Specific Instructions Justification_EEO-5.olcreview._rev_4_5_1

Specific Instructions Justification_EEO-5.olcreview._rev_4_5_1.doc

Elementary-Secondary Staff Information (EEO-5)

OMB: 3046-0003

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Supporting Statement

Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirement for the

Elementary-Secondary Staff Information EEO-5 Report

(EEOC Form 168A)

A. Justification


1. The legal bases for the Elementary-Secondary Staff Information (EEO-5) form and recordkeeping requirements are Section 709 (c) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 2000e-8(c), which imposes the requirement that “[e]very employer, employment agency, and labor organization subject to this subchapter shall (1) make and keep such records relevant to the determinations of whether unlawful employment practices have been or are being committed, (2) preserve such records for such periods, and (3) make such reports there from as the Commission shall prescribe by regulation or order. . .” Accordingly, the EEOC issued a regulation, 29 C.F.R. §1602.39-45, which sets forth the reporting and related recordkeeping requirements for public Elementary and Secondary school systems and districts with 100 or more employees. Elementary and Secondary public school systems and districts have been required to submit EEO-5 reports since 1974 (biennially in even numbered years since 1982). The individual reports are confidential and may not be made public by the Commission prior to the institution of lawsuit(s) under Title VII in which the individual reports are involved.


2. The EEO-5 data are used by the EEOC to investigate charges of employment discrimination against public elementary and secondary school districts. The data are used to support EEOC decisions and conciliations, and in systemic program activities.

Finally, data are used to evaluate and categorize charges and to determine the appropriate investigative approaches. Further in the process, the data can be analyzed to provide additional proof as the investigation proceeds. The data are also used to conduct ad hoc studies and are used by academic researchers.


The data are shared with the Department of Justice. Pursuant to §709(d) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, EEO-1 data are also shared with eighty-six State and local Fair Employment Practices Agencies (FEPAs) for their enforcement efforts.


3. The EEO-5 report is collected through a web base on-line filing system. There are 7,218 respondents reporting biennially and approximately 58 percent of these respondents file on-line. The on-line filing system has reduced the burden hours.


4. While the Department of Education collects some staffing data from public primary and secondary schools it is not sufficiently comprehensive to serve the same needs as the EEO-5. In fact, the EEO-5 is shared with the Department of Education.


5. The EEO-5 Report survey is not collected from private employers and it is only collected from public employers.


6. Because the data is an integral part of the Title VII enforcement process, failure to collect the data would reduce our ability to enforce Title VII. The data has been integrated into the enforcement process. Collecting the data less often would impair enforcement decisions by reducing the reliability of the data as there will be a lag between the employment statistics provided by employers when reporting and when the data is used. This problem is likely to be most pronounced among school districts with fluctuations in employment. It is important to make certain that employment decisions are consistent with law when increases or decreases in employment occur. A gap of more than two years between data collections would also impose some processing costs on EEOC because more work would be needed to update mailing lists. The data is only collected biennially. Since employment characteristics are dynamic, collecting the data less often would significantly reduce data utility.


7. None of the above special circumstances will be used to collect the EEO-5 Report.


8. See attached Federal Register Notice dated April 4, 2012 informing the public of the request for reinstatement without change.


9. EEOC’s employees are prohibited by law from providing any payment or gifts to respondents, other than remuneration of contractors or grantees.


10. All reports and information from individual reports are subject to the confidentiality provisions of Section 709(e) of Title VII, and may not be made public by EEOC prior to the institution of any proceeding under Title VII. However, aggregate data may be made public in a manner so as not to reveal any particular jurisdiction’s statistics.


11. The EEO-5 Report does not solicit any information of a sensitive nature from respondents.


12.










REPORTS

FILED

2010

ESTIMATED

BURDEN

PER REPORT

ESTIMATED

TOTAL BURDEN

HOURS

COSTS

PER

HOUR

ESTIMATED

TOTAL

BURDEN

7,218

4.5

32,481

19.00

617,139


Burden hours are assumed to be 4.5 hours per form at a cost of $19.00 per hour.1





13. There are no cost changes. Jurisdictions have been completing this form for a number of years.


14. Estimated cost to the federal government will be: $190,000 contract cost (based on a competitive bid process from prior years.)

.


15. There are no program changes.


16. Time Schedule for Information Collection and Publication:


Reporting Period for Data October 1


Filing Deadline November 30


Follow-up Communication January 31


Preliminary Data Tape May 31


Final Data Tape August 31


Table Preparation September 30


17. This approval is not requested.


18. No exceptions are requested.


19. This approval is not requested.


1 Estimated burden hours were calculated by multiplying the number of reports expected to be filed annually (7,218 in 2010) by the estimated average time to complete and submit each report (4.5 hours) forms for each form(7,218 X 4.5 = 32,418). Relying on an estimate of $19 per hour results in a total burden cost of $617,139 thousands (32,418 burden hours X 19.00 per hour). The rate of $19 per hour is based on the hourly pay rate of human resources assistants of $18.22 (Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2010, 43-4161 Human Resources Assistants, Except Payroll and Timekeeping, http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/print.pl/oes/current/oes434161.htm 6/30/2011, Last Modified Date: May 17, 2011, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Division of Occupational Employment Statistics) $18.22 was rounded to $19 to account for instances where higher paid staff perform this work.



File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleSpecific Instructions Justification
AuthorLBROWN
Last Modified ByErin Norris
File Modified2012-04-05
File Created2012-04-05

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