Broad Coalition
of Civil Rights Groups Oppose the Department of Labor’s National
Interest Exemption Suspending Critical Affirmative Action Regulations
for Federal Contractors Responding to COVID-19
April 9, 2020
Washington, DC – On April 7, 2020 a broad coalition of 56 civil rights and workers’ rights organizations led by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) to
oppose the Department’s decision to temporarily exempt and waive
affirmative action obligations under new supply, service, and
construction federal contracts for coronavirus relief.
The
letter highlights that the pandemic and its economic repercussions are
disproportionately impacting people of color and other historically
marginalized communities, and urges the federal government to
do everything to ensure that federal contractors responding to COVID-19
are affirmatively recruiting and promoting all employment opportunities
to those most impacted.
“We
are in the midst of a national health crisis, and many workers
throughout our economy are losing their jobs. Not surprisingly,
communities of color and other marginalized communities are
disproportionately feeling the economic shocks of this pandemic,” said Dariely Rodriguez,
Director of the Economic Justice Project at the Lawyers’ Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law. "Civil rights are non-negotiable and we must do
everything to ensure that limited employment ooprtunites are being
targeted at those who need them the most.”
The letter also outlines the critical obligations under Executive Order 11246
and federal statutes that have been waived. These laws require
government contractors to undertake affirmative efforts to ensure that
equal opportunity is provided in all aspects of employment, including
recruitment and hiring.
The
exemptions not only apply to federal contractors, but also to the
subcontractors with whom they do business. The waivers will undoubtedly
discourage covered employers responding to the coronavirus pandemic from
casting a wide net to recruit diverse workers from historically
underrepresented populations. They will also keep contractor and
subcontractor workers and their union representatives in the dark about
their legal rights and make enforcement of affirmative action
regulations even more difficult.
In the letter,
the organizations urged the OFCCP to not abandon its mission of
promoting diversity and protecting workers during this pandemic by
rescinding, limiting or not extending this exemption.
The letter sent to the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs can be found here.
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