Final
Federal Sector Complaint Processing Regulations
29 C.F.R. Part 1614
The civil
rights laws enforced by the Commission, which prohibit employment discrimination
on the bases of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age and
disability, as well as retaliation, apply to employment discrimination
by the federal government. While the substantive protections for federal
employees are the same as those for all other workers, the procedures
for resolving complaints of federal employees differ from the procedures
which govern claims by employees in the private sector. The federal
sector procedural rule approved by the Commission updates and improves
the procedures which govern how the discrimination claims of federal
employees are processed administratively.
1. Why
did the Commission issue these regulations?
- The
Commission issued these regulations as part its ongoing effort to
improve the effectiveness of its operations. The federal sector program
had come under criticism based on a number of factors:
- The
process was too long and contained too many layers of review;
- Agencies
could revise decisions of administrative judges regarding whether
the agency had violated the law, leading to widespread perceptions
of a process that was not impartial; and
- The
process led to the fragmentation of complaints, bogging down the
system and making it difficult for federal employees to prove
that they had been discriminated against.
2. Did
the EEOC consult with its
stakeholder communities in determining how to improve its federal sector
operations?
- Throughout
the entire development of the rule, the EEOC consulted extensively
with the full range of federal sector stakeholders and incorporated
many of their suggestions and comments. From the beginning of the
process, EEOC invited both
agency and employee representatives to meet and discuss the federal
sector process and their ideas for improving it.
- After
approving a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), EEOC circulated the
proposed rule to all agencies for their comments and then submitted
it to OMB for its coordination and clearance process.
- Following
publication of the NPRM, EEOC received and
carefully considered over 60 public comments on the proposed rule.
- Based
on those comments, EEOC approved a proposed
final rule which was also circulated to all the federal agencies before
its submission to OMB for additional coordination and clearance.
3. Who
is affected by the changes?
- The
federal sector complaint processing regulations apply to federal employees
and applicants for employment in the federal government as well as
to the agencies that employ and hire them.
4. Has
EEOC expanded the role
of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) programs in the federal
sector process?
- Consistent
with its commitment to the use of ADR in its private sector programs,
EEOC will require
agencies to establish or make available an ADR program which will be available
both during the pre-complaint process and the formal complaint process.
Agencies will have substantial flexibility in how they structure their
ADR programs
so long as they incorporate principles of confidentiality, neutrality,
voluntariness, and enforceability. ADR may function as an alternative
to counseling.
5. Will
agencies continue to be able to reverse or modify decisions issued by
administrative judges?
- Under
the previous rule, AJ's issued recommended decisions regarding
whether an agency violated the law which the agency was then free
to reverse or modify. While agencies won most hearings, they reversed
or modified the AJ
decisions in about two-thirds of the cases which they lost. The final
regulation provides that AJ
decisions will continue to be submitted to the agencies for final
action. However, the agencies will not have the opportunity to rewrite
the AJ decisions. Rather, they will issue
an order providing only whether or not they will fully implement the
AJ decision. If they choose to not implement
the AJ decision, they
must simultaneously file an appeal with the EEOC.
6. How
much time will agencies have to issue final orders?
- Agencies
will have 40 days to determine whether or not to implement the AJ
decision and, if they choose not to implement the decision, another
20 days to file their brief on appeal. This corresponds to the 60
day period that agencies previously had to review an AJ
decision and issue their final decision.
7. Will
an agency have to provide the complainant with the relief ordered by
the administrative judge if the agency chooses not to implement the
AJ decision and appeals?
- If
the AJ decision involved
restoration of the complaining party into a job, the agency must comply
with the order pending the appeal. The agency may refuse to return
the individual to his or her job if the agency determines that the
individual's presence in the workplace would be unduly disruptive.
If this occurs, however, the agency must provide pay and benefits
until the appeal is completed. The agency is not required to pay any
other monetary benefit ordered by the AJ
pending the outcome of the appeal but must pay interest on such sum
if the complaining party ultimately prevails.
8. What
standard of review will EEOC apply on appeal?
- On
appeal, the EEOC will review legal
issues and factual findings by the agencies under a de novo standard
while using a substantial evidence standard to review AJ findings of fact. It is appropriate
to provide a deferential standard of review to the factual findings
by AJ's who are independent
decision makers and had the opportunity to directly evaluate the credibility
of witnesses.
9. How
do the changes address the problem of the fragmentation of cases?
