81_FR_45614 81 FR 45479 - Agency Information Collection Activities; Notice of Submission for OMB Review, Final Comment Request: Revision of the Employer Information Report (EEO-1)

81 FR 45479 - Agency Information Collection Activities; Notice of Submission for OMB Review, Final Comment Request: Revision of the Employer Information Report (EEO-1)

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 135 (July 14, 2016)

Page Range45479-45497
FR Document2016-16692

In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or Commission) announces that it is submitting to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) a request for a three-year PRA approval of a revised Employer Information Report (EEO-1) data collection. Employers have submitted the EEO-1 report for over fifty years. The Commission is responsible for PRA compliance for the EEO-1, although it is a joint data collection to meet the statistical needs of both the EEOC and the U.S. Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP). This PRA submission has two components. Component 1 describes the data now collected by the currently approved EEO-1, which is data about employees' ethnicity, race, and sex by job category (demographic data). Component 2 describes the W-2 (Box 1) and hours-worked data that will be added to the EEO-1 with OMB's approval under this PRA request (pay data). EEO-1 respondents must comply with the 2016 filing requirement for the currently approved EEO-1.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 135 (Thursday, July 14, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 135 (Thursday, July 14, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 45479-45497]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-16692]


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EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

[3046-007]


Agency Information Collection Activities; Notice of Submission 
for OMB Review, Final Comment Request: Revision of the Employer 
Information Report (EEO-1)

AGENCY: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

ACTION: Notice.

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SUMMARY: In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or Commission) 
announces that it is submitting to the Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB) a request for a three-year PRA approval of a revised Employer 
Information Report (EEO-1) data collection. Employers have submitted 
the EEO-1 report for over fifty years. The Commission is responsible 
for PRA compliance for the EEO-1, although it is a joint data 
collection to meet the statistical needs of both the EEOC and the U.S. 
Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs 
(OFCCP). This PRA submission has two components. Component 1 describes 
the data now collected by the currently approved EEO-1, which is data 
about employees' ethnicity, race, and sex by job category (demographic 
data). Component 2 describes the W-2 (Box 1) and hours-worked data that 
will be added to the EEO-1 with OMB's approval under this PRA request 
(pay data). EEO-1 respondents must comply with the 2016 filing 
requirement for the currently approved EEO-1.

DATES: Submit comments on or before August 15, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Comments on this notice must be submitted to Joseph B. Nye, 
Policy Analyst, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of 
Management and Budget, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503, email 
[email protected]. Commenters are also encouraged to send 
comments to the EEOC online at http://www.regulations.gov, which is the 
Federal eRulemaking Portal. Follow the instructions on the Web site for 
submitting comments. In addition, the EEOC's Executive Secretariat will 
accept comments in hard copy by delivery by COB on August 15, 2016. 
Hard copy comments should be sent to Bernadette Wilson, Acting 
Executive Officer, EEOC, 131 M Street NE., Washington, DC 20507. 
Finally, the Executive Secretariat will accept comments totaling six or 
fewer pages by facsimile (``fax'') machine before the same deadline at 
(202) 663-4114. (This is not a toll-free number.) Receipt of fax 
transmittals will not be acknowledged, except that the sender may 
request confirmation of receipt by calling the Executive Secretariat 
staff at (202) 663-4070 (voice) or (202) 663-4074 (TTY). (These are not 
toll-free telephone numbers.) The EEOC will post online at http://www.regulations.gov all comments submitted via this Web site, in hard 
copy, or by fax to the Executive Secretariat. These comments will be 
posted without change, including any personal information you provide. 
However, the EEOC reserves the right to refrain from posting libelous 
or otherwise inappropriate comments including those that contain 
obscene, indecent, or profane language; that contain threats or 
defamatory statements; that contain hate speech directed at race, 
color, sex, national origin, age, religion, disability, or genetic 
information; or that promote or endorse services or products. All 
comments received, including any personal information provided, also 
will be available for public inspection during normal business hours by 
appointment only at the EEOC Headquarters' Library, 131 M Street NE., 
Washington, DC 20507. Upon request, individuals who require assistance 
viewing comments will be provided appropriate aids such as readers or 
print magnifiers. To schedule an appointment, contact EEOC Library 
staff at (202) 663-4630 (voice) or (202) 663-4641 (TTY). (These are not 
toll-free numbers.)

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ronald Edwards, Director, Program 
Research and Surveys Division, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 
131 M Street NE., Room 4SW30F, Washington, DC 20507; (202) 663-4949 
(voice) or (202) 663-7063 (TTY). Requests for this notice in an 
alternative format should be made to the Office of Communications and 
Legislative Affairs at (202) 663-4191 (voice) or (202) 663-4494 (TTY).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

I. Background
II. The EEOC's Legal Authority To Propose This EEO-1 Report
    A. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

[[Page 45480]]

    B. The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
III. Revisions to the EEO-1 Report Are Necessary for the Enforcement 
of Title VII, the EPA, and Executive Order 11246
IV. Who Will Report Pay Data on the Revised EEO-1
    A. Employers That Currently File the EEO-1
    B. 60-Day Notice: Which Employers Would File Pay Data
    C. Public Comments
    D. 30-Day Notice: Employers With 100 or More Employees Will File 
Components 1 & 2
V. When To File: Filing Deadline and Workforce Snapshot Period
    A. 60-Day Notice
    B. Public Comments
    C. 30-Day Notice
    1. Deadline for Filing the EEO-1
    2. ``Workforce Snapshot'' Period
VI. What Pay Data To Report: Measure of Pay for the EEO-1
    A. 60-Day Notice: Options for Measuring Pay
    B. Public Comments
    1. Supporting the Use of W-2 Income
    2. Opposing the Use of W-2 Income
    C. 30-Day Notice: W-2 (Box 1) Income Is the Measure of Pay
    1. W-2 Income and Employee Choice
    2. Supplemental Income Is Important and May Be Linked to 
Discrimination
    3. Bridging HRIS and Payroll
VII. What Data To Report: Hours Worked
    A. 60-Day Notice
    B. Public Comments
    C. 30-Day Notice
    1. The Importance of Collecting Hours Worked
    2. Defining ``Hours Worked''
    3. Reporting Hours Worked for Nonexempt Employees
    4. Reporting Hours Worked for Exempt Employees
VIII. How To Report Data in Component 2: Pay Bands and Job 
Categories
    A. 60-Day Notice
    B. Public Comments
    C. 30-Day Notice
IX. How the EEOC Will Use W-2 and Hours-Worked Data
    A. 60-Day Notice
    B. Public Comments
    C. 30-Day Notice
    1. Early Assessment of Charges of Discrimination
    2. EEOC Publications Analyzing Aggregate EEO-1 Data
    3. EEOC Training on the Pay Data Collection
X. Confidentiality of EEO-1 Data
    A. 60-Day Notice
    B. Public Comments
    C. 30-Day Notice
    1. Legal Confidentiality
    a. EEOC
    b. OFCCP
    2. Data Protection and Security
XI. Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Estimates
    A. Background
    B. 60-Day Notice
    C. 30-Day Notice
    1. Annual Burden Hours
    2. Hourly Wage Rates
XII. Formal Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    A. Overview of Information Collection
    1. 2016 Overview of Information Collection--Component 1
    2. 2017 and 2018 Overview of Information Collection--Components 
1 and 2
    a. Component 1 (Demographic and Job Category Data)
    b. Components 1 and 2 (Demographic and Job Category Data Plus W-
2 and Hours Worked Data)
    B. 30-Day Notice PRA Burden Statement

I. Background

    This final proposal to supplement the longstanding EEO-1 employer 
information report (currently approved by OMB under Control Number 
3046-0007) is intended to support the EEOC's pay discrimination 
investigations by collecting employer- and gender-, race-, and 
ethnicity-specific pay data to identify pay disparities that may result 
from discriminatory practices or policies. This Notice provides 
stakeholders with their second opportunity to comment on this proposal.
    The EEOC published the first notice of this proposed revision in 
the Federal Register on February 1, 2016, for a 60-day comment period 
(the ``60-Day Notice'').\1\ It announced which employers would be 
required to file pay data, what data would be collected, when the due 
date would be, how the data would be analyzed, and how the proposed 
collection and analysis would protect confidentiality and privacy. As 
required, the 60-Day Notice estimated the cost to employers of 
completing the current EEO-1 (Component 1) and the proposed revision of 
the EEO-1 (Components 1 and 2).
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    \1\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).
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    The EEOC received 322 timely public comments in response to the 60-
Day Notice. The comments were submitted by individual members of the 
public, employers, employer associations, Members of Congress, civil 
rights groups, women's organizations, labor unions, industry groups, 
law firms, and human resources organizations. Over 120 of the 322 
comments were part of mass mail campaigns mostly supporting the 
proposal, although one mass mail campaign opposed the proposal. The 
mass mail campaigns included submissions from organizations that 
collected up to thousands of signatures from their members or 
supporters.
    The Commission also held a public hearing on March 16, 2016, and 
heard from 15 witnesses representing a range of stakeholders including 
employers, employees, and academics. The Commission reviewed their 
detailed written submissions, heard them discuss their different 
perspectives on the proposal, and asked them questions.\2\
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    \2\ The press release on the hearing is available at EEOC, EEOC 
Hears Wide Range of Views at Public Hearing on Proposed Changes to 
EEO-1 Form (Mar. 16, 2016), https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/3-16-16.cfm. The statements and biographies of the witnesses 
are available at EEOC, Hearing of March 16, 2016--Public Input into 
the Proposed Revisions to the EEO-1 Report, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/3-16-16/.
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    Pursuant to the required procedures under the PRA, the Commission 
now publishes its final proposal to supplement the EEO-1 for a second 
round of public comments, to last 30 days (hence the ``30-Day 
Notice''). The EEOC also is formally submitting the proposed EEO-1 
revisions to OMB for consideration and decision.
    This 30-Day Notice summarizes the 60-Day Notice, describes the 
public comments, and explains the Commission's decisions. In making 
these decisions, the Commission took into account all of the hearing 
testimony and public comments. The Commission also assessed government 
data regarding components of compensation in United States workplaces, 
relevant academic literature on compensation practices and on 
discrimination, and the conclusions of two studies commissioned by the 
EEOC to examine how and whether to implement a pay data collection.\3\ 
This 30-Day Notice sets forth the EEOC's conclusions about the ways the 
proposed pay data collection will be used to enhance and increase the 
efficiency of enforcement efforts while facilitating employer self-
evaluation and voluntary compliance.
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    \3\ The first EEOC-commissioned study, resulting in a 2012 
report from the National Research Council, National Academy of 
Sciences (NAS Report), outlined the potential value for EEOC 
enforcement of collecting pay data from employers by sex, race, and 
national origin through a report such as the EEO-1. National 
Research Council, 2012. Collecting Compensation Data from Employers. 
Washington, DC: National Academies Press, http://www.nap.edu/read/13496/chapter/1#ii. The second study, reported by an EEOC contractor 
in 2015, provided detailed analysis of different approaches to 
implementing the report and included assessments of different 
statistical analyses for employer data. Sage Computing, EEOC Pay 
Pilot Study (September, 2015), http://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/pay-pilot-study.pdf.
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II. The EEOC's Legal Authority To Propose This EEO-1 Report

    In written comments in response to the 60-Day Notice, several 
interested parties questioned whether the EEOC has legal authority to 
collect pay data and whether the agency should have conducted a formal 
rulemaking to impose a pay data reporting requirement. As explained in 
more

[[Page 45481]]

detail below, the EEOC has the legal authority to collect pay data 
under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (Title 
VII),\4\ without conducting a formal rulemaking because the EEOC is 
responsible for enforcing federal laws that prohibit wage 
discrimination on the basis of sex, race and national origin, and Title 
VII grants the EEOC broad authority to collect data from employers 
regarding compliance with federal anti-discrimination laws. The EEOC 
has exercised this statutory authority by implementing a regulation to 
establish the EEO-1 reporting requirement, and now administers the EEO-
1 report pursuant to the PRA.
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    \4\ 42 U.S.C. 2000e, et seq.
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A. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

    The EEOC is responsible for enforcing Title VII, which prohibits 
all employment discrimination, including pay discrimination, based on 
race, color, religion, national origin, or sex.\5\ The EEOC also 
enforces other federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination, 
including the Equal Pay Act of 1963 (EPA), which prohibits certain 
gender-based pay discrimination.\6\
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    \5\ Id.
    \6\ 29 U.S.C. 206(d).
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    The EEOC's authority to promulgate the EEO-1 report is found in 
section 709(c) of Title VII, which requires employers covered by Title 
VII to make and keep records relevant to whether unlawful employment 
practices have been or are being committed, to preserve such records, 
and to produce reports as the Commission prescribes by regulation or 
order, after public hearing, ``as reasonable, necessary, or appropriate 
for the enforcement of this subchapter or the regulations . . . 
thereunder.'' \7\ The Commission prescribes the EEO-1 report by 
regulation at 29 CFR part 1602, subpart B, which requires private 
employers with 100 or more employees to ``file [annually] with the 
Commission or its delegate executed copies of [the] . . . EEO-1 
[report] in conformity with the directions set forth in the form and 
accompanying instructions.'' The EEOC administers the EEO-1 jointly 
with OFCCP, which enforces the employment discrimination prohibitions 
of Executive Order 11246, as amended, for federal contractors and 
subcontractors (contractors), including specific provisions regarding 
pay discrimination and transparency.\8\ OFCCP's regulations require 
contractors to submit ``complete and accurate reports on Standard Form 
100 (EEO-1) . . . or such form as may hereafter be promulgated in its 
place.'' \9\ The Joint Reporting Committee, composed of the EEOC and 
OFCCP and located at the EEOC, administers the EEO-1 as a single data 
collection to meet the statistical needs of both agencies while 
avoiding duplication.
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    \7\ 42 U.S.C. 2000e-8(c).
    \8\ E.O. 11246, as amended, 30 FR 12319, 41 CFR 60-1.7(a). 
Executive Order 13665 amends E.O. 11246 to promote pay transparency 
for federal contractors, protect employees and job applicants, and 
make it possible for employees and job applicants to share 
information about their pay without fear of discrimination. E.O. 
13665, 79 FR 20749, available at: https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/DCPD-201400250/pdf/DCPD-201400250.pdf. OFCCP's recently adopted 
final rule on sex discrimination (OFCCP Rule on Discrimination on 
the Basis of Sex) addresses a number of sex-based barriers to equal 
employment and fair pay. The rule requires contractors to provide 
equal opportunities ``without regard to sex.'' 41 CFR part 60-20. 
See also 81 FR 39108, 39125-39129 (June 15, 2016).
    \9\ 41 CFR 60-1.7(a).
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B. The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995

    Since 1995, the EEO-1 report also has been governed by the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), which provides standards for 
federal data collections and requires periodic Office of Management and 
Budget (OMB) review and renewal.\10\ The EEOC is responsible for 
maintaining PRA approval of the EEO-1.
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    \10\ According to the OMB, ``collection of information'' may 
include: (1) Requests for information to be sent to the government, 
such as forms (e.g., the IRS 1040), written reports (e.g., grantee 
performance reports), and surveys (e.g., the Census); (2) 
recordkeeping requirements (e.g., OSHA requirements that employers 
maintain records of workplace accidents); and third-party or public 
disclosures (e.g., nutrition labeling requirements for food).
    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Memorandum 
for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies and Independent 
Regulatory Agencies, Information Collection under the Paperwork 
Reduction Act (Apr. 7, 2010), https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/inforeg/PRAPrimer_04072010.pdf; See also 5 
CFR 1320.3(c).
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    The EEOC, like other federal agencies subject to the PRA, generally 
follows a multi-step process for maintaining OMB approval of an 
information collection, which culminates in OMB deciding if the 
proposed collection ``strikes a balance between collecting information 
necessary to fulfill [the agency's] statutory mission[ ] and guarding 
against unnecessary or duplicative information that imposes unjustified 
costs on the American public.'' \11\ The first step is for the agency 
to publish a proposed information collection for a 60-day public 
comment period, which ran from February 1 to April 1, 2016 for this 
EEO-1 revision.\12\ Then, in light of the public comments and its 
statutory mission, the agency formulates a final data collection, which 
it publishes in the Federal Register and submits to OMB for approval, 
subject to a 30-day public comment period.\13\ The current document, 
which has been approved by a majority of the Commission, is the EEOC's 
30-Day Notice for the revised EEO-1.
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    \11\ Id.
    \12\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).
    \13\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(a)(1).
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    The EEOC has consistently used the PRA renewal process to change 
the EEO-1. Most recently, in 2006, the PRA process was used to 
significantly revise the EEO-1 by adding a new race category, requiring 
employers to ask employees to self-identify by race and ethnicity, and 
requiring employers to ask about ethnicity (Hispanic or Latino) in a 
separate question.\14\ The 2006 EEO-1 revision also added a new job 
category.\15\
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    \14\ EEOC, EEOC Implements Finals Revisions to EEO-1 Report 
(Jan. 27, 2006), https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/archive/1-27-06.html; See also 70 FR 71294 (Nov. 28, 2005); OMB approved 
these changes on January 25, 2006, Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs, http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=200511-3046-001#.
    \15\ Id.
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III. Revisions to the EEO-1 Report Are Necessary for the Enforcement of 
Title VII, the EPA, and Executive Order 11246

    Some public comments opposing the EEOC's proposal in the 60-Day 
Notice questioned whether there are still pay disparities that are 
caused by discrimination linked to gender, race, or ethnicity and, 
accordingly, whether there is actually a need for more effective 
enforcement of the prohibitions on pay discrimination in Title VII, the 
EPA, and E.O. 11246.
    Based on federal data and a robust body of research, the Commission 
concludes that: (1) Persistent pay gaps continue to exist in the U.S. 
workforce correlated with sex, race, and ethnicity; (2) workplace 
discrimination is an important contributing factor to these pay 
disparities; and (3) implementing the proposed EEO-1 pay data 
collection will improve the EEOC's ability to efficiently and 
effectively structure its investigation of pay discrimination charges.
    First, persistent pay gaps exist in the U.S. workforce correlated 
with sex, race, and ethnicity. As of 2014, for women of all races and 
ethnicities, the median annual pay for a woman who held a full-time, 
year-round job was $39,621, while the median annual pay for a man who 
held a full-time, year-round job was $50,383.\16\
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    \16\ Carmen DeNavas-Walt and Bernadette Proctor, U.S. Census 
Bureau, Income and Poverty in the United States: 2014, Current 
Population, 6 (2015), Table 1: Income and Earnings Summary Measures 
by Selected Characteristics: 2013 and 2014, https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2015/demo/p60-252.pdf.

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[[Page 45482]]

    African American and Hispanic or Latina women nationwide now 
experience the largest pay disparities. As of 2014, African American 
women were paid almost 40% less than white, non-Hispanic, men and 
approximately 20% less than white, non-Hispanic women.\17\ At a 
national level, African American women were paid 18% less than African 
American men.\18\
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    \17\ Joan Farrelly-Harrigan, U.S. Dep't. of Labor, Women's 
Bureau, Black Women in the Labor Force (Feb. 2016), https://www.dol.gov/wb/media/Black_Women_in_the_Labor_Force.pdf (reporting 
that African American women's median annual earnings in 2014 was 
$33,533, $41,822 for white, non-Hispanic women, and $55,470 for 
white, non-Hispanic men).
    \18\ Id.
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    Similarly, Latina women were paid approximately 44% less than 
white, non-Hispanic men, and 27% less than white, non-Hispanic, women 
in 2014.\19\ The result of the wage gap is that the average Hispanic or 
Latina woman would be paid approximately $1,007,000 less than the 
average white, non-Hispanic, male over a 40-year period.\20\
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    \19\ Michelle Vaca, U.S. Dep't. of Labor Blog, Celebrating 
Hispanic Women in the Labor Force (Oct. 6, 2015), http://blog.dol.gov/2015/10/06/celebrating-hispanic-women-in-the-labor-force/ (reporting that the 2013 median annual earnings for Latinas 
was $30,209).
    \20\ Joint Economic Committee, United States Congress, Gender 
Pay Inequality, 3 (April 2016) http://www.jec.senate.gov/public/
_cache/files/0779dc2f-4a4e-4386-b847-9ae919735acc/gender-pay-
inequality__us-congress-joint-economic-committee.pdf.
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    A similar pattern exists for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander 
women and Native American women who were paid approximately 38% and 41% 
less than white, non-Hispanic men, respectively.\21\ Asian American 
women were paid 10% less than white, non-Hispanic men.\22\
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    \21\ American Association of University Women, The Simple Truth 
About the Gender Pay Gap, 10 (Spring 2016), http://www.aauw.org/files/2016/02/SimpleTruth_Spring2016.pdf (reporting that the median 
annual earnings for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander women was 
$32,893 and $31,191 for Native American women).
    \22\ Id. (reporting that Asian American women's median earnings 
in 2014 was $47,776).
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    Wage disparities also exist for men of color. In 2014, African 
American men who worked full time in wage and salary jobs had median 
weekly earnings of $680, which represented approximately 76% of white 
men's median weekly earnings ($897).\23\ Hispanic men earned $616, or 
approximately 69%, of white men's median weekly earnings.\24\
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    \23\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Women in 
the labor force; a databook, BLS Reports, 60-61 (Dec. 2015), Table 
16: Median usual weekly earnings of full-time wage and salary 
workers, in current dollars, by race, Hispanic, or Latino ethnicity, 
and gender, 1979-2014 annual averages, http://www.bls.gov/opub/reports/womens-databook/archive/women-in-the-labor-force-a-databook-2015.pdf.
    \24\ Id.
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    Employment discrimination may play both direct and indirect roles 
in creating these pay disparities. Economists Francine Blau and 
Lawrence Khan found that 64.6% of the wage gap between men and women 
can be explained by three factors: Experience (14.1%), industry 
(17.6%), and occupation (32.9%).\25\ Men are more likely to work in 
blue collar jobs that are higher paying, including construction, 
production, or transportation occupations, whereas women are more 
concentrated in lower paying professions, such as office and 
administrative support positions.\26\ Most of the remaining 35.4% of 
the gender gap cannot be explained by differences in education, 
experience, industry, or occupation.\27\ Blau and Khan argue that 
discrimination--intentional or unintentional, systematic or at the 
individual level--plays a role in explaining the gap.\28\
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    \25\ Francine Blau and Lawrence Kahn, The Gender Wage Gap: 
Extent, Trends, and Explanations, Institute for the Study of Labor, 
73 (Jan. 2016), Table 4: Decomposition of Gender Wage Gap, 1980 and 
2010 (PSID), http://ftp.iza.org/dp9656.pdf (the authors reported 
that the gender wage gap for purposes of the study was approximately 
79 cents on the dollar in 2010).
    \26\ DeNavas-Walt and Proctor, supra note 16 at 5; see also 
PayScale, Inside the Gender Pay Gap, (2016), http://www.payscale.com/data-packages/gender-pay-gap (reporting that across 
the United States women are more likely to be overrepresented in 
lower paying jobs (jobs that pay less than $60,000 per year) and 
underrepresented in higher paying jobs compared to men. In addition, 
female pay levels off at $49,000 between the ages of 35-40 whereas 
men's pay levels off at $75,000 for the ages of 50-55).
    \27\ Blau & Kahn, supra note 25 at 73, Table 4.
    \28\ Id. A smaller portion of the gap (approximately 5%) can be 
attributed to geographic region (0.3%) and race (4.3%). The authors 
do not provide an explanation about why only 4% of the pay gap is 
attributed to race despite federal data suggesting that the wage gap 
between and within minorities is much larger. However, women's gains 
in education helped to narrow the gender wage gap by almost 6% as 
women now exceed men in educational attainment.
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    Gender bias may become more obvious when occupations have a greater 
proportion of women. One study found that, in an occupation dominated 
by men, pay declines when women enter that occupation in large numbers, 
even after controlling for factors such as education and work 
experience.\29\ The opposite effect occurred when a larger proportion 
of men entered a profession previously dominated by women, i.e., pay 
increased.\30\
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    \29\ Asaf Levanon, Paula England, Paul Allison, Occupational 
Feminization and Pay: Assessing Casual Dynamics Using 1950-2000 U.S. 
Census Data, Social Forces 88(2) (Dec. 2009), http://statisticalhorizons.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/88.2.levanon.pdf.
    \30\ Claire Cain Miller, As Women Take Over a Male Dominated 
Field, the Pay Drops, NY Times (Mar. 18, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/20/upshot/as-women-take-over-a-male-dominated-field-the-pay-drops.html?_r=0 (reporting that when more 
women became designers, for example, wages fell by 34 percentage 
points. When male computer programmers outnumbered women computer 
programmers, the job began to pay more and earned more prestige).
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    One way that gender discrimination may influence pay is through 
implicit or unconscious bias during hiring, promotion decisions, or job 
assignments.\31\ A study by McKinsey & Company found that women are 
almost three times more likely than men to have missed out on an 
assignment, promotion, or increase in wages because of their 
gender.\32\ Another study shows that women who engage in pay 
negotiations are more likely than men to face backlash due to gender 
stereotypes.\33\
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    \31\ Nancy Lockwood, The Glass Ceiling: Domestic and 
International Perspectives, 3 Society for Human Resource Management 
Quarterly 2004, https://www.shrm.org/Research/Articles/Articles/Documents/040329Quaterly.pdf (reporting that signs of the glass 
ceiling in the workplace can be based on gender-based barriers that 
may be invisible, covert, and overt).
    \32\ Lean In & McKinsey & Company, Women in the Workplace 2015, 
13 (2015), http://womenintheworkplace.com/ui/pdfs/Women_in_the_Workplace_2015.pdf?v=5.
    \33\ Hannah Riley Bowles & Linda Babcock, How Can Women Escape 
the Compensation Negotiation Dilemma? Relational Accounts Are One 
Answer, Psychology of Women Quarterly, 37.1, 81 (2013), http://pwq.sagepub.com/content/37/1/80.full.pdf+html (finding that 
``[n]egotiating for higher compensation is socially costly for women 
because it violates prescriptive gender stereotypes derived from the 
gendered division of labor . . ., and its resulting social hierarchy 
of men in charge and women in caregiving and support roles'').
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    Similar to gender discrimination, racial discrimination may 
influence pay through implicit or unconscious bias. A series of studies 
by MIT Sloan found racial bias in salary negotiations even after 
controlling for the applicants' objective qualifications.\34\ Research 
by

[[Page 45483]]

Roland Fryer, Devah Pager, and J[ouml]rg L. Spenkuch found that 
discrimination accounts for at least one-third of the black-white wage 
gap.\35\ The authors concluded that, compared to whites with comparable 
resumes, black job seekers were offered lower compensation by potential 
new employees and were more likely to accept the lower compensation. 
The researchers found that, although the wage gaps narrow over time as 
black workers stay at the same job, an unexplained gap nonetheless 
persists.\36\
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    \34\ Moreal Hernandez and Derek R. Avery, Getting the Short End 
of the Stick: Racial Bias in Salary Negotiations, MIT Sloan 
Management Review (June 15, 2016), http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/getting-the-short-end-of-the-stick-racial-bias-in-salary-negotiations/ (MIT conducted three studies focused on racial bias in 
salary negotiations. In the first study, evaluators reviewed resumes 
from white and black job applicants. The evaluators were asked to 
evaluate each job applicant and rate the likelihood that the job 
applicant would negotiate their salary if offered the job. After 
controlling for each job applicant's objective qualifications, the 
evaluators identified the black job applicants as less likely to 
negotiate compared to the white job applicants. The second study 
tested whether the evaluators had a racially-biased mindset, which 
was defined as a person who believes one or a few races were 
superior to others. The study found that the evaluators had 
different role expectations of the black applicants compared to the 
white applicants and they also identified the black job applicants 
as less likely to negotiate. For the third study, the evaluators and 
job applicants were required to simulate a job negotiation. Although 
the black job applicants reported that they negotiated comparably 
(in terms of the number of offers and counteroffers made) to their 
white counterparts, their evaluators reported that the black job 
applicants had negotiated more than the white job applicants. The 
MIT professors concluded that because the evaluators expected the 
black job applicants to negotiate less, they had an exaggerated view 
of their behavior during the job negotiation. In addition, the 
professors found that the black job applicants received lower 
starting salaries based on the evaluators perception that the black 
job applicants were more aggressive).
    \35\ Roland Fryer, Devah Pager, and J[ouml]rg L. Spenkuch, 
Racial Disparities in Job Findings and Offered Wages, Journal of Law 
and Economics, University of Chicago Press, vol. 56(3), 22-23, 
(Sept. 2011), http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/fryer/files/racial_disparities_in_job_finding_and_offered_wages.pdf.
    \36\ Id.
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    Voluntary compliance is an important part of the effort to prevent 
discrimination and improve pay equity, and many employers are taking 
steps to ensure equal pay for equal work. For example, more than 25 
companies have signed a White House Equal Pay Pledge to take action to 
reduce wage disparities in the workplace.\37\ These employers committed 
to conducting an annual company-wide gender pay analysis across 
occupations, reviewing hiring and promotion processes and procedures to 
reduce unconscious bias and structural barriers, and embedding equal 
pay efforts into broader enterprise-wide equity initiatives.\38\
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    \37\ The White House, White House Equal Pay Pledge, https://www.whitehouse.gov/webform/white-house-equal-pay-pledge. See also, 
Natalia Merluzzi, These Businesses are Taking the Equal Pay Pledge, 
White House Blog (June 14, 2016), https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2016/06/14/businesses-taking-equal-pay-pledge.
    \38\ Id.
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    There is also evidence that pay equity is good for business. For 
example, a McKinsey & Company study found that gender parity in the 
United States could lead to $4.3 trillion of additional GDP by 2025, 
which is 19% higher than if current trends in pay inequity 
continue.\39\ Another recent study found that, on average, companies 
with greater gender diversity outperformed their peers with less 
diversity over the previous five years, and had a higher return on 
equity.\40\ The study measured gender diversity according to the 
following factors: (1) Equality in pay; (2) empowerment (defined as 
number of women at the highest levels of the corporation and on key 
committees); (3) representation of women at different levels (including 
as members of the board of directors, senior executives, and regular 
employees); (4) work life balance programs; and (5) diversity policies. 
Pay parity and empowerment were weighted more than the other 
factors.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ McKinsey & Company, The Power of Parity: Advancing Women's 
Equality in the United States, (April 2016) http://www.mckinsey.com/global-themes/employment-and-growth/the-power-of-parity-advancing-womens-equality-in-the-united-states.
    \40\ Morgan Stanley, Gender Diversity is a Competitive Advantage 
(May 12, 2016), http://www.morganstanley.com/blog/women/gender-diversity-work; See also Morgan Stanley, Why it Pays to Invest in 
Gender Diversity (May 11, 2016), http://www.morganstanley.com/ideas/gender-diversity-investment-framework.html.
    \41\ Id.
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    Despite voluntary compliance and the strong business case for fair 
pay, pay discrimination persists as a serious problem that EEOC and 
OFCCP are statutorily required to address. The EEOC's mission is to 
stop and remedy unlawful employment discrimination. The OFCCP's purpose 
is to enforce, for the benefit of job seekers and wage earners, the 
contractual promise of affirmative action and equal employment 
opportunity required of those who do business with the federal 
government. To fulfill these goals, the EEOC and OFCCP need to be as 
effective and efficient as possible in their investigations of alleged 
discrimination. They now lack the employer- and establishment-specific 
pay data that, prior to issuing a detailed request for information or a 
subpoena, would be extremely useful in helping enforcement staff to 
investigate potential pay discrimination. Balancing utility and burden, 
the EEOC has concluded that the proposed EEO-1 pay data collection 
would be an effective and appropriate tool for this purpose, for all of 
the reasons explained below.\42\
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    \42\ States also are addressing gender pay inequities, including 
proposing to establish pay transparency, prohibit retaliation 
against workers who discuss their wages, and request state agencies 
to examine their pay practices and develop best practices. For a 
summary of state equal pay laws, see National Conference of State 
Legislatures, State Equal Pay Laws--July 2015, http://www.ncsl.org/research/labor-and-employment/equal-pay-laws.aspx. For a summary of 
state equal pay legislation, see Kate Nielsen, American Association 
of University Women, 2015 State Equal Pay Legislation by the Numbers 
(August 20, 2015), http://www.aauw.org/2015/08/20/equal-pay-by-state/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

IV. Who Will Report Pay Data on the Revised EEO-1

A. Employers That Currently File the EEO-1

    All private employers that are covered by Title VII and have 100 or 
more employees now file an EEO-1 report about the sex, race, and 
ethnicity of their employees, which is designated here as Component 1 
(demographic data).\43\ Federal contractors with 50 or more employees 
also file the EEO-1 if they are not exempt as provided for by 41 CFR 
60-1.5. Single establishment employers file one EEO-1, and multi-
establishment employers file EEO-1 reports or data for each 
establishment.\44\ Federal contractors with 1 to 49 employees and other 
private employers with 1 to 99 employees do not file EEO-1 reports.
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    \43\ Private employers also must file the EEO-1 if they have 
fewer than 100 employees but are owned or affiliated with another 
company or have centralized ownership, control or management so that 
the group legally constitutes a single enterprise and the entire 
enterprise employs a total of 100 or more employees. EEOC, EEO-1: 
Who Must File, https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/whomustfile.cfm.
    \44\ Employers and contractors file different types of EEO-1 
reports depending on whether they are single-establishment or multi-
establishment filers. Single-establishment filers only file one 
report, the Type 1 report. Multi-establishment filers submit several 
reports. These are: The Type 2--Consolidated Report, which must 
include data on all employees of the company; the Type 3--
Headquarters Report, which must include the employees working at the 
main office site of the company and those who work from home and 
report to the corporate office; the Type 4--Establishment Report, 
for each physical location with 50 or more employees, which provides 
full employment data categorized by race, gender and job category. 
For sites with fewer than 50 employees, filers submit either: Type 
6--Establishment List, which provides only the establishment name, 
complete address and total number of employees; or Type 8--
Establishment Report, which is a full report for each establishment 
employing fewer than 50 employees.
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B. 60-Day Notice: Which Employers Would File Pay Data

    In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC proposed that EEO-1 private 
employers and federal contractors with 100 or more employees would 
submit the EEO-1 with pay and hours-worked data (Component 2) in 
addition to Component 1 data. The 60-Day Notice also stated that 
federal contractors with between 50 and 99 employees would continue to 
submit Component 1 data but would not submit Component 2 data.

C. Public Comments

    The EEOC received comments urging it to remove employers with fewer 
than

[[Page 45484]]

200, or fewer than 500, employees from the requirement to report pay 
and hours-worked data on the EEO-1 (Component 2), in order to avoid 
imposing a burden on them. Some comments also encouraged the EEOC to 
eliminate the requirement to provide establishment-level pay data for 
establishments with fewer than 50 or 100 employees. These comments also 
expressed concern that reporting pay data for small employers, or small 
employer establishments, could reveal employee-level pay information. 
Conversely, other comments urged the EEOC to collect data from smaller 
employers by lowering the reporting threshold for pay data to 50 or 
more employees for federal contractors.

D. 30-Day Notice: Employers With 100 or More Employees Will File 
Components 1 and 2

    The Commission has considered the arguments for increasing the size 
of those employers subject to Components 1 and 2 and has decided to 
retain the same employee thresholds as in the 60-Day Notice. Exempting 
employers with fewer than 500 employees, or even fewer than 250, from 
Component 2 would result in losing data for a large number of employers 
who employ millions of workers, and thus would significantly reduce the 
utility of the pay data collection. In addition, the EEOC and OFCCP 
have decided not to exempt federal contractors with 50-99 employees 
from filing Component 1 of the EEO-1. The Commission's proposal reduces 
employer burden by changing other aspects of the EEO-1, such as the 
reporting deadline. See section V.
    In sum, all employers with 100 or more employees will be subject to 
Components 1 and 2 of the EEO-1 starting with reporting year 2017. 
Federal contractors with 50-99 employees will not experience a change 
in their EEO-1 reporting requirements as a result of this proposal; 
they will not file Component 2 and will continue to file only Component 
1. Consistent with current practice, federal contractors with 1 to 49 
employees and other private employers with 1 to 99 employees will be 
exempt from filing the EEO-1; they will file neither Component 1 nor 
Component 2.

V. When To File: Filing Deadline and Workforce Snapshot Period

    This 30-Day Notice proposes to change the EEO-1 filing deadline to 
March 31st\,\ of the year that follows the reporting year. This Notice 
also proposes to change the ``workforce snapshot'' to a pay period 
between October 1st and December 31st of the reporting year, starting 
with the EEO-1 report for 2017.
    Note that the reporting schedule for 2016 data remains unchanged; 
EEO-1 respondents must comply with the September 30, 2016, filing 
requirement for the currently-approved EEO-1, and must continue to use 
the July 1st through September 30th workforce snapshot period for that 
report. Under the proposed changes to the reporting schedule, EEO-1 
reports for 2017 data would be due on March 31, 2018.

A. 60-Day Notice

    In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC proposed to retain the current 
September 30th EEO-1 filing deadline. The EEOC explained that, starting 
in 2017, employers with 100 or more employees would document their 
employees' W-2 earnings for a 12-month period starting October 1st and 
ending the next September 30th. The 60-Day Notice reasoned that W-2 
earnings are generally recorded in 3-month periods (calendar year 
quarters) and that, because the third quarter ends on September 30th, 
employers could calculate the 12-month W-2 wages without significant 
difficulty.\45\ The 60-Day Notice also retained the current ``workforce 
snapshot'' approach of allowing each employer to choose a pay period 
between July 1st and September 30th during which it would count its 
employees to be reported on the EEO-1.\46\ The employees counted during 
this pay period would be the ones reported on the EEO-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).
    \46\ EEOC, EEO-1: When to File, https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/whentofile.cfm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Public Comments

    Employers and other groups objected vigorously to the burden of 
reporting non-calendar year W-2 data (i.e., October 1st to September 
30th). These parties argued that the EEOC, by choosing to impose this 
unique 12-month reporting period, would significantly increase their 
costs by compelling them to recalculate W-2 earnings for the sole 
purpose of completing the EEO-1.
    On a related point, employers reliant on human resource information 
systems (HRIS) \47\ and payroll software said that they would have 
insufficient time to budget, develop, and implement new reporting 
systems if the 2017 EEO-1 report were to be due on September 30, 2017. 
Employers lacking HRIS and payroll software said they would have a 
variety of implementation challenges, depending on how they organized 
their records.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ These systems are also sometimes called ``human resource 
management systems'' or HRMS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Many commenters suggested changing the 12-month EEO-1 reporting 
period to be the same as the W-2 reporting period (a calendar year) and 
moving the EEO-1 filing deadline into the subsequent year, preferably 
after W-2s are due. A few stakeholders suggested that the EEOC conduct 
the pay data collection every two years.

C. 30-Day Notice

1. Deadline for Filing the EEO-1
    For the upcoming 2016 EEO-1 report, the filing deadline will remain 
September 30, 2016. However, beginning with the 2017 report, the 
reporting deadline for all EEO-1 filers will be March 31st of the year 
following the EEO-1 report year. Thus, the 2017 EEO-1 report will be 
due on March 31, 2018. Changing the filing deadline will give employers 
subject to Component 2 six more months to prepare their recordkeeping 
systems for the 2017 report, and it will give them 1.5 years without 
filing an EEO-1 report (September 30, 2016 to March 31, 2018). At the 
same time, this change will align the EEO-1 with federal obligations to 
calculate and report W-2 earnings as of December 31st; the EEOC will 
not require a special W-2 calculation for the EEO-1.\48\ These changes 
will reduce the burden on employers of gathering Component 2 data.
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    \48\ Employers must send the W-2 to the Social Security 
Administration by the last day of February, although special due 
dates apply if the employer terminated its business or is filing 
electronically. Employers must furnish the W-2 to employees by 
February 1. IRS, Topic 752--Filing Forms W-2 and W-3 (Dec. 30, 
2015), https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc752.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission declines to adopt an alternate-year schedule for 
filing the EEO-1 report. If collected only in alternate years, the 
utility of EEO-1 data would be diminished because it would become stale 
before the new data became available.
2. ``Workforce Snapshot'' Period
    The ``workforce snapshot'' period refers to the pay period when 
employers count the total number of employees for that year's EEO-1 
report. The EEO-1 has always used this ``workforce snapshot'' approach, 
which gives employers a choice but freezes EEO-1 employment numbers as 
of the chosen pay period. Some employers criticized the ``workforce 
snapshot'' approach because it would not reflect same-year promotions 
that have the effect of moving the employee into a different EEO-1 job 
category or pay band after the ``snapshot'' was taken. The Commission

[[Page 45485]]

addresses this concern in part by moving the ``workforce snapshot'' 
period to the fourth quarter, October 1st to December 31st, so that 
there are fewer opportunities for unreported changes after the 
``snapshot.'' This will preserve employer choice as to the ``workforce 
snapshot,'' while at the same time accommodating the established 
federal schedule for preparing W-2's. In sum, while employers will 
count their employees during a pay period between October 1st and 
December 31st, they will report W-2 income and hours-worked data for 
these employees for the entire year ending December 31st.\49\
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    \49\ By changing the EEO-1 ``workforce snapshot'' to the last 
quarter of each calendar year, EEO-1 contractor filers that also 
file annual employee reports under the Vietnam Era Veterans' 
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended (VEVRAA), 38 U.S.C. 
4212(d), will be in a position to align their VEVRAA data 
collections with the new EEO-1. Under regulations implementing 
VEVRAA, certain federal contractors must report annually on form 
VETS-4212 the number of employees and new hires protected under 
VEVRAA. 41 CFR 61-300.10(d)(1). Form VETS-4212 collects information 
for veterans protected by VEVRAA using the EEO-1's 10 job 
categories. For each reporting year, the federal contractor must 
report covered employees for the 12-month period preceding a date it 
selects between July 1st and August 31st that falls at the end of a 
payroll period. Significantly, the regulations allow contractors to 
select December 31st as the basis for reporting the number of 
employees and as the ending date of the twelve-month covered period, 
if the federal contractor has ``previous written approval from the 
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to do so for purposes of 
submitting the Employer Information Report EEO-1, Standard Form 100 
(EEO-1 Report).'' 41 CFR 61-300.10(d)(2). The implementation notice 
for the revised EEO-1 will serve as ``previous written approval'' 
from the EEOC pursuant to this Department of Labor VEVRAA rule.
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    This change will not affect the 2016 EEO-1, for which the July 1st 
to September 30th ``workforce snapshot'' period remains effective.

VI. What Pay Data To Report: Measure of Pay for the EEO-1

    This 30-Day Notice proposes that employers use Box 1 of Form W-2 
(hereafter ``W-2 income'') as the measure of pay for Component 2 of the 
EEO-1.\50\ By definition, W-2, Box 1 includes income that is received 
between January 1st and December 31st of the relevant calendar year. In 
reaching this decision, the Commission considered government studies 
that analyze compensation in U.S. workplaces, relevant academic 
literature on compensation practices, the public comments and public 
testimony, and the analyses reflected in the EEOC's NAS study \51\ and 
its own Pilot Study.\52\
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    \50\ The IRS instructions for Form W-2 list the following 
categories of Box 1 taxable income: ``(1) Total wages, bonuses 
(including signing bonuses), prizes, and awards paid to employees 
during the year; (2) Total noncash payments, including certain 
fringe benefits; (3) Total tips reported by the employee to the 
employer; (4) Certain employee business expense reimbursements; (5) 
The cost of accident and health insurance premiums for 2%-or-more 
shareholder-employees paid by an S corporation: (6) Taxable benefits 
from a section 125 (cafeteria) plan if the employee chooses cash; 
(7) Employee contributions to an Archer MSA (medical savings 
account); (8) Employer contributions to an Archer MSA if includible 
in the income of the employee; (9) Employer contributions for 
qualified long-term care services to the extent that such coverage 
is provided through a flexible spending or similar arrangement; (10) 
Taxable cost of group-term life insurance in excess of $50,000; (11) 
Unless excludable under Educational assistance programs, payments 
for non-job-related education expenses or for payments under a 
nonaccountable plan; (12) The amount includible as wages because you 
paid your employee's share of social security and Medicare taxes (or 
railroad retirement taxes, if applicable). If employer also paid the 
employee's income tax withholding, the employer treats the grossed-
up amount of that withholding as supplemental wages and reports 
those wages in boxes 1, 3, 5, and 7. (Employer uses box 14 if 
railroad retirement taxes apply.) No exceptions to this treatment 
apply to household or agricultural wages; (13) Designated Roth 
contributions made under a section 401(k) plan, a section 403(b) 
salary reduction agreement, or a governmental section 457(b) plan; 
(14) Distributions to an employee or former employee from an NQDC 
plan (including a rabbi trust) or a nongovernmental section 457(b) 
plan; (15) Amounts includible in income under section 457(f) because 
the amounts are no longer subject to a substantial risk of 
forfeiture; (16) Payments to statutory employees who are subject to 
social security and Medicare taxes but not subject to federal income 
tax withholding must be shown in box 1 as other compensation; (17) 
Cost of current insurance protection under a compensatory split-
dollar life insurance arrangement; (18) Employee contributions to a 
health savings account (HSA); (19) Employer contributions to an HSA 
if includible in the income of the employee; (20) Amounts includible 
in income under an NQDC plan because of section 409A; (21) Payments 
made to former employees while they are on active duty in the Armed 
Forces or other uniformed services; and (22) All other compensation, 
including certain scholarship and fellowship grants.'' IRS, 2016 
General Instructions for Forms W-2 and W-3, (Jan. 5, 2016), https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/iw2w3.pdf.
    \51\ NAS Report, supra note 3.
    \52\ Sage Computing, supra note 3. This EEOC Pilot Study 
compared the OES definition of compensation to the W-2 and concluded 
that ``[t]he W-2 definition of income . . . offers a more 
comprehensive picture of earnings data and therefore is more 
appropriate for identifying discriminatory practices.'' In contrast 
to the OES definition of pay, the W-2 definition includes all the 
elements of compensation that are captured by the OES definition, 
but also includes forms of compensation such as overtime wages, 
shift differentials, fees, commissions, fringe benefits, and 
bonuses. Box 1 on the W-2 excludes certain elective deferrals or 
pre-tax deductions such as employer-sponsored retirement plan 
(401(k) or 403(b)) contributions, flexible spending account 
contributions for health and dependent care, and medical 
contributions.
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A. 60-Day Notice: Options for Measuring Pay

    The EEOC's 60-Day Notice described five different measures of 
individual compensation that are used by the federal government.\53\ 
After narrowing its consideration to two of these--the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics' Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) measure of pay 
\54\ and the Internal Revenue Service's W-2 definition \55\ --the EEOC 
proposed to use W-2 income because it is already calculated by 
employers, therefore limiting burden, and because it is a comprehensive 
measure of pay that would be more likely to capture the effect of 
employment discrimination on different kinds of compensation.\56\ In 
the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC did not specify which box on the W-2 it 
would use, but the Commission now specifies that employers will report 
on income provided in Box 1 of the W-2 form.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ NAS Report, supra notes 3 and 51 at 32-34, 41-45, http://www.nap.edu/read/13496/chapter/4#32.
    \54\ The Occupation Employment Statistics (OES) survey defines 
earnings to include base rate pay, cost-of-living allowances, 
guaranteed pay, hazardous-duty pay, incentive pay such as 
commissions and production bonuses, tips, and on-call pay. The OES 
measure excludes back pay, jury duty pay, overtime pay, severance 
pay, shift differentials, nonproduction bonuses, employer costs for 
supplementary benefits, and tuition reimbursements. U.S. Dept. of 
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupation Employment Statistics, 
http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_tec.htm. OES survey uses twelve 
wage intervals. U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 
Survey Methods and Reliability Statement for the 2015 Occupational 
Employment Statistics Survey, 4, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/methods_statement.pdf,
    \55\ 81 FR 5113, 5116 (Feb. 1, 2016). The EEOC initially 
considered five measures of pay. Three of those measures are used by 
the U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS) when it reports 
national employment data: the Occupation Employment Statistics 
(OES); the National Compensation Survey (NCS); and the Current 
Employment Statistics (CES) survey programs. One measure was from 
the Social Security Administration (SSA) and the final measure was 
from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) (W-2).
    \56\ Sage Computing, supra notes 3 and 52.
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B. Public Comments

1. Supporting the Use of W-2 Income
    Comments in support of using W-2 income emphasized that it is a 
comprehensive measure of pay that encompasses overtime, shift 
differentials, and production and non-production bonuses, which are 
increasingly important elements of pay. These parties stated that 
employment discrimination can be manifested when employers decide which 
employees get opportunities to earn shift differentials or overtime 
pay, or get large bonuses or awards. Using a measure of pay that 
excludes so much pay that could be influenced by discrimination would 
radically reduce the utility of this data collection for the EEOC and 
OFCCP.
2. Opposing the Use of W-2 Income
    Comments in opposition to using W-2 income fell into three 
categories.

[[Page 45486]]

Objection 1: W-2 Income Reflects Employee Choice and Is Not a Reliable 
Measure of Employer Discrimination
    The most widely articulated objection to using W-2 income was that 
it was not indicative of discrimination because it may reflect employee 
choice more than employer discretion and that the EEOC cannot 
differentiate the two in an aggregate pay data collection. Commenters 
making this argument identified elective participation in overtime, 
working shifts that provide pay differentials, and working faster or 
better than another employee (e.g., payments for piecework, 
commissions, or production), as governed by employee choice. Some of 
these comments argued that using W-2 income will in fact cause the EEOC 
to find ``false-positives'' indicating discrimination because the 
agency will assume that pay disparities are caused by discrimination 
rather than employee choice.
    Some of these parties urged the EEOC to use ``base pay'' rather 
than W-2 income because ``base pay'' is controlled entirely by 
employers and therefore is better suited to documenting potential 
discrimination. Another advantage to using ``base pay,'' they 
maintained, is that it would be significantly less expensive and easier 
for them to report on the EEO-1 because their HRIS now include records 
of base pay but not W-2 income. These stakeholders did not define 
``base pay,'' apart from noting that it does not include supplemental 
pay such as overtime, shift differentials, and bonuses, and that it can 
be stated as an hourly rate or as an annual salary.
Objection 2: Collection of W-2 Data Burdens Employers by Requiring the 
Integration of HRIS and Payroll Systems
    Employers argued that reporting W-2 income would impose an 
inordinate burden and expense because they store W-2 income data in 
computerized payroll systems that are entirely separate from the HRIS 
where they maintain EEO-1 demographic data. They asserted that 
procuring or developing new software to bridge these two systems would 
be time-consuming and extremely costly.
Objection 3: Collection of W-2 Income Data for October 1st to September 
30th Is Burdensome
    Finally, employers argued that reporting W-2 income for October 1st 
to September 30th of every year would be burdensome because employers' 
payroll systems collect and report W-2 income on a calendar-year basis 
for tax purposes. By proposing to change the filing date for the 
revised EEO-1 from September 30th to March 31st, the EEOC has addressed 
this objection.

C. 30-Day Notice: W-2 (Box 1) Income Is the Measure of Pay

1. W-2 Income and Employee Choice
    The Commission is not persuaded by the argument that W-2 income is 
an unsuitable measure for a pay data collection by an agency that 
enforces anti-discrimination laws because it may reflect employee 
choice as well as employer policy or decisions. As the White House 
Council of Economic Advisers notes, ``In many situations, the 
delineations between discrimination and preferences are ambiguous.'' 
\57\ For example, higher commission income may, as some public comments 
noted, reflect an employee's higher performance, but it may also 
reflect an employer's discriminatory assignment of more lucrative sales 
opportunities to employees based on race, ethnicity, and/or sex. As 
another example, a statistically significant difference in overtime pay 
between men and women in the same job may result from an employer's 
gender-biased assumptions that lead to more overtime opportunities 
being offered to men than to women, whom they may assume have competing 
family responsibilities. Pay discrimination is complex, and it would be 
an oversimplification to conclude that only those measures of pay that 
are shown to be exclusively dependent on an employer's decision or 
policy can be relevant to assessing allegations of pay discrimination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ Council of Economic Advisers Issue Brief, The Gender Pay 
Gap on the Anniversary of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (Jan. 
2016), https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/page/files/20160128_cea_gender_pay_gap_issue_brief.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Supplemental Income Is Important and May Be Linked to Discrimination
    Based on its consideration of public comments and government and 
private sector research, the Commission concludes that supplemental pay 
is a critical component of compensation and it can be influenced by 
discrimination, so any measure of income for purposes of enforcing the 
pay discrimination laws should include supplemental pay. W-2 income 
incorporates different kinds of supplemental pay that would not be 
available for analysis if the EEOC were to collect only ``base pay'' or 
another basic measure of pay that ignored major sources of 
compensation.\58\ For employers, W-2 income is a well-defined, 
familiar, and universally-available measure of pay; for the EEOC and 
OFCCP, it is useful data for exploring potential pay discrimination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ For example, although the FLSA requires employers to 
maintain pay rates, those pay rates do not include important sources 
of supplemental income that the EEOC has determined is important to 
collect in order to identify potential sources of pay 
discrimination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Supplemental pay is becoming more and more prevalent in the United 
States. As noted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Labor 
(BLS), ``For many occupations in the U.S. labor market supplemental 
pay--including overtime, bonuses, and shift differentials--is an 
important component of overall cash compensation. Overtime pay is 
especially important in production occupations and other blue-collar 
jobs; bonus pay is mostly a feature of high-wage managerial and sales 
occupations; and shift differentials play a prominent role in . . . 
healthcare [] and technical occupations.'' \59\ This pattern also is 
apparent in some of America's highest paying professions. In the legal 
profession, for example, bonuses at law firms can account for a 
significant portion of an associate's total compensation, beyond base 
salary.\60\
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    \59\ John L. Bishow, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, A Look at Supplemental Pay: Overtime Pay, Bonuses, and 
Shift Differentials (March 25, 2009), http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/cwc/a-look-at-supplemental-pay-overtime-pay-bonuses-and-shift-differentials.pdf.
    \60\ National Association of Law Placement (NALP), 2014 
Associate Salary Survey, NALP, 67-77 (September, 2014), Associate 
Bonuses.
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    The human resources consulting firm Aon Hewitt's 2014 U.S. Salary 
Increase Survey of 1,064 organizations found that variable pay (such as 
performance-based bonuses) for exempt employees comprised 12.7% of 
payroll that year.\61\ This represented the highest ratio companies 
have paid out of their budgets toward bonuses since the consulting firm 
started keeping records 35 years ago and is an increase from 2008 when 
10.8% of their total compensation budgets were devoted to variable pay 
for exempt employees.\62\ Ken Abosch, leader of Aon Hewitt's 
compensation practice, stated that companies prefer to give 
performance-based pay because this practice ``keeps employees focused 
on good performance rather than just showing up, and it allows 
companies to reward and retain their really valuable employees.'' \63\ 
In addition, Abosch

[[Page 45487]]

noted that performance-based pay allows companies to keep their base 
salaries lower and that companies will only allocate bonuses ``if [the 
company] has good or great results.'' \64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \61\ Aon Hewitt, New Aon Hewitt Survey Shows 2014 Variable Pay 
Spending Spikes to Record-High Level (Aug. 27, 2014), http://aon.mediaroom.com/New-Aon-Hewitt-Survey-Shows-2014-Variable-Pay-Spending-Spikes-to-Record-High-Level.
    \62\ Id.
    \63\ Jenna McGregor, Bonuses are making up a bigger and bigger 
percentage of companies' payrolls, Washington Post, (Aug. 27, 2014), 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/on-leadership/wp/2014/08/27/bonuses-are-making-up-a-bigger-and-bigger-percentage-of-companies-payrolls/.
    \64\ Id.
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    In some industries, shift differentials \65\ and overtime pay \66\ 
are important aspects of income. Eighty-three percent of manufacturing 
and production companies, 59% of customer service and support entities, 
and 51% of transportation and distribution companies surveyed in 2010 
offered shift differentials.\67\ Hospitals and health care service 
organizations also pay shift differentials for holiday and weekend 
shifts more than other industries.\68\ Overtime is particularly 
important in production, transportation, and material moving 
industries, with workers earning 2% of their income in overtime pay in 
December 2015.\69\ Employers can control who gets the opportunity for 
assignments to lucrative shifts that pay premium wages or overtime pay, 
and withholding such assignments because of a protected basis such as 
race, ethnicity, or sex would violate Title VII.
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    \65\ Shift differentials are paid to compensate employees for 
working shifts other than regular weekday hours.
    \66\ Employees who are nonexempt under the Fair Labor Standards 
Act are entitled to receive overtime pay for hours worked over 40 in 
a workweek. 29 CFR 778.10. The overtime rate is not less than time 
and one-half their regular pay rate. U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and 
Hour Division, Overtime Pay, https://www.dol.gov/whd/overtime_pay.htm. See also U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and Hour 
Division, Final Rule: Overtime, https://www.dol.gov/whd/overtime/final2016/, and, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, Fact 
Sheet: Final Rule to Update the Regulations Defining and Delimiting 
the Exemption for Executive, Administrative, and Professional 
Employees (May 2016), https://www.dol.gov/whd/overtime/final2016/overtime-factsheet.htm.
    \67\ SHRM, Shift Differentials: Compensation for Working 
Undesirable Hours (Dec. 3, 2010), https://www.shrm.org/hrdisciplines/compensation/articles/pages/shiftdifferentials.aspx.
    \68\ Id.
    \69\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, News 
Release-Employer Costs for Employee Compensation (June 9, 2016), 
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf.
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    Incentive pay for top executives also may be subject to 
discrimination. For example, at the five highest executive level 
positions (chief executive officer, vice chair, president, chief 
financial officer, and chief operating officer), research based on data 
from 1992-2005 shows that women received a lower share of incentive pay 
(including bonuses and stock option grants) than their male 
counterparts, accounting for 93% of the gender pay gap at that 
level.\70\ This difference remained even after taking into account 
differences of age, tenure, and titles.\71\
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    \70\ Stefania Albanesi, Claudia Olivetti, Maria Jos[eacute] 
Prados, Liberty Street Economics: Incentive Pay and Gender 
Compensation Gaps for Top Executives, Federal Reserve Bank of New 
York, (Aug. 25, 2015), http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2015/08/incentive-pay-and-gender-compensation-gaps-for-top-executives.html#.VzovwP5JlR0.
    \71\ Stefania Albanesi, How performance pay schemes make the 
gender gap worse, World Economic Forum, (Dec.23, 2015), https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/12/how-performance-pay-schemes-make-the-gender-gap-worse/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Bridging HRIS and Payroll
    In light of employers' argument that bridging employers' HRIS and 
payroll software for the new EEO-1 will be so burdensome that it 
outweighs the utility of W-2 income, the EEOC examined three of the 
HRIS tools that it sees most often in systemic investigations: ADP 
Enterprise, PeopleSoft, and UltiPro. All three HRIS allow for the 
collection of EEO-1 demographic data, and all three offer the capacity 
to record year-to-date gross and paid earnings.\72\ The EEOC recognizes 
that many employers may not choose to use this capacity, but its 
existence suggests that creating software solutions for the EEO-1, 
Components 1 and 2, may not be as complex or novel as some comments 
suggested.
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    \72\ The ADP HRIS software allows for the collection of year-to-
date gross pay and pay earnings. It includes paycheck year-to-date 
totals and provides fields for year-to-date tax amount, overtime 
hourly earnings, overtime hours, total overtime earnings, and total 
overtime hours. Further, it appears to provide fields for year-to-
date taxable income, taxable gross income year-to-date, and year-to-
date taxable amounts. Ultipro allows collection of weekly pay rate, 
hourly pay rate, and year-to-date taxable gross income, in addition 
to other measure of pay, hours, and bonus. Finally, PeopleSoft 
allows collection of hourly rate, minimum hourly rate, maximum 
hourly rate, and Last 26 Pay Period gross income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC intends to support employers and HRIS vendors as 
appropriate to accommodate Component 2 of the proposed EEO-1. For 
example, the EEO-1 Joint Reporting Committee plans to post online its 
new Data File Specifications for Components 1 and 2 of the modified 
EEO-1 as soon as OMB approves the information collection. The EEO-1 
data file specifications will be for data uploads (submitting EEO-1 
data in one digital file), but they also will describe the formatting 
of data for direct data entry onto the firm's secure EEO-1 account with 
the Joint Reporting Committee. For reference, the current EEO-1 data 
file specifications can be found at https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/ee1_datafile_2013.cfm.

VII. What Data To Report: Hours Worked

A. 60-Day Notice

    The Commission proposed collecting the number of ``hours worked'' 
for non-exempt employees by job category, subdivided into pay band 
cells, to account for periods when employees were not employed or were 
engaged in part-time work. With regard to exempt employees, the EEOC 
suggested that ``[o]ne approach would be for employers to use an 
estimate of 40 hours per week for full-time salaried workers. The EEOC 
[was] not proposing to require an employer to begin collecting 
additional data on actual hours worked for salaried workers, to the 
extent that the employer does not currently maintain such 
information.'' \73\
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    \73\ 81 FR 5113, 5117 (Feb. 1, 2016).
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B. Public Comments

    Public comments from many employers objected to collecting hours 
worked data due to the cost of creating new systems to collate and 
report data about hours worked with W-2 income, and EEO-1 Component 1 
data. Some employers inquired how the EEOC would define ``hours 
worked,'' so they would know what to report. These employers focused on 
two alternatives: (1) The FLSA definition of hours worked; and (2) the 
Affordable Care Act (ACA) approach.
    The question of how to count hours worked for employees exempt from 
overtime received a lot of attention, especially the EEOC's proposal to 
count 40 hours per week for full time, exempt workers. Supporters of 
the revised EEO-1 said it was reasonable to use a proxy of 40 hours per 
week for full-time exempt employees. Those who objected to using the 
40-hours per week proxy observed that it simply would not reflect the 
reality of the hours worked by many full-time exempt employees, who may 
work substantially more than 40 hours in any given week and may work 
less than 40 hours in another week. Some comments argued that, since 
the 40-hour estimate would be incorrect in many instances, reporting 40 
hours per week would require them to submit and certify inaccurate 
information to the federal government.

C. 30-Day Notice

1. The Importance of Collecting Hours Worked
    Collecting hours worked is of central importance because this data 
will enable the EEOC and OFCCP to account for part-time and partial-
year work and to assess potential pay disparities in the

[[Page 45488]]

context of this information. The importance of ``hours worked'' data 
can be illustrated by example. If two men and two women in the same job 
category are paid comparable wage rates, but the men are employed full-
time and the women are employed part-time, it would initially appear on 
Component 2 of the EEO-1--without any data on their hours worked--that 
the employer was paying the women significantly less than the men (the 
women would be counted in a lower pay band). On the other hand, if it 
was known that the men worked 40 hours per week and the women worked 20 
hours per week, then their different hours would provide a potential 
explanation of what initially appears to be a gender-based pay 
disparity. Of course, explaining a pay disparity in this way would not 
rule out the possibility that it was also caused by a discriminatory 
practice or policy that may be identified through further 
investigation.
    In addition to helping to assess pay disparities, hours-worked data 
may be useful in its own right. The EEOC receives charges of 
discrimination alleging that an employer gave the charging party fewer 
hours than other employees, or denied overtime or premium pay hours 
based on race, ethnicity, sex, or another statutorily-protected basis. 
Collecting ``hours worked'' data on the EEO-1 would be useful in the 
initial stages of such an investigation, as the EEOC seeks to assess 
how the employer assigns work hours.
2. Defining ``Hours Worked''
    The Commission adopts the FLSA definition for ``hours worked'' 
because it is familiar to employers, designed in conjunction with pay, 
and applies to all employers subject to the EEO-1.\74\ By contrast, the 
ACA approach to ``service hours'' gives employers a range of choices 
about how to count hours, which would not provide clarity for the EEO-
1.\75\
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    \74\ Under the Fair Labor Standards Act, employers must keep 
certain records for employees who are subject to the minimum wage 
provisions alone, or to both the minimum wage and overtime 
provisions, including records of hours worked each workday and total 
hours worked each workweek. 29 CFR 516.2(a)(7). Employers are not 
required to maintain hours worked records for employees who are 
exempt from minimum wage or minimum wage and overtime requirements. 
29 CFR 516.3. ``Hours worked'' under the FLSA includes ``(a) [a]ll 
time during which an employee is required to be on duty or on the 
employer's premises or at a prescribed workplace and (b) all time 
during which an employee is suffered or permitted to work whether or 
not he is required to do so.'' 29 CFR 778.223. Unlike the ACA 
definition, it does not include paid days off.
    \75\ Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), all employers with 50 
or more full-time employees or equivalents are considered applicable 
large employers (ALEs) subject to ACA's shared responsibility 
provisions for providing health insurance. For this purpose, a full-
time employee is, for a calendar month, an employee employed on 
average at least 30 hours of service per week, or 130 hours of 
service per month. The ACA provides employers the flexibility to use 
different measurements of hours worked, or ``service hours,'' for 
different categories of exempt employees, provided the measures are 
reasonable and consistently applied. 26 CFR 54.4980H-3(b)(3)(i).
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    Under the FLSA, the term ``hours worked'' includes ``all time an 
employee must be on duty, or on the employer's premises or at any other 
prescribed place of work, from the beginning of the first principal 
activity of the workday to the end of the last principal activity of 
the workday.'' \76\ Numerous court decisions have also helped shape 
this definition. The FLSA and its regulations require employers to 
maintain certain records for nonexempt employees, including hours the 
employee worked each day and the total hours the employee worked each 
workweek.\77\ Payroll records are to be preserved for at least three 
years and records upon which wage computations were made (e.g., time 
cards) should be maintained for at least two years.\78\
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    \76\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, Handy 
Reference Guide to the Fair Labor Standards Act (November, 2014), 
https://www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/hrg.htm.
    \77\ Additional FLSA recordkeeping requirements include (1) the 
employee's sex and occupation, (2) time and day of the week when 
employer's workweek begins, (3) basis on which employee's wages are 
paid, (4) employee's regular hourly rate, (5) employee's total daily 
or weekly straight-time earnings, (6) employee's total overtime 
earnings for the workweek, (7) employee's total wages each pay 
period, (8) date of payment to employee and pay period covered by 
payment, and much more. 29 CFR 516. See also United States 
Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, Fact Sheet #21: 
Recordkeeping Requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) 
(July, 2008), https://www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/whdfs21.htm.
    \78\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Federal contractors that file the EEO-1 also are subject to the 
2014 Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces Executive Order, which, once 
implemented by regulation, will require them to supply employees with a 
document each pay period showing the employee's hours worked, overtime 
hours, pay, and any additions made to, or deductions made from, pay as 
recorded for purposes of the FLSA.\79\ Adopting the FLSA definition of 
``hours worked'' for the EEO-1 promotes consistency for contractors 
subject to both requirements.
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    \79\ E.O. 13673, section 5, 79 FR 45309 (Aug. 5, 2014). The 
Paycheck Transparency provision of the Executive Order on Fair Pay 
Safe Workplaces provides: ``(a) Agencies shall ensure that, for 
contracts subject to section 2 of this order, provisions in 
solicitations and clauses in contracts shall provide that, in each 
pay period, contractors provide all individuals performing work 
under the contract for whom they are required to maintain wage 
records under the Fair Labor Standards Act; 40 U.S.C. chapter 31, 
subchapter IV (also known as the Davis-Bacon Act); 41 U.S.C. chapter 
67 (also known as the Service Contract Act); or equivalent State 
laws, with a document with information concerning that individual's 
hours worked, overtime hours, pay, and any additions made to or 
deductions made from pay. Agencies shall also require that 
contractors incorporate this same requirement into subcontracts 
covered by section 2 of this order. The document provided to 
individuals exempt from the overtime compensation requirements of 
the Fair Labor Standards Act need not include a record of hours 
worked if the contractor informs the individuals of their overtime 
exempt status. These requirements shall be deemed to be fulfilled if 
the contractor is complying with State or local requirements that 
the Secretary of Labor has determined are substantially similar to 
those required by this subsection.''
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3. Reporting Hours Worked for Nonexempt Employees
    The Commission will require private employers and contractors to 
report the ``hours worked'' as recorded for FLSA purposes for nonexempt 
employees in Component 2 of the proposed EEO-1. ``Hours worked'' will 
be reported for the total number of employees in each pay band by 
ethnicity, race, and gender, for the entire calendar year. For example, 
assume an employer reports on the EEO-1 that it employs four African 
American women as administrative support workers in the sixth pay band. 
The employer would report their total ``hours worked'' for the entire 
year in the appropriate pay band cell under ``Hours Worked'' (for 
example, 8,160 hours). If one of the workers resigned after the 
employer took its ``workforce snapshot'' but before December 31st, the 
employer would report only the total number of hours she actually 
worked that year prior to her resignation, which would account for her 
partial-year employment (for example, rather than 2,040 hours, it might 
report 1,900 hours).
4. Reporting Hours Worked for Exempt Employees
    Although the Commission seeks to minimize employer burden, the 
importance of hours-worked data necessitates its collection on the EEO-
1. The EEO-1 Instructions will give employers the option to: (1) Report 
a proxy of 40 hours per week for full-time exempt employees, and 20 
hours per week for part-time exempt employees, multiplied by the number 
of weeks the individuals were employed during the EEO-1 reporting year; 
or (2) provide actual hours of work by exempt employees during the EEO-
1 reporting year if the employer already maintains accurate records of 
this information.

[[Page 45489]]

    With this approach, the company official who certifies the firm's 
EEO-1 report would certify that the reports are ``accurate and . . . . 
prepared in accordance with the instructions.'' Since the new EEO-1 
instructions will give employers the option to record 40 hours per week 
for full-time exempt employees and 20 hours per week for part-time 
exempt employees, or to report actual hours-worked data for exempt 
employees, employers using the proxies can certify with confidence that 
they completed their EEO-1 reports accurately and in accordance with 
the instructions.

VIII. How To Report Data in Component 2: Pay Bands and Job Categories

    This 30-Day Notice does not change the proposal to collect W-2 
income and hours-worked data in the twelve pay bands used by the 
Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational 
Employment Statistics (OES),\80\ for each of the 10 EEO-1 job 
categories. Such data will support the EEOC's ability to discern 
significant pay disparities in the early stages of its investigations 
and, in conjunction with other information, to make more efficient 
decisions about how to plan the investigations going forward.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \80\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Survey 
Methods and Reliability Statement for the May 2015 Occupational 
Employment Statistics Survey, supra note 54 at 3, (stating that 
``employment refers to the number of workers who can be classified 
as full-or-part-time employees, including workers on paid vacations 
or other types of paid leave; exempt officers, executives, and staff 
members of incorporated firms; employees temporarily assigned to 
other units; and noncontract employees for whom the reporting unit 
is their permanent duty station regardless of whether that unit 
prepares their paychecks.'')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. 60-Day Notice

    The 60-Day Notice proposed that Component 2 of the EEO-1 report 
would collect W-2 income and hours-worked data within twelve distinct 
pay bands for each job category. These pay bands were based on the 
twelve wage intervals used by the BLS for the OES survey, which is a 
semi-annual survey designed to measure employment and wage estimates 
\81\ for over 800 occupations.\82\ These OES pay bands are different 
from the pay bands used on the EEO-4 report now completed by state and 
local government employers.
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    \81\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 
Occupational Employment Statistics Frequently Asked Questions, 
http://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_ques.htm.
    \82\ Id. The OES survey produces estimates of wages or salary 
paid to employees in non-farm occupations in the United States, in a 
particular State, or in a particular industry. The occupational wage 
estimates can be estimates of mean wages or percentiles, such as the 
median wage.

                        Table 1--EEO-4 Pay Bands
------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Pay bands                         Pay bands label
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1...................................  $100-$15,999.
2...................................  $16,000-$19,999.
3...................................  $20,000-$24,999.
4...................................  $25,000-$32,999.
5...................................  $33,000-$42,999.
6...................................  $43,000-$54,999.
7...................................  $55,000-$69,999.
8...................................  $70,000 and over.
------------------------------------------------------------------------


                    Table 2--Proposed EEO-1 Pay Bands
------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Pay bands                         Pay bands label
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1...................................  $19,239 and under.
2...................................  $19,240-$24,439.
3...................................  $24,440-$30,679.
4...................................  $30,680-$38,999.
5...................................  $39,000-$49,919.
6...................................  $49,920-$62,919.
7...................................  $62,920-$80,079.
8...................................  $80,080-$101,919.
9...................................  $101,920-$128,959.
10..................................  $128,960-$163,799.
11..................................  $163,800-$207,999.
12..................................  $208,000 and over.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Public Comments

    Many stakeholders argued that the twelve OES pay bands are overly 
broad, particularly for the highest pay band ($208,000 and over) and 
also for the lower or middle income pay bands ($30,000 to $80,000). 
Opponents of the proposal argued that broad pay bands would not produce 
reliable data because the employees within each pay band may have 
different levels of experience or hold different jobs within an 
organization. Some comments advocated for additional and narrower pay 
bands to better capture pay disparities.

C. 30-Day Notice

    Collecting W-2 income and hours-worked data in the twelve OES pay 
bands will enable the EEOC to gather pay data about most employees and 
EEO-1 filers, as the majority of wages in the United States are well 
below the highest OES pay band ($208,000 and over), even after 
including some types of supplemental income. According to the U.S. 
Census Bureau, the estimated median earnings for full-time, year round 
civilian workers 16 years of age and over were $43,545 in 2014. For 
management occupations, the median earnings were $71,112.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \83\ U.S. Census Bureau, Table Packages, Full-Time, Year-Round 
Workers and Median Earnings in the Past 12 Months by Sex and 
Detailed Occupation: 2014, http://www.census.gov/people/io/publications/table_packages.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In Component 2 of the EEO-1, employers will report the number of 
employees whose annual W-2 income falls in each of the job category's 
twelve pay bands. For example, an employer may report that it has 
twelve employees in pay band 3 for Professionals, and that four are 
white men, four are Asian men, and four are white women.
    The EEOC is not convinced that using twelve pay bands in 
conjunction with the EEO-1 job categories will undermine the utility of 
W-2 income and hours-worked data. The EEOC does not intend or expect 
that this data will identify specific, similarly situated comparators 
or that it will establish pay discrimination as a legal matter. 
Therefore, it is not critical that each EEO-1 pay band include only the 
same or similar occupations. The data will be useful for identifying 
patterns or correlations that can inform the early stages of the 
investigative process, as explained in more detail in section IX.
    In addition, many EEO-1 firms and establishments do not report 
widely divergent occupations in each EEO-1 job category. It also is 
likely that similar firms and establishments in the same geographic 
area will have similar distributions of occupations within the job 
groups and pay bands, thus making statistical comparisons between EEO-1 
reports a reasonable approach to using this data.

IX. How the EEOC Will Use W-2 and Hours-Worked Data

A. 60-Day Notice

    As explained in the 60-Day Notice, Component 2 data would support 
EEOC data analysis at the early stages of an investigation, using 
statistical tests to identify significant disparities in reported pay. 
EEOC enforcement staff who conduct these analyses would use them, in 
the larger context of other available economic data and information, to 
evaluate whether and how to investigate the allegations of 
discrimination in more depth. Moreover, the 60-Day Notice also 
explained how employers would be able to use the summary pay data that 
the EEOC intends to publish to generally assess their own pay 
practices.

B. Public Comments

    Employers opposing the proposal expressed concern that the EEOC 
would make unfounded inferences of discrimination based on its 
statistical analysis of the EEO-1 Component 2 pay data which, in turn, 
would result in

[[Page 45490]]

unwarranted and burdensome EEOC investigations. Some interested parties 
criticized the particular statistical analyses that the EEOC described 
in the 60-Day Notice, arguing that these tests would not yield 
meaningful results when applied to data reported in pay bands and broad 
EEO-1 job categories. These commenters also raised concerns about the 
dangers of Type I or Type II errors in analyzing Component 2 data: In 
statistics, ``Type I'' errors are referred to as ``false positives'' 
and ``Type II'' errors are ``false negatives.'' \84\
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    \84\ Type I errors represent the possibility of rejecting a null 
hypothesis when it is correct. For example, a null hypothesis might 
be that the earnings of African Americans and whites are the same 
and a Type I error would be rejecting it as false when it is true. 
Type II errors represent the opposite: The possibility of accepting 
the null hypothesis (for example, that the earnings of African 
Americans and whites are the same) as true when in fact it is false. 
Type I errors in this context could suggest a need for an 
investigation where it may not be needed; Type II errors in this 
context could result in victims of pay discrimination not receiving 
relief for discrimination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, employers expressed skepticism that the EEOC's reports 
based on aggregated EEO-1 pay data would be useful for evaluating their 
own pay practices and promoting voluntary compliance. Several employers 
explained that they do not use W-2 data to analyze their own 
compensation practices, but rather rely on more complete compensation 
data that they have at their disposal.

C. 30-Day Notice

    This 30-Day Notice expands on the discussion in the 60-Day Notice 
and explains in more detail how the data collected with this 
information collection will support enforcement of, and compliance 
with, Title VII, the EPA, and E.O. 11246.
1. Early Assessment of Charges of Discrimination
    Currently, the EEOC enforcement staff can retrieve a respondent's 
EEO-1 report using existing EEO-1 analytics software to assess the 
distribution of different demographics (sex, race, and ethnicity) in an 
employer's job groups. When W-2 income and hours-worked data is added 
to the EEO-1 report, the EEOC's EEO-1 analytic software tool will be 
expanded to allow for the examination of pay disparities based on job 
category, pay bands, and gender, ethnicity, or race. For example, if a 
charging party alleges that she was paid less than her male colleagues 
in a similar job, the EEOC's enforcement staff might use the expanded 
EEO-1 analytics tool to generate a report comparing the distribution of 
the pay of women to that of men in the same EEO-1 job category.\85\ 
They also might use statistical tools to determine generally whether 
there are significant disparities in reported pay in job groups based 
on race, gender, or ethnicity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \85\ Enforcement staff could choose to compare men and women in 
one particular EEO-1 job category, for multiple job categories, or 
even all job categories.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EEOC enforcement staff could then examine how the employer compares 
to similar employers in its labor market \86\ by using a statistical 
test to compare the distribution of women's pay in the respondent's 
EEO-1 report to the distribution of women's pay among the respondent's 
competitors in the same labor market. With the proposed addition of 
hours-worked data to the EEO-1, statistical tests could be used to 
determine whether pay disparities remain among relevant groups such as 
men and women, controlling for hours worked. More specifically, 
statistical tests could determine whether factors such as race, 
ethnicity, gender, and hours worked impact the distribution of 
individuals in pay bands. The EEOC envisions that any statistical test 
would be accompanied by an indication of the practical significance of 
pay differences.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \86\ EEO-1 reports are identified by location and by each 
establishment's 5-dight NAICS industry codes. The U.S. Census Bureau 
maintains only one NAICS code for each establishment based on its 
primary business activity. The Census Bureau states: ``[i]deally, 
the primary business activity of an establishment is determined by 
relative share of production costs and/or capital investment. In 
practice, other variables, such as revenue, value of shipments, or 
employment, are used as proxies. The Census Bureau generally uses 
revenue or value of shipments to determine an establishment's 
primary business activity.'' U.S. Census Bureau, ``North American 
Industry Classification System--Frequently Asked Questions,'' 
https://www.census.gov/eos/www/naics/faqs/faqs.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    After considering the results of several statistical analyses in 
conjunction with allegations in the charge, and sometimes also 
assessing how the EEO-1 pay data compares to statistics for comparable 
workers using Census data, EEOC enforcement staff would decide how to 
focus the investigation and what information to request from the 
employer. When EEOC enforcement staff requests information from an 
employer, the employer has the opportunity to explain its practices, 
provide additional data, and explain the non-discriminatory reasons for 
its pay practices and decisions. Only after considering all of this 
information, and possibly additional information, would the EEOC reach 
a conclusion about whether discrimination was the likely cause of the 
pay disparities.
    The EEOC has tested whether statistical tests, and the EEO-1 pay 
data, would be useful tools in the investigation of charges of 
discrimination and has found them to be effective.\87\ The EEOC used 
two databases to test the utility of the planned analyses. The first 
was the EEO-4 database that the EEOC currently uses to collect and 
analyze pay data from state and local governments. Since the EEO-4 has 
fewer and different pay bands than the EEOC proposes for the EEO-1 pay 
data collection, the EEOC also used a synthetic database. The term 
``synthetic'' does not mean that the data was not real. Rather, the 
EEOC created a large confidential database from HRIS data obtained in 
actual EEOC investigations that contained certain variables of 
interest, in particular pay rate history and job titles for all 
employees, and the statistical tests referenced above were run. Other 
important variables such as ``race,'' ``gender,'' and ``EEO-1'' job 
codes were randomly generated for databases that lacked this 
information. The results supported the EEOC's conclusion that these 
statistical tests provide insights that are useful in developing a 
request for information or deciding whether an investigation of a 
charge should have a more limited scope.\88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \87\ Sage Computing, supra notes 3, 52, and 56.
    \88\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As noted above, some critics disputed the EEOC's choice of 
statistical tests, arguing that they would not be useful for data 
reported in broad pay bands and job categories. The EEOC's Pilot Study 
reported on a 2007 study finding that, even if collecting income data 
in bands results in a loss of information, that loss would likely be 
small and of little concern to many researchers, and would be balanced 
by reduced cost and burden.\89\ Other researchers have identified the 
value of banded pay data even to the point of being useful in 
estimating mean incomes within an accuracy of 1-3 percent.\90\ This 
research suggests that critics who argue that one cannot detect mean 
differences that are smaller than the pay bands, or bins, are 
incorrect.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \89\ Id. citing Micklewright, John and Schnepf, Sylke V., How 
Reliable are Income Data Collected with a Single Question? (Nov., 
2007), http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1047981.
    \90\ Paul T. von Hippel, Samuel V. Scarpino and Igor Holas, 
Robust estimation of inequality from binned incomes, Sociological 
Methodology (Jun. 6, 2016), http://arxiv.org/abs/1402.4061.
    \91\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, the EEOC is confident that the risk of Type I (false 
positive) or Type II (false negative) errors will not undermine its 
statistical analyses of Component 2 data. The chances of incurring Type 
I errors (false positives) are related to the probability level used

[[Page 45491]]

in the statistical significance test. The EEOC follows judicially 
recognized statistical standards for identifying meaningful 
discrepancies,\92\ and therefore is confident that the probability 
level it uses is effective at minimizing the risk of Type I (false 
positive) errors. By contrast, the risk of Type II (false negative) 
error is inversely related to the sample size: The smaller the sample 
size, the more likely a Type II error. If a sample size is so small 
that the EEOC enforcement staff is concerned about Type II errors, it 
will consider analyzing a differently configured, larger sample. Even 
if it forgoes such analysis due to an elevated risk of Type II errors, 
enforcement staff will study the EEO-1 for other relevant information 
and analyze additional data from other sources. In fact, EEOC 
enforcement staff expects to analyze data from other sources regardless 
of the risk of error.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ Hazelwood Sch. Dist. v. United States, 433 U.S. 299, 311 
n.17 (1977) (explaining that ``a fluctuation of more than two or 
three standard deviations would undercut the hypothesis that 
decisions were being made randomly with respect to [a protected 
trait]''); Wright v. Stern, 450 F.Supp.2d 335, 363 (S.D.N.Y. 2006) 
(denying motion for summary judgment in case alleging discrimination 
against African-American and Hispanic employees in promotions and 
compensation, the court noted that, ``[t]hough not dispositive, 
statistics demonstrating a disparity of two standard deviations 
outside of the norm are generally considered statistically 
significant.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. EEOC Publications Analyzing Aggregate EEO-1 Data
    Using aggregated EEO-1 data, Census data, and potentially other 
data sources, the EEOC expects to periodically publish reports on pay 
disparities by race, sex, industry, occupational groupings, and 
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). Particularly after a few years of 
data collection, these reports will provide useful comparative data. 
For smaller employers and others that do not hire consultants to 
analyze their compensation structures, these reports will be especially 
informative in light of the business case for equal pay and the need to 
comply with state equal pay laws.
    The EEOC's publication of aggregated pay data, in conjunction with 
the employer's preparation of the EEO-1 report itself, may be useful 
tools for employers to engage in voluntary self-assessment of pay 
practices. For contractors, such self-assessment is encouraged by the 
OFCCP Rule on Discrimination on the Basis of Sex.\93\ OFCCP states that 
``[e]ach contractor may continue to choose the assessment method that 
best fits with its workforce and compensation practices.'' \94\ 
Although the OFCCP rule does not create new obligations with respect to 
a covered contractor's self-assessment of its compensation practices, 
it does provide additional guidance about the kinds of compensation 
practices the contractors should evaluate to ensure their compliance 
with E.O. 11246.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \93\ 41 CFR 60-20. See also 81 FR 39109 (June 15, 2016).
    \94\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. EEOC Training on the Pay Data Collection
    The EEOC will ensure its internal capacity to use the EEO-1 pay 
data effectively by supplementing existing training for EEOC 
statisticians, investigators, and attorneys about how EEO-1 pay data 
and the updated EEO-1 analytics tool can be used to improve the 
agency's enforcement work. EEOC enforcement staff will receive periodic 
training on how to use the expanded EEO-1 analytics software tool to 
examine pay data and identify any disparities. EEOC personnel who 
conduct intake also would receive periodic training to help them 
``issue spot'' potential pay discrimination and ask appropriate 
questions to collect relevant anecdotal evidence of possible 
discrimination and information about employer policies and practices. 
Further, the agency would provide specialized training to its lead 
systemic investigators. Finally, as discussed more fully below, the 
EEOC would continue to ensure that staff is trained with regard to 
confidentiality obligations with respect to pay data.
    The EEOC also would provide enhanced technical assistance and 
support to employers with seminars or webinars, training, and outreach 
and education materials. Such materials may include best practice 
guides and self-assessment tools to promote voluntary compliance and 
assist employers in identifying and correcting discriminatory pay 
policies and practices. They may also identify practices that could 
lead to pay discrimination, such as subjective pay decision-making 
practices, establishing salary by relying heavily on prior salary, and 
setting salary based in large part on negotiations.
    Finally, the EEOC would conduct outreach to other stakeholders, 
including employees and their advocates, and academic researchers. 
Outreach to employees and their advocates would focus on ``know your 
rights'' trainings with respect to equal pay for equal work and also 
include training about how to use the EEOC's planned aggregated pay 
data reports for research and informational purposes.

X. Confidentiality of EEO-1 Data

    This 30-Day Notice expands on the discussion in the 60-Day Notice 
regarding the privacy and confidentiality protections for Component 2 
data. The EEOC has successfully protected the confidentiality of EEO-1 
data for over 50 years, since this data was first collected. 
Recognizing that employers are concerned both about the confidentiality 
of their business data and the privacy of employees' pay information, 
the EEOC and OFCCP have committed to vigorously guarding its privacy 
and confidentiality, as explained below.

A. 60-Day Notice

    The 60-Day Notice emphasized that Title VII subjects the EEOC to 
strict confidentiality requirements, subject to criminal penalties; 
that OFCCP defers to the EEOC on disclosure of all non-contractor data; 
and that the OFCCP ensures the confidentiality of contractor data to 
the maximum extent permissible by law. In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC 
explained that EEO-1 Component 2 data would not include any employee 
personally identifiable information and, since EEO-1 pay and hours-
worked data would be anonymous and aggregated, personally identifying 
information would not be readily apparent.

B. Public Comments

    Employers expressed concern that the addition of sensitive pay data 
to the EEO-1 would make it more valuable to their competitors and that 
any breach in confidentiality would be significantly more costly than 
with the current EEO-1. They also expressed concern about the privacy 
of the data, because an individual's pay could be disclosed if, for 
example, the employee was one of only a few employees matching a 
particular race/ethnicity background and gender in a cell on the EEO-1 
and the EEO-1 report were disclosed. Some employers expressed concern 
that federal and state agencies may not be bound by Title VII's 
confidentiality requirements, and some employers urged the EEOC to 
prevail on Congress to amend Title VII to expressly extend the 
statute's confidentiality provisions to other federal and state 
agencies that might get EEO-1 data.

C. 30-Day Notice

1. Legal Confidentiality
a. EEOC
    As recognized by employers and explained in the 60-Day Notice, 
Title VII forbids the EEOC or any EEOC officer or employee from making 
public any

[[Page 45492]]

information, including EEO-1 data, before a Title VII proceeding is 
instituted that involves that information.\95\ EEOC staff who violate 
this prohibition are guilty of a criminal misdemeanor and can be 
imprisoned.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \95\ 42 U.S.C. 2000e-8(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC directly imposes this Title VII confidentiality 
requirement on all of its contractors, including contract workers and 
contractor companies, as a condition of their contracts. With respect 
to other federal agencies with a legitimate law enforcement purpose, 
the EEOC gives access to information collected under Title VII only if 
the agencies agree, by letter or memorandum of understanding, to comply 
with the confidentiality provisions of Title VII.
    Finally, the text of Title VII itself states that the EEOC may only 
give state and local fair employment practices agencies (FEPAs) 
information (including EEO-1 data) about employers in their 
jurisdiction on the condition that they not make it public.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ 42 U.S.C. 2000e-8(d). See also EEOC, EEO-1 Survey System 
Privacy Impact Assessment, https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/privacyimpact.cfm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For the EEOC, its agents and contractors, and the FEPAs, Title VII 
only permits disclosure of information after suit is filed on the 
issues that were investigated at the administrative level.
b. OFCCP
    Even though OFCCP obtains EEO-1 reports for federal contractors and 
subcontractors (contractors) through the Joint Reporting Committee with 
the EEOC, OFCCP obtains this information pursuant to its own legal 
authority under E.O. 11246 and its implementing regulations.\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ 41 CFR 60-1.7(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    OFCCP will notify contractors of any FOIA request for their EEO-1 
pay and hours-worked data. If a contractor objects to disclosure, OFCCP 
will not disclose the data if OFCCP determines that the contractor's 
objection is valid. FOIA Exemptions 3 and 4 recognize the value of this 
data and provide, in combination with the Trade Secrets Act, the 
necessary tools to appropriately protect it from public disclosure. 
OFCCP will protect the confidentiality of EEO-1 pay and hours-worked 
data to the maximum extent possible consistent with FOIA.
    With respect to companies that are not federal contractors or 
subcontractors under OFCCP's jurisdiction, the confidentiality 
provision of Section 709(e) applies. OFCCP will refer all such FOIA 
requests for EEO-1 data to the EEOC for a response. The EEOC, in turn, 
is subject to Title VII confidentiality and cannot disclose any of its 
EEO-1 data to the public, except in an aggregated format that protects 
the confidentiality of each employer's information. Any FOIA request by 
a member of the public for such disaggregated EEO-1 data will be denied 
by the EEOC under Exemption 3 of the FOIA.
2. Data Protection and Security
    The EEOC takes extensive measures to protect the confidentiality 
and integrity of EEO-1 data in its possession. First, all EEOC and FEPA 
staff \98\ receive annual training in data protection and security. The 
EEOC maintains a robust cyber security and privacy program, in 
compliance with the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 
2014.\99\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \98\ As noted in text above, all FEPAs sign a contractual 
agreement with the EEOC that requires them to follow the 
confidentiality provisions set forth in Title VII.
    \99\ 44 U.S.C. 3551; see also relevant provision 44 U.S.C. 3554 
discussing federal agency responsibilities for protecting federal 
information and information systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC also complies with a comprehensive set of security and 
privacy controls to protect organizational operations and information 
system assets against a diverse set of threats, including hostile 
cyber-attacks, natural disasters, structural failures, and human 
errors. The EEOC's systems are monitored on an ongoing basis to assure 
compliance with an extensive set of security and privacy requirements 
derived from legislation, Executive Orders, policies, directives, and 
standards.\100\ Agency information technology systems are subjected to 
weekly security scans by the Department of Homeland Security, annual 
internal audits performed by the EEOC's Office of Inspector General, 
and expert third-party audits for best practices and compliance with 
cyber-security standards. Current protections include regular internal 
and external vulnerability scanning and penetration testing, 
comprehensive real-time anti-virus scanning and protection on all 
desktops and servers, Internet and email filtering for malware and 
spam, strong firewall protections and intrusion detection systems, 
compliance with security benchmark configuration settings, deep 
discovery advanced network security analysis and monitoring, secure 
domain name server configurations, automatic server/firewall monitoring 
and logging, security awareness training, and comprehensive disaster 
recovery planning and testing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \100\ 40 U.S.C. 1401 et seq., Information Technology Management 
Reform Act, identifying standards and guidelines developed by the 
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for federal 
computing systems. NIST, NIST Special Publication 800-53, Rev 4, 
Security and Privacy Controls for Federal Information Systems and 
Organizations (April 2013), http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/SpecialPublications/NIST.SP.800-53r4.pdf (explaining specific 
security controls required by the Federal Information Security 
Management Act of 2002 and thereafter the Federal Information 
Security Modernization Act of 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The online EEO-1 portal of the Joint Reporting Committee allows 
firms that currently upload EEO-1 data files to encrypt their data or 
even create a file transfer site for EEOC to download the data. After 
collecting and reconciling EEO-1 data through a process that may 
involve input from the employer or contractor, the Joint Reporting 
Committee at the EEOC provides the database to OFCCP on an encrypted 
storage device.

XI. Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Estimates

A. Background

    The revised EEO-1 data collection has two components. The first 
component (Component 1) will collect information identical to that 
collected by the currently approved EEO-1, through which employers 
report data on employees' ethnicity, race, and sex by job category. The 
second component (Component 2) will collect data on employees' W-2 (Box 
1) income and hours worked. Because of the complexity of this PRA 
burden calculation, the EEOC is providing the following background 
information to explain the rationale behind its methodologies for 
calculating the annual and one-time burden of filing EEO-1 reports.
    The OMB's PRA guidance prescribes the factors for agencies to 
consider in calculating annual reporting and one-time implementation 
costs. The prescribed PRA calculation is focused on the time it takes 
filers to complete the tasks required for the proposed information 
collection and the hourly rates of the employees who spend that time. 
For this reason, the following discussion of the costs of transitioning 
and annually filing Components 1 and 2 of the EEO-1 must be formulated 
through the PRA analysis of hours spent and hourly rates.
    OMB's PRA regulations also require consideration of how to reduce 
the burden of a data collection through the use of technology and 
automation.\101\

[[Page 45493]]

This consideration is particularly relevant to EEO-1 reporting. In the 
years since the EEOC first estimated the PRA burden of the EEO-1 based 
only on the time to fill in the cells on a paper EEO-1 report, there 
have been major advances in technology both for employers and the Joint 
Reporting Committee. Many employers now rely on HRIS and automated 
payroll systems.\102\ The Joint Reporting Committee now utilizes an 
online EEO-1 portal for the confidential filing of EEO-1 reports, 
either by digital upload or by data entry onto a password-protected, 
partially pre-populated digital EEO-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \101\ Agencies must ``evaluat[e] . . . whether (and if so, to 
what extent) the burden on respondents can be reduced by use of 
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection 
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., 
permitting electronic submission of responses.'' 5 CFR 1320.8(a)(5).
    \102\ International Public Management Association for Human 
Resources, Public Personnel Management, Volume 39, No. 3, Fall 2010, 
http://ipma-hr.org/files/pdf/ppm/ppmfall2010.pdf (reporting that 90% 
of human resources departments used some form of HRIS).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Throughout the Joint Reporting Committee's transition to this new 
system, the EEOC continued to calculate the PRA burden based on its 
original method of counting all the cells on a paper report and 
calculating the time needed to enter data into each of them. However, 
with the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC concluded that both digital 
recordkeeping and digital filing were sufficiently well-established to 
transition to a new PRA methodology more suited to the new technology 
and the time-savings it generated.\103\ The EEOC's new PRA 
methodology--necessarily expressed in the PRA's terms of hours and 
hourly labor rates--focuses on the time needed by the employer's staff 
to complete tasks such as reading the EEO-1 instructions, collecting, 
verifying, validating, certifying, and submitting the report. 
Therefore, in the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC considered for the first time 
the time savings generated by this task-based approach stemming from 
technology.\104\ This is the reason that the burden of filing the EEO-1 
actually declined with the PRA calculations in 60-Day Notice, relative 
to the paper-based calculation method previously used.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \103\ 81 FR 5113, 5120 (Feb. 1, 2016).
    \104\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC concluded that most employers would 
be filing the EEO-1 with a digital file upload by the time they file 
their EEO-1 reports for 2017 and 2018. Therefore, in the 60-Day Notice, 
the EEOC reasoned that ``each additional report filed [would have] just 
a marginal additional cost.'' \105\ Accordingly, the burden calculation 
in the 60-Day Notice was based on the number of firms filing one or 
more EEO-1 reports, not on the number of reports submitted or the 
number of separate establishments submitting reports. The EEOC's PRA 
burden calculations also assumed that all employees working on the EEO-
1 would be administrative staff paid an hourly rate of $24.23 per hour.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \105\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC's intent in calculating respondent burden for the 60-Day 
Notice was to recognize the cost and time savings associated with the 
accelerating trend toward greater automation. However, employers' 
public comments indicated that the EEOC's estimates reflected a level 
of automation that was unlikely to be attained imminently. Some of 
these comments included estimates about the annual time and costs of 
completing the EEO-1. While some firms stated that they spent less time 
each year on the EEO-1 than the EEOC estimated in the 60-Day Notice, 
many firms reported that they spent more time and used more varied 
professional staff. These same commenters observed that they used data 
uploads less frequently than the EEOC had projected.
    The EEOC carefully considered employers' input, yet, their comments 
as a whole reflected widely discrepant estimates of the time needed, 
jobs involved, and HRIS and software costs associated with digital EEO-
1 reporting. Although the EEOC recognizes that the EEO-1 may involve 
more time than it estimated in the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC also 
concludes that the amount of time a filer spends each year completing 
this report varies, because each employer is different in terms of 
number of establishments, number of employees involved in producing the 
report, time spent by those employees and their rates of pay, and 
sophistication of HRIS. Due to the wide range of estimates provided 
about annual reporting costs, the EEOC also relied on its own 
experience collecting the EEO-1 reports and working with EEO-1 
stakeholders over the years.
    In conclusion, the EEOC adjusted its methodology for calculating 
PRA annual burden in this 30-Day Notice. First, the EEOC took into 
account the time and pay rates for a range of employees at both the 
firm- and establishment- levels who are responsible for preparing and 
filing the EEO-1. The EEOC now accounts for time to be spent annually 
on EEO-1 reporting by everyone from the executive who certifies it, to 
the lawyer who reviews it and the human resource professionals who 
prepare it with the support of information technology professionals and 
clericals.
    Second, the EEOC no longer assumes that all the EEO-1 reports for 
2017 and 2018 will be submitted by one data upload filed by the firm on 
behalf of all the establishments. While still reflecting that the bulk 
of the tasks performed in completing the EEO-1 report will be completed 
at the firm level due to the centrality of automation, the EEOC's 30-
Day Notice recognizes that there are certain tasks that will be 
performed at the establishment level for employers who enter their EEO-
1 data directly onto the Joint Reporting Committee's secure portal. 
Therefore, the 30-Day Notice burden calculations are based on the 
number of hours needed to complete the tasks at the firm level and also 
at the establishment level for the proportion of EEO-1 filers who do 
not now use centralized, secure data uploads. To make these 
calculations, the EEOC distinguished the time spent at the firm and 
establishment levels on the different types of EEO-1 reports, such as 
single-establishment Type 1 reports, Type 2 consolidated reports for 
employers with multiple establishments, and Type 6 or 8 reports for 
small establishments (under 50 employees).
    For those employers who have staff enter EEO-1 data online, which 
is closest digital equivalent to completing a paper form by hand, the 
Joint Reporting Committee's password-protected, individualized portal 
prompts the employer with pre-populated EEO-1 forms that already 
include identifying information and the prior year totals. Moreover, 
the Joint Reporting Committee's online portal does not compel these 
employers to enter ``zeros'' in the cells for which they do not submit 
data. No EEO-1 filers enter data in every cell, so basing the annual 
PRA burden on the total number of cells on the EEO-1 form would be 
inaccurate.
    Therefore, as explained in detail below, the total estimated annual 
burden hour cost in 2017 and 2018 for those contractors that will 
complete and submit only Component 1 (contractors with 50-99 employees) 
will be $1,872,792.41. The total estimated annual burden hour cost in 
2017 and 2018 for employers and contractors that will complete both 
Components 1 and 2 will be $53,546,359.08.
    The EEOC estimates that for these filers submitting both Component 
1 and 2 data in 2017 and 2018, the addition of pay data will increase 
the estimated annual burden hour costs by a total of $25,364,064.80 or 
an average of $416.58 per EEO-1 filer each year, using the 30-Day PRA 
analysis. This is an average

[[Page 45494]]

estimate per filer, and actual costs will vary, as explained in this 
Notice.

B. 60-Day Notice

    In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC estimated burden based on 
centralized electronic, rather than paper, filing of the EEO-1. Costs 
were calculated assuming that all tasks were performed at the firm 
level.
    Burden Statement--2016: For reporting year 2016, when all filers 
will continue to submit only Component 1 demographic data, the EEOC 
estimated the total annual burden hours required to complete the EEO-1 
as 228,296.4 hours, with an associated total annual burden hour cost of 
$5,531,621.77.
    Burden Statement--Component 1 Only: The 60-Day Notice stated that 
starting in 2017, the estimated number of annual respondents 
(contractor filers) who will submit Component 1 only would be 
6,260.\106\ The 60-Day Notice estimated the burden in 2017 on 
contractor filers with 50 to 99 employees as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \106\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). Of the 67,146 firms that filed 
EEO-1 reports in 2014, 6,260 were federal contractor filers with 
fewer than 100 employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Annual Burden Calculation: The total annual burden hours 
required to complete Component 1 of the EEO-1 data collection in 2017 
and 2018 was estimated to be 21,284 hours each year, with an associated 
total annual burden hour cost of $515,711.32. This figure used an 
average wage rate of $24.23 for employees working on the EEO-1, based 
on the conclusion that administrative support staff would perform the 
work in completing an EEO-1 report.
    Burden Statement--Components 1 and 2: The 60-Day Notice estimated 
the number of annual respondents that would submit both Components 1 
and 2 starting with the 2017 reporting cycle at 60,886 private industry 
and contractor filers. Filers required to complete both Components 1 
and 2 were estimated to incur 401,847.6 burden hours annually or 6.6 
hours per filer.
     Annual Burden Calculation: The estimated total annual 
burden hours needed for filers to report demographic and W-2 income and 
hours-worked data via Components 1 and 2 of the revised EEO-1 was 
estimated at 401,847.6, with an associated total annual burden hour 
cost of $9,736,767.35. This burden estimate includes reading 
instructions and collecting, merging, validating, and reporting the 
data electronically.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \107\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). This estimate was calculated as 
follows: 6.6 hours per respondent x 60,886 respondents = 401,847.6 
hours x $24.23 per hour = $9,736,767.35. See also U.S. Dept. of 
Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee 
Compensation--December 2013 (March 2014), http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_03122014.htm (listing total compensation 
for administrative support as $24.23 per hour).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     One-Time Implementation Burden: The estimated one-time 
implementation burden hour cost for submitting the information required 
by Component 2 of the revised EEO-1 Report was estimated as 
$23,000,295.\108\ This calculation was based on the one-time cost for 
developing queries related to Component 2 in an existing human 
resources information system, which was estimated to take 8 hours per 
filer at a wage rate of $47.22 per hour.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \108\ 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). This estimate was calculated as 
follows: 8 hours per respondent x 60,886 employers = 487,088 x 
$47.22 per hour = $23,000,295. See also U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau 
of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee Compensation--
December 2013, supra note 108 (listing total compensation for a 
professional as $47.22 per hour).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The 60-Day Notice also estimated that the addition of W-2 income 
data to the EEO-1 would result in the EEOC incurring $318,000 in one-
time costs and would raise the EEOC's recurring internal staffing cost 
by $290,478 due to the increased staff time needed to process the 
additional data.

C. 30-Day Notice

    In response to concerns raised in the public comments to the 60-Day 
Notice, this 30-Day Notice reflects an increased burden estimate by: 
(1) Reflecting varying labor costs for the different types of staff 
involved with preparing the EEO-1, (2) adding labor costs for report-
level functions, and (3) increasing the total number of burden hours a 
firm would need to read the EEO-1 instructions and to collect, verify, 
and enter EEO-1 data on the EEO-1 online portal. This methodology 
increases the total number of hours spent annually, even though the 30-
Day Notice reduced overall burden by no longer requiring employers to 
make special W-2 income calculations for the EEO-1. This reflects 
employers' feedback about the annual EEO-1 reporting burden.
1. Annual Burden Hours
    The 30-Day Notice revises the annual burden hour estimates to add 
the estimated time spent on firm-level functions by several different 
types of employees. These estimates are informed by the comments on the 
60-Day Notice, based on the EEOC's experiences in providing technical 
assistance to employers, and within the range of time suggested by 
public comments.
    To submit a report containing EEO-1 Component 1 data, the EEOC now 
assumes that, at the firm level, computer specialists would need to 
spend 4 hours, senior human resource managers, corporate legal counsel, 
and chief executive officers would each spend 1 hour, and data entry 
clerks and clerical staff would each spend 0.5 hours, for a total of 8 
hours to complete firm-level functions.
    Based on information received during the comment period, the 
addition of Component 2 data would increase the total time spent by 
each of these employees by a factor of 1.9. Therefore, the EEOC 
estimates that beginning with the 2017 EEO-1, each firm reporting both 
Component 1 and Component 2 data would require 7.6 hours by computer 
specialists, 1.9 hours each by senior human resource managers, 
corporate legal counsel, and chief executive officers, and 0.95 hours 
each by data entry clerks and clerical staff, for a total of 15.2 hours 
per firm for firm-level functions.
    In order to analyze annual reporting burden as accurately as 
possible, the EEOC now also considers the time and effort associated 
with completing the different types of EEO-1 reports. There are six 
types of EEO-1 reports, as detailed in the footnote.\109\ All reports 
except the Type 6 report include the requested EEO-1 workforce data; 
the Type 6 report includes only the employer's name, address, and the 
number of employees in each establishment with fewer than 50 employees. 
An employer having establishments with fewer than 50 employees chooses 
between filing one Type 6 report or multiple Type 8 reports (a full 
EEO-1 report for the establishment). If it chooses to file separate 
Type 8 reports for each establishment with fewer than 50 employees, the 
Joint Reporting Committee does not require it to complete a 
consolidated EEO-1 for the entire firm; rather, the Joint Reporting 
Committee's software generates a Type 2 report for the employer. 
However, if the employer chooses to submit a Type 6 report, it must 
also complete a full consolidated report. Accordingly, firms that have 
establishments with fewer than 50 employees either submit Type 8 
reports (one for each establishment) or a Type 6 report (a list 
covering all establishments) plus a Type 2 report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \109\ Type 1 (single establishment firm); Type 2 (consolidated 
report for headquarters and multi-establishment firm); Type 3 
(headquarters report); Type 4 (report for establishments with over 
50 employees); Type 6 (list of establishments with under 50 
employees); and Type 8 (detailed report for establishments with 
under 50 employees).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, based on the EEOC's experience, most firms complete all 
the

[[Page 45495]]

tasks associated with filing EEO-1 Type 1, 2, and 6 reports at the firm 
level. By contrast, for Type 3, 4 and 8 reports, some of the tasks are 
performed at the firm level, but others are performed at the 
establishment level. The EEOC's 30-Day Notice annual burden estimates 
therefore reflect time spent on establishment-level tasks associated 
with Type 3, 4, and 8 reports, while time spent on tasks associated 
with Type 1, 2, and 6 reports (and the firm-level functions associated 
with Types 3, 4, and 8) are included in the firm-level estimates.\110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \110\ Because of this, the EEOC's burden estimates for firm-
level tasks are inflated for those firms electing to file Type 8 
reports, because the firm-level estimates include time spent 
completing a Type 2 and a Type 6 report, even though firms that opt 
to complete Type 8 reports do not also submit a Type 2 or Type 6 
report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC assumes that human resource specialists and data entry 
clerks will perform all establishment-level functions. For firms filing 
only Component 1 of the EEO-1, the EEOC estimates that for each 
establishment report submitted, a human resource specialist and a data 
entry clerk would each spend 0.5 hours on establishment-level 
functions, for a total of 1 hour per report. Beginning in 2017, firms 
filing both Component 1 and Component 2 of the EEO-1 would require 0.95 
hours each from the human resource specialist and the data entry clerk 
on establishment-level functions, for a total of 1.9 hours per report.
    In 2014, 1,449 firms submitted their EEO-1 reports via data upload, 
but they submitted 329,944 Type 3, 4, and 8 reports.\111\ The EEOC 
estimates that firms using data upload will need to spend less time at 
the establishment level than firms submitting their reports by data 
entry. For firms using data upload, the EEOC estimates that data entry 
clerks will not need to perform any establishment-level tasks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ In 2014, contractor filers with 50-99 employees submitted 
86 Type 3, 4, and 8 reports via data upload.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Hourly Wage Rates
    Using figures reflecting median pay obtained from the Bureau of 
Labor Statistics,\112\ the EEOC's 30-Day Notice uses hourly wage rates 
as follows: Computer specialist $24.75, senior human resource manager 
$50.21, corporate legal counsel $55.69, chief executive officer $49.37, 
data entry clerk $13.69, clerical staff $15.41, and human resource 
specialist $28.06. See Table 3 for an illustration of the jobs, hours, 
and wage rates described in this Notice. Based on the EEOC's 
experience, the bulk of the work is now performed by computer 
specialists and senior human resource managers. At the establishment 
level, the EEOC concluded that EEO-1 reporting work is more likely to 
be performed by data entry clerks and human resource specialists, 
resulting in a lower average wage rate for establishment-level 
functions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \112\ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 
Occupational Outlook Handbook, http://www.bls.gov/ooh/.

                                      Table 3--EEO-1 Jobs, Hours, and Wages
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  Hours spent on
                                                                  Hours spent on       EEO-1        Hourly wage
                            Job title                                  EEO-1      Components 1 &       rates
                                                                    Component 1          2
-----------------------------------------------------------------------only-------------------------------------
                                              Firm-Level Functions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Computer Specialist.............................................               4             7.6          $24.75
Senior Human Resource Manager...................................               1             1.9           50.21
Corporate Legal Counsel.........................................               1             1.9           55.69
Chief Executive Officer.........................................               1             1.9           49.37
Data Entry Clerk................................................             0.5            0.95           13.69
Clerical Staff..................................................             0.5            0.95           15.41
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Report-Level Functions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human Resource Specialist.......................................             0.5            0.95           28.06
Data Entry Clerk................................................             0.5            0.95           13.69
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

XII. Formal Paperwork Reduction Act Statement

A. Overview of Information Collection

    The EEOC has submitted to OMB a request for a three-year PRA 
approval of a revised EEO-1. The revised EEO-1 data collection has two 
components. The first component (Component 1) will collect information 
identical to that collected by the currently approved EEO-1. The second 
component (Component 2) will collect data on employees' W-2 pay and 
hours worked. Component 1 can be found at http://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/upload/eeo1-2.pdf. An illustration of the data to 
be collected by both Components 1 and 2 can be found at http://10.5.0.211/employers/eeo1survey/2016_new_survey.cfm.
    For the 2016 reporting cycle, there will be no change to the EEO-1 
reporting requirement. All EEO-1 filers will continue to submit the 
data on race, ethnicity, sex, and job category that is currently 
collected by the EEO-1 report. The EEOC refers to this demographic and 
job category data as Component 1 data. Beginning with the 2017 
reporting cycle, the EEOC proposes to require EEO-1 filers with 100 or 
more employees to submit data on pay and hours worked (Component 2 
data) in addition to Component 1 data. However, federal contractor 
filers with 50 to 99 employees will only submit Component 1 data.
1. 2016 Overview of Information Collection--Component 1
    Collection Title: Employer Information Report (EEO-1).
    OMB Control Number: 3046-0007.
    Frequency of Report: Annual.
    Description of Affected Public: Private industry filers with 100 or 
more employees and federal government contractor filers with 50 or more 
employees.
    Number of Respondents: 67,146 firms filing 683,275 establishment 
reports.
    Reporting Hours: 1,055,471.
    Respondent Burden Hour Cost: $30,055,086.62.
    Federal Cost: $1,330,821.
    Number of Forms: 1.
    Form Number: EEOC Form 100.

[[Page 45496]]

2. 2017 and 2018 Overview of Information Collection--Components 1 and 2
    Collection Title: Employer Information Report (EEO-1).
    OMB Control Number: 3046-0007.
    Frequency of Report: Annual.
    Number of Forms: 1.
    Form Number: EEOC Form 100.
    Federal Cost: $318,000 for one-time costs and $1,621,300 \113\ for 
recurring staffing costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \113\ The addition of W-2 pay data to the EEO-1 is expected to 
increase EEOC's internal staffing costs by approximately $290,478. 
The annual federal cost figure of $1,621,300 includes both the 
increase in contract costs resulting from the addition of the pay 
data collection and the estimated internal staffing costs. It 
reflects an increase of more than $290,478 compared to the estimated 
federal costs provided in previously published Federal Register 
notices seeking PRA approval of this information collection because 
past estimates reflected the cost of the contract with the vendor 
whose services the EEOC procures to assist with administration and 
processing of the EEO-1 but did not include EEOC's internal staffing 
costs associated with processing the EEO-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

a. Component 1 (Demographic and Job Category Data)
    Description of Affected Public: In 2017 and 2018, contractor filers 
with 50 to 99 employees will submit only the demographic and job 
category data collected by Component 1.
    Number of Respondents: 6,260 firms filing 9,129 establishment 
reports.
    Reporting Hours: 59,166.
    Respondent Burden Hour Cost: $1,872,792.41.
b. Components 1 and 2 (Demographic and Job Category Data Plus W-2 and 
Hours Worked Data)
    Description of Affected Public: In 2017 and 2018, EEO-1 filers with 
100 or more employees will submit pay and hours worked data under 
Component 2 in addition to demographic and job category data under 
Component 1.
    Number of Respondents: 60,886 firms filing 674,146 establishment 
reports.
    Reporting Hours: 1,892,979.5.
    Respondent Burden Hour Cost: $53,546,359.08.

B. 30-Day Notice PRA Burden Statement

2016: Component 1
    Burden Statement: In 2016, all EEO-1 filers will submit Component 
1, which only includes the data collected by the currently approved 
EEO-1. No filer will be required to submit the Component 2 data during 
the 2016 reporting cycle. The estimated number of respondents required 
to submit the annual EEO-1 report is 67,146.\114\ This data collection 
is estimated to impose 1,055,471 burden hours in 2016 or 8 hours per 
filer for firm-level functions plus an additional one hour per report 
for establishment-level functions.\115\ The associated burden hour cost 
for the 2016 reporting cycle is $30,055,086.62.\116\ This estimate 
assumes electronic filing through the EEO-1 online portal either by 
data entry or data upload, and accounts for time and cost savings now 
associated with submission of the EEO-1 via data upload.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \114\ In 2014, 67,146 firms filed EEO-1 reports.
    \115\ This estimate calculates total time spent by firms 
assuming no data upload, then subtracts the estimated time saved by 
firms using data upload, as follows: 8 hours per firm for firm-level 
functions x 67,146 firms = 537,168 hours; 1 hour per report for 
establishment-level functions x 683,275 reports = 683,275 hours; 
537,168 + 683,275 = 1,220,443 total hours; 0.5 hours per report of 
data entry clerk time saved by data upload x 329,944 reports filed 
by data upload = 164,972; 1,220,443-164,972 = 1,055,471.
    \116\ To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied the hourly 
wage rates for each job by the estimated hours spent by each job in 
completing the EEO-1 to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level 
functions of $268.82 and a per-report cost for establishment-level 
functions of approximately $20.88 (rounded). The total burden hour 
cost for firm-level functions is $18,050,187.7 and the total burden 
hour cost for establishment-level functions is $14,263,365.6. Firms 
using data upload are estimated to save $2,258,466.68 (data entry 
clerk hourly wage rate of $13.69 x 0.5 hours x 329,944 reports filed 
by data upload). Total firm-level burden hour cost of $18,050,187.7 
+ total establishment-level burden hour cost of $14,263,365.6-cost 
savings from data upload of $2,258,466.68 = a total annual burden 
hour cost of $30,055,086.62.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2017 and 2018: Components 1 and 2
    With respect to the EEO-1 reporting cycles for 2017 and 2018, this 
Notice will discuss the burden estimates associated with two distinct 
groups of filers. The first group consists of contractor filers with 50 
to 99 employees. This group of filers will continue to submit only the 
Component 1 data, just as they have done in previous years. The second 
group of filers includes all EEO-1 filers with 100 or more employees, 
whether private industry or contractor filers. This larger group will 
continue to submit Component 1 data as they have always done, but will 
also submit the newly-added W-2 and hours-worked data of Component 2.
    Burden Statement--Component 1 Only: Starting in 2017, the estimated 
number of annual respondents who are contractor filers with 50 to 99 
employees is 6,260.\117\ Again, this calculation assumes 8 hours per 
filer for firm-level functions plus an additional one hour per 
individual report for report-level functions. The burden on these 
contractor filers is estimated as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \117\ Of the 67,146 firms that filed EEO-1 reports in 2014, 
6,260 were federal contractor filers with fewer than 100 employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Annual Burden Calculation: The estimated total annual 
burden hours required to complete Component 1 of the EEO-1 data 
collection in 2017 and 2018 is 59,166,\118\ with an associated total 
annual burden hour cost of $1,872,792.41.\119\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ This estimate calculates total time spent by firms 
assuming no data upload, then subtracts the estimated time saved by 
firms using data upload, as follows: 8 hours per firm for firm-level 
functions x 6,260 firms = 50,080 hours; 1 hour per report for 
establishment-level functions x 9,129 reports = 9,129 hours; 50,080 
+ 9,129 = 59,209 total hours; 0.5 hours per report of data entry 
clerk time saved by data upload x 86 reports filed by data upload = 
43; 59,209-43 = 59,166.
    \119\ To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied the adjusted 
hourly rates for each job by the estimated hours spent by each job 
in completing the report to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level 
functions of $268.82 and a per-report cost for establishment-level 
functions of approximately $20.88 (rounded). The burden hour cost 
for firm-level functions is $1,682,813.2 and the burden hour cost 
for establishment-level functions is $190,567.875. Firms using data 
upload are estimated to save $588.67 (data entry clerk hourly wage 
rate of $13.69 x 0.5 hours x 86 reports filed by data upload). Total 
firm-level burden hour cost of $1,682,813.2 + total establishment-
level burden hour cost of $190,567.875-cost savings from data upload 
of $588.67 = a total annual burden hour cost of $1,872,792.41.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Burden Statement--Components 1 and 2: Starting in 2017, the 
estimated number of annual respondents that will submit Components 1 
and 2 is 60,886 private industry and contractor filers. Filers required 
to complete both Components 1 and 2 are estimated annually to incur a 
total of 15.2 hours per filer for firm-level functions plus an 
additional 1.9 hours per individual report for establishment-level 
functions. The estimated burden is based on electronic filing.
    The burden imposed on all private industry employer filers and 
contractor filers with 100 or more employees as a result of the 
proposed collection of Component 1 and 2 data is estimated as follows:
     Annual Burden Calculation: The estimated total annual 
burden hours needed for all filers required to report Components 1 and 
2 data is 1,892,979.5 hours,\120\ with an associated total annual 
burden hour cost of $53,546,359.08.\121\ The EEOC estimates

[[Page 45497]]

that for these filers submitting both Component 1 and 2 data in 2017 
and 2018, the addition of pay data will increase the estimated annual 
burden hour costs by a total of $25,364,064.80 or an average of $416.58 
per EEO-1 filer each year. This burden estimate includes reading 
instructions and collecting, merging, validating, and reporting the 
data electronically.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \120\ This estimate calculates total time spent by firms 
assuming no data upload, then subtracts the estimated time saved by 
firms using data upload, as follows: 15.2 hours per firm for firm-
level functions x 60,886 firms = 925,467.2 hours; 1.9 hours per 
report for establishment-level functions x 674,146 reports = 
1,280,877.4 hours; 925,467.2 + 1,280,877.4 = 2,206,344.6 total 
hours; 0.95 hours per report of data entry clerk time saved by data 
upload x 329,858 reports filed by data upload = 313,365.1; 
2,206,344.6-313,365.1 = 1,892,979.5.
    \121\ To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied the adjusted 
hourly rates for each job by the estimated hours spent by each job 
in completing the report to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level 
functions of approximately $510.76 and a per-report cost for 
establishment-level functions of approximately $39.66 (these figures 
are rounded). The burden hour cost for firm-level functions is 
$31,098,011.6 and the burden hour cost for establishment-level 
functions is $26,738,315.7. Firms using data upload are estimated to 
save $4,289,968.22 (data entry clerk hourly wage rate of $13.69 x 
0.95 hours x 329,858 reports filed by data upload). Total firm-level 
burden hour cost of $31,098,011.6 + total establishment-level burden 
hour cost of $26,738,315.7-cost savings from data upload of 
$4,289,968.22 = a total annual burden hour cost of $53,546,359.08.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     One-Time Implementation Burden: The 60-Day Notice 
estimated the one-time implementation burden hour cost associated with 
submitting the information required by Component 2 of the revised EEO-1 
Report to be $23,000,295. This was based on the one-time cost for 
developing queries related to Component 2 in an existing HRIS, which 
was estimated to take 8 hours per filer at a wage rate of $47.22 per 
hour.
    Employers filing public comments stated that bridging pay and HRIS 
systems, or purchasing software updates from vendors, would be 
extremely expensive. Some of these employers estimated the one-time 
implementation cost of bridging HRIS and payroll records to report 
Component 2 data estimated costs could range from $5,000 per firm to 
$20,000, $30,000, or $40,000 per firm. Although the estimates did not 
provide details explaining how they were calculated, the EEOC has 
considered this feedback and increased the one-time implementation 
burden. It has done so by reflecting that specialized computer software 
experts with a higher wage rate will be required to do the work 
necessary to implement the one-time changes required for this proposal.
    Using an hourly wage rate for a computer programmer of $55.81, the 
EEOC now estimates one-time burden hour cost of $27,184,381.28.\122\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \122\ This estimate is calculated as follows: 8 hours per 
respondent x 60,886 employers = 487,088 x $55.81 per hour = 
$27,184,381.28. The higher one-time implementation burden estimate 
in this Notice as compared to the one-time implementation burden 
estimate in the 60-Day Notice is due to the higher wage rate for the 
computer programmer, multiplied by 1.46, which is the employer 
contribution for ``management, professional, related.'' U.S. Dept. 
of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook: 
Computer Programmers, http://www.bls.gov/ooh/computer-and-information-technology/computer-programmers.htm; see also U.S. Dept. 
of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee 
Compensation--Dec. 2015 (Mar. 2016), http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_03102016.htm (computing the rate of 
employer contribution by dividing total compensation by total 
salary).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Dated: July 11, 2016.

    For the Commission.
Jenny R. Yang,
Chair.
[FR Doc. 2016-16692 Filed 7-13-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P



                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                45479

                                                    supported by the rationales included in                    Dated: July 6, 2016.                                EEOC’s Executive Secretariat will accept
                                                    those documents.                                         Michael Goodis,                                       comments in hard copy by delivery by
                                                       Following public comment, the                         Acting Director, Pesticide Re-Evaluation              COB on August 15, 2016. Hard copy
                                                    Agency will issue interim or final                       Division, Office of Pesticide Programs.               comments should be sent to Bernadette
                                                                                                             [FR Doc. 2016–16709 Filed 7–13–16; 8:45 am]           Wilson, Acting Executive Officer, EEOC,
                                                    registration review decisions for the
                                                                                                             BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                131 M Street NE., Washington, DC
                                                    pesticides listed in the tables in Unit II.
                                                                                                                                                                   20507. Finally, the Executive Secretariat
                                                       The registration review program is                                                                          will accept comments totaling six or
                                                    being conducted under congressionally                                                                          fewer pages by facsimile (‘‘fax’’)
                                                                                                             EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
                                                    mandated time frames, and EPA                            COMMISSION                                            machine before the same deadline at
                                                    recognizes the need both to make timely                                                                        (202) 663–4114. (This is not a toll-free
                                                    decisions and to involve the public.                     [3046–007]                                            number.) Receipt of fax transmittals will
                                                    Section 3(g) of the Federal Insecticide,                                                                       not be acknowledged, except that the
                                                                                                             Agency Information Collection                         sender may request confirmation of
                                                    Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
                                                                                                             Activities; Notice of Submission for                  receipt by calling the Executive
                                                    (7 U.S.C. 136a(g)) required EPA to                       OMB Review, Final Comment Request:
                                                    establish by regulation procedures for                                                                         Secretariat staff at (202) 663–4070
                                                                                                             Revision of the Employer Information                  (voice) or (202) 663–4074 (TTY). (These
                                                    reviewing pesticide registrations,                       Report (EEO–1)
                                                    originally with a goal of reviewing each                                                                       are not toll-free telephone numbers.)
                                                    pesticide’s registration every 15 years to               AGENCY: Equal Employment                              The EEOC will post online at http://
                                                                                                             Opportunity Commission.                               www.regulations.gov all comments
                                                    ensure that a pesticide continues to
                                                                                                             ACTION: Notice.
                                                                                                                                                                   submitted via this Web site, in hard
                                                    meet the FIFRA standard for
                                                                                                                                                                   copy, or by fax to the Executive
                                                    registration. The Agency’s final rule to                                                                       Secretariat. These comments will be
                                                                                                             SUMMARY:    In accordance with the
                                                    implement this program was issued in                                                                           posted without change, including any
                                                                                                             Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                                                    August 2006 and became effective in                                                                            personal information you provide.
                                                                                                             (PRA), the Equal Employment
                                                    October 2006, and appears at 40 CFR                      Opportunity Commission (EEOC or                       However, the EEOC reserves the right to
                                                    part 155, subpart C. The Pesticide                       Commission) announces that it is                      refrain from posting libelous or
                                                    Registration Improvement Act of 2003                     submitting to the Office of Management                otherwise inappropriate comments
                                                    (PRIA) was amended and extended in                       and Budget (OMB) a request for a three-               including those that contain obscene,
                                                    September 2007. FIFRA, as amended by                     year PRA approval of a revised                        indecent, or profane language; that
                                                    PRIA in 2007, requires EPA to complete                   Employer Information Report (EEO–1)                   contain threats or defamatory
                                                    registration review decisions by October                 data collection. Employers have                       statements; that contain hate speech
                                                    1, 2022, for all pesticides registered as                submitted the EEO–1 report for over                   directed at race, color, sex, national
                                                    of October 1, 2007.                                      fifty years. The Commission is                        origin, age, religion, disability, or
                                                                                                             responsible for PRA compliance for the                genetic information; or that promote or
                                                       The registration review final rule at 40
                                                                                                             EEO–1, although it is a joint data                    endorse services or products. All
                                                    CFR 155.58(a) provides for a minimum
                                                                                                             collection to meet the statistical needs              comments received, including any
                                                    60-day public comment period on all                                                                            personal information provided, also will
                                                    proposed interim registration review                     of both the EEOC and the U.S.
                                                                                                             Department of Labor’s Office of Federal               be available for public inspection during
                                                    decisions. This comment period is                                                                              normal business hours by appointment
                                                    intended to provide an opportunity for                   Contract Compliance Programs
                                                                                                             (OFCCP). This PRA submission has two                  only at the EEOC Headquarters’ Library,
                                                    public input and a mechanism for                                                                               131 M Street NE., Washington, DC
                                                                                                             components. Component 1 describes the
                                                    initiating any necessary amendments to                                                                         20507. Upon request, individuals who
                                                                                                             data now collected by the currently
                                                    the proposed interim decision. All                       approved EEO–1, which is data about                   require assistance viewing comments
                                                    comments should be submitted using                       employees’ ethnicity, race, and sex by                will be provided appropriate aids such
                                                    the methods in ADDRESSES, and must be                    job category (demographic data).                      as readers or print magnifiers. To
                                                    received by EPA on or before the closing                 Component 2 describes the W–2 (Box 1)                 schedule an appointment, contact EEOC
                                                    date. These comments will become part                    and hours-worked data that will be                    Library staff at (202) 663–4630 (voice) or
                                                    of the docket for the pesticides included                added to the EEO–1 with OMB’s                         (202) 663–4641 (TTY). (These are not
                                                    in the tables in Unit II. Comments                       approval under this PRA request (pay                  toll-free numbers.)
                                                    received after the close of the comment                  data). EEO–1 respondents must comply                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                    period will be marked ‘‘late.’’ EPA is not               with the 2016 filing requirement for the              Ronald Edwards, Director, Program
                                                    required to consider these late                          currently approved EEO–1.                             Research and Surveys Division, Equal
                                                    comments.                                                DATES: Submit comments on or before
                                                                                                                                                                   Employment Opportunity Commission,
                                                                                                                                                                   131 M Street NE., Room 4SW30F,
                                                       The Agency will carefully consider all                August 15, 2016.
                                                                                                                                                                   Washington, DC 20507; (202) 663–4949
                                                    comments received by the closing date                    ADDRESSES: Comments on this notice
                                                                                                                                                                   (voice) or (202) 663–7063 (TTY).
                                                    and may provide a ‘‘Response to                          must be submitted to Joseph B. Nye,                   Requests for this notice in an alternative
                                                    Comments Memorandum’’ in the                             Policy Analyst, Office of Information                 format should be made to the Office of
                                                    docket. The interim registration review                  and Regulatory Affairs, Office of                     Communications and Legislative Affairs
                                                                                                             Management and Budget, 725 17th
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    decision will explain the effect that any                                                                      at (202) 663–4191 (voice) or (202) 663–
                                                    comments had on the interim decision                     Street NW., Washington, DC 20503,                     4494 (TTY).
                                                    and provide the Agency’s response to                     email oira_submission@omb.eop.gov.
                                                                                                                                                                   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                    significant comments.                                    Commenters are also encouraged to
                                                                                                             send comments to the EEOC online at                   Table of Contents
                                                       Background on the registration review                 http://www.regulations.gov, which is
                                                    program is provided at: http://                                                                                I. Background
                                                                                                             the Federal eRulemaking Portal. Follow                II. The EEOC’s Legal Authority To Propose
                                                    www2.epa.gov/pesticide-reevaluation.                     the instructions on the Web site for                       This EEO–1 Report
                                                       Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq.                       submitting comments. In addition, the                    A. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964



                                               VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:33 Jul 13, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00031   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\14JYN1.SGM   14JYN1


                                                    45480                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                       B. The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995                XII. Formal Paperwork Reduction Act                       written submissions, heard them
                                                    III. Revisions to the EEO–1 Report Are                        Statement                                            discuss their different perspectives on
                                                          Necessary for the Enforcement of Title               A. Overview of Information Collection                   the proposal, and asked them
                                                          VII, the EPA, and Executive Order 11246              1. 2016 Overview of Information
                                                                                                                                                                       questions.2
                                                    IV. Who Will Report Pay Data on the Revised                   Collection—Component 1
                                                                                                                                                                          Pursuant to the required procedures
                                                          EEO–1                                                2. 2017 and 2018 Overview of Information
                                                       A. Employers That Currently File the EEO–                  Collection—Components 1 and 2                        under the PRA, the Commission now
                                                          1                                                    a. Component 1 (Demographic and Job                     publishes its final proposal to
                                                       B. 60-Day Notice: Which Employers Would                    Category Data)                                       supplement the EEO–1 for a second
                                                          File Pay Data                                        b. Components 1 and 2 (Demographic and                  round of public comments, to last 30
                                                       C. Public Comments                                         Job Category Data Plus W–2 and Hours                 days (hence the ‘‘30-Day Notice’’). The
                                                       D. 30-Day Notice: Employers With 100 or                    Worked Data)                                         EEOC also is formally submitting the
                                                          More Employees Will File Components 1                B. 30-Day Notice PRA Burden Statement                   proposed EEO–1 revisions to OMB for
                                                          &2                                                                                                           consideration and decision.
                                                    V. When To File: Filing Deadline and                     I. Background
                                                                                                                                                                          This 30-Day Notice summarizes the
                                                          Workforce Snapshot Period                             This final proposal to supplement the
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice
                                                                                                                                                                       60-Day Notice, describes the public
                                                                                                             longstanding EEO–1 employer                               comments, and explains the
                                                       B. Public Comments
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice
                                                                                                             information report (currently approved                    Commission’s decisions. In making
                                                       1. Deadline for Filing the EEO–1                      by OMB under Control Number 3046–                         these decisions, the Commission took
                                                       2. ‘‘Workforce Snapshot’’ Period                      0007) is intended to support the EEOC’s                   into account all of the hearing testimony
                                                    VI. What Pay Data To Report: Measure of Pay              pay discrimination investigations by                      and public comments. The Commission
                                                          for the EEO–1                                      collecting employer- and gender-, race-                   also assessed government data regarding
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice: Options for Measuring               , and ethnicity-specific pay data to                      components of compensation in United
                                                          Pay                                                identify pay disparities that may result                  States workplaces, relevant academic
                                                       B. Public Comments                                    from discriminatory practices or                          literature on compensation practices
                                                       1. Supporting the Use of W–2 Income                   policies. This Notice provides
                                                       2. Opposing the Use of W–2 Income                                                                               and on discrimination, and the
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice: W–2 (Box 1) Income Is
                                                                                                             stakeholders with their second                            conclusions of two studies
                                                          the Measure of Pay                                 opportunity to comment on this                            commissioned by the EEOC to examine
                                                       1. W–2 Income and Employee Choice                     proposal.                                                 how and whether to implement a pay
                                                       2. Supplemental Income Is Important and                  The EEOC published the first notice                    data collection.3 This 30-Day Notice sets
                                                          May Be Linked to Discrimination                    of this proposed revision in the Federal                  forth the EEOC’s conclusions about the
                                                       3. Bridging HRIS and Payroll                          Register on February 1, 2016, for a 60-                   ways the proposed pay data collection
                                                    VII. What Data To Report: Hours Worked                   day comment period (the ‘‘60-Day                          will be used to enhance and increase the
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice                                      Notice’’).1 It announced which                            efficiency of enforcement efforts while
                                                       B. Public Comments                                    employers would be required to file pay
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice
                                                                                                                                                                       facilitating employer self-evaluation and
                                                                                                             data, what data would be collected,                       voluntary compliance.
                                                       1. The Importance of Collecting Hours
                                                          Worked                                             when the due date would be, how the
                                                                                                             data would be analyzed, and how the                       II. The EEOC’s Legal Authority To
                                                       2. Defining ‘‘Hours Worked’’                                                                                    Propose This EEO–1 Report
                                                       3. Reporting Hours Worked for Nonexempt               proposed collection and analysis would
                                                          Employees                                          protect confidentiality and privacy. As                      In written comments in response to
                                                       4. Reporting Hours Worked for Exempt                  required, the 60-Day Notice estimated                     the 60-Day Notice, several interested
                                                          Employees                                          the cost to employers of completing the                   parties questioned whether the EEOC
                                                    VIII. How To Report Data in Component 2:                 current EEO–1 (Component 1) and the                       has legal authority to collect pay data
                                                          Pay Bands and Job Categories                       proposed revision of the EEO–1                            and whether the agency should have
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice                                                                                                conducted a formal rulemaking to
                                                                                                             (Components 1 and 2).
                                                       B. Public Comments
                                                                                                                The EEOC received 322 timely public                    impose a pay data reporting
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice
                                                    IX. How the EEOC Will Use W–2 and Hours-                 comments in response to the 60-Day                        requirement. As explained in more
                                                          Worked Data                                        Notice. The comments were submitted
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice                                      by individual members of the public,                        2 The press release on the hearing is available at

                                                       B. Public Comments                                    employers, employer associations,                         EEOC, EEOC Hears Wide Range of Views at Public
                                                                                                                                                                       Hearing on Proposed Changes to EEO–1 Form (Mar.
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice                                      Members of Congress, civil rights                         16, 2016), https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/
                                                       1. Early Assessment of Charges of                     groups, women’s organizations, labor                      release/3-16-16.cfm. The statements and
                                                          Discrimination                                     unions, industry groups, law firms, and                   biographies of the witnesses are available at EEOC,
                                                       2. EEOC Publications Analyzing Aggregate              human resources organizations. Over                       Hearing of March 16, 2016—Public Input into the
                                                          EEO–1 Data                                                                                                   Proposed Revisions to the EEO–1 Report, http://
                                                                                                             120 of the 322 comments were part of                      www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/3-16-16/.
                                                       3. EEOC Training on the Pay Data
                                                          Collection                                         mass mail campaigns mostly supporting                       3 The first EEOC-commissioned study, resulting

                                                    X. Confidentiality of EEO–1 Data                         the proposal, although one mass mail                      in a 2012 report from the National Research
                                                       A. 60-Day Notice                                      campaign opposed the proposal. The                        Council, National Academy of Sciences (NAS
                                                                                                             mass mail campaigns included                              Report), outlined the potential value for EEOC
                                                       B. Public Comments                                                                                              enforcement of collecting pay data from employers
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice                                      submissions from organizations that                       by sex, race, and national origin through a report
                                                       1. Legal Confidentiality                              collected up to thousands of signatures                   such as the EEO–1. National Research Council,
                                                       a. EEOC
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                                                                                                             from their members or supporters.                         2012. Collecting Compensation Data from
                                                       b. OFCCP                                                 The Commission also held a public                      Employers. Washington, DC: National Academies
                                                       2. Data Protection and Security                                                                                 Press, http://www.nap.edu/read/13496/chapter/
                                                                                                             hearing on March 16, 2016, and heard                      1#ii. The second study, reported by an EEOC
                                                    XI. Paperwork Reduction Act Burden
                                                          Estimates
                                                                                                             from 15 witnesses representing a range                    contractor in 2015, provided detailed analysis of
                                                       A. Background                                         of stakeholders including employers,                      different approaches to implementing the report
                                                                                                             employees, and academics. The                             and included assessments of different statistical
                                                       B. 60-Day Notice                                                                                                analyses for employer data. Sage Computing, EEOC
                                                       C. 30-Day Notice                                      Commission reviewed their detailed                        Pay Pilot Study (September, 2015), http://
                                                       1. Annual Burden Hours                                                                                          www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/pay-pilot-
                                                       2. Hourly Wage Rates                                       1 81   FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).                       study.pdf.



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                                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                   45481

                                                    detail below, the EEOC has the legal                         require contractors to submit ‘‘complete               data collection, which it publishes in
                                                    authority to collect pay data under Title                    and accurate reports on Standard Form                  the Federal Register and submits to
                                                    VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as                      100 (EEO–1) . . . or such form as may                  OMB for approval, subject to a 30-day
                                                    amended (Title VII),4 without                                hereafter be promulgated in its place.’’ 9             public comment period.13 The current
                                                    conducting a formal rulemaking because                       The Joint Reporting Committee,                         document, which has been approved by
                                                    the EEOC is responsible for enforcing                        composed of the EEOC and OFCCP and                     a majority of the Commission, is the
                                                    federal laws that prohibit wage                              located at the EEOC, administers the                   EEOC’s 30-Day Notice for the revised
                                                    discrimination on the basis of sex, race                     EEO–1 as a single data collection to                   EEO–1.
                                                    and national origin, and Title VII grants                    meet the statistical needs of both                       The EEOC has consistently used the
                                                    the EEOC broad authority to collect data                     agencies while avoiding duplication.                   PRA renewal process to change the
                                                    from employers regarding compliance                                                                                 EEO–1. Most recently, in 2006, the PRA
                                                                                                                 B. The Paperwork Reduction Act of                      process was used to significantly revise
                                                    with federal anti-discrimination laws.
                                                                                                                 1995                                                   the EEO–1 by adding a new race
                                                    The EEOC has exercised this statutory
                                                    authority by implementing a regulation                          Since 1995, the EEO–1 report also has               category, requiring employers to ask
                                                    to establish the EEO–1 reporting                             been governed by the Paperwork                         employees to self-identify by race and
                                                    requirement, and now administers the                         Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), which                     ethnicity, and requiring employers to
                                                    EEO–1 report pursuant to the PRA.                            provides standards for federal data                    ask about ethnicity (Hispanic or Latino)
                                                                                                                 collections and requires periodic Office               in a separate question.14 The 2006
                                                    A. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of                      of Management and Budget (OMB)                         EEO–1 revision also added a new job
                                                    1964                                                         review and renewal.10 The EEOC is                      category.15
                                                       The EEOC is responsible for enforcing                     responsible for maintaining PRA
                                                    Title VII, which prohibits all                               approval of the EEO–1.                                 III. Revisions to the EEO–1 Report Are
                                                    employment discrimination, including                            The EEOC, like other federal agencies               Necessary for the Enforcement of Title
                                                    pay discrimination, based on race, color,                    subject to the PRA, generally follows a                VII, the EPA, and Executive Order
                                                    religion, national origin, or sex.5 The                      multi-step process for maintaining OMB                 11246
                                                    EEOC also enforces other federal laws                        approval of an information collection,                    Some public comments opposing the
                                                    prohibiting employment discrimination,                       which culminates in OMB deciding if                    EEOC’s proposal in the 60-Day Notice
                                                    including the Equal Pay Act of 1963                          the proposed collection ‘‘strikes a                    questioned whether there are still pay
                                                    (EPA), which prohibits certain gender-                       balance between collecting information                 disparities that are caused by
                                                    based pay discrimination.6                                   necessary to fulfill [the agency’s]                    discrimination linked to gender, race, or
                                                       The EEOC’s authority to promulgate                        statutory mission[ ] and guarding                      ethnicity and, accordingly, whether
                                                    the EEO–1 report is found in section                         against unnecessary or duplicative                     there is actually a need for more
                                                    709(c) of Title VII, which requires                          information that imposes unjustified                   effective enforcement of the
                                                    employers covered by Title VII to make                       costs on the American public.’’ 11 The                 prohibitions on pay discrimination in
                                                    and keep records relevant to whether                         first step is for the agency to publish a              Title VII, the EPA, and E.O. 11246.
                                                    unlawful employment practices have                           proposed information collection for a                     Based on federal data and a robust
                                                    been or are being committed, to preserve                     60-day public comment period, which                    body of research, the Commission
                                                    such records, and to produce reports as                      ran from February 1 to April 1, 2016 for               concludes that: (1) Persistent pay gaps
                                                    the Commission prescribes by                                 this EEO–1 revision.12 Then, in light of               continue to exist in the U.S. workforce
                                                    regulation or order, after public hearing,                   the public comments and its statutory                  correlated with sex, race, and ethnicity;
                                                    ‘‘as reasonable, necessary, or                               mission, the agency formulates a final                 (2) workplace discrimination is an
                                                    appropriate for the enforcement of this                                                                             important contributing factor to these
                                                    subchapter or the regulations . . .                          and make it possible for employees and job             pay disparities; and (3) implementing
                                                    thereunder.’’ 7 The Commission                               applicants to share information about their pay
                                                                                                                 without fear of discrimination. E.O. 13665, 79 FR
                                                                                                                                                                        the proposed EEO–1 pay data collection
                                                    prescribes the EEO–1 report by                               20749, available at: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/    will improve the EEOC’s ability to
                                                    regulation at 29 CFR part 1602, subpart                      DCPD-201400250/pdf/DCPD-201400250.pdf.                 efficiently and effectively structure its
                                                    B, which requires private employers                          OFCCP’s recently adopted final rule on sex             investigation of pay discrimination
                                                    with 100 or more employees to ‘‘file                         discrimination (OFCCP Rule on Discrimination on
                                                                                                                 the Basis of Sex) addresses a number of sex-based
                                                                                                                                                                        charges.
                                                    [annually] with the Commission or its                        barriers to equal employment and fair pay. The rule       First, persistent pay gaps exist in the
                                                    delegate executed copies of [the] . . .                      requires contractors to provide equal opportunities    U.S. workforce correlated with sex, race,
                                                    EEO–1 [report] in conformity with the                        ‘‘without regard to sex.’’ 41 CFR part 60–20. See      and ethnicity. As of 2014, for women of
                                                    directions set forth in the form and                         also 81 FR 39108, 39125–39129 (June 15, 2016).
                                                                                                                    9 41 CFR 60–1.7(a).
                                                                                                                                                                        all races and ethnicities, the median
                                                    accompanying instructions.’’ The EEOC                           10 According to the OMB, ‘‘collection of            annual pay for a woman who held a
                                                    administers the EEO–1 jointly with                           information’’ may include: (1) Requests for            full-time, year-round job was $39,621,
                                                    OFCCP, which enforces the employment                         information to be sent to the government, such as      while the median annual pay for a man
                                                    discrimination prohibitions of Executive                     forms (e.g., the IRS 1040), written reports (e.g.,     who held a full-time, year-round job
                                                                                                                 grantee performance reports), and surveys (e.g., the
                                                    Order 11246, as amended, for federal                         Census); (2) recordkeeping requirements (e.g.,         was $50,383.16
                                                    contractors and subcontractors                               OSHA requirements that employers maintain
                                                    (contractors), including specific                            records of workplace accidents); and third-party or      13 44  U.S.C. 3507(a)(1).
                                                    provisions regarding pay discrimination                      public disclosures (e.g., nutrition labeling             14 EEOC,   EEOC Implements Finals Revisions to
                                                                                                                 requirements for food).                                EEO–1 Report (Jan. 27, 2006), https://www.eeoc.gov/
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                                                    and transparency.8 OFCCP’s regulations
                                                                                                                    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,       eeoc/newsroom/release/archive/1-27-06.html; See
                                                                                                                 OMB, Memorandum for the Heads of Executive             also 70 FR 71294 (Nov. 28, 2005); OMB approved
                                                      4 42    U.S.C. 2000e, et seq.                              Departments and Agencies and Independent               these changes on January 25, 2006, Office of
                                                      5 Id.
                                                                                                                 Regulatory Agencies, Information Collection under      Information and Regulatory Affairs, http://
                                                      6 29 U.S.C. 206(d).                                        the Paperwork Reduction Act (Apr. 7, 2010),            www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_
                                                      7 42 U.S.C. 2000e–8(c).                                    https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/        nbr=200511-3046-001#.
                                                      8 E.O. 11246, as amended, 30 FR 12319, 41 CFR              omb/assets/inforeg/PRAPrimer_04072010.pdf; See           15 Id.

                                                    60–1.7(a). Executive Order 13665 amends E.O.                 also 5 CFR 1320.3(c).                                    16 Carmen DeNavas-Walt and Bernadette Proctor,
                                                                                                                    11 Id.
                                                    11246 to promote pay transparency for federal                                                                       U.S. Census Bureau, Income and Poverty in the
                                                    contractors, protect employees and job applicants,              12 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).                                                                 Continued




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                                                    45482                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                      African American and Hispanic or                       Hispanic men earned $616, or                            opposite effect occurred when a larger
                                                    Latina women nationwide now                              approximately 69%, of white men’s                       proportion of men entered a profession
                                                    experience the largest pay disparities.                  median weekly earnings.24                               previously dominated by women, i.e.,
                                                    As of 2014, African American women                          Employment discrimination may play                   pay increased.30
                                                    were paid almost 40% less than white,                    both direct and indirect roles in creating                 One way that gender discrimination
                                                    non-Hispanic, men and approximately                      these pay disparities. Economists                       may influence pay is through implicit or
                                                    20% less than white, non-Hispanic                        Francine Blau and Lawrence Khan                         unconscious bias during hiring,
                                                    women.17 At a national level, African                    found that 64.6% of the wage gap                        promotion decisions, or job
                                                    American women were paid 18% less                        between men and women can be                            assignments.31 A study by McKinsey &
                                                    than African American men.18                             explained by three factors: Experience                  Company found that women are almost
                                                      Similarly, Latina women were paid                      (14.1%), industry (17.6%), and                          three times more likely than men to
                                                    approximately 44% less than white,                       occupation (32.9%).25 Men are more                      have missed out on an assignment,
                                                    non-Hispanic men, and 27% less than                      likely to work in blue collar jobs that are             promotion, or increase in wages because
                                                    white, non-Hispanic, women in 2014.19                    higher paying, including construction,                  of their gender.32 Another study shows
                                                    The result of the wage gap is that the                   production, or transportation                           that women who engage in pay
                                                    average Hispanic or Latina woman                         occupations, whereas women are more                     negotiations are more likely than men to
                                                    would be paid approximately                              concentrated in lower paying                            face backlash due to gender
                                                    $1,007,000 less than the average white,                  professions, such as office and                         stereotypes.33
                                                    non-Hispanic, male over a 40-year                        administrative support positions.26                        Similar to gender discrimination,
                                                    period.20                                                Most of the remaining 35.4% of the                      racial discrimination may influence pay
                                                      A similar pattern exists for Native                    gender gap cannot be explained by                       through implicit or unconscious bias. A
                                                    Hawaiian and Pacific Islander women                      differences in education, experience,                   series of studies by MIT Sloan found
                                                    and Native American women who were                       industry, or occupation.27 Blau and                     racial bias in salary negotiations even
                                                    paid approximately 38% and 41% less                      Khan argue that discrimination—                         after controlling for the applicants’
                                                    than white, non-Hispanic men,                            intentional or unintentional, systematic                objective qualifications.34 Research by
                                                    respectively.21 Asian American women                     or at the individual level—plays a role
                                                    were paid 10% less than white, non-                      in explaining the gap.28                                   30 Claire Cain Miller, As Women Take Over a

                                                    Hispanic men.22                                             Gender bias may become more                          Male Dominated Field, the Pay Drops, NY Times
                                                                                                                                                                     (Mar. 18, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/
                                                      Wage disparities also exist for men of                 obvious when occupations have a                         20/upshot/as-women-take-over-a-male-dominated-
                                                    color. In 2014, African American men                     greater proportion of women. One study                  field-the-pay-drops.html?_r=0 (reporting that when
                                                    who worked full time in wage and                         found that, in an occupation dominated                  more women became designers, for example, wages
                                                    salary jobs had median weekly earnings                   by men, pay declines when women                         fell by 34 percentage points. When male computer
                                                                                                                                                                     programmers outnumbered women computer
                                                    of $680, which represented                               enter that occupation in large numbers,                 programmers, the job began to pay more and earned
                                                    approximately 76% of white men’s                         even after controlling for factors such as              more prestige).
                                                    median weekly earnings ($897).23                         education and work experience.29 The                       31 Nancy Lockwood, The Glass Ceiling: Domestic

                                                                                                                                                                     and International Perspectives, 3 Society for Human
                                                    United States: 2014, Current Population, 6 (2015),       ethnicity, and gender, 1979–2014 annual averages,       Resource Management Quarterly 2004, https://
                                                    Table 1: Income and Earnings Summary Measures            http://www.bls.gov/opub/reports/womens-                 www.shrm.org/Research/Articles/Articles/
                                                    by Selected Characteristics: 2013 and 2014, https://     databook/archive/women-in-the-labor-force-a-            Documents/040329Quaterly.pdf (reporting that
                                                    www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/               databook-2015.pdf.                                      signs of the glass ceiling in the workplace can be
                                                    publications/2015/demo/p60-252.pdf.                         24 Id.                                               based on gender-based barriers that may be
                                                       17 Joan Farrelly-Harrigan, U.S. Dep’t. of Labor,         25 Francine Blau and Lawrence Kahn, The Gender       invisible, covert, and overt).
                                                                                                                                                                        32 Lean In & McKinsey & Company, Women in the
                                                    Women’s Bureau, Black Women in the Labor Force           Wage Gap: Extent, Trends, and Explanations,
                                                    (Feb. 2016), https://www.dol.gov/wb/media/Black_         Institute for the Study of Labor, 73 (Jan. 2016),       Workplace 2015, 13 (2015), http://
                                                    Women_in_the_Labor_Force.pdf (reporting that             Table 4: Decomposition of Gender Wage Gap, 1980         womenintheworkplace.com/ui/pdfs/Women_in_
                                                    African American women’s median annual earnings          and 2010 (PSID), http://ftp.iza.org/dp9656.pdf (the     the_Workplace_2015.pdf?v=5.
                                                                                                                                                                        33 Hannah Riley Bowles & Linda Babcock, How
                                                    in 2014 was $33,533, $41,822 for white, non-             authors reported that the gender wage gap for
                                                    Hispanic women, and $55,470 for white, non-              purposes of the study was approximately 79 cents        Can Women Escape the Compensation Negotiation
                                                    Hispanic men).                                           on the dollar in 2010).                                 Dilemma? Relational Accounts Are One Answer,
                                                       18 Id.                                                   26 DeNavas-Walt and Proctor, supra note 16 at 5;     Psychology of Women Quarterly, 37.1, 81 (2013),
                                                       19 Michelle Vaca, U.S. Dep’t. of Labor Blog,          see also PayScale, Inside the Gender Pay Gap,           http://pwq.sagepub.com/content/37/1/
                                                                                                             (2016), http://www.payscale.com/data-packages/          80.full.pdf+html (finding that ‘‘[n]egotiating for
                                                    Celebrating Hispanic Women in the Labor Force
                                                                                                             gender-pay-gap (reporting that across the United        higher compensation is socially costly for women
                                                    (Oct. 6, 2015), http://blog.dol.gov/2015/10/06/
                                                                                                             States women are more likely to be overrepresented      because it violates prescriptive gender stereotypes
                                                    celebrating-hispanic-women-in-the-labor-force/
                                                                                                             in lower paying jobs (jobs that pay less than $60,000   derived from the gendered division of labor . . .,
                                                    (reporting that the 2013 median annual earnings for
                                                                                                             per year) and underrepresented in higher paying         and its resulting social hierarchy of men in charge
                                                    Latinas was $30,209).
                                                                                                             jobs compared to men. In addition, female pay           and women in caregiving and support roles’’).
                                                       20 Joint Economic Committee, United States
                                                                                                             levels off at $49,000 between the ages of 35–40            34 Moreal Hernandez and Derek R. Avery, Getting
                                                    Congress, Gender Pay Inequality, 3 (April 2016)                                                                  the Short End of the Stick: Racial Bias in Salary
                                                                                                             whereas men’s pay levels off at $75,000 for the ages
                                                    http://www.jec.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/           of 50–55).                                              Negotiations, MIT Sloan Management Review (June
                                                    0779dc2f-4a4e-4386-b847-9ae919735acc/gender-                27 Blau & Kahn, supra note 25 at 73, Table 4.        15, 2016), http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/
                                                    pay-inequality----us-congress-joint-economic-               28 Id. A smaller portion of the gap (approximately   getting-the-short-end-of-the-stick-racial-bias-in-
                                                    committee.pdf.                                                                                                   salary-negotiations/ (MIT conducted three studies
                                                       21 American Association of University Women,
                                                                                                             5%) can be attributed to geographic region (0.3%)
                                                                                                             and race (4.3%). The authors do not provide an          focused on racial bias in salary negotiations. In the
                                                    The Simple Truth About the Gender Pay Gap, 10            explanation about why only 4% of the pay gap is         first study, evaluators reviewed resumes from white
                                                    (Spring 2016), http://www.aauw.org/files/2016/02/        attributed to race despite federal data suggesting      and black job applicants. The evaluators were asked
                                                    SimpleTruth_Spring2016.pdf (reporting that the
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                                                                                                             that the wage gap between and within minorities is      to evaluate each job applicant and rate the
                                                    median annual earnings for Native Hawaiian and           much larger. However, women’s gains in education        likelihood that the job applicant would negotiate
                                                    Pacific Islander women was $32,893 and $31,191           helped to narrow the gender wage gap by almost          their salary if offered the job. After controlling for
                                                    for Native American women).                              6% as women now exceed men in educational               each job applicant’s objective qualifications, the
                                                       22 Id. (reporting that Asian American women’s
                                                                                                             attainment.                                             evaluators identified the black job applicants as less
                                                    median earnings in 2014 was $47,776).                       29 Asaf Levanon, Paula England, Paul Allison,        likely to negotiate compared to the white job
                                                       23 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,                                                           applicants. The second study tested whether the
                                                                                                             Occupational Feminization and Pay: Assessing
                                                    Women in the labor force; a databook, BLS Reports,       Casual Dynamics Using 1950–2000 U.S. Census             evaluators had a racially-biased mindset, which was
                                                    60–61 (Dec. 2015), Table 16: Median usual weekly         Data, Social Forces 88(2) (Dec. 2009), http://          defined as a person who believes one or a few races
                                                    earnings of full-time wage and salary workers, in        statisticalhorizons.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/        were superior to others. The study found that the
                                                    current dollars, by race, Hispanic, or Latino            01/88.2.levanon.pdf.                                    evaluators had different role expectations of the



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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                      45483

                                                    Roland Fryer, Devah Pager, and Jörg L.                  that, on average, companies with greater               IV. Who Will Report Pay Data on the
                                                    Spenkuch found that discrimination                       gender diversity outperformed their                    Revised EEO–1
                                                    accounts for at least one-third of the                   peers with less diversity over the
                                                                                                                                                                    A. Employers That Currently File the
                                                    black-white wage gap.35 The authors                      previous five years, and had a higher
                                                                                                                                                                    EEO–1
                                                    concluded that, compared to whites                       return on equity.40 The study measured
                                                    with comparable resumes, black job                       gender diversity according to the                        All private employers that are covered
                                                    seekers were offered lower                               following factors: (1) Equality in pay; (2)            by Title VII and have 100 or more
                                                    compensation by potential new                            empowerment (defined as number of                      employees now file an EEO–1 report
                                                    employees and were more likely to                        women at the highest levels of the                     about the sex, race, and ethnicity of
                                                    accept the lower compensation. The                       corporation and on key committees); (3)                their employees, which is designated
                                                    researchers found that, although the                     representation of women at different                   here as Component 1 (demographic
                                                    wage gaps narrow over time as black                      levels (including as members of the                    data).43 Federal contractors with 50 or
                                                    workers stay at the same job, an                         board of directors, senior executives,                 more employees also file the EEO–1 if
                                                    unexplained gap nonetheless persists.36                  and regular employees); (4) work life                  they are not exempt as provided for by
                                                       Voluntary compliance is an important                  balance programs; and (5) diversity                    41 CFR 60–1.5. Single establishment
                                                    part of the effort to prevent                            policies. Pay parity and empowerment                   employers file one EEO–1, and multi-
                                                    discrimination and improve pay equity,                   were weighted more than the other                      establishment employers file EEO–1
                                                    and many employers are taking steps to                   factors.41                                             reports or data for each establishment.44
                                                    ensure equal pay for equal work. For                        Despite voluntary compliance and the                Federal contractors with 1 to 49
                                                    example, more than 25 companies have                     strong business case for fair pay, pay                 employees and other private employers
                                                    signed a White House Equal Pay Pledge                    discrimination persists as a serious                   with 1 to 99 employees do not file EEO–
                                                    to take action to reduce wage disparities                problem that EEOC and OFCCP are                        1 reports.
                                                    in the workplace.37 These employers                      statutorily required to address. The
                                                    committed to conducting an annual                                                                               B. 60-Day Notice: Which Employers
                                                                                                             EEOC’s mission is to stop and remedy
                                                    company-wide gender pay analysis                                                                                Would File Pay Data
                                                                                                             unlawful employment discrimination.
                                                    across occupations, reviewing hiring                     The OFCCP’s purpose is to enforce, for                   In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC
                                                    and promotion processes and                              the benefit of job seekers and wage                    proposed that EEO–1 private employers
                                                    procedures to reduce unconscious bias                    earners, the contractual promise of                    and federal contractors with 100 or
                                                    and structural barriers, and embedding                   affirmative action and equal                           more employees would submit the
                                                    equal pay efforts into broader                           employment opportunity required of                     EEO–1 with pay and hours-worked data
                                                    enterprise-wide equity initiatives.38                    those who do business with the federal                 (Component 2) in addition to
                                                       There is also evidence that pay equity                government. To fulfill these goals, the                Component 1 data. The 60-Day Notice
                                                    is good for business. For example, a                     EEOC and OFCCP need to be as effective                 also stated that federal contractors with
                                                    McKinsey & Company study found that                      and efficient as possible in their                     between 50 and 99 employees would
                                                    gender parity in the United States could                 investigations of alleged discrimination.              continue to submit Component 1 data
                                                    lead to $4.3 trillion of additional GDP                  They now lack the employer- and                        but would not submit Component 2
                                                    by 2025, which is 19% higher than if                     establishment-specific pay data that,                  data.
                                                    current trends in pay inequity                           prior to issuing a detailed request for
                                                    continue.39 Another recent study found                                                                          C. Public Comments
                                                                                                             information or a subpoena, would be
                                                                                                             extremely useful in helping enforcement                   The EEOC received comments urging
                                                    black applicants compared to the white applicants
                                                                                                             staff to investigate potential pay                     it to remove employers with fewer than
                                                    and they also identified the black job applicants as
                                                    less likely to negotiate. For the third study, the       discrimination. Balancing utility and
                                                                                                                                                                    http://www.aauw.org/2015/08/20/equal-pay-by-
                                                    evaluators and job applicants were required to           burden, the EEOC has concluded that                    state/.
                                                    simulate a job negotiation. Although the black job       the proposed EEO–1 pay data collection                    43 Private employers also must file the EEO–1 if
                                                    applicants reported that they negotiated comparably
                                                    (in terms of the number of offers and counteroffers      would be an effective and appropriate                  they have fewer than 100 employees but are owned
                                                    made) to their white counterparts, their evaluators      tool for this purpose, for all of the                  or affiliated with another company or have
                                                    reported that the black job applicants had               reasons explained below.42                             centralized ownership, control or management so
                                                    negotiated more than the white job applicants. The                                                              that the group legally constitutes a single enterprise
                                                    MIT professors concluded that because the                                                                       and the entire enterprise employs a total of 100 or
                                                    evaluators expected the black job applicants to          (April 2016) http://www.mckinsey.com/global-           more employees. EEOC, EEO–1: Who Must File,
                                                    negotiate less, they had an exaggerated view of their    themes/employment-and-growth/the-power-of-             https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/
                                                    behavior during the job negotiation. In addition, the    parity-advancing-womens-equality-in-the-united-        whomustfile.cfm.
                                                    professors found that the black job applicants           states.                                                   44 Employers and contractors file different types
                                                                                                                40 Morgan Stanley, Gender Diversity is a
                                                    received lower starting salaries based on the                                                                   of EEO–1 reports depending on whether they are
                                                    evaluators perception that the black job applicants      Competitive Advantage (May 12, 2016), http://          single-establishment or multi-establishment filers.
                                                    were more aggressive).                                   www.morganstanley.com/blog/women/gender-               Single-establishment filers only file one report, the
                                                       35 Roland Fryer, Devah Pager, and Jörg L.            diversity-work; See also Morgan Stanley, Why it        Type 1 report. Multi-establishment filers submit
                                                    Spenkuch, Racial Disparities in Job Findings and         Pays to Invest in Gender Diversity (May 11, 2016),     several reports. These are: The Type 2—
                                                    Offered Wages, Journal of Law and Economics,             http://www.morganstanley.com/ideas/gender-             Consolidated Report, which must include data on
                                                    University of Chicago Press, vol. 56(3), 22–23,          diversity-investment-framework.html.                   all employees of the company; the Type 3—
                                                    (Sept. 2011), http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/fryer/       41 Id.
                                                                                                                                                                    Headquarters Report, which must include the
                                                    files/racial_disparities_in_job_finding_and_offered_        42 States also are addressing gender pay            employees working at the main office site of the
                                                    wages.pdf.                                               inequities, including proposing to establish pay       company and those who work from home and
                                                       36 Id.
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                                                                                                             transparency, prohibit retaliation against workers     report to the corporate office; the Type 4—
                                                       37 The White House, White House Equal Pay             who discuss their wages, and request state agencies    Establishment Report, for each physical location
                                                    Pledge, https://www.whitehouse.gov/webform/              to examine their pay practices and develop best        with 50 or more employees, which provides full
                                                    white-house-equal-pay-pledge. See also, Natalia          practices. For a summary of state equal pay laws,      employment data categorized by race, gender and
                                                    Merluzzi, These Businesses are Taking the Equal          see National Conference of State Legislatures, State   job category. For sites with fewer than 50
                                                    Pay Pledge, White House Blog (June 14, 2016),            Equal Pay Laws—July 2015, http://www.ncsl.org/         employees, filers submit either: Type 6—
                                                    https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2016/06/14/              research/labor-and-employment/equal-pay-               Establishment List, which provides only the
                                                    businesses-taking-equal-pay-pledge.                      laws.aspx. For a summary of state equal pay            establishment name, complete address and total
                                                       38 Id.
                                                                                                             legislation, see Kate Nielsen, American Association    number of employees; or Type 8—Establishment
                                                       39 McKinsey & Company, The Power of Parity:           of University Women, 2015 State Equal Pay              Report, which is a full report for each establishment
                                                    Advancing Women’s Equality in the United States,         Legislation by the Numbers (August 20, 2015),          employing fewer than 50 employees.



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                                                    45484                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    200, or fewer than 500, employees from                   reporting year, starting with the EEO–1                 depending on how they organized their
                                                    the requirement to report pay and                        report for 2017.                                        records.
                                                    hours-worked data on the EEO–1                             Note that the reporting schedule for                     Many commenters suggested changing
                                                    (Component 2), in order to avoid                         2016 data remains unchanged; EEO–1                      the 12-month EEO–1 reporting period to
                                                    imposing a burden on them. Some                          respondents must comply with the                        be the same as the W–2 reporting period
                                                    comments also encouraged the EEOC to                     September 30, 2016, filing requirement                  (a calendar year) and moving the EEO–
                                                    eliminate the requirement to provide                     for the currently-approved EEO–1, and                   1 filing deadline into the subsequent
                                                    establishment-level pay data for                         must continue to use the July 1st                       year, preferably after W–2s are due. A
                                                    establishments with fewer than 50 or                     through September 30th workforce                        few stakeholders suggested that the
                                                    100 employees. These comments also                       snapshot period for that report. Under                  EEOC conduct the pay data collection
                                                    expressed concern that reporting pay                     the proposed changes to the reporting                   every two years.
                                                    data for small employers, or small                       schedule, EEO–1 reports for 2017 data
                                                                                                                                                                     C. 30-Day Notice
                                                    employer establishments, could reveal                    would be due on March 31, 2018.
                                                    employee-level pay information.                                                                                  1. Deadline for Filing the EEO–1
                                                                                                             A. 60-Day Notice
                                                    Conversely, other comments urged the                                                                                For the upcoming 2016 EEO–1 report,
                                                    EEOC to collect data from smaller                           In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC
                                                                                                                                                                     the filing deadline will remain
                                                    employers by lowering the reporting                      proposed to retain the current
                                                                                                                                                                     September 30, 2016. However,
                                                    threshold for pay data to 50 or more                     September 30th EEO–1 filing deadline.
                                                                                                                                                                     beginning with the 2017 report, the
                                                    employees for federal contractors.                       The EEOC explained that, starting in
                                                                                                                                                                     reporting deadline for all EEO–1 filers
                                                                                                             2017, employers with 100 or more
                                                    D. 30-Day Notice: Employers With 100                                                                             will be March 31st of the year following
                                                                                                             employees would document their
                                                    or More Employees Will File                                                                                      the EEO–1 report year. Thus, the 2017
                                                                                                             employees’ W–2 earnings for a 12-
                                                    Components 1 and 2                                                                                               EEO–1 report will be due on March 31,
                                                                                                             month period starting October 1st and
                                                                                                                                                                     2018. Changing the filing deadline will
                                                       The Commission has considered the                     ending the next September 30th. The
                                                                                                                                                                     give employers subject to Component 2
                                                    arguments for increasing the size of                     60-Day Notice reasoned that W–2
                                                                                                                                                                     six more months to prepare their
                                                    those employers subject to Components                    earnings are generally recorded in 3-
                                                                                                                                                                     recordkeeping systems for the 2017
                                                    1 and 2 and has decided to retain the                    month periods (calendar year quarters)
                                                                                                                                                                     report, and it will give them 1.5 years
                                                    same employee thresholds as in the 60-                   and that, because the third quarter ends
                                                                                                                                                                     without filing an EEO–1 report
                                                    Day Notice. Exempting employers with                     on September 30th, employers could
                                                                                                                                                                     (September 30, 2016 to March 31, 2018).
                                                    fewer than 500 employees, or even                        calculate the 12-month W–2 wages
                                                                                                                                                                     At the same time, this change will align
                                                    fewer than 250, from Component 2                         without significant difficulty.45 The 60-
                                                                                                                                                                     the EEO–1 with federal obligations to
                                                    would result in losing data for a large                  Day Notice also retained the current
                                                                                                                                                                     calculate and report W–2 earnings as of
                                                    number of employers who employ                           ‘‘workforce snapshot’’ approach of
                                                                                                                                                                     December 31st; the EEOC will not
                                                    millions of workers, and thus would                      allowing each employer to choose a pay
                                                                                                                                                                     require a special W–2 calculation for the
                                                    significantly reduce the utility of the                  period between July 1st and September
                                                                                                                                                                     EEO–1.48 These changes will reduce the
                                                    pay data collection. In addition, the                    30th during which it would count its
                                                                                                                                                                     burden on employers of gathering
                                                    EEOC and OFCCP have decided not to                       employees to be reported on the EEO–
                                                                                                                                                                     Component 2 data.
                                                    exempt federal contractors with 50–99                    1.46 The employees counted during this
                                                                                                                                                                        The Commission declines to adopt an
                                                    employees from filing Component 1 of                     pay period would be the ones reported
                                                                                                                                                                     alternate-year schedule for filing the
                                                    the EEO–1. The Commission’s proposal                     on the EEO–1.
                                                                                                                                                                     EEO–1 report. If collected only in
                                                    reduces employer burden by changing                      B. Public Comments                                      alternate years, the utility of EEO–1 data
                                                    other aspects of the EEO–1, such as the                                                                          would be diminished because it would
                                                    reporting deadline. See section V.                         Employers and other groups objected
                                                                                                             vigorously to the burden of reporting                   become stale before the new data
                                                       In sum, all employers with 100 or
                                                                                                             non-calendar year W–2 data (i.e.,                       became available.
                                                    more employees will be subject to
                                                    Components 1 and 2 of the EEO–1                          October 1st to September 30th). These                   2. ‘‘Workforce Snapshot’’ Period
                                                    starting with reporting year 2017.                       parties argued that the EEOC, by
                                                                                                                                                                        The ‘‘workforce snapshot’’ period
                                                    Federal contractors with 50–99                           choosing to impose this unique 12-
                                                                                                                                                                     refers to the pay period when employers
                                                    employees will not experience a change                   month reporting period, would
                                                                                                                                                                     count the total number of employees for
                                                    in their EEO–1 reporting requirements                    significantly increase their costs by
                                                                                                                                                                     that year’s EEO–1 report. The EEO–1
                                                    as a result of this proposal; they will not              compelling them to recalculate W–2
                                                                                                                                                                     has always used this ‘‘workforce
                                                    file Component 2 and will continue to                    earnings for the sole purpose of
                                                                                                                                                                     snapshot’’ approach, which gives
                                                    file only Component 1. Consistent with                   completing the EEO–1.
                                                                                                               On a related point, employers reliant                 employers a choice but freezes EEO–1
                                                    current practice, federal contractors                                                                            employment numbers as of the chosen
                                                    with 1 to 49 employees and other                         on human resource information systems
                                                                                                             (HRIS) 47 and payroll software said that                pay period. Some employers criticized
                                                    private employers with 1 to 99                                                                                   the ‘‘workforce snapshot’’ approach
                                                    employees will be exempt from filing                     they would have insufficient time to
                                                                                                             budget, develop, and implement new                      because it would not reflect same-year
                                                    the EEO–1; they will file neither                                                                                promotions that have the effect of
                                                    Component 1 nor Component 2.                             reporting systems if the 2017 EEO–1
                                                                                                             report were to be due on September 30,                  moving the employee into a different
                                                    V. When To File: Filing Deadline and                     2017. Employers lacking HRIS and                        EEO–1 job category or pay band after the
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                                                    Workforce Snapshot Period                                payroll software said they would have a                 ‘‘snapshot’’ was taken. The Commission
                                                      This 30-Day Notice proposes to                         variety of implementation challenges,                      48 Employers must send the W–2 to the Social
                                                    change the EEO–1 filing deadline to                                                                              Security Administration by the last day of February,
                                                                                                                  45 81
                                                                                                                     FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016).
                                                    March 31st, of the year that follows the                                                                         although special due dates apply if the employer
                                                                                                                  46 EEOC,EEO–1: When to File, https://
                                                    reporting year. This Notice also                                                                                 terminated its business or is filing electronically.
                                                                                                             www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/                      Employers must furnish the W–2 to employees by
                                                    proposes to change the ‘‘workforce                       whentofile.cfm.                                         February 1. IRS, Topic 752—Filing Forms W–2 and
                                                    snapshot’’ to a pay period between                          47 These systems are also sometimes called           W–3 (Dec. 30, 2015), https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/
                                                    October 1st and December 31st of the                     ‘‘human resource management systems’’ or HRMS.          tc752.html.



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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                     45485

                                                    addresses this concern in part by                        includes income that is received                         its consideration to two of these—the
                                                    moving the ‘‘workforce snapshot’’                        between January 1st and December 31st                    Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational
                                                    period to the fourth quarter, October 1st                of the relevant calendar year. In                        Employment Statistics (OES) measure of
                                                    to December 31st, so that there are fewer                reaching this decision, the Commission                   pay 54 and the Internal Revenue
                                                    opportunities for unreported changes                     considered government studies that                       Service’s W–2 definition 55 —the EEOC
                                                    after the ‘‘snapshot.’’ This will preserve               analyze compensation in U.S.                             proposed to use W–2 income because it
                                                    employer choice as to the ‘‘workforce                    workplaces, relevant academic literature                 is already calculated by employers,
                                                    snapshot,’’ while at the same time                       on compensation practices, the public                    therefore limiting burden, and because
                                                    accommodating the established federal                    comments and public testimony, and                       it is a comprehensive measure of pay
                                                    schedule for preparing W–2’s. In sum,                    the analyses reflected in the EEOC’s
                                                                                                                                                                      that would be more likely to capture the
                                                    while employers will count their                         NAS study 51 and its own Pilot Study.52
                                                                                                                                                                      effect of employment discrimination on
                                                    employees during a pay period between                    A. 60-Day Notice: Options for Measuring                  different kinds of compensation.56 In
                                                    October 1st and December 31st, they                      Pay                                                      the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC did not
                                                    will report W–2 income and hours-
                                                                                                                The EEOC’s 60-Day Notice described                    specify which box on the W–2 it would
                                                    worked data for these employees for the
                                                    entire year ending December 31st.49                      five different measures of individual                    use, but the Commission now specifies
                                                       This change will not affect the 2016                  compensation that are used by the                        that employers will report on income
                                                    EEO–1, for which the July 1st to                         federal government.53 After narrowing                    provided in Box 1 of the W–2 form.
                                                    September 30th ‘‘workforce snapshot’’                                                                             B. Public Comments
                                                                                                             similar arrangement; (10) Taxable cost of group-
                                                    period remains effective.                                term life insurance in excess of $50,000; (11) Unless
                                                                                                             excludable under Educational assistance programs,        1. Supporting the Use of W–2 Income
                                                    VI. What Pay Data To Report: Measure                     payments for non-job-related education expenses or
                                                    of Pay for the EEO–1                                     for payments under a nonaccountable plan; (12)             Comments in support of using W–2
                                                      This 30-Day Notice proposes that                       The amount includible as wages because you paid          income emphasized that it is a
                                                                                                             your employee’s share of social security and
                                                    employers use Box 1 of Form W–2                          Medicare taxes (or railroad retirement taxes, if
                                                                                                                                                                      comprehensive measure of pay that
                                                    (hereafter ‘‘W–2 income’’) as the                        applicable). If employer also paid the employee’s        encompasses overtime, shift
                                                    measure of pay for Component 2 of the                    income tax withholding, the employer treats the          differentials, and production and non-
                                                                                                             grossed-up amount of that withholding as
                                                    EEO–1.50 By definition, W–2, Box 1                       supplemental wages and reports those wages in
                                                                                                                                                                      production bonuses, which are
                                                                                                             boxes 1, 3, 5, and 7. (Employer uses box 14 if           increasingly important elements of pay.
                                                       49 By changing the EEO–1 ‘‘workforce snapshot’’       railroad retirement taxes apply.) No exceptions to       These parties stated that employment
                                                    to the last quarter of each calendar year, EEO–1         this treatment apply to household or agricultural
                                                    contractor filers that also file annual employee         wages; (13) Designated Roth contributions made
                                                                                                                                                                      discrimination can be manifested when
                                                    reports under the Vietnam Era Veterans’                  under a section 401(k) plan, a section 403(b) salary     employers decide which employees get
                                                    Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended          reduction agreement, or a governmental section           opportunities to earn shift differentials
                                                    (VEVRAA), 38 U.S.C. 4212(d), will be in a position       457(b) plan; (14) Distributions to an employee or
                                                                                                             former employee from an NQDC plan (including a
                                                                                                                                                                      or overtime pay, or get large bonuses or
                                                    to align their VEVRAA data collections with the
                                                    new EEO–1. Under regulations implementing                rabbi trust) or a nongovernmental section 457(b)         awards. Using a measure of pay that
                                                    VEVRAA, certain federal contractors must report          plan; (15) Amounts includible in income under            excludes so much pay that could be
                                                    annually on form VETS–4212 the number of                 section 457(f) because the amounts are no longer
                                                                                                             subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture; (16)
                                                                                                                                                                      influenced by discrimination would
                                                    employees and new hires protected under
                                                    VEVRAA. 41 CFR 61–300.10(d)(1). Form VETS–               Payments to statutory employees who are subject to       radically reduce the utility of this data
                                                    4212 collects information for veterans protected by      social security and Medicare taxes but not subject       collection for the EEOC and OFCCP.
                                                    VEVRAA using the EEO–1’s 10 job categories. For          to federal income tax withholding must be shown
                                                    each reporting year, the federal contractor must         in box 1 as other compensation; (17) Cost of current     2. Opposing the Use of W–2 Income
                                                    report covered employees for the 12-month period         insurance protection under a compensatory split-
                                                    preceding a date it selects between July 1st and         dollar life insurance arrangement; (18) Employee            Comments in opposition to using W–
                                                                                                             contributions to a health savings account (HSA);
                                                    August 31st that falls at the end of a payroll period.                                                            2 income fell into three categories.
                                                                                                             (19) Employer contributions to an HSA if includible
                                                    Significantly, the regulations allow contractors to
                                                                                                             in the income of the employee; (20) Amounts
                                                    select December 31st as the basis for reporting the
                                                                                                             includible in income under an NQDC plan because             54 The Occupation Employment Statistics (OES)
                                                    number of employees and as the ending date of the
                                                                                                             of section 409A; (21) Payments made to former            survey defines earnings to include base rate pay,
                                                    twelve-month covered period, if the federal              employees while they are on active duty in the
                                                    contractor has ‘‘previous written approval from the                                                               cost-of-living allowances, guaranteed pay,
                                                                                                             Armed Forces or other uniformed services; and (22)
                                                    Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to do                                                                     hazardous-duty pay, incentive pay such as
                                                                                                             All other compensation, including certain
                                                    so for purposes of submitting the Employer                                                                        commissions and production bonuses, tips, and on-
                                                                                                             scholarship and fellowship grants.’’ IRS, 2016
                                                    Information Report EEO–1, Standard Form 100                                                                       call pay. The OES measure excludes back pay, jury
                                                                                                             General Instructions for Forms W–2 and W–3, (Jan.
                                                    (EEO–1 Report).’’ 41 CFR 61–300.10(d)(2). The            5, 2016), https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/               duty pay, overtime pay, severance pay, shift
                                                    implementation notice for the revised EEO–1 will         iw2w3.pdf.                                               differentials, nonproduction bonuses, employer
                                                    serve as ‘‘previous written approval’’ from the             51 NAS Report, supra note 3.                          costs for supplementary benefits, and tuition
                                                    EEOC pursuant to this Department of Labor                   52 Sage Computing, supra note 3. This EEOC Pilot
                                                                                                                                                                      reimbursements. U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of
                                                    VEVRAA rule.                                                                                                      Labor Statistics, Occupation Employment Statistics,
                                                                                                             Study compared the OES definition of                     http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_tec.htm. OES
                                                       50 The IRS instructions for Form W–2 list the
                                                                                                             compensation to the W–2 and concluded that ‘‘[t]he
                                                    following categories of Box 1 taxable income: ‘‘(1)                                                               survey uses twelve wage intervals. U.S. Dept. of
                                                                                                             W–2 definition of income . . . offers a more
                                                    Total wages, bonuses (including signing bonuses),                                                                 Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Survey Methods
                                                                                                             comprehensive picture of earnings data and
                                                    prizes, and awards paid to employees during the                                                                   and Reliability Statement for the 2015 Occupational
                                                                                                             therefore is more appropriate for identifying
                                                    year; (2) Total noncash payments, including certain                                                               Employment Statistics Survey, 4, http://
                                                                                                             discriminatory practices.’’ In contrast to the OES
                                                    fringe benefits; (3) Total tips reported by the          definition of pay, the W–2 definition includes all       www.bls.gov/oes/current/methods_statement.pdf,
                                                                                                                                                                         55 81 FR 5113, 5116 (Feb. 1, 2016). The EEOC
                                                    employee to the employer; (4) Certain employee           the elements of compensation that are captured by
                                                                                                                                                                      initially considered five measures of pay. Three of
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                                                    business expense reimbursements; (5) The cost of         the OES definition, but also includes forms of
                                                    accident and health insurance premiums for 2%-or-        compensation such as overtime wages, shift               those measures are used by the U.S. Bureau of
                                                    more shareholder-employees paid by an S                  differentials, fees, commissions, fringe benefits, and   Labor and Statistics (BLS) when it reports national
                                                    corporation: (6) Taxable benefits from a section 125     bonuses. Box 1 on the W–2 excludes certain               employment data: the Occupation Employment
                                                    (cafeteria) plan if the employee chooses cash; (7)       elective deferrals or pre-tax deductions such as         Statistics (OES); the National Compensation Survey
                                                    Employee contributions to an Archer MSA (medical         employer-sponsored retirement plan (401(k) or            (NCS); and the Current Employment Statistics (CES)
                                                    savings account); (8) Employer contributions to an       403(b)) contributions, flexible spending account         survey programs. One measure was from the Social
                                                    Archer MSA if includible in the income of the            contributions for health and dependent care, and         Security Administration (SSA) and the final
                                                    employee; (9) Employer contributions for qualified       medical contributions.                                   measure was from the Internal Revenue Service
                                                    long-term care services to the extent that such             53 NAS Report, supra notes 3 and 51 at 32–34, 41–     (IRS) (W–2).
                                                    coverage is provided through a flexible spending or      45, http://www.nap.edu/read/13496/chapter/4#32.             56 Sage Computing, supra notes 3 and 52.




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                                                    45486                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    Objection 1: W–2 Income Reflects                         filing date for the revised EEO–1 from                employers, W–2 income is a well-
                                                    Employee Choice and Is Not a Reliable                    September 30th to March 31st, the                     defined, familiar, and universally-
                                                    Measure of Employer Discrimination                       EEOC has addressed this objection.                    available measure of pay; for the EEOC
                                                       The most widely articulated objection                                                                       and OFCCP, it is useful data for
                                                                                                             C. 30-Day Notice: W–2 (Box 1) Income
                                                    to using W–2 income was that it was not                                                                        exploring potential pay discrimination.
                                                                                                             Is the Measure of Pay                                    Supplemental pay is becoming more
                                                    indicative of discrimination because it
                                                                                                             1. W–2 Income and Employee Choice                     and more prevalent in the United States.
                                                    may reflect employee choice more than
                                                                                                                                                                   As noted by the Bureau of Labor
                                                    employer discretion and that the EEOC                      The Commission is not persuaded by                  Statistics, Department of Labor (BLS),
                                                    cannot differentiate the two in an                       the argument that W–2 income is an                    ‘‘For many occupations in the U.S. labor
                                                    aggregate pay data collection.                           unsuitable measure for a pay data                     market supplemental pay—including
                                                    Commenters making this argument                          collection by an agency that enforces                 overtime, bonuses, and shift
                                                    identified elective participation in                     anti-discrimination laws because it may               differentials—is an important
                                                    overtime, working shifts that provide                    reflect employee choice as well as                    component of overall cash
                                                    pay differentials, and working faster or                 employer policy or decisions. As the                  compensation. Overtime pay is
                                                    better than another employee (e.g.,                      White House Council of Economic                       especially important in production
                                                    payments for piecework, commissions,                     Advisers notes, ‘‘In many situations, the             occupations and other blue-collar jobs;
                                                    or production), as governed by                           delineations between discrimination                   bonus pay is mostly a feature of high-
                                                    employee choice. Some of these                           and preferences are ambiguous.’’ 57 For               wage managerial and sales occupations;
                                                    comments argued that using W–2                           example, higher commission income                     and shift differentials play a prominent
                                                    income will in fact cause the EEOC to                    may, as some public comments noted,                   role in . . . healthcare [] and technical
                                                    find ‘‘false-positives’’ indicating                      reflect an employee’s higher                          occupations.’’ 59 This pattern also is
                                                    discrimination because the agency will                   performance, but it may also reflect an               apparent in some of America’s highest
                                                    assume that pay disparities are caused                   employer’s discriminatory assignment                  paying professions. In the legal
                                                    by discrimination rather than employee                   of more lucrative sales opportunities to              profession, for example, bonuses at law
                                                    choice.                                                  employees based on race, ethnicity,                   firms can account for a significant
                                                       Some of these parties urged the EEOC                  and/or sex. As another example, a                     portion of an associate’s total
                                                    to use ‘‘base pay’’ rather than W–2                      statistically significant difference in               compensation, beyond base salary.60
                                                    income because ‘‘base pay’’ is controlled                overtime pay between men and women                       The human resources consulting firm
                                                    entirely by employers and therefore is                   in the same job may result from an                    Aon Hewitt’s 2014 U.S. Salary Increase
                                                    better suited to documenting potential                   employer’s gender-biased assumptions                  Survey of 1,064 organizations found that
                                                    discrimination. Another advantage to                     that lead to more overtime opportunities              variable pay (such as performance-based
                                                    using ‘‘base pay,’’ they maintained, is                  being offered to men than to women,                   bonuses) for exempt employees
                                                    that it would be significantly less                      whom they may assume have competing                   comprised 12.7% of payroll that year.61
                                                    expensive and easier for them to report                  family responsibilities. Pay                          This represented the highest ratio
                                                    on the EEO–1 because their HRIS now                      discrimination is complex, and it would               companies have paid out of their
                                                    include records of base pay but not W–                   be an oversimplification to conclude                  budgets toward bonuses since the
                                                    2 income. These stakeholders did not                     that only those measures of pay that are              consulting firm started keeping records
                                                    define ‘‘base pay,’’ apart from noting                   shown to be exclusively dependent on                  35 years ago and is an increase from
                                                    that it does not include supplemental                    an employer’s decision or policy can be               2008 when 10.8% of their total
                                                    pay such as overtime, shift differentials,               relevant to assessing allegations of pay              compensation budgets were devoted to
                                                    and bonuses, and that it can be stated                   discrimination.                                       variable pay for exempt employees.62
                                                    as an hourly rate or as an annual salary.                                                                      Ken Abosch, leader of Aon Hewitt’s
                                                                                                             2. Supplemental Income Is Important
                                                    Objection 2: Collection of W–2 Data                                                                            compensation practice, stated that
                                                                                                             and May Be Linked to Discrimination
                                                    Burdens Employers by Requiring the                                                                             companies prefer to give performance-
                                                    Integration of HRIS and Payroll Systems                     Based on its consideration of public               based pay because this practice ‘‘keeps
                                                                                                             comments and government and private                   employees focused on good
                                                      Employers argued that reporting W–2                                                                          performance rather than just showing
                                                                                                             sector research, the Commission
                                                    income would impose an inordinate                                                                              up, and it allows companies to reward
                                                                                                             concludes that supplemental pay is a
                                                    burden and expense because they store                                                                          and retain their really valuable
                                                                                                             critical component of compensation and
                                                    W–2 income data in computerized                                                                                employees.’’ 63 In addition, Abosch
                                                                                                             it can be influenced by discrimination,
                                                    payroll systems that are entirely
                                                                                                             so any measure of income for purposes
                                                    separate from the HRIS where they                                                                              to collect in order to identify potential sources of
                                                                                                             of enforcing the pay discrimination laws
                                                    maintain EEO–1 demographic data.                                                                               pay discrimination.
                                                                                                             should include supplemental pay. W–2
                                                    They asserted that procuring or                                                                                  59 John L. Bishow, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of
                                                                                                             income incorporates different kinds of                Labor Statistics, A Look at Supplemental Pay:
                                                    developing new software to bridge these
                                                                                                             supplemental pay that would not be                    Overtime Pay, Bonuses, and Shift Differentials
                                                    two systems would be time-consuming                                                                            (March 25, 2009), http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/
                                                                                                             available for analysis if the EEOC were
                                                    and extremely costly.                                                                                          cwc/a-look-at-supplemental-pay-overtime-pay-
                                                                                                             to collect only ‘‘base pay’’ or another               bonuses-and-shift-differentials.pdf.
                                                    Objection 3: Collection of W–2 Income                    basic measure of pay that ignored major                 60 National Association of Law Placement
                                                    Data for October 1st to September 30th                   sources of compensation.58 For                        (NALP), 2014 Associate Salary Survey, NALP, 67–
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                                                    Is Burdensome                                                                                                  77 (September, 2014), Associate Bonuses.
                                                                                                               57 Council of Economic Advisers Issue Brief, The      61 Aon Hewitt, New Aon Hewitt Survey Shows
                                                      Finally, employers argued that                         Gender Pay Gap on the Anniversary of the Lilly        2014 Variable Pay Spending Spikes to Record-High
                                                    reporting W–2 income for October 1st to                  Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (Jan. 2016), https://          Level (Aug. 27, 2014), http://aon.mediaroom.com/
                                                    September 30th of every year would be                    www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/page/files/    New-Aon-Hewitt-Survey-Shows-2014-Variable-Pay-
                                                                                                             20160128_cea_gender_pay_gap_issue_brief.pdf.          Spending-Spikes-to-Record-High-Level.
                                                    burdensome because employers’ payroll                      58 For example, although the FLSA requires            62 Id.
                                                    systems collect and report W–2 income                    employers to maintain pay rates, those pay rates do     63 Jenna McGregor, Bonuses are making up a
                                                    on a calendar-year basis for tax                         not include important sources of supplemental         bigger and bigger percentage of companies’
                                                    purposes. By proposing to change the                     income that the EEOC has determined is important      payrolls, Washington Post, (Aug. 27, 2014), https://



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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                     45487

                                                    noted that performance-based pay                         level.70 This difference remained even                   VII. What Data To Report: Hours
                                                    allows companies to keep their base                      after taking into account differences of                 Worked
                                                    salaries lower and that companies will                   age, tenure, and titles.71                               A. 60-Day Notice
                                                    only allocate bonuses ‘‘if [the company]
                                                    has good or great results.’’ 64                          3. Bridging HRIS and Payroll                                The Commission proposed collecting
                                                       In some industries, shift                                                                                      the number of ‘‘hours worked’’ for non-
                                                                                                                In light of employers’ argument that                  exempt employees by job category,
                                                    differentials 65 and overtime pay 66 are                 bridging employers’ HRIS and payroll
                                                    important aspects of income. Eighty-                                                                              subdivided into pay band cells, to
                                                                                                             software for the new EEO–1 will be so                    account for periods when employees
                                                    three percent of manufacturing and
                                                                                                             burdensome that it outweighs the utility                 were not employed or were engaged in
                                                    production companies, 59% of customer
                                                                                                             of W–2 income, the EEOC examined                         part-time work. With regard to exempt
                                                    service and support entities, and 51% of
                                                                                                             three of the HRIS tools that it sees most                employees, the EEOC suggested that
                                                    transportation and distribution
                                                                                                             often in systemic investigations: ADP                    ‘‘[o]ne approach would be for employers
                                                    companies surveyed in 2010 offered
                                                    shift differentials.67 Hospitals and                     Enterprise, PeopleSoft, and UltiPro. All                 to use an estimate of 40 hours per week
                                                    health care service organizations also                   three HRIS allow for the collection of                   for full-time salaried workers. The EEOC
                                                    pay shift differentials for holiday and                  EEO–1 demographic data, and all three                    [was] not proposing to require an
                                                    weekend shifts more than other                           offer the capacity to record year-to-date                employer to begin collecting additional
                                                    industries.68 Overtime is particularly                   gross and paid earnings.72 The EEOC                      data on actual hours worked for salaried
                                                    important in production, transportation,                 recognizes that many employers may                       workers, to the extent that the employer
                                                    and material moving industries, with                     not choose to use this capacity, but its                 does not currently maintain such
                                                    workers earning 2% of their income in                    existence suggests that creating software                information.’’ 73
                                                    overtime pay in December 2015.69                         solutions for the EEO–1, Components 1
                                                                                                                                                                      B. Public Comments
                                                    Employers can control who gets the                       and 2, may not be as complex or novel
                                                                                                             as some comments suggested.                                Public comments from many
                                                    opportunity for assignments to lucrative
                                                                                                                                                                      employers objected to collecting hours
                                                    shifts that pay premium wages or                            The EEOC intends to support                           worked data due to the cost of creating
                                                    overtime pay, and withholding such                       employers and HRIS vendors as                            new systems to collate and report data
                                                    assignments because of a protected basis                 appropriate to accommodate                               about hours worked with W–2 income,
                                                    such as race, ethnicity, or sex would                    Component 2 of the proposed EEO–1.                       and EEO–1 Component 1 data. Some
                                                    violate Title VII.                                       For example, the EEO–1 Joint Reporting                   employers inquired how the EEOC
                                                       Incentive pay for top executives also                 Committee plans to post online its new                   would define ‘‘hours worked,’’ so they
                                                    may be subject to discrimination. For                    Data File Specifications for Components                  would know what to report. These
                                                    example, at the five highest executive                   1 and 2 of the modified EEO–1 as soon                    employers focused on two alternatives:
                                                    level positions (chief executive officer,                as OMB approves the information                          (1) The FLSA definition of hours
                                                    vice chair, president, chief financial                   collection. The EEO–1 data file                          worked; and (2) the Affordable Care Act
                                                    officer, and chief operating officer),                   specifications will be for data uploads                  (ACA) approach.
                                                    research based on data from 1992–2005                    (submitting EEO–1 data in one digital                      The question of how to count hours
                                                    shows that women received a lower                        file), but they also will describe the                   worked for employees exempt from
                                                    share of incentive pay (including                        formatting of data for direct data entry                 overtime received a lot of attention,
                                                    bonuses and stock option grants) than                    onto the firm’s secure EEO–1 account                     especially the EEOC’s proposal to count
                                                    their male counterparts, accounting for                  with the Joint Reporting Committee. For                  40 hours per week for full time, exempt
                                                    93% of the gender pay gap at that                        reference, the current EEO–1 data file                   workers. Supporters of the revised EEO–
                                                                                                             specifications can be found at https://                  1 said it was reasonable to use a proxy
                                                    www.washingtonpost.com/news/on-leadership/wp/
                                                    2014/08/27/bonuses-are-making-up-a-bigger-and-           www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/                       of 40 hours per week for full-time
                                                    bigger-percentage-of-companies-payrolls/.                ee1_datafile_2013.cfm.                                   exempt employees. Those who objected
                                                      64 Id.                                                                                                          to using the 40-hours per week proxy
                                                      65 Shift differentials are paid to compensate            70 Stefania Albanesi, Claudia Olivetti, Maria José    observed that it simply would not
                                                    employees for working shifts other than regular          Prados, Liberty Street Economics: Incentive Pay and      reflect the reality of the hours worked
                                                    weekday hours.                                           Gender Compensation Gaps for Top Executives,             by many full-time exempt employees,
                                                      66 Employees who are nonexempt under the Fair
                                                                                                             Federal Reserve Bank of New York, (Aug. 25, 2015),       who may work substantially more than
                                                    Labor Standards Act are entitled to receive overtime     http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2015/
                                                    pay for hours worked over 40 in a workweek. 29           08/incentive-pay-and-gender-compensation-gaps-           40 hours in any given week and may
                                                    CFR 778.10. The overtime rate is not less than time      for-top-executives.html#.VzovwP5JlR0.                    work less than 40 hours in another
                                                    and one-half their regular pay rate. U.S. Dept. of         71 Stefania Albanesi, How performance pay              week. Some comments argued that,
                                                    Labor, Wage and Hour Division, Overtime Pay,             schemes make the gender gap worse, World
                                                    https://www.dol.gov/whd/overtime_pay.htm. See
                                                                                                                                                                      since the 40-hour estimate would be
                                                                                                             Economic Forum, (Dec.23, 2015), https://
                                                    also U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and Hour Division,        www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/12/how-
                                                                                                                                                                      incorrect in many instances, reporting
                                                    Final Rule: Overtime, https://www.dol.gov/whd/           performance-pay-schemes-make-the-gender-gap-             40 hours per week would require them
                                                    overtime/final2016/, and, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage      worse/.                                                  to submit and certify inaccurate
                                                    and Hour Division, Fact Sheet: Final Rule to Update        72 The ADP HRIS software allows for the                information to the federal government.
                                                    the Regulations Defining and Delimiting the              collection of year-to-date gross pay and pay
                                                    Exemption for Executive, Administrative, and             earnings. It includes paycheck year-to-date totals       C. 30-Day Notice
                                                    Professional Employees (May 2016), https://              and provides fields for year-to-date tax amount,
                                                    www.dol.gov/whd/overtime/final2016/overtime-                                                                      1. The Importance of Collecting Hours
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                                                                                                             overtime hourly earnings, overtime hours, total
                                                    factsheet.htm.                                           overtime earnings, and total overtime hours.             Worked
                                                      67 SHRM, Shift Differentials: Compensation for
                                                                                                             Further, it appears to provide fields for year-to-date
                                                    Working Undesirable Hours (Dec. 3, 2010), https://       taxable income, taxable gross income year-to-date,          Collecting hours worked is of central
                                                    www.shrm.org/hrdisciplines/compensation/articles/        and year-to-date taxable amounts. Ultipro allows         importance because this data will
                                                    pages/shiftdifferentials.aspx.                           collection of weekly pay rate, hourly pay rate, and      enable the EEOC and OFCCP to account
                                                      68 Id.
                                                                                                             year-to-date taxable gross income, in addition to        for part-time and partial-year work and
                                                      69 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,    other measure of pay, hours, and bonus. Finally,
                                                    News Release-Employer Costs for Employee                 PeopleSoft allows collection of hourly rate,             to assess potential pay disparities in the
                                                    Compensation (June 9, 2016), http://www.bls.gov/         minimum hourly rate, maximum hourly rate, and
                                                    news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf.                               Last 26 Pay Period gross income.                          73 81   FR 5113, 5117 (Feb. 1, 2016).



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                                                    45488                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    context of this information. The                         which would not provide clarity for the                 Adopting the FