The words and phrases contained in this chapter generally are used by the
federal, state and local civil rights agencies. They are defined or described for the purpose of
providing a common understanding among them and those who use this Manual.
1B GLOSSARY OF GENERAL DEFINITIONS
Accessibility
The extent to which a contractor's facility is readily approachable and
usable by individuals with disabilities, particularly such areas as the
personnel office, worksite and public areas.
Accommodation
See "Reasonable Accommodation," "Undue Hardship," and "Religious
Accommodation."
Act
As used in this Manual, provisions enforced by OFCCP of:
(a) The Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974 (P.L.
93-580, 88 Stat. 1593, 38 U.S.C. 4212), as amended (previously referred to as "Section
402" or, until 1991 amendments, "38 U.S.C. 2012"); or
(b) The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (P.L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 393, 29 U.S.C.
793), as amended.
Administering Agency
Any department, agency or establishment in the Executive branch of the
Government, including any wholly-owned Government corporation, that administers
a program involving federally assisted construction contracts. See 41 CFR
60-1.3
Administrative Complaint
The document that begins an administrative enforcement proceeding under
Executive Order 11246, Section 503, or 38 U.S.C. 4212.
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
The presiding official at administrative enforcement proceedings under 41
CFR Part 60-30. Also see 41 CFR 60-1.26(c), 60-250.29(b) and 60-741.29(b).
Administrative Procedure Act
A law enacted by Congress in 1946. It establishes basic requirements to
which an administrative process must conform. It includes standards for
rulemaking, for certain formal adjudication, and for court reviews of certain
administrative actions.
Adverse Impact
A substantially different rate of selection in hiring, promotion, transfer,
training, or other employment related decisions for any race, sex, or ethnic
group. A finding of adverse impact by itself, does not establish a violation
device in question based on job relatedness or business necessity. See
definition of disparate impact. See also Chapter 7 of this manual.
Affected Class
A group of persons, identifiable by name or characteristics, who are the
victims of a pattern or practice of discrimination.
Affirmative Action
Actions, policies, and procedures to which a contractor commits itself that
are designed to achieve equal employment opportunity. The affirmative action
obligation entails: (1) thorough, systematic efforts to prevent discrimination
from occurring or to detect it and eliminate it as promptly as possible, and (2)
recruitment and outreach measures. See Manual Section 2A02(b).
Affirmative Action Clause
The clauses set forth in 41 CFR 60-250.4 and 41 CFR
60-741.4 that must be included in Federal contracts and subcontracts. These
two clauses outline the affirma-tive action requirements for special disabled
veterans, Vietnam era veterans (41 CFR 60-250.4) and individuals
with handicaps (41 CFR 60-741.4). The clauses are a part of covered
contracts regardless of whether they are physically incorporated into the
contract and whether the contract is written. See also definition of "Equal
Opportunity Clause."
Affirmative Action Program (AAP)
A written program, meeting the requirements of 41 CFR Part 60-2, 60-250.5 or
60-741.5, in which a contractor annually details the steps it will take and has
already taken, to ensure equal employment opportunity.
Aggregate Workforce
A construction contractor's total workforce in each trade on all
construction work including Federally funded or assisted projects and all
nonfederal projects within a designated geographical area established under 41
CFR 60-4.6. See definition of "Covered Area."
American Indian-Alaskan Native
A person with origins in any of the original peoples of North America who
maintains cultural identification through tribal affiliation or has community
recognition as an American Indian or Alaskan Native.
Anecdotal Evidence
Oral or written narrative evidence. A short account of some happening,
usually personal. (For example, interview or written statements given to an
investigator that record personal experiences of employees can be anecdotal
evidence of discrimination.)
Anti-nepotism Policy
A policy or practice that limits the simultaneous employment of two or more
members of the same family.
Applicant Flow Log
A chronological compilation of applicants for employ-ment or promotion,
showing the persons categorized by race, sex and ethnic group, who applied for
each job title (or group of job titles requiring similar qualifications) during
a specific period.
Apprenticeship
A system of indenture or other agreement, written or implied, to train a
person in a recognized trade or craft in accordance with specified standards.
Asian-Pacific Islander
A person with origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East,
Southeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands. This area
includes, for example, China, Japan, Korea, the Philippine Republic and Samoa;
and, on the Indian Subcontinent, includes India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri
Lanka, Nepal, Sikkim and Bhutan.
Availability
The availability of minorities or women for a job group means the percentage
that minorities or women are among persons in the relevant labor area and/or
internal feeder pools having the requisite qualifications to perform the
positions included in the job group. The term is broad enough to include any
factor that is in fact relevant to determining the availability of individuals
for the jobs in the job group. Avail-ability figures are used in determining
whether to find underutilization, and, where a goal is established, in
determining the level of the goal.
In determining availability for a job group, a contractor must consider at
least each of the factors specified in 41 CFR 2.11(b). However, a contractor
need not actually use each of these factors in reaching its availability
estimate. Only the factors that are relevant to the particular job group should
be used. For example, availability for jobs in a job group filled by promotion
from within, or requiring specialized skills, would not be based on general area
population, workforce, or unemployment factors. In addition to the factors
specified in 41 CFR 2.11(b), a contractor may consider any other relevant factor
in determining availability. See Manual Section 2G05.
Back Pay
Compensation for past wage and benefit losses caused by a contractor's
discriminatory employment practices or procedures. Lost wages include, e.g.,
overtime, incentive pay, raises, bonuses economic loss includes compensatory
damages. See also "fringe benefits."
Bargaining Agreement
Also referred to as collective bargaining agreement and sometimes known as
labor-management agreement or union contract. These terms refer to an agreement
between an employer and a union establishing wages, hours, and other terms and
conditions of employment for employees in the bargaining unit represented by the
union.
Black
An individual, not of Hispanic origin, with origins in any of the Black
racial groups of Africa.
Bona-Fide Occupational Qualification (BFOQ)
A defense allowing an employer to limit a particular job to members of one
sex, religion, or national origin group. The courts have held that the
statutory BFOQ provision in Title VII is a very narrow exception to the general
prohibition against discrimination on the basis of those characteristics. In
enforcing the Executive Order, OFCCP follows Title VII principles regarding the
BFOQ exception. An employer claiming that sex is a BFOQ for a job must show
that all or substantially all members of the excluded sex are incapable of
performing the duties of the job and that failure to allow the exclusion would
undermine the "essence" (i.e., the central purpose or mission) of the
employer's business. Race cannot ever be a BFOQ for any job.
