FILING DISCRIMINATION COMPLAINTS
Number: DAO 215-9 Effective Date: 1992-10-19
SECTION 1. PURPOSE.
.01
This Order provides for the issuance of Department of Commerce
procedures for the use of aggrieved employees or applicants for
employment in the filing and processing of discrimination
complaints.
.02 The procedures for filing and processing
discrimination complaints included in Appendix A to this Order meet
the Regulations of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
which require Federal agencies to issue EEO complaints regulations
for employees and applicants for employment.
SECTION 2. STATUS AND APPLICABILITY.
.01
This Order is consistent with the EEOC regulations for Agency
Discrimination Complaints Processing (29 CFR Parts 1614.105 through
1614.204) and incorporates those provisions of the EEOC regulations
and any amendments thereto by reference. Whenever there is a conflict
between the provisions and the requirements of this Order and the
EEOC regulations, the EEOC regulations will prevail.
.02
This Order applies to employees and applicants for employment in the
Department, except aliens employed or applying for employment outside
the limits of the United States; and is limited to complaints of
employment discrimination filed under;
a. Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2000e);
b.
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 U.S.C. 701-794);
c.
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended (29
U.S.C. 621-634); and
d. Equal Pay Act (29 U.S.C. 201 et
seq.).
SECTION 3. DISTRIBUTION.
.01
The Office of Civil rights will issue and distribute Appendix A to
EEO Officers for dissemination to EEO Counselors, management
officials, interested employees, applicants for employment and their
representatives. The Director of Civil Rights is authorized to
develop and issue subsequent changes to the Appendix in accordance
with DAO 200-3, and subject to prior review and comments by the
Office of Inspector General and the Office of the General
Counsel.
.02 EEO Officers shall submit a request for a
supply of Appendix A to the Director of Civil Rights in accordance
with instructions that the Director will issue.
Signed by: Director of Civil Rights
Approved by: Chief Financial Officer and Assistant Secretary for Administration
Office of Primary Interest: Office of Civil Rights, Compliance Division
Index Changes:
Add
Complaints,
Filing Discrimination 215-9
Discrimination Complaints,
Filing 215-9
Filing Discrimination Complaints
215-9
APPENDIX A DAO 215-9
PROCEDURES FOR
PROCESSING DISCRIMINATION COMPLAINTS IN THE
DEPARTMENT OF
COMMERCE
The regulations of the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) require Federal agencies to promulgate
procedures for complaint processing. This Appendix is in accordance
with the EEOC's regulations and wherever possible uses language
identical to those regulations. The purpose is to ensure that
provisions in the appendix pertaining to government-wide requirements
for complaint processing will be interpreted as intended by the EEOC.
The effective date of this Appendix is October 1, 1992.
SECTION
1. INDIVIDUAL COMPLAINTS OF DISCRIMINATION
.01
PROCEDURE.
All individual complaints of discrimination on
the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age,
handicap or retaliation shall be processed in compliance with the
principles and requirements of this section.
.02
PRE-COMPLAINT PROCESSING.
a. An aggrieved person who
believes that they have been discrimination against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, age or handicap, or retaliated
against because of engaging in protected activity, must consult a
Counselor prior to filing a complaint to try to resolve the matter
informally. Contact should be made with a Counselor designated to
serve the operating unit or Departmental office at the location where
the discriminatory incident is alleged to have occurred.
1.
An aggrieved person must initiate contact with a Counselor within 45
days of the matter alleged to be discriminatory or, if a personnel
action, within 45 days of the effective date of the action.
2.
The Department or the EEOC shall extend the 45-day time limit in
subparagraph a.1. of this section when the individual shows that they
were not notified of the time limit and was not otherwise aware of
them, that they did not know and reasonably should not have known
that the discriminatory matter or personnel action occurred, that
despite due diligence they were prevented by circumstances beyond
their control from contacting the Counselor within the time limits,
or for other reasons considered sufficient by the Department or the
EEOC.
b. At the initial counseling session, Counselors
shall advise individuals, in writing, of their rights and
responsibilities, including the right to request a hearing after an
investigation by the Department, election rights pursuant to 29 CFR
1614.301 and 302, the right to file a notice of intent to sue
pursuant to 20 CFR 1614.201(a) and a lawsuit under the Age
Discrimination Employment Act instead of an administrative complaint
of age discrimination under this section, the duty to mitigate
damages, raised in pre-complaint counseling (or issues like or
related to issues raised in pre-complaint counseling) may be alleged
in a subsequent complaint filed with the Department. Counselors must
advise individuals of their duty to keep the Department and the EEOC
informed of their current address and to serve copies of appeal
papers on the Department. The notice required by subparagraphs d. or
e. of this section shall include a notice of the right to a class
complaint. All notices issued by a Counselor must be transmitted to
the aggrieved person and their representative either by certified
mail, return receipt requested, or by any other method that enables
the Department and the EEOC to determine the date of receipt.
If
the aggrieved person informs the Counselor that they wish to file a
class complaint, the Counselor shall explain the class complaint
procedures and the responsibilities of the class agent.
c.
The Director of Civil Rights shall distribute, through the operating
unit EEO Officer, the Counselors procedures consistent with
instructions contained in EEOC Management directives. The Counselor
shall conduct all counseling activities according to procedures
distributed by the Director of Civil Rights. When advised that a
complaint has been filed, the Counselor shall submit a written report
within 15 days to the Chief, Compliance Division, Office of Civil
Rights, concerning the issues discussed and action taken during
counseling. The Chief, Compliance Division, shall submit a copy of
the report to the aggrieved person. The Director of Civil Rights may
authorize an operating unit's or Departmental office's EEO Officer to
notify the Counselor of the complaint, received the report and
forward the original report to the Chief, Compliance Division.
d.
Unless the aggrieved person and the operating unit's or Departmental
office's EEO Officer mutually agree to a longer counseling period
under subparagraph e. of this section, or the operating unit or
Departmental office has an established alternate dispute resolution
procedure under subparagraph f. of this section, the Counselor shall
conduct the final interview with the aggrieved person within 30 days
of the date the aggrieved person brought the matter to the
Counselor's attention. If the matter is not resolved, the aggrieved
person shall be informed, in writing, by the Counselor of the right
to file a discrimination complaint. The notice shall inform the
aggrieved person of the right to file a discrimination complaint with
the Director of Civil Rights or the operating unit's or Departmental
office's EEO Officer within 15 days of receipt of the notice, and of
the complainant's duty to assure that the Department is informed
immediately if the complainant retains counsel or a
representative.
e. Prior to the end of the 30-day period,
the aggrieved person may agree, in writing, with the EEO Officer to
postpone the final interview and extend the counseling period for an
additional period of no more than 60 days. If the matter has not been
resolved before the conclusion of the agreed extension, the notice
described in subparagraph d. of this section shall be issued.
f.
Where the operating unit or Departmental office has an established
alternate dispute resolution procedure, approved by the Director of
Civil Rights and the Office of the General Counsel, and the aggrieved
individual agrees with the concurrence of the operating unit's or
Departmental office's EEO Officer to participate in the procedure,
the pre-complaint processing period shall be 90 days. If the matter
has not been resolved before the 90th day, the notice described in
subparagraph d. of this section shall be issued.
g. The
Counselor shall not attempt in any way to restrain the aggrieved
person from filing a complaint. The Counselor shall not reveal the
identity of an aggrieved person who has consulted with the Counselor,
unless authorized to do so by the aggrieved person, or until a formal
complaint of discrimination involving the matter(s) discussed has
been filed by the person.
h. When, at the informal
counseling stage, an aggrieved person has named or otherwise
identified an individual as responsible for an alleged act of
discrimination, the Counselor must solicit the views of that
"responding official" unless the Counselor otherwise
obtains and provides information that exonerates the official to the
clear satisfaction of the aggrieved person. Prior to the Counselor's
interview with the official, the latter must be advised that they
have been named or identified by a potential complainant, must be
informed of the nature of any accusation made, and must be advised of
the right to have a representative present during the interview to
provide advice on how to respond to any questions the Counselor may
ask the Counselor must be careful, however, not to reveal the
identity of the aggrieved individual when the individual has not
authorized the Counselor to do so.
i. Every counseling
contact must result I a settlement agreement signed by the aggrieved
person or issuance of a notice as described in subparagraph d. of
this section.
.03 FILING AND PRESENTATION OF FORMAL
COMPLAINTS.
a. Complaint of discrimination filed with the
Department must allege that the Department, an operating unit or a
Departmental office of the Department discriminated against the
complainant.
b. A complaint must be filed with the
Director of Civil Rights, of the Department or the operating unit or
Departmental office within 15 days of receipt of the notice required
by subparagraphs .02d., e. or f. of this section.
c. A
complaint must contain a signed statement from the person claiming to
be aggrieved or that person's attorney. This statement must be
sufficiently precise to identify the aggrieved individual and the
operating unit or Departmental office and to describe generally the
action(s) or practices(s) that form the basis of the complaint. The
complaint must also contain a telephone number and address where the
complainant or the representative can be contacted.
d. The
Office f Civil Rights shall acknowledge receipt of a complaint, in
writing, and inform the complainant of the date on which the
complaint was received. Such acknowledgment shall also advise the
complainant that:
1. the complainant has the right to
appeal the final decision or dismissal of all or a portion of a
complaint; and
2. the Department shall conduct a complete
and fair investigation of the complaint within 180 days of the filing
of the complaint unless the parties agree in writing to extend that
period.
.04 DISMISSALS OF COMPLAINTS.
The
Director of Civil Rights shall dismiss a complaint or a portion of a
complaint:
a. that fails to state a claim under paragraph
.01 or subparagraph .03a. of this section;
b. that fails
to comply with the applicable time limits contained in paragraph
1.02, 1.03 and subparagraph 2.04b. of this Appendix, unless the
Department extends the time limits; or that raises a matter that has
not been brought to the attention of a Counselor and is not like or
related to a matter that has been brought to the attention of a
Counselor;
c. that is the basis of a pending civil action
in a United States District Court in which the complainant is a party
provided that at least 180 days have passed since the filing of the
administrative complaint, or that was the basis of a civil action
decided by a United States District Court in which the complainant
was a party;
d. where the complainant has raised the
matter in a negotiated grievance procedure that permits allegations
of discrimination or in appeal t the Merit Systems Protection
Board;
e. that is moot or alleges that a proposal to take
a personnel action, or other preliminary step to taking a personnel
action is discriminatory;
f. where the complainant cannot
be located, provided that reasonable efforts have been made to locate
the complainant and the complainant has not responded within 15 days
of its receipt or the complaint's response does not address the
Department's request, provided that the request included a notice of
the proposed dismissal. Instead of dismissing for failure to
cooperate, the complaint may be adjudicated if sufficient information
for that purpose is available; or
h. if, prior to the
issuance of the notice required by subparagraph .05f. of this
section, the complainant refuses within 30 days of receipt of an
offer of settlement to accept a Department offer of full relief
containing a certification from the Director of Civil Rights that the
offer constitutes full relief, provided that the offer gave notice
that failure to accept would result, provided that the offer gave
notice that failure to accept would result in dismissal of the
complaint.
.05 INVESTIGATION OF COMPLAINTS.
a.
Upon the acceptance of a formal complaint, the Office of Civil Rights
shall conduct or arrange for an investigation of the matter.
b.
The Office of Civil Rights shall develop a complete and impartial
factual record upon which to make findings. Complaint investigations
will be conducted in accordance with existing guidance provided by
the EEOC.
c. The following procedures apply:
1.
The complainant, the operating unit, Departmental office, or any
Federal employee shall produce such documentary and testimonial
evidence as the investigator deems necessary.
2.
Investigators are authorized to administer oaths. Statements of
witnesses shall be made under oath or affirmation or, alternatively
by written statement under penalty of perjury.
3. A
responding official, whether identified at the time a formal
complaint is filed or during the investigation, must be given an
opportunity to respond to all allegations made against them. In this
respect, the investor should interview and receive information from
the responding official as often as may be necessary to ensure that
the responding official has an opportunity to respond to all the
allegations. Pertinent documents (i.e., documents in which the
responding official is identified and charged with discrimination or
other wrongdoing) intended for inclusion in the investigative file,
including the Counselor's report, in which the responding official is
named, must be made available to the official for this purpose. Names
of and identifying information on persons other than the complainant
and the responding official should be deleted by the investigator
from copies of the documents shown to the responding official, to
protect such persons from unwarranted invasion of privacy.
4.
When the complainant, operating unit, Departmental office, or Federal
employee fails without good cause to respond fully and in a timely
fashion to requests for documents, records, comparative data,
statistics, affidavits, or the attendance of witness(es), the
investigator may note in the investigative record that the decision
maker should, or the EEOC on appeal may, in appropriate
circumstances:
(a) draw an adverse inference that the
requested information, or the testimony of the requested witness,
would have reflected unfavorably on the party refusing to provide the
requested information;
(b) consider the matters to which
the requested information or testimony pertains to be established in
favor of the opposing party;
copyright exclude other
evidence offered by the party failing to produce the requested
information or witness;
(d) issue a decision fully or
partially in favor of the opposing party; or
(e) take such
other actions as deemed appropriate.
5. When it becomes
apparent to the investigator that a complainant may fail to respond
as required, the investigator will immediately advise the
complainant, in writing, that failure to respond within a specified
time may result in an adverse inference.
6. When it
becomes apparent to the investigator that an employee of an operating
unit or Departmental office may fail to respond as required, the
investigator will immediately notify the appropriate EEO Officer, in
writing, of the failure to respond and request assistance in
eliciting the response.
7. All investigations will be
conducted by investigators with appropriate security clearances.
d.
The Office of Civil Rights, as required by the regulations of the
EEOC, shall complete an investigation within 180 days of the date of
filing an individual complaint or within the time period contained in
an order from the Office of Federal Operations, EEOC on an appeal
from a dismissal pursuant to the EEOC's regulations at 29 CFR
1614.107. However, by written agreement within those time periods,
the complainant and the Department may voluntarily extend the time
period for not more than an additional 90 days. The Department may
unilaterally extend the time period or any period of extension agreed
upon for not more than an additional 30 days where it must sanitize a
complaint file that may contain information classified pursuant to
Executive Order No. 12356, or successor orders, in the interest of
national defense or foreign policy, provided the Department notifies
the complainant of the extension.
e. Where time permits,
the Department, at its election, shall provide a draft copy of the
investigation to both the complainant and the EEO officer for the
operating unit or Departmental office for their review. Either party
may request that additional information be gathered and added to the
investigative file. The Office of Civil Rights, Compliance Division
will review any comments received and make a final determination as
the weather any supplementation of the investigative file is
required.
f. Within 180 days from the filing of the
complaint, within the time period contained in an order from the
Office of Federal Operations, EEOC on an appeal from a dismissal, or
within any period of extension provided for in subparagraph d. above,
the Department shall notify the complainant that the investigation
has been completed, shall provide the complainant with a copy of the
final investigative file, and shall notify the complainant that,
within 30 days of receipt of the final investigative file, the
complainant has the right to request a hearing through the Office of
Civil Rights before an administrative judge or to request an
immediate final decision pursuant to 29 CFR 1614.110 from the
Director of Civil Rights. In the absence of the required notice, the
complainant may request a hearing, directly from the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, at any time after 180 days has elapsed from
the filing of the complaint.
.06 HEARING.
a. If
the complainant makes a request within the time frames set forth in
subparagraph .05f. of this section, for a hearing, the Office of
Civil Rights shall request that the EEOC appoint an administrative
judge to conduct a hearing in accordance with this section. Any
hearing will be conducted by an administrative judge or hearing
examiner with appropriate security clearances. Where the
administrative judge determines that the complainant is raising or
intends to pursue issues like or related to those raised in the
complaint, but which the Department has not had an opportunity to
address, the administrative judge shall remand any such issue for
counseling in accordance with paragraph .02 of this section and for
such other processing as ordered by the administrative judge.
b.
Discovery - The administrative judge shall notify the parties of the
right to seek discovery prior to the hearing and may issue such
discovery orders as are appropriate. Unless the parties agree in
writing concerning the methods and scope of discovery, the party
seeking discovery shall request authorization from the administrative
judge prior to commencing discovery. Both parties are entitled to
reasonable development of evidence on matters relevant to the issues
raised in the complaint, but the administrative judge may limit the
quantity and timing of discovery. Evidence may be developed through
interrogatories, deposition, and requests for admissions,
stipulations or production of documents. It shall be grounds for
objection to producing evidence that the information sought by either
party is irrelevant, over burdensome, repetitious, or privileged.
c. Conduct of hearing - The Department shall provide for
the attendance at a hearing of all its employees who are approved as
witnesses by an administrative judge. Attendance at hearings will be
limited to persons determined by the administrative judge to have
direct knowledge relating to the complaint. Hearings are part of the
investigative process and are thus closed to the public. The
administrative judge shall have the power to regulate the conduct of
a hearing, limit the number of witnesses where testimony would be
repetitious, and exclude any person from the hearing for contumacious
conduct or misbehavior that obstructs the hearing. The administrative
judge shall receive into evidence information or documents relevant
to the complaint. Rules of evidence shall not be applied strictly,
but the administrative judge shall exclude irrelevant or repetitious
evidence. The administrative judge or the EEOC may refer to the
Disciplinary Committee of the appropriate Bar Association any
attorney or, upon reasonable notice and an opportunity to be heard,
suspend or disqualify from representing complainants or agencies in
EEOC hearings any representative who refuses to follow the orders of
an administrative judge, or who otherwise engages in improper
conduct.
1. The following procedures apply to hearings of
complaints:
(a) The complainant, the operating unit,
Departmental office, or any Federal employee shall produce
documentary and testimonial evidence as the administrative judge
deems necessary.
(b) Statements from witnesses under oath
(administrative judges are authorized to administer oaths),
affirmation, or alternatively written under penalty of
perjury.
copyright When the complainant, or the
Department, or its employees fail without good cause shown to respond
fully and in timely fashion to requests for documents, records,
comparative data, statistics, affidavits, or the attendance of
witness(es), the administrative judge may, in appropriate
circumstances:
(1) draw an adverse inference that the
requested information, or the testimony of the requested witness,
would have reflected unfavorably on the party refusing to provide the
requested information;
(2) consider the matters to which
the requested information or testimony pertains to be established in
favor of the opposing party;
(3) exclude other evidence
offered by the party failing to produce the requested information or
witness;
(4) issue a decision fully or partially in favor
of the opposing party; or
(5) take such other actions as
appropriate.
d. Findings and conclusions without
hearing.
(1) If a party believes that some or all material
facts are not in genuine dispute and there is no genuine dispute and
there is no genuine issue as to credibility, the party may, at least
15 days prior to the date of the hearing or at such earlier time as
required by the administrative judge, file a statement with the
administrative judge setting forth the fact or facts and referring to
the parts of the record relied on to support the statement. The
statement must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue as to any
such material fact. The party shall serve the statement on the
opposing party.
(2) If the opposing party files an
opposition within 15 days of receipt of the statement in subparagraph
d.(1) of this section, the opposition may refer to the record in the
case to rebut the statement that a fact is not in dispute or may file
an affidavit stating that the party cannot, for reasons stated,
present facts to oppose the request. After considering the
submissions, the administrative judge may order that discovery be
permitted on the fact or facts involved, limit the hearing to the
issues remaining in dispute, issue findings and conclusions without a
hearing or issue findings and conclusions without holding
hearing.
(3) If the administrative judge determines upon
their own initiative that some or all facts are not in genuine
dispute, they may, after giving notice to the parties and providing
them an opportunity to respond in writing within 15 calendar days,
issue an order limiting the scope of the hearing or issue findings
and conclusions without holding a hearing.
e. Record of
hearing - The hearing shall be recorded and the EEO Officer shall
arrange and pay for verbatim transcripts. All documents submitted to,
and accepted by, the administrative judge at the hearing shall be
made part of the record of the hearing. If the Department submits a
document that is accepted, it shall furnish a copy of the document to
the complainant. If the complainant submits a document that is
accepted, the administrative judge shall make the document available
to the Department representative for reproduction.
f.
Findings and conclusions - Unless the administrative judge makes a
written determination that good cause exists for extending the time
limit for issuing findings of fact and conclusions of law, the
administrative judge shall within 180 days of a request for a hearing
being received by EEOC, issue findings of fact and conclusions of law
on the merits of the complaint, and shall order appropriate relief
where discrimination is found with regard to the matter that gave
rise to the complaint. The administrative judge shall send copies of
the entire record, including the transcript, and the findings and
conclusions to the Director of Civil Rights by certified mail, return
receipt requested. Within 60 days of receipt of the findings and
conclusions, the Director of Civil Rights may accept, reject or
modify the findings and conclusions or the relief ordered by the
administrative judge and issue a final decision in accordance with 29
CFR 1614.110. If the Department does not, within 60 days of receipt,
reject or modify the findings and conclusions of the administrative
judge, then the relief ordered shall become the final decision of the
Department and the complainant shall be notified of the final
decision in accordance with section 29 CFR 1614.110.
.07
FINAL DECISIONS.
Within 60 days of receiving notification
that a complainant has requested an immediate decision from the
Department or within 60 days of the end of the 30-day period for the
complainant to request a hearing or an immediate final decision,
under subparagraph 1.05f. of this section, where the complainant has
not requested either a hearing or a decision, or within 60 days of
receiving the findings and conclusions of an administrative judge,
under subparagraph 1.06f. of this section, the director of Civil
Rights shall issue a final decision. The final decision shall consist
of findings by the Department on the merits of each issue in the
complaint and, when discrimination is found, appropriate remedies and
relief in accordance with 29 CFR 1614.501. The final decision shall
contain notice of the right to appeal to the EEOC, the name and
address of the department official upon whom an appeal should be
served, notice of the right to file a civil action in federal
district court, the name of the proper defendant in any such lawsuit
and the applicable time limits for appeals and lawsuits. A copy of
EEOC Form 573, Notice of Appeal/Petition, shall be attached to the
decision.
SECTION 2. CLASS COMPLAINTS OF
DISCRIMINATION
.01 COVERAGE.
All class
complaints of discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion,
sex, national origin, age or handicap shall be processed in
compliance with the principles and requirements of this section.
.02
DEFINITIONS.
a. A "class" is a group of
Department employees, former Department employees, or applicants for
employment who, it is alleged, have been, or are being adversely
affected, by a Department personnel management policy or practice
which discriminates against the group on the basis of their race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, or handicap.
b. A
"class complaint" is a complaint of discrimination filed on
behalf of a class alleging that:
1. the class is so
numerous that a consolidated complaint of the members of the class is
impractical;
2. there are questions of fact common to the
class;
3. the claims of the Agent of the class are typical
of the claims of the class; and
4. the Agent of the class,
or , if represented, the representative, will fairly and adequately
protect the interests of the class.
c. An "Agent of
the class" (Agent) is a class member who acts for the class
during the processing of the class complaint.
.03
PRE-COMPLAINT PROCESSING.
An employee or applicant who
wishes to file a class complaint must seek counseling and be
counseled in accordance with paragraph .01 of this Appendix. EEO
Officers may serve as Counselors on class matters.
.04
FILING AND PRESENTATION OF A CLASS COMPLAINT.
a. A class
complaint must be signed by the Agent or representative and must
identify the policy or practice adversely affecting the class as well
as the specific action or matter adversely affecting the Agent.
b.
The complaint must be filed with the Director of Civil Rights not
later than fifteen days after the Agent's receipt of the notice of
right to file a class complaint. (See subparagraph .02d. of this
Appendix).
c. The complaint shall be processed promptly;
the parties shall cooperate and shall proceed at all times without
undue delay.
.05 ACCEPTANCE OR DISMISSAL.
a.
Within 30 days of the Department's receipt of a complaint, the
Department shall:
1. designate a Department representative
who shall not be any of the individuals referenced in 29 CFR
1614.102(b)(3); and
2. forward the complaint, along with a
copy of the Counselor's report and any other information pertaining
to timeliness or other relevant circumstances related to the
complaint, to the EEOC. The EEOC shall assign the complaint to an
administrative judge or complaints examiner with a proper security
clearance when necessary. The administrative judge may require the
complainant or Department to submit additional information relevant
to the complaint.
b. The administrative judge may
recommend that the Department dismiss the complaint, or any portion,
for any of the reasons listed in 29 CFR 1614.107(a)(2) or because it
does not meet the prerequisites of a class complaint under
1614.204(a)(2).
c. If an allegation is not included in the
Counselor's report, the administrative judge shall afford the Agent
15 days to state whether the matter was discussed with the Counselor
and, if not, explain why it was not discussed. If the explanation is
not satisfactory, the administrative judge shall refer the allegation
to the Department for further counseling of the Agent. After
counseling, if timely, the allegation shall be consolidated with the
class complaint.
d. If an allegation lacks specificity and
detail, the administrative judge shall afford the Agent 15 days to
provide specific and detailed information. The administrative judge
shall recommend that the Department dismiss the complaint if the
Agency fails to provide such information within the specified time
period. If the information provided contains new allegations outside
the scope of the complaint, the administrative judge shall advise the
Agent how to proceed on an individual or class basis concerning these
allegations.
e. The administrative judge may recommend
that the Department extend the time limits for filing a complaint and
for consulting with a Counselor in accordance with the time limit
provisions contained in 29 CFR 1614.105(a)(2) and 1614.604. When
appropriate, the administrative judge may recommend that a class be
divided into subclasses and that each subclass be treated as a class,
and the provisions of this section then shall be construed and
applied accordingly.
f. The administrative judge's written
recommendation to the Department on whether to accept or dismiss a
complaint shall be transmitted to the Department and notification of
that transmittal shall be sent to the Agent. The administrative
judge's recommendation to accept or dismiss shall become the
Department's decision unless the Department rejects or modifies the
recommended decision within 30 days of the receipt of the recommended
decision and complaint file. The Department shall notify the Agent by
certified mail, return receipt requested, and the administrative
judge of its decision to accept or dismiss a complaint. At the same
time, the Department shall forward to the Agent copies of the
administrative judge's recommendation and the complaint file. The
Department's decision dismissing a class complaint, shall inform the
Agent either that the complaint is being filed on that date as an
individual complaint of discrimination and will be processed under
Section 1 of this Appendix or that the complaint is also dismissed as
an individual complaint in accordance with 29 CFR 1614.107. In
addition, the decision shall inform the Agent of the right to appeal
the dismissal of the class complaint to the Office of Federal
Operations, EEOC or to file a civil action and include EEOC Form 573,
Notice of Appeal/Petition.
.06 NOTIFICATION.
a.
Within 15 days of accepting a class complaint, the Department shall
use reasonable means, such as delivery, mailing to last known address
or distribution, to notify all class members of the acceptance of the
class complaint.
b. Such notice shall contain:
(1)
the name of the Department or organizational segment, its location,
and the date of acceptance of the complaint;
(2) a
description of the issues accepted as part of the class
complaint;
(3) an explanation of the binding nature of the
final decision or resolution of the complaint on class members;
and
(4) the name, address and telephone number of the
class representative.
.07 OBTAINING EVIDENCE CONCERNING
THE COMPLAINT.
a. The administrative judge shall notify
the Agent and the Department representative of the time period that
will be allowed both parties to prepare their cases. This time period
will include at least 60 days and may be extended by the
administrative judge upon the request of either party. Both parties
are entitled to reasonable development of evidence on matters
relevant to the issues raised in the complaint. Evidence may be
developed through interrogatories, depositions, and requests for
admissions, stipulations or production of documents. It shall be
grounds for objection to producing evidence that the information
sought by either party is irrelevant, over burdensome, repetitious,
or privileged.
b. If mutual cooperation fails, either
party may request the administrative judge to rule on a request to
develop evidence. If a party fails, without good cause shown, to
respond fully and in a timely fashion to a request made or approved
by the administrative judge for documents, records, comparative data,
statistics or affidavits, and the information is solely in the
control of one party, such failure may, in appropriate circumstances,
cause the administrative judge:
1. to draw an adverse
inference that the requested information would have reflected
unfavorably on the party refusing to provide the requested
information;
2. to consider the matters to which the
requested information pertains to be established in favor of the
opposing party;
3. to exclude other evidence offered by
the party failing to produce the requested information;
4.
to recommend that a decision be entered in favor of the opposing
party; or
5. to take such other actions as the
administrative judge deems appropriate.
c. During the
period for development of evidence, the administrative judge may, at
their discretion, direct that an investigation of facts relevant to
the complaint or any portion be conducted by the Department.
d.
Both parties shall furnish to the administrative judge copies of all
materials that they wish to be examined and such other material as
may be requested.
.08 OPPORTUNITY FOR RESOLUTION OF THE
COMPLAINT.
a. The administrative judge shall furnish the
Agent and the Department representative a copy of all materials
obtained concerning the complaint and provide opportunity for the
Agent to discuss materials with the Department representative and
attempt resolution of the complaint.
b. The complaint may
be resolved by agreement of the Department and the Agent at any time
as long as the agreement is fair and reasonable.
c. If the
complaint is resolved, the terms of the resolution shall be reduced
to writing and signed by the Agent and the Department.
d.
Notice of the resolution shall be given to all class members in the
same manner as notification of the acceptance of the class complaint
and shall state the relief, if any, to be granted by the Department.
A resolution shall bind all members of the class. Within 30 days of
the date of the notice of resolution, any member of the class may
petition the Director of Civil Rights to vacate the resolution
because it benefits only the Agent or is otherwise not fair and
reasonable. Such a petition will be processed in accordance with
1614.204(d) and if the administrative judge finds that the resolution
is not fair and reasonable, they shall recommend that the resolution
be vacated and that the original Agent be replaced by the petitioner
or some other class member who is eligible to be the Agent during
further processing of the class complaint. The Department's decision
that the resolution is not fair and reasonable vacates any agreement
between the former Agent and the Department. The Department's
decision on such a petition shall inform the former Agent or the
petitioner of the right to appeal the decision to the Office of
Federal Operations, EEOC and include EEOC Form 573, Notice of
Appeal/Petition.
.09 HEARING.
On expiration of
the period allowed for preparation of the case, the administrative
judge shall set a date for hearing. The hearing shall be conducted in
accordance with subparagraph 1.06c. of the Appendix.
.10
REPORT OF FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS.
a. The
administrative judge shall transmit to the Department a report of
findings and recommendations on the complaint, including a
recommended decision, systemic relief for the class and any
individual relief, where appropriate, with regard to the personnel
action or matter that gave rise to the complaint.
b. If
the administrative judge finds no class relief appropriate, they
shall determine if a finding of individual discrimination is
warranted and, if so, shall recommend appropriate relief.
c.
The administrative judge shall notify the Agent of the date on which
the report of findings and recommendations was forwarded to the
Department.
.11 DEPARTMENT DECISION.
a. Within
60 days of receipt of the report of findings and recommendations
issued under paragraph .03 of this section, the Office of Civil
Rights shall issue a final decision, which shall accept, reject, or
modify the findings and recommendations of the administrative
judge.
b. The final decision of the Department shall be in
writing and shall be transmitted to the Agent by certified mail,
return receipt requested, along with a copy of the report of findings
and recommendations of the administrative judge.
c. When
the Department's final decision is to reject or modify the findings
and recommendations of the administrative judge the decision shall
contain specific reasons for the Department's action.
d.
If the Department had not issued a final decision within 60 days of
its receipt of the administrative judge's report of findings and
recommendations, those findings and recommendations shall become the
final decision. The Department shall transmit the final decision to
the Agent within five days of the expiration of the 60-day
period.
e. The final decision of the Department shall
require any relief authorized by law and determined to be necessary
or desirable to resolve the issue of discrimination.
f. A
final decision on a class complaint shall, subject to 29 CFR
1614.401, be binding on all members of the class and the
Department.
g. The final decision shall inform the Agent
of the right to appeal or to file a civil action in accordance with
29 CFR 1614.401 and the applicable time limits.
.12
NOTIFICATION OF DECISION.
The Department shall notify
class members of the final decision and relief awarded, if any,
through the same method employed to give notice of the existence of
the class complaint. The notice, where appropriate, shall include
information concerning the rights of class members to seek individual
relief, and of the procedures to be followed. Notice shall be given
by the Department within 10 days of the transmittal of its final
decision to the Agent.
.13 RELIEF FOR INDIVIDUAL CLASS
MEMBERS.
a. When discrimination is found, the Department
must eliminate or modify the employment policy or practice out of
which the complaint arose and provide individual relief, including an
award of attorney's fees and costs, to the Agent in accordance with
29 CFR 1614.501.
b. When class-wide discrimination is not
found, but it is found that the Agent is a victim of discrimination,
29 CFR 1614.501 shall apply. The Department shall also, within 60
days of the issuance of the final decision finding no class-wide
discrimination, issue the acknowledgment of receipt of an individual
complaint as required by section 1, subparagraph .03d. of this
Appendix and process in accordance with the provisions of section 1
of this Appendix, each individual complaint that was subsumed into
the class complaint.
c. When discrimination is found in
the final decision and a class member believes that they are entitled
to individual relief, the class member may file a written claim with
the Secretary of Commerce or the Director of Civil Rights within 30
days of receipt of notification by the Department of its final
decision. The claim must include a specific, detailed showing that
the claimant is a class member who was affected by a personnel action
or matter resulting from the discriminatory policy or practice, and
that this discriminatory action took place within the period of time
for which the Department found class-wide discrimination in its final
decision. The Department shall issue a final decision on each such
claim within 90 days of filing. Such decision must include a notice
of the right to file an appeal or a civil action in accordance with
20 CFR 1614.401, and the applicable time limits.
Questions and Comments
Send Questions or Comments on the Commerce Directives Management program to Directives@doc.gov.
Office
of Privacy and Open Government
Office of the Chief Financial
Officer and Assistant Secretary for Administration
U.S.
Department of Commerce
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Dumas, Sheleen (Federal) |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-13 |