- A
significant problem in the current system arises from the fragmentation
of cases. Fragmentation -- breaking cases down into their constituent
parts and then processing the parts separately -- substantially adds
to the number of cases and the overall burden in the system. It also
makes it more difficult to prove some cases, such as harassment cases,
which are dependent on a "critical mass" of facts. The final regulation
includes a number of provisions to address this problem:
- Partial
dismissals: The regulations
eliminate interlocutory appeals from partial dismissals. Instead,
the case will continue to be processed and appeals will be preserved
until the rest of the case is ready for appeal.
- No
more remands: AJ's will no longer remand issues to
agencies for counseling or other processing. Once a case is before
an AJ the AJ is fully responsible for processing
it.
- Amendment
of complaints: Complaining
parties will have greater rights to amend their complaints with
like and related claims and independent claims brought by the
same complaining party will be consolidated for processing so
they will be handled together.
- Spin
off complaints: The rule
adds a provision providing for the dismissal of spin-off complaints
which are complaints about the processing of existing complaints.
It provides instead that complaints about existing complaints
should be brought up as part of the original complaint. OFO estimates
that there are about 6,000 spin-off complaints filed a year.
10. Are
there changes to the class complaint process?
- Although
there are certainly instances of class-wide discrimination in the
federal government, under the prior rule only a tiny number of class
cases were brought within the administrative system. Most class cases
were either diverted into the federal courts or they were simply not
brought at all. The new rule includes several reforms to the treatment
of class actions which will make it more feasible for class claims
to be brought and resolved in the administrative system.
- A
class complainant may now move for class certification at any
reasonable point in the process, usually no later than the conclusion
of discovery. This recognizes that complaining parties do not
have access to discovery until they are before an AJ and therefore may not have sufficient
information when they file their case to determine whether or
not class issues are raised.
- AJ
decisions regarding class certification will be treated the same
way as other AJ decisions. Agencies will take final
action on certification by issuing a final order, and, if it does
not fully implement the AJ
decision, appealing to EEOC.
- AJ's
will review class settlements under the same "fair and reasonable"
standard which federal judges use to review class settlements.
11. Can
agencies still dismiss complaints for failure to accept a certified
offer of full relief?
- The
regulation eliminates the provision which permitted agencies to dismiss
complaints for failure to accept a certified offer of full relief.
This provision had not been used very much since the introduction
of damages since short of a hearing it is virtually impossible to
determine when an offer of damages constitutes an offer for full relief.
12. Has
EEOC provided another
mechanism to encourage complainants to seriously consider settlement
offers?
- The
regulations create a new offer of resolution procedure, based on the
offer of judgment rule in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, to
encourage settlement. Under this procedure, agencies may make offers
of resolution, which are settlement offers, to complaining parties.
If the complaining party does not accept the offer and ultimately
obtains no more relief than what was offered, no attorney's fees or
costs will be payable for work done after the offer was not accepted.
13. Can
parties still request reconsideration of an EEOC appellate decision?
- Under
the final rule, reconsideration of EEOC appellate decisions
will no longer be available as of right. Instead, EEOC will exercise
its discretion in determining whether to reconsider its appellate
decisions. This is similar to the process used by the Merit Systems
Protection Board.
14. Who
will decide the amount of attorney's fees when the complainant requests
a hearing?
- AJ's
will decide the amount of fees to be awarded to prevailing complaining
parties. There will be a strong presumption that traditional lodestar
analysis (hours reasonably expended multiplied by a reasonable hourly
rate) will determine the appropriate fee.
15. Will
attorney's fees be available for work performed during the pre-complaint
process?
- Fees
will be available for legal work done before a complaint is filed
in the limited circumstance where a complaining party prevails in
a hearing, the agency chooses not to fully implement the AJ decision, and the EEOC finds in favor
of the complaining party. This will provide an incentive to agencies
to assess carefully whether they will decline to fully implement an
AJ decision which is adverse to them.
At the same time agencies and complaining parties may include attorney's
fees for pre-complaint work in a settlement agreement.
16. When
will the changes become effective?
- The
regulation will take effect on November 9, 1999, 120 days after publication
in the Federal Register. It will apply to pending cases. Agencies
will be required to have their ADR programs in effect by January
1, 2000.
17. Will
EEOC issue additional
guidance to assist the agencies and federal employees come into compliance
with the new regulation.
- EEOC
will issue revisions to its Management Directive
110 to assist both agencies and federal employees better understand
their rights and responsibilities.