Bona-Fide Seniority System
A seniority system that was not created and is not maintained for the
purpose of discriminating on the basis of a prohibited factor.
Bumping Rights
Rights of an employee to displace another employee due to a layoff or other
employment action as defined in a collective bargaining agreement or other
binding agreement.
Business Necessity
An defense available when the employer has a criterion for selection that
is facially neutral but which excludes members of one sex, race, national origin
or religious group at a substantially higher rate than
members of other groups (thus creating adverse impact). The employer must
prove that its requirement having the adverse impact is job-related and
consistent with business necessity. See Manual Section 7E08.
Civilian Labor Force
The aggregate of the persons classified as employed and as unemployed in
accordance with the criteria estab-lished by the Bureau of the Census and the
U.S. Department of Commerce. See "Employed" and "Unemployed."
Cohort Analysis
A comparison of the treatment of similarly situated individuals or groups.
Collateral Estoppel
A bar to relitigating an issue that has already been litigated between the
same parties or certain closely related persons (sometimes known as privies).
Under collateral estoppel, when an issue has been contested and finally resolved
in litigation involving the parties, that resolution of the issue is binding on
future litigation involving the two parties (or their privies).
Collective Bargaining Agreement
See "Bargaining Agreement."
Comparative Evidence
Nonstatistical evidence that compares the contractor's treatment of
individuals of one group (e.g., race) with its treatment of similarly situated
individuals of other groups. Also see "Statistical Evidence" and "Anecdotal
Evidence."
Complaint
A written charge filed with OFCCP by an employee, former employee, applicant
for employment or by a third party alleging specific violations of the Executive
Order, Section 503 or 38 U.S.C. §4212.
Compliance
Meeting the requirements and obligations imposed by Executive Order 11246,
as amended, Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, 38 U.S.C.
§4212, and their implementing regulations.
Conciliation
Discussions between OFCCP and a contractor to resolve findings of
noncompliance.
Conciliation Agreement (CA)
A binding written agreement between a contractor and OFCCP that details
specific contractor commitments to resolve the alleged violations set forth in
the agree-ment.
Construction Contract
Any contract for the construction, rehabilitation, alteration, conversion,
extension, demolition or repair of buildings or highways, or other changes or
improve- ments to real property, including facilities providing utility
services.
Construction Site
The general physical location of any building, highway or real property
undergoing construction, rehabilita- tion, alteration, conversion, extension,
demolition, repair, or any other change or improvement, and any temporary
location or facility at which a contractor or other participating party meets a
demand or performs a function relating to the contract or subcontract. See "Site
of Construction," 41 CFR 60-1.3.
Construction Work
The construction, rehabilitation, alteration, conversion, extension,
demolition or repair of buildings or highways, or other changes or improvements
to real property, including facilities providing utility services. The term
also includes the supervision, inspection and other onsite functions incidental
to the actual construction. See 41 CFR 60-1.3.
Constructive Discharge
An employee's involuntary resignation resulting from the employer making
working conditions for the employee so intolerable that a reasonable person
would have felt
compelled to resign. OFCCP will assert that an employee was constructively
discharged in violation of the Executive Order, Section 503, or 38 U.S.C. §4212
where it finds that (1) a reasonable person in the employee's position would
have found the working conditions intolerable; (2) the employer's conduct which
constituted the violation against the employee created the intolerable working
conditions; and (3) the employee's involuntary resignation resulted from the
intolerable working conditions.
Continuing Violation
The continuing violation theory has been analyzed as encompassing three
separate sub-theories, each applicable to distinct fact situations: (1) a series
of individual related discriminatory acts, at least one of which must have
occurred within 2 years prior to the notice of a compliance review, or 180 days
before the filing of a complaint of employment discrimination; (2) systemic
discrimination where the employer has maintained a policy or practice which
discriminates against a class of individuals; and, (3) present effects of past
discrimination--where an individual or a class is suffering the residual effects
of discriminatory conduct which occurred prior to the limitation period but was
not the subject of a timely charge. (In recent years, OFCCP has not applied the
present effects of past discrimination theory.)
Contract
Any "Government Contract" or, for the Executive Order, any "Federally
Assisted Construction Contract."
Contract Cancellation
The termination of a Federal contract before its expiration date. Contract
cancellation is one of the sanctions authorized, in appropriate cases, for
violations of the Executive Order, Section 503, or 38 U.S.C. §4212.
Compare "Debarment;" "Contract Suspension."
Contract Suspension
The temporary interruption of a Federal contract by order of the appropriate
authorities. Contract suspension is one of the sanctions authorized, in
appropriate cases, for violation of the Executive Order, Section 503 or 38
U.S.C. §4212. Compare "Contract Cancellation;" "Debarment."
Contracting Agency
For purposes of the Executive Order, Section 503 and 38 U.S.C. §4212,
a contracting agency is any department, agency, establishment or
instrumentality of the United States (under the Executive Order, limited to the
executive branch of the Government), including any wholly owned Government
corporation, which enters into contracts. See 41 CFR 60-1.3, 60-250.2, and
60-741.2.
Contractor
A contractor as described below, is:
(a) Prime contractor. Any person holding, and for enforcement purposes any
person who has held, a contract subject to the Executive Order, Section 503 or
38 U.S.C. §4212.
(b) Subcontractor. Any person holding, and for enforcement purposes any
person who has held, a subcontract subject to the Executive Order, Section 503
or 38 U.S.C. §4212. See definition of "Subcontract."
(c) First-tier subcontractor. A subcontractor holding a subcontract with a
prime contractor.
Covered Area
The geographical area, Economic Area (EA) or Standard Metropolitan
Statistical Area (SMSA), designated in the Federal Register by the Secretary of
Labor where a Federal or federally assisted construction project is being
performed. See 45 FR 65976, 65984, Appendix
B-80, October 3, 1980.
Criteria Identification/Criteria Verification
The process of obtaining the contractor's stated criteria for a selection
decision(s) (usually through interviewing selecting officials and examining any
relevant contractor documents), and then determining whether the stated criteria
explain the actual selec-tion decisions (usually through reviewing applications/
files of persons selected and not selected).
Debarment
An order declaring a contractor ineligible for the award of future
contracts. Debarment is one of the sanctions that may be imposed upon a
contractor who is
found to be in violation of the Executive Order, Section 503, or 38 U.S.C. §4212.
Deficiency
Failure to fulfill a requirement of the Executive Order, Section 503 or 38
U.S.C. §4212, including implementing rules, regulations and orders. See "Violation."
(The terms deficiency and violation often are used interchangeably.)
Deposition
A type of pre-trial discovery. (See "Discovery.") An oral
deposition is the examination, under oath, by the lawyer for one party of a
person (such as a potential witness for the other party) who is believed to have
knowledge of facts or circumstances relevant to the matter in litigation. A
transcript of the examination is made and can be used at trial for some
purposes.
Dictionary of Occupational Titles
A publication of the Employment and Training Admini- stration, U.S.
Department of Labor, that classifies more than 12,000 occupations based on their
duties and commonly required qualifications.
Director
The Director of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs of the
United States Department of Labor.
Direct Evidence of Discrimination
A method of proof in which evidence on its face establishes a discriminatory
reason for an employment decision, without inference or presumption. Direct
evidence is evidence that on its face shows an intent to discriminate. It may
be based upon testimony or any reliable documentation such as a copy of a help
wanted ad that specifies "males only."
Disabled Veteran
See "Special Disabled Veteran."
Discovery
In trial practice, the pre-trial devices that can be used by a party to
obtain facts and information about the case from the other party in order to
assist the party's preparation for trial. Tools of discovery
include: depositions upon oral and written questions, written
interrogatories, requests for production of documents or things, requests for
physical and mental examinations, and requests for admission. See "Deposition."
Discrimination
See "Disparate Impact," "Disparate Treatment," and
Chapter 7.
Disparate Impact
A theory or category of employment discrimination. Disparate impact
discrimination may be found when a contractor's use of a facially neutral
selection standard (e.g., a test, an interview, a degree require-ment)
disqualifies members of a particular race or gender group at a significantly
higher rate than others and is not justified by business necessity or job
re-latedness. An intent to discriminate is not necessary to this type of
employment discrimination. The dis-parate impact theory may be used to analyze
both objective and subjective selection standards. Same concept as adverse
impact. See definition of adverse impact.
Disparate Treatment
A theory or category of employment discrimination. Disparate treatment
discrimination may be found when a contractor treats an individual or group
differently because of its race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap
or veteran status. An intent to discriminate is a necessary element in this
type of employment discrimination, and may be shown by direct evidence or
inferentially by statistical, anecdotal and/or comparative evidence.
Dun's Number
An identification number assigned to a business by Dun & Bradstreet (D&B).
EEO-1 Report
The Equal Employment Opportunity Employer Information Report (EEO-1): An
annual report filed with the Joint Reporting Committee (composed of OFCCP and
EEOC) by certain employers subject to the Executive Order or to Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended. This report details the sex and
race/ethnic composition of an employer's work force by job category. (Also
termed Standard Form 100.)
EEO-2 Report
The Equal Employment Opportunity Apprenticeship Information Report: A
chronological list of names of all persons who have applied to an apprenticeship
program. The information needed to fill out the report must be kept by the
apprenticeship sponsor; however, the EEOC no longer requires the filing of EEO-2
reports.
EEO-3 Report
The Equal Employment Opportunity Labor Union Report (EEO-3): A report filed
biennially in even-numbered years by labor unions. This report is filed with
the EEOC Survey Branch and contains information on the sex and race/ethnic
composition of union membership and referrals for employment.
EEO-4 Report
The Equal Employment Information Report (EEO-4): A report filed by State
and local governments with the State and Local Reporting Committee (composed of
EEOC, Health and Human Services [HHS], Department of Energy [DOE], Housing and
Urban Development [HUD], Department of Transportation [DOT], Office of Personnel
Management [OPM], and OFCCP). This report sets forth the sex and race/ethnic
composition of the work force by job category and annual salary. Frequency of
reporting for political jurisdictions varies with their number of full-time
employees, as follows: 100 or more, annually; 50 to 99, every other year; 25 to
49, every 4 years; 15 to 24, every 6 years.
EEO-5 Report
The Equal Employment Opportunity Elementary-Secondary Staff Information
Report (EEO-5): A report filed with the School Reporting Committee (composed of
EEOC, the Department of Education/Office of Civil Rights and the National Center
for Education Statistics). This report details the sex and race/ethnic
composition, by job category, of elementary and secondary school staffs.
Frequency of reporting for school districts varies with their number of pupils,
as follows: 1800 or more, every other year; 900-1799, every 4 years; 450-899,
every 6 years; 250-449, every 8 years.
EEO-6 Report
The Equal Employment Opportunity Higher Education Staff Information Report
(EEO-6): A report filed biennially in odd-numbered years with the Higher
Education Report-
ing Committee (composed of OFCCP, Department of Educa-tion/Office of Civil
Rights and EEOC) by colleges and universities. It details by job category and
salary the sex and race/ethnic composition of their faculty and staffs.
Employed
Under criteria established by the Bureau of the Census and the U.S.
Department of Commerce, all civilians 16 years old and over who were either:
(a) "at work," meaning those who did any work at all during the
reference week as paid employees or in their business or profession, or on their
farm, or who worked 15 hours or more as unpaid workers on a family farm or in a
family business; or
(b) "with a job but not at work," meaning those who did not work
during the reference week but had jobs or businesses from which they were
temporarily absent due to illness, bad weather, industrial dispute, vacation, or
other personal reasons.
Generally excluded from the category of employed are persons whose only
activity consisted of unpaid work around the house or volunteer work for
religious, charitable, and similar organizations, or persons on layoff.
Employee
A person employed by a Federal contractor, subcontractor or Federally
assisted construction contractor or subcontractor.
