EEO-1 Reports Due September 30; New Rules and Regulations
Employers with 100 or
more employees (and covered government
contractors/subcontractors with 50 or more employees)
are required to file an annually EEO-1 Report with the
EEOC. The EEO-1 form due September 30, 2007, will
differ from the old form in two respects:
(1) The
"Officials and Managers" category has been divided
into two separate categories; and
(2) The existing
five racial classifications have been expanded to
seven.
According to Littler
Mendelson, for non-government contractors, these changes
to the EEO-1 form are easily addressed. However,
government contractors are faced with possible issues
that could make it more difficult to know what to do.
"Officials & Managers"
The
previous category of "Officials and Managers" is now
divided into two levels, based on responsibility and
influence within the organization. The two new levels
are:
1. Executive/Senior-Level
Officials and Managers:
Those who plan, direct and formulate policy, set
strategy and provide overall direction.
2. First/Mid-Level
Officials and Managers:
All other managers.
Race/Ethnic Category
The new
EEO-1 Report Form expands the race/ethnic categories, as
follows:
1. The
existing category of "Asian or Pacific Islander" is
divided into two separate categories: (1) "Asian"
and (2) "Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander."
Thus, Native Hawaiians or Other Pacific Islanders
will be reported in their own category, separately
from other Asians.
2. A
new category titled "Two or More Races" has been
added. Thus, non-Hispanics who identify with more
than one race (White, Black, Asian, Native Hawaiian/
Other Pacific Islander, American Indian/Alaska
Native) can choose to be classified as "Two or More
Races" rather than as one of the two or more
particular races with which they may identify.
As a result, the new
EEO-1 Report Form contains seven, instead of five,
race/ethnic categories:
-
Hispanic/Latino,
-
White,
-
Black /African
American,
-
American
Indian/Alaska Native,
-
Asian,
-
Native Hawaiian or
Other Pacific Islander, [new]
-
Two or More Races
(Not Hispanic/Latino), [new]
Employees must be
reported in one, and only one, of the foregoing
seven categories on the new EEO-1 form.
IMPLEMENTATION
Employers must
provide the information using the new two levels of
Officials & Managers now, for the 2007 report.
Employers should simply divide officials and managers
into the two categories in any logical manner that is
consistent with their operations. The EEOC recommends
that large companies place the CEO and the next two
reporting levels in category 1.1, and all other
Officials and Managers in category 1.2. For smaller
employers, only the very top levels of management will
be in EEO Category 1.1.
Race/Ethnic Categories
Although
employers must use the new EEO-1 form in 2007, there is
no requirement that employers report employees under
these new categories in 2007. Employers may choose to
utilize the new seven categories now or wait to begin
using them at some future point.
Non-Government
Contractors
Employers who do not
have contracts with the federal government, and are not
affected by OFCCP requirements, can implement the new
race/ethnic categories fairly easily.
Existing Workforce
Although the EEOC encourages employers to resurvey the
existing workforce (contact all employees to update
their race/ethnicity), there is no obligation to
resurvey the existing workforce, this year or at all.
However, there are practical reasons to provide
employees with the opportunity to choose one of the new
categories. Instead of resurveying employees, employers
may simply notify all employees that those who wish to
change to one of the two new categories ("Native
Hawaiians/Other Pacific Islanders" or "Two or More
Races") should let the employer know, and that employees
will otherwise just stay in their present category.
Thus, the burden is on the employees to inform the
employer if they wish to change category and the
employer only deals with employees wishing to do so.
New Hires
Although the EEOC has encouraged employers to begin
using the new race/ethnic categories for new hires as
soon as possible, there is no mandatory start date.
Thus, if employers have not yet begun using the new
seven categories for new hires, they may wish to begin
doing so, for consistency, at the same time they begin
collecting such data for existing employees.
Government Contractors
Implementing the new EEO-1 categories is more
complicated for government contractors because they must
meet the requirements of both the EEOC and OFCCP.
Government contractors must ultimately follow
the EEOC's requirement of gathering and reporting data
by the seven categories, but there is no assurance that
the OFCCP's requirements will follow suit. To date, the
OFCCP has not issued new regulations indicating whether
it will either:
-
adopt the seven
categories now required by the EEOC;
-
maintain the five
race categories in its current regulations (i.e.
requiring Pacific Islanders to continue being
included with other Asians and requiring those who
choose "Two or More Races" to, nevertheless, be
placed in a specific race category for OFCCP
affirmative action purposes); or
-
require something
different (e.g., requiring that multi-racial
individuals choosing "Two or More Races" for EEO-1
reporting be identified by each specific
combination of two, three, or four races for
affirmative action reporting, which could expand the
race/ethnic categories from five to almost 30 or
more).
The OFCCP has provided
interim guidance that, pending issuance of its
regulations, it will accept information presented in
either format (the OFCCP's existing five categories, or
the EEOC's new seven categories). Thus, contractors
still using the OFCCP's five categories as well as those
who have already started using the EEOC's seven
categories are all considered compliant by the OFCCP for
affirmative action purposes until it issues guidance to
the contrary.
Alternatives for
Government Contractors
Because of the uncertainty about what the OFCCP might
do when it finally issues regulations, government
contractors have several different available options on
how to proceed at this time, each with advantages and
disadvantages. According to Littler, the following are
three options along with their advantages and
disadvantages:
1 Do
Nothing for Now (Keep Five Categories)...Wait until
September 2008 or until the OFCCP Issues Final
Regulations.
Some government contractors are concerned that the
OFCCP, which is still using the traditional five
categories, might not follow the EEOC approach.
Thus, such contractors are reluctant to adopt a
specific system to capture data for the new EEO-1
categories until they learn exactly what categories
the OFCCP will require them to use for affirmative
action purposes.
By "doing nothing"
now, contractors need not guess what the OFCCP may
ultimately do. This reduces the possibility of
having to resurvey employees if the OFCCP ultimately
requires recordkeeping that is inconsistent with the
EEOC requirements. There is hope that the OFCCP's
initial proposal will be revealed with the next
month or so, and that may be a strong reason for
employers who have not yet initiated a new system to
wait a little longer to see what requirements the
OFCCP may propose.
2 Use a
Single-Question with All Seven Choices and Ask
Individuals to "Check Only One.”
In this format, employers simply list the seven
race/ethnic categories and ask individuals to "Check
Only One."
The advantages of
this "Check Only One" approach include:
(1) it
complies with the EEOC requirements;
(2) it is
easy for employers to implement (just add two
new race fields in the HRIS system);
(3) it is
easy for employers to administer and maintain
data (employees are counted just once, in one of
the seven categories, and the employer need not
guess or manipulate data to determine the proper
category);
(4) it is
easy for employees to understand ("pick one of
the following"); and
(5) it
allows employees to choose the exact category in
which they wish to be reported.
The disadvantages
include: (1) if the OFCCP refuses to allow reporting
of "Two or More Races" and requires a specific
race for each employee, then employers would
have to resurvey those employees selecting "Two or
More Races" to determine a specific preferred race
for OFCCP affirmative action reporting and add such
a question to the self-identification form; and (2)
if the OFCCP requires that individuals selecting
"Two or More Races" be categorized by specific race
combinations, then employers would have to
resurvey those employees to determine the various
races they identify with and add such a question to
the self-identification form.
3 Use a
Single-Question with the Six Race/Ethnic Choices and
Ask Individuals to "Check All That Apply."
In this format, employers list the six specific
race/ethnic categories (but not the "Two or More
Races" alternative), and ask individuals to "Check
All That Apply." The employer would then categorize
the responses pursuant to the following rules: (1)
if the individual selects Hispanic plus any other
category, the employer must report the
individual as Hispanic on the EEO-1 form; (2) if the
individual selects more than one race, none of which
is Hispanic, the employer must report the
individual as "Two or More Races" on the EEO-1 form.
The advantages of
this approach include: (1) it complies with the EEOC
requirements; and (2) if the OFCCP requires that
individuals identifying as multi-racial be
categorized by specific race combinations,
this approach would provide that information.
The disadvantages
include: (1) it is potentially burdensome to
implement and maintain; (2) employees may be
reported in race/ethnic categories they have not
chosen or might not prefer (e.g., someone selecting
both "Black" and "Hispanic" will be defaulted to
"Hispanic," even if they would have preferred to be
categorized as "Black", and someone selecting
"Black" and "Asian" will be defaulted to "Two or
More Races" even if they would have preferred to be
categorized under one of the specific races); and
(3) if the OFCCP refuses to allow reporting of "Two
or More Races" and requires a specific race
for each employee, employers would have to resurvey
those employees selecting multiple races to
determine a specific preferred race for the OFCCP
affirmative action reporting, and add such a
question to the self-identification form.
Employers are urged to
keep these issues in mind as they elect the best option
going forward. (Littler Mendelson, PC September 17,
2007).
If you have any questions regarding the EEO-1 Rules and
Regulations, HR-OneSource can provide help.
Please contact Jack Lipovac, SPHR,
lipovacj@hr-onesource.com at (515) 221-1718.