A Practical Guide To Providing Employees With Adequate Information About Their Rights Under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity
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- Preserving Access to the Legal System:
- A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
- A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
Preserving Access to the Legal System:
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their
Rights under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
September 2, 2014
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights
under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
Page 2 of 5
Preserving Access to the Legal System:
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their
Rights under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
INTRODUCTION
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has developed an
agency-wide Strategic Enforcement Plan (SEP) for fiscal years 2012-2016 designed to
maximize its ability, within the constraints of its resources, to have a sustainable impact
on reducing and deterring discriminatory practices in the workplace. As a part of the
SEP the Commission has adopted the following national priorities: (1) eliminating
barriers in recruiting and hiring; (2) protecting immigrant, migrant, and other vulnerable
workers; (3) addressing emerging and developing issues; (4) enforcing Equal Pay Laws;
(5) preserving access to the legal system; and (6) preventing harassment through
systemic enforcement and targeted outreach. Under the fifth priority, preserving access
to the legal system, EEOC has committed to targeting policies and practices which
discourage or prohibit individuals from exercising their rights under the employment
discrimination statutes or that impede EEOC’s enforcement efforts. In order to
implement the SEP in the federal sector, the Commission approved the Federal Sector
Complement Plan (FCP). One of the strategies the FCP details for preserving access to
the legal system in the federal sector is to assess whether agencies are providing
employees with adequate information about how to initiate the EEO discrimination
complaint process, and, if so, whether that information is easily accessible and
understandable.
EEOC’s Office of Federal Operations (OFO) has responsibility for, among other things,
evaluating federal sector agencies’ EEO programs, operations, and activities. Pursuant
to these responsibilities, and as part of its federal sector implementation of EEOC’s
SEP/FCP priority concerning preserving access to the legal system, OFO is issuing this
compilation of practices and ideas to provide agencies with a variety of adequate and
appropriate methods of distributing EEO information concerning the complaint process,
laws, and regulations to their workforce.
BACKGROUND
Each covered federal agency is required to maintain an EEO program. To this end,
agencies must use various media to distribute EEO information concerning federal EEO
laws, regulations and requirements, rights, and duties and responsibilities and to
promote best workplace practices. EEOC Management Directive 715 (MD-715) Part II,
Section B.
Pursuant to 29 C.F.R. § 1614.102(b)(5), each agency shall “[m]ake written materials
available to all employees and applicants informing them of the variety of equal
employment opportunity programs . . . and prominently post such written materials in all
personnel and EEO offices and throughout the workplace.”
In addition, agencies shall “publicize to all employees and post at all times the names,
business telephone numbers and business addresses of the EEO Counselors (unless
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights
under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
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the counseling function is centralized, in which case only the telephone number and
address need be publicized and posted), along with a notice of the time limits and
necessity of contacting a Counselor before filing a complaint and the telephone numbers
and addresses of the EEO Director, EEO Officer(s) and Special Emphasis Program
Mangers.” 29 C.F.R. § 1614.102(b)(7).
PRACTICES AND IDEAS
OFO provides this compilation of practices and ideas to assist federal agencies in
implementing effective communication plans to inform all employees about their rights
and responsibilities under federal EEO laws and regulations and to ensure that
employees who want to file discrimination complaints know how to initiate the EEO
complaint process. We note that agencies continue to face challenges in disseminating
information and effectively communicating the EEO complaint process to their workforce.
Agencies with a decentralized workforce encounter the most challenging communication
issues. EEOC strongly recommends agencies use whatever electronic means available
to them, for example, their official websites, phones and employee e-mail accounts as a
primary method of communication with its workforce. However, we recognize that under
some circumstances agencies may need alternative communication methods. In
particular, circumstances in which employees’ workstations are in non-office settings
without regular access to the agencies’ computer or office e-mail systems likely present
the most complicated communication challenges.
Accordingly, we reached out to agencies whose employees are not in an office
environment and asked which methods they used to effectively communicate to
employees their rights under EEO laws in this electronic age. The following ideas
constitute the agencies’ most common practices:
1. Broadcast, on a quarterly basis, via e-mail to all employees their EEO rights,
along with the telephone numbers, physical addresses, and e-mail addresses of
EEO Counselors. The communication also indicates that an aggrieved person
must initiate contact with an EEO Counselor within 45 days of the date of the
matter alleged to be discriminatory.
2. Design and disseminate informative brochures explaining the EEO complaint
process, including the following information: specific federal laws as well as the
specific bases for discrimination, how to initiate an EEO complaint, specific time
frames, and proper contact information. Ensure that every employee receives a
copy of the agency’s brochure and request that employees sign for it upon
receipt. Additionally, place brochures prominently in common areas (for
example, near building entrances and exits) and post the information on the
agencies’ internal and external websites that are accessible to employees,
former employees, and applicants for employment with the agency.
3. Produce and post video messages in which the agency head and/or the EEO
Director provides employees information on various EEO topics on the agency’s
TVs throughout the facilities where possible.
4. Use the agency’s intranet home page for special emphasis months and for
posting relevant EEO information and documents.
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights
under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
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5. Create and hang EEO posters, with information on how to initiate the EEO
complaint process and whom to contact to file a complaint, at every agency
facility, on each floor in the most frequented areas, for example, in break rooms,
lunchrooms, central bulletin boards (including electronic bulletin boards),
administrative offices, training offices, physical fitness centers, kitchen areas, and
central hallways.
6. Establish as a collateral duty an EEO Point of Contact (POC), located at each of
the agency’s facilities. EEO POC duties might include providing information and
directing employees to the EEO Office with the appropriate contact numbers for
EEO Counselors, as well as other avenues for resolutions of non-EEO issues.
7. Send letters via postal mail to employees’ addresses of record when there is a
very important matter, such as a change of policy or changes in the law.
8. Use monthly divisional town hall meetings and/or staff meetings to remind
employees about their rights under EEO laws and disseminate informative
brochures.
9. Ensure that the agency’s newsletter includes information concerning employees’
EEO rights and the telephone numbers and addresses of EEO Counselors.
Indicate that an aggrieved person must initiate contact with a Counselor within 45
days of the date of the matter alleged to be discriminatory. Provide examples of
issues employees may need resolved and how they can resolve them, along with
any updates in the laws.
10. Ensure that the responsible supervisors communicate EEO information orally
and by hard copy delivery / postings at the work site.
11. Provide mandatory EEO training to all employees and new employees, including
managers and supervisors, regarding the rights, responsibilities, and remedies
available under the employment discrimination laws. Provide training in person
or via electronic means and require that each employee receive the training
every year in accordance with the No FEAR Act of 2002.
12. Conduct brown bag lunches focusing on various EEO topics. Stream live
webcast sessions so that employees at remote locations can participate or view
the video later on the agency’s website.
13. Post EEO information regarding how to initiate an EEO complaint and contact
information on employees’ pay stubs and/or on the agency’s payroll web site.
CONCLUSION
Continuous communication of EEO laws and regulations and the complaint process is
an important factor in an agency’s success in becoming a model EEO program. Federal
agencies must ensure a prompt and efficient complaint process and should make
employees aware of the various anti-discrimination EEO laws.
A Practical Guide to Providing Employees with Adequate Information about Their Rights
under Federal Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Laws and Regulations
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Agencies must comply with EEOC regulations and management directives and ensure
that EEO written materials are available to all employees; agencies should post such
written materials in prominent areas throughout the workplace. We strongly encourage
agencies to adopt several methods of communication to inform their employees about
the EEO Program, in accordance with each agency’s unique mission requirements
and/or circumstances. We intend this practical guide will assist agencies in developing
reliable and effective communication plans for disseminating their EEO program
information.