Employment Agency
Any entity regularly undertaking with or without compensation to procure
permanent employees for an employer or to procure for individuals opportunities
to permanently work for an employer. Also includes an agent of such a person or
entity.
Employment Offer
An employer's offer of employment to an individual, usually for a specific
job.
Employer Identification Number (EIN)
A nine digit number assigned to a company by the Internal Revenue Service
for tax and other identification purposes.
Enforcement
Administrative or judicial action to compel compliance with Executive Order
11246, Section 503 or 38 U.S.C. §4212 and their implementing regulations.
Equal Opportunity Clause
The subparagraphs contained in 41 CFR 60-1.4(a) or (b) required by Sections
202 and 301 of Executive Order 11246, as amended, to be part of contracts
covered by the Executive Order. Pursuant to 41 CFR 60-1.4(e) and 60-4.9, the
clause is a part of covered contracts regardless of whether it is physically
incorporated into the contract or whether the contract between the agency and
the contractor is written. See also definition of "Affirmative Action
Clause."
Establishment
A facility or unit which produces goods or services, such as a factory,
office, store, or mine. In most in- stances, the unit is a physically separate
facility at a single location. In appropriate circumstances, OFCCP may consider
as an establishment several facilities located at two or more sites when the
facilities are in the same labor market or recruiting area. The determination
as to whether it is appropriate to group facilities as a single establishment
will be made by OFCCP on a case-by-case basis.
Executive Order
For purposes of this manual, Parts II, III, and IV of Executive Order 11246,
September 24, 1965 (30 FR 12319), as amended. The short form references of "Order"
or "E.O. 11246" sometimes are used.
Exempt Contract
Any Government contract or subcontract which is excluded from coverage under
some or all provisions of 41 CFR Chapter 60 according to the standards set forth
in 41 CFR 60-1.5. (See also 60-250.3, and 60-741.3 which use the term "waiver"
instead of exempt.)
Expert Witness
A person such as a doctor or statistician selected by the court or a party
on account of his/her knowledge or skill, to examine, estimate, and ascertain
things and make a report (testimony) of his/her findings and opinions.
Facially Neutral Selection Standard/Criteria
A criterion/process is facially neutral if it does not make any reference to
a prohibited factor and is equally applicable to everyone regardless of race,
gender or ethnicity; i.e., is not discriminatory on its face. See also "uniformly
applied."
Federally Assisted Construction Contract
Any agreement or modification thereof between any applicant and a person for
construction work which is paid for in whole or in part with funds obtained from
the Government or borrowed on the credit of the Government pursuant to any
Federal program involving a grant, contract, loan, insurance, or guarantee, or
undertaken pursuant to any Federal program involving such grant, contract, loan,
insurance, or guarantee, or any application or modification thereof approved by
the Government for a grant, contract, loan, insurance, or guarantee under which
the applicant itself participates in the construction work. See 41 CFR 60-1.3.
Federally Involved Construction Contract
Any Federal construction contract or subcontract, Federally assisted
construction contract or subcon-tract, or any other construction contract or
subcontract that is necessary, in whole or in part, to
the performance of a Federal supply and service contract or subcontract.
Fifteen (15) Day Notice
See "Notice of Alleged Noncompliance."
First-tier Subcontractor
A subcontractor holding a subcontract with a prime contractor.
Focus Job Area
A unit of an establishment's work force (such as a seniority unit,
department, line of progression, or job title, as appropriate) identified at
desk audit as a potential problem area for further investigation onsite.
Example: a unit where minorities or women are concentrated, underrepresented, or
restricted from working because of their race or sex.
Formal Training
A structured program to develop an individual's job related skills and
abilities. Typically classroom training as well as on-the-job training fall
into this category.
Fringe Benefits
Compensation for employment other than wages or salary, including, for
example, annual and sick leave, medical insurance, life insurance, retirement
benefits, profit sharing, bonus plans, etc.
Front Pay
Compensation for estimated future economic loss; generally calculated based
on the difference between the discrimination victim's current pay (or for a
rejected applicant, the pay he/she should have received) and the pay associated
with his/her rightful place. Front pay runs from the time of the settlement
(e.g., Conciliation Agreement), hearing, or admini-strative or court order to a
certain time in the future set by the settlement, hearing or administrative or
court order (usually when the victim attains his/her rightful place) set by the
settlement, hearing or court order. See also "Rightful Place."
Goals
Goals under the Executive Order are of two kinds: percentage placement goals
and goals by organizational unit. See Manual Sections 2G07 and 2G12.
Goals for Construction Contractors
In the construction industry, benchmark employment levels for minorities and
women expressed as a percentage of the hours worked by the contractor's
aggregate work force by trade in a geographic area.
a. Goals for women: See 43 FR 14899, 14900, Appendix A, April 7, 1978 and 45
FR 85750, 85751, December 30, 1980.
b. Goals for minorities: See 45 FR 65979, 65984, Appendix B-80, October 3,
1980.
Good Cause
A. A legally acceptable defense (usually put forward by a contractor against
whom OFCCP has alleged a violation of its regulations) for not having taken an
action that would otherwise be required.
B. Justification provided by a complainant, and found acceptable by OFCCP,
as the basis for accepting an otherwise untimely complaint filing. See 41 CFR
60-1.21, 250.26 and 741.26.
Good Faith Efforts
This term refers to a contractor's efforts to make all aspects of its
affirmative action plan work. Designing and implementing an effective
affirmative action plan requires sustained attention. The contractor must
analyze its employment and recruitment practices as they affect equal
opportunity, identify problem areas, design and implement measures to address
the problems, and monitor the effectiveness of its program, making adjustments
as circumstances warrant. In evaluating the contractor's good faith efforts,
the EOS must make a careful assessment of the quality and thoroughness of the
contractor's work to implement its program and assure equal opportunity. The
basic components of good faith efforts are (1) outreach and recruitment measures
to broaden candidate pools from which selection decisions are made to include
minorities and women and (2) systematic efforts to assure that selections
thereafter are made without regard to race, sex, or other prohibited factors.
Government
Except where otherwise indicated, government means the government of the
United States of America.
Government Contract
Any agreement or modification thereof between any contracting agency and any
person for the furnishing of supplies or services, or for the use of real or
per-sonal property, including lease arrangements. The term "services,"
as used here, includes, but is not limited to, the following: utility,
construction, transporta-tion, research, insurance, and fund depository,
regard-less of whether the Government is the purchaser or seller. The term "Government
Contract" does not include (a) agreements in which the parties stand in the
relationship of employer and employee and (b) Federally assisted construction
contracts. See 41 CFR 60-1.3, 250.2 and 741.2.
Handicapped Individual
A term used in the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 but replaced by "Individual
with Handicaps" in 1986 amendments to that Act. See "Individual with
Handicaps."
Hispanic
A person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American, or
other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race. This does not include
persons of Portuguese descent or persons from Central or South America who are
not of Spanish origin or culture.
Hometown Plan Areas
Geographical areas designated by the Secretary of Labor where there was a "Hometown
Plan." A Hometown Plan was a cooperative effort, initiated at the local
level, among construction contrators, construction unions and the minority
community to increase the representation of minorities in the construction
trades. Once approved by OFCCP, such plans were published and enforced as bid
conditions for the area. See 43 FR 19473, Appendix B, May 5, 1978.
Immediate Labor Area
The geographic area from which employees reasonably may commute to the
contractor's establishment. It may include one or more contiguous cities,
counties, Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSAs) or parts thereof.
Impact Ratio Analysis
The Impact Ratio Analysis (IRA) is a comparison of the selection rates of
different groups from an identified candidate pool. If the selection rate for
one group is less than 80% of that for another, the IRA is considered adverse.
Individual with a Disability
See "Individual with Handicaps"
Individual with Handicaps
Any person who:
(a) has a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or
more of such person's major life activities;
(b) has a record of such an impairment; or
(c) is regarded as having such an impairment.
This definition does not include an individual currently engaging in the
illegal use of drugs, when the contractor acts on the basis of such use. This
definition does not include an individual who is an alcoholic whose current
abuse of alcohol prevents such individual from performing the duties of the job
in question, or whose employment, by reason of such current alcohol abuse, would
constitute a direct threat to property or safety of others.
The term "individual with handicaps" is used interchangeably with "individual
with a disability" and "handicapped individual."
Injunctive Relief
A court order requiring a person to perform, or to refrain from performing,
a designated act. For example, in an enforcement action OFCCP might seek the
injunctive relief of requiring that the contractor cease asking discriminatory
questions on its job application.
Internal Review Procedure
An internal procedure of contractors capable of resolving discrimination
complaints. By regulation OFCCP allows contractors 60 days to attempt to
resolve internally a complaint of employment discrimination made by an employee
who is an individual with handicaps, a special disabled veteran or a veteran of
the Vietnam era.
Invitation to Self Identify
An invitation by the contractor, extended to employees and applicants for
employment, to identify themselves as individuals with handicaps or special
disabled or Vietnam era veterans for purposes of Section 503 or 38 U.S.C. §4212
in order to permit the contractor to make reasonable accommodation and take
affirmative action on their behalf. All information obtained in response to
such an invitation shall be kept confidential in accordance with 41 CFR
60-741.5(c)(1) or 60-250.5(d).
Job Area
Any subunit of a workforce sector, such as department, job group, job title,
etc.
Job Area Acceptance Range (JAAR)
The JAAR is an analytical tool used to analyze the distribution of employees
in a workforce by comparing the actual percentage of minorities/women in a job
area to their percentage in the relevant larger segment of the contractor's
workforce.
Job Categories
The nine designated categories of the EEO-1 report: officials and managers,
professionals, technicians, sales workers, office and clerical, craft workers
(skilled), operatives (semi-skilled), laborers (unskilled), and service workers.
Job Description
A written statement detailing the duties of a particular job title.
Job Group
One or a group of jobs having similar content, wage rates and opportunities.
See 41 CFR 60-2.11(b).
Job Specification
The minimum qualification(s) the contractor identifies as necessary to
perform a job.
Journey Worker
One who has completed an apprenticeship or otherwise possesses the full
skills and licenses of workers in his/her trade.
Labor Area
Geographic area used in calculating availability. The area may vary from
local to nationwide. (See Chapter 2.) Compare with "Immediate Labor Area."
Layoff
The process by which workers are removed from the active payroll to the
inactive payroll during a reduction-in-force (RIF).
Life Activities (Major Life Activities)
For purposes of Section 503, this term means functions such as caring for
oneself, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing,
learning, and working.
Line of Progression
A series of related jobs in a promotional sequence generally starting with
less difficult, lower paying jobs and progressing to more difficult, higher
paying jobs. Often, the lower jobs provide required training for movement to
the higher level jobs.
Linkage
Linkage is the connection between contractors and appropriate recruitment
and/or training sources. When an underutilization of minorities or women in a
job group is found and there are recruitment/training resources available that
are able to refer qualified applicants to the contractor for consideration, the
EOS will attempt in a Letter of Commitment or Conciliation Agreement to execute
a linkage agreement with the contractor. (See Chapter 3, Section 3J.)
Major Life Activities
See "Life Activities."
Make Whole Relief
Remedies for discrimination that restore the victim of discrimination to his
or her rightful place, i.e., the position, both economically and in terms of
employment status that he/she would have occupied had the discrimination never
taken place. Common elements of make whole relief include an award of the
position the individual was wrongfully denied, back pay with interest, and
retroactive seniority.
Mandatory Job Listing (MJL)
The provision of the affirmative action clause at 41 CFR 250.4 that requires
covered employers to list suit-able job openings with the local office of the
State Employment Service.
Maternity Leave
Childbirth-related absence from work by a woman that does not directly
depend on her medical condition. The term includes leave for
nondisability-related care and nurturing following the birth of a child.
Distinguish from "pregnancy disability leave," but see Manual Section
3G01(h)(2).
Minorities
Men and women of those minority groups for whom EEO-1 reporting is required;
i.e., Black, Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaskan
Native. As used in this Manual, the term may mean these groups in the aggregate
or an individual group. See EEO-1 for further explanation.
New Hire
A worker added to an establishment's payroll for the first time. Compare
with "Rehire."
Noncompliance
A contractor's failure to adhere to the conditions set out in the contract's
equal opportunity and/or affirmative action clauses and/or the regulations
implementing those clauses (41 CFR Chapter 60) and/or failure to correct
violations.
Normal Business Hours
For purposes of access to a contractor's premises, the hours during which
employees to be interviewed are at
work, regardless of the time of day or night. Also used to indicate the
regular business hours during which Section 503 and 38 U.S.C. §4212 AAPs
are available for inspection by employees and applicants for employment.
Notice of Alleged Noncompliance (15 Day Notice)
A letter from OFCCP to a contractor informing it that the agency believes
the contractor has violated the terms of a Conciliation Agreement and that
enforcement proceedings may be initiated unless the contractor demonstrates
within 15 working days from its receipt of the letter that it has not violated
its commitments under the Agreement.
Notice of Violation (NOV)
A letter from OFCCP notifying the contractor that the agency has found
violations of the Executive Order, Section 503 and/or 38 U.S.C. §4212
during a compliance review, and the remedies that are required to resolve those
violations.
Objective Criteria/Procedures
A criterion is objective if it is fixed and measurable. The central
characteristic of an objective criterion is that it can be independently
verified; i.e., different people measuring objective criteria will reach the
same results. Compare with "Subjective Criteria/ Procedures."
On-the-Job Training (OJT)
An employer sanctioned training program, usually at the employer's worksite,
conducted either under close supervision or with assistance, and designed to
teach and qualify an individual to perform a job or element(s) of a job.
Order
Generally, a short-hand term meaning Executive Order 11246, as amended.
The term also is used in phrases dealing with decisions in litigation matters,
such as, Final Decision and Order or Court Order.
Organizational Unit
A department, division, branch, section or other organ-izational entity of a
contractor that operates as a single unit under a common head.
Pacific Islander
See "Asian/Pacific Islander."
Parental Leave
Absence from work by a parent to care for a child.
Pattern or Practice Discrimination
Employer actions constituting a pattern of conduct resulting in
discriminatory treatment toward the members of a class. Pattern or practice
discrimination generally is demonstrated in large measure through statistical
evidence, and can be proven under either the disparate treatment or disparate
impact model.
Person
As defined in OFCCP's regulations, "person" means any natural
person, corporation, partnership, unincorporated association, State or local
government, and any agency, instrumentality or subdivision of such a government.
See 41 CFR 60-1.3.
Physical & Mental Job Qualification Requirements
Physical and mental standards that an employer requires a person performing
or applying for a job to meet.
Placement
In this Manual, placement is often used in the context of the selection or
assignment of individuals in a particular job.
Pre-employment Medical Examination
An evaluation of the health status of an applicant for employment.
Predetermination Notice
A letter in which OFCCP notifies the contractor of its preliminary finding
that the contractor has engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination. The
Notice states the basis for the preliminary findings and offers the contractor
the opportunity to respond.
Pregnancy-Disability Leave
Pregnancy and childbirth-related absence from work by a woman affected by
pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions. It includes leave prior to
childbirth when medically indicated and leave to recover from pregnancy,
childbirth or related medical conditions following the birth of a child.
Prima Facie Case
A legal term that refers to a case sufficient on its face to prevail in the
absence of contradictory evidence.
Problem Areas
Aspects of the contractor's employment decisions, policies, or practices
that appear to raise questions regarding the contractor's compliance with the
Executive Order, Section 503 or 38 U.S.C. §4212.
Progression Line Charts
Written listings of a contractor's line of progression. See "Line of
Progression."
Prohibited Factor
A factor prohibited by law from being used in making employment decisions.
Under Executive Order 11246, as amended, the prohibited factors are race, color,
religion, sex and national origin. Under Section 503, the prohibited factor is
handicap; under 38 U.S.C. §4212, it is status as a special disabled or
Vietnam era veteran.
Promotable Minorities and Women
Minorities and women who are qualified and eligible for promotion based upon
valid selection criteria.
Promotable or Transferable
In the context of developing data for availability, those employees who are
currently employed in a job group or groups that serve or could serve as a
source from which selections are or could be made for other job groups.
Promotion
Any personnel action resulting in movement to a position affording higher
pay and/or greater rank, and/or requiring greater skill or responsibility, or
the opportunity to attain such.
Proof of Discrimination
"Proofs" of discrimination are the factual
formulations which show that discrimination under a particular theory exists.
These formulations describe the kinds of facts needed to show a nexus between a
particular adverse action or result and a particular prohibited factor. Proof
requires evidence; see "Anecdotal Evidence," "Comparative
Evidence," and "Statistical Evidence."
Qualified Special Disabled Veteran
A special disabled veteran (see below) who is capable of performing a
particular job with or without a reasonable accommodation to his or her
disability.
Qualified Individual with a Handicap(s)
An individual with handicaps (see above) who is capable of performing a
particular job, with or without reason-able accommodation to his or her
handicap.
Reasonable Accommodation (Section 503)
(a) Any modification or adjustment to a job application process that
enables a qualified individual with handicaps to be considered for the position
such qualified individual desires, and which will not impose an undue hardship
on the contractor's business (see, "Undue Hardship" below); or
(b) Any modification or adjustment to the work environment, or to the
manner or circumstances under which the position held or desired is customarily
performed, that enables a qualified individual with handicaps to perform the
essential functions of the position, and which will not impose an undue hardship
on the operation of the contractor's business; or
(c) Any modification that enables a contractor's employee with handicaps to
enjoy equal benefits and privileges of employment as are enjoyed by its other
similary situated employees without handicaps, and which will not impose an
undue hardship on the operation of the contractor's business.
Reasonable accommodation may include but is not limited to: (1) Making
existing facilities used by employees readily accessible to and usable by
individuals with handicaps; (2) Job restructuring; part-time or modified work
schedules; (3) Reassignment to a vacant position; (4) Acquisition or
modifications of equipment or devices; (5) Appropriate adjustment or
modifications of examinations, training materials, or policies; (8) the
provision of qualified readers or interpreters; and, (7) other similar
accommodations for individuals with handicaps.
To determine the appropriate reasonable accommodation it may be necessary
for the contractor to initiate an informal, interactive process with the
qualified individual with a handicap in need of the accommodation. This process
should identify the precise limitations resulting from the disability and
potential reasonable accommodations that could overcome those limitations.
Compare with "Religious Accommodation."
Reasonable Recruitment Area
The area from which the contractor usually seeks or reasonably could seek
workers for a particular job group. (See Section 2G04(c).)
Recall
The process or action by which workers are returned to active employment
from layoff.
Recruiting Source
Any person, organization or agency used to refer or provide workers for
employment.
Rehire
To reengage a formerly employed worker after a complete break in employment
status. Compare with "Recall."
Relevant Labor Market Area
Geographic area used in determining availability (Refer to Chapter 2 of this
Manual).
Religious Accommodation
Requirement of a contractor to accommodate sincere religious observances and
practices of an employee or prospective employee unless the contractor can
demonstrate that it is unable to do so without undue hardship on the conduct of
its business. See 41 CFR 60-50.3. Anything requiring more than a de minimis
cost has been held by the Supreme Court to constitute "undue hardship"
in this context.
Requisite Skills
Those basic skills needed to perform a job satisfactorily.
Right of Response
The contractor's right to produce a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for
its actions once OFCCP has made a prima facie showing of discrimination.
Rightful Place
The job, seniority level (if applicable), salary level, etc. that a
discriminatee would now hold had there been no discrimination.
Section 503
Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 793), as amended.
Seniority
Length of employment as defined by the employer or applicable collective
bargaining agreement. (Seniority may be both competitive and non-competitive,
and may be defined in terms of company seniority, facility seniority,
departmental seniority, etc.) Employees may have different seniority for
different purposes (e.g., job bidding rights governed by department seniority
and leave accural governed by company seniority).
Show Cause Notice
A letter from OFCCP to the contractor ordering it to show cause why
enforcement proceedings should not be instituted. A show cause notice follows
OFCCP's issuance of a notice of violation and failure of conciliation. The show
cause notice provides that the contractor must come into compliance within 30
days or
OFCCP will recommend the institution of enforcement proceedings.
Skill Inventory
A list of persons, categorized by their skills, kept by a contractor to
encourage maximum use of the skills of applicants or employees.
Special Disabled Veteran
A veteran who: (a) is entitled to compensation (or who, but for the
receipt of military retirement pay, would be entitled to compensation) under
laws admini-stered by the Department of Veterans Affairs for a disability that
is (i) rated at 30 percent or more, or (ii) rated at 10 or 20 percent in the
case of a veteran who has been determined under Section 1506 of the Veterans'
Rehabilitation and Education Act Amendments of 1980 to have a serious employment
handicap; or
(b) was discharged or released from active duty because of a
service-connected disability. See 38 U.S.C. §4211.
Standard Deviation
A statistical measure used to describe the probability that differences
between similarly situated groups (such as in selection rates, wages, etc.)
occurred by chance.
Standard Form 100
See "EEO-1 Report."
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Code
A numerical coding system developed under the sponsorship of the Office of
Management and Budget that classifies establishments by principal activity or
service.
Statistical Evidence
Evidence that explains or analyzes the meaning of numerical differences in
selection rates, wages, or other employment decisions between members of one
group and others who were similarly situated. Statistical evidence also may be
used to show which factors did or did not affect selection decisions, wages, or
other employment decisions. Also see "Anecdotal Evidence" and "Comparative
Evidence."
Subcontract
Any agreement or arrangement between a contractor and any person (in which
the parties do not stand in the relationship of an employer and an employee):
(a) for the furnishing of supplies or services or for the use of real or
personal property, including lease arrangements, which, in whole or in part, is
necessary to the performance of any one or more Government contracts; or
(b) under which any portion of the contractor's obligation under one or
more Government contracts is performed, undertaken or assumed. See 41 CFR
60-1.3.
Subcontractor
Any person holding a subcontract, or for enforcement purposes any person who
has held a subcontract, subject to the Executive Order, Section 503 or 38 U.S.C.
4212. See definition of "Subcontract."
Subjective Criteria/Procedures
Employment qualifications, selection standards or processes that require
judgment in their application, such that different persons applying such
criteria/procedures would not necessarily reach the same conclusion. A
criterion is subjective if it is not fixed or measurable. Compare "Objective
Criteria/Processes."
Substantially Limits
In the application of Section 503, this means to affect significantly an
individual's ability to perform a major life activity, or to restrict
significantly an individual as to the condition, manner, or duration under which
such individual can perform a particular major life activity. The following
factors should be considered in determining whether an individual is
substantially limited in a major life activity: (a) The nature and severity of
the impairment; (b) The duration or expected duration of the impairment; and (c)
The permanent or long term impact, or the expected permanent or long term impact
of or resulting from the impairment.
Support Data
Statistical data, documentation and other materials regarding employment
practices, generally used in the development, support and/or justification of an
affirmative action program.
Systemic Discrimination
Employment policies or practices that serve to differentiate or to
perpetuate a differentiation in terms or conditions of employment of applicants
or employees because of their status as members of a particular group. Such
policies or practices may or may not be facially neutral, and intent to
discriminate may or may not be involved. Systemic discrimination, sometimes
called class discrimination or a pattern or practice of discrimination, concerns
a recurring practice or continuing policy rather than an isolated act of
discrimination.
Termination of Employment
Separation of an employee from the active and inactive payroll.
Terms and Conditions of Employment
This phrase includes all aspects of the employment relationships between an
employee and his or her employer including, but not limited to, compensation,
fringe benefits, leave policies, job placement, physical environment,
work-related rules, work assignments, training and education, opportunities to
serve on committees and decision-making bodies, opportunities for promotion, and
maintenance of a nondiscriminatory working environment.
38 U.S.C. §4212
The affirmative action and nondiscrimination provisions of the Vietnam Era
Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended. In this Manual,
sometimes shortened to "Section 4212." Prior to 1991, when it was
redesignated, the law was referred to as "38 U.S.C. §2012.
Tolling
The suspension of the running of a statute of limitations for equitable
reasons. Because the Title VII 180
day limit on filing a charge with the EEOC has been held to be a statute of
limitations, there have been numerous court cases discussing tolling of that
limit. By comparison, the regulations for OFCCP's three programs provide for
the filing of a complaint within 180 days of the alleged violation unless the
time for filing is extended by the Director for good cause shown. There is no
similar good cause language in Title VII. The good cause authority allows the
Director to waive the 180 day limit without raising questions of tolling.
Training Agency
Any person, organization or agency whose purpose is to train workers.
Transfer
Movement (usually lateral) from one position or function to another.
Underutilization
Having materially fewer minorities or women in a particular job group than
reasonably would be expected based upon their availability. See Section 2G06.
Undue Hardship
In general, with respect to the provision of a reasonable accommodation,
significant difficulty or expense incurred by a contractor. Whether an
accommodation is reasonable requires a case-by-case determination. For Section
503, see Chapter 6, Appendix A, IV. For Executive Order 11246, see Manual
Section 3H02.
Unemployed
Under the criteria established by the Bureau of the Census of the U.S.
Department of Commerce, civilians 16 years old and over who:
(a) were neither "at work" nor "with a job" during the
reference week (see "Employed");
(b) were looking for work during the last 4 weeks; and
(c) were available to accept a job.
Also included as unemployed are persons who did not work at all during the
reference week and were waiting to be called back to a job from which they had
been laid off.
Uniformly Applied
Applying employment criteria/processes in the same manner to members of a
particular race, color, religion, sex or national origin group and others.
Union Shop
A factory, business, etc. operating under a contract between the employer
and a labor union, that requires that all employees within the bargaining unit
pay uniform periodic dues to the union, beginning within a specific period after
hire.
Vestibule Training
Informal orientation provided by the contractor for the benefit of new
employees.
Veteran of the Vietnam Era
A person who:
(a) served on active duty for more than 180 days, any part of which occurred
between August 5, 1964 and May 7, 1975, and was discharged or released
there-from with other than a dishonorable discharge; or
(b) was discharged or released from active duty for a service-connected
disability if any part of such active duty was performed between August 5, 1964
and May 7, 1975.
Violation
Failure to fulfill a requirement of the Executive Order, Section 503 or 38
U.S.C. 4212, or their implementing rules, regulations and orders. See "Deficiency."
(The terms violation and deficiency are often used interchangeably.)
White
An individual, not of Hispanic origin, with origins in any of the original
peoples of Europe, North Africa or the Middle East.
Wrongful Discharge
Generally, unlawful employment termination. The phrase "wrongful
discharge" is frequently used to refer to exceptions created by the courts
in some states to the employment at will doctrine (see above). Courts in such
states differ in the circumstances in which they will allow wrongful discharge
suits challenging a termination. State law on this issue is not of direct
concern to OFCCP. The Executive Order, Section 503, 38 U.S.C. §4212 and
implementing regulations prohibit termination based on a prohibited factor.
1C GLOSSARY OF GENERAL ABBREVIATIONS
AA Affirmative Action
AAP Affirmative Action Program
ADA Americans with Disabilities Act
ALJ Administrative Law Judge
ADD Assistant District Director
AO Area Office, OFCCP
AOD Area Office Director, OFCCP; Now DD (District Director)
APA Administrative Procedure Act
ARA Assistant Regional Administrator, OFCCP; Now RD (Regional Director)
BFOQ Bona Fide Occupational Qualification
CA Conciliation Agreement
CAS Complaint Administration System
CEO Chief Executive Officer
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CO Compliance Officer
COA Compliance Officer Assistant
CRIS Compliance Review Information System
D&B Dun & Bradstreet
DBE Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
DD District Director
DO District Office
DOJ Department of Justice
DOL Department of Labor
DORO Division of Regional Operations
EEO Equal Employment Opportunity
EEOC Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
EIN Employer Identification Number
EO Executive Order
EOA Equal Opportunity Assistant; Now, Compliance Officer Assistant
EOS Equal Opportunity Specialist; Now, Compliance Officer
ESA Employment Standards Administration
ETA Employment and Training Administration
FCCM Federal Contract Compliance Manual
FO Field Office, OFCCP; Now, Area Office
FOD Field Office Director, OFCCP; Now, Assistant District Director (ADD)
FOIA Freedom of Information Act
FR Federal Register
IRA Impact Ratio Analysis
IRCA Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
JAAR Job Area Acceptance Range
LOC Letter of Commitment
LOP Line of Progression
MBE Minority Business Enterprise
MJL Mandatory Job Listing
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MSS Management Support Staff
NO National Office, OFCCP
NOV Notice of Violation
NSOL National Office, Solicitor of Labor
NRI Notification of Results of Investigation
OFCCP Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
RSOL Regional Solicitor of Labor
SCN Show Cause Notice
SCRR Standard Compliance Review Report (Supply and Service)
SCCRF Standard Construction Compliance Report Form
SEC. 503 Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. §793),
as amended
SES State Employment Service
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SMSA Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
SOL Solicitor of Labor
TERO Tribal Employment Rights Office
TRIS Time Reporting Information System
Title VI Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended
Title VII Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended
USES United States Employment Service
U.S.C. United States Code
V/H Veterans/Handicapped
VES Veterans Employment Service
VETS Veterans' Employment and Training Service (DOL)
WBE Women's Business Enterprise
WEAL Women's Equity Action League
1D STANDARD FORMS LIST
NUMBER TITLE/EXPLANATION
CC-4 Complaint Form
CC-41 Hometown Plan Administrative Committee Quarterly Report
CC-56 Time Sheet
CC-58 Complaint Report Sheet
CC-58a Financial Payments Sheet
CC-73 Quality Audit Form for Supply and Service Review
CC-74 Quality Audit Form for Construction Review
CC-75 Quality Audit Form for Complaint Investigation
CC-100 Compliance Review Report Sheet forwarded to the Regional Office to
initiate the CRIS computer tracking system at the time the contractor is sent
the "scheduling letter"
CC-100a Compliance Review Report Sheet generated by the CRIS and returned
to the District/Area office after submission of the CC-100
CC-101 Regional Office Report Sheet used for the CRIS
CC-104 Report of Remedies Agreed to for Identifiable Persons
CC-257 Monthly Employment Utilization Report; document used by construction
companies to report monthly hours worked by trade
SF-50 Notice of Personnel Action Form
SF-71 Request for Leave Form
SF-171 Federal Employment Application