and the agency agrees that there was class-wide discrimination regarding training, the agency can implement that part of the AJ’s decision pertaining to training while appealing the AJ’s findings on the promotion issue.
No. The new rule requires only the submission of digital records, not electronic filing. To comply with the new rule, an agency will have to convert its paper files to a digital format, but it can then choose the means by which it transmits its digital files. For example, an agency can place its digital files on password-protected CDs or DVDs and mail the discs to EEOC. An agency also can place its digital files on its website where EEOC can access them. Additionally, an agency can transmit appellate and complaint records electronically by using EEOC’s secure filing portal.
Yes. Under the new rule, an agency can request a waiver. EEOC will permit an agency to continue to submit paper files “for good cause shown.” Good cause can include the financial burden placed on an agency in having to convert to digital records. Good cause also can include a showing that an agency needs a specific amount of time to modify or upgrade its software, equipment, or systems in order to make compliance possible. EEOC will apply the good cause standard on a case-by-case basis, since cost and other factors that would establish good cause are relative and unique to each agency.
The changes made by this Final Rule to Part 1614 are effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.
As a general rule, this does not mean that, if a particular stage of the complaint process has passed, an agency or complainant will have to revisit that stage in order to comply with a new procedure. Here are some examples: