The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs announced this month that it is issuing a Final Rule that implements President Obama's Executive Order that prohibits federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.
This Final Rule will be effective 120 days after publication in the Federal Register (which has not yet occurred) and will apply to federal contracts entered into or modified on or after that date.
What does the Final Rule change?
The
EO Clause has been changed to include "sexual orientation" and "gender
identity." Those contractors who incorporate the EO clause by
reference, however, will not need to physically alter their subcontracts or
purchase orders.
Contractors
must notify applicants and employees of their non-discrimination policy
by posting the "EEO is the Law" poster. Presumably, the government
will be updating this poster to include these two new categories.
Contractors
are also obligated to expressly state in job advertisements that all
qualified candidates will receive consideration for employment without
regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender
identity, or national origin. The Final Rule provides that employers can
satisfy this requirement by including that verbiage or simply
indicating that the company is an "equal opportunity employer."
Although
employees hired outside of the United States are not covered by the
regulations, if a contractor is not able to obtain a visa of entry for
an employee or potential employee to a country in which it is doing
business, the regulations require the contractor to notify both the
OFCCP and the U.S. Department of State if the contractor believes that
the refusal of the visa is due to the individual's protected
characteristic. This requirement now applies to sexual orientation and
gender identity status.
Affirmative Action Plan Placement Goals Changes
The
section of the regulations regarding Placement Goals in AAPs has also
been updated. Contractors are prohibited from extending preferences on
the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender
identity, or national origin due to specific placement goals.
What is not affected by the Final Rule?
The
Final Rule does not change contractors' reporting and information
collection requirements, so contractors are not required to survey or
report on the number of LGBT applicants or employees. The required
components of Affirmative Action Plans are also not affected.
What should contractors do to comply?
The
Final Rule simply adds sexual orientation and gender identity to the
sections of the regulation where the other protected categories are
listed, so the affect on federal contractors is limited. Contractors should, however, begin the process of determining whether and when
they need to do the following:
• Update the EO Clause in subcontracts and purchase orders;
• Amend the EEO and AA policy to include sexual orientation and gender identity;
• Obtain new "EEO is the Law" posters;
• Modify their EEO tagline on job solicitations; and
• Train appropriate personnel on the new protections.
In addition, the OFCCP has issued FAQs
regarding its interpretation of the Final Rule. These will probably be
updated periodically as contractors pose questions to the OFCCP.
Why no proposed rule?
The OFCCP bypassed the Notice of Proposed Rule-making and comment
period. They stated that the "Executive Order was very clear about the steps
the Department of Labor was required to take and left no discretion
regarding how to proceed. In such cases, principles of administrative
law allow an agency to publish final rules without prior notice and
comment when the agency only makes a required change to conform a
regulation to the enabling authority and does not have any discretion
in doing so."
If you have any questions regarding this Final Rule, please contact a board certified labor attorney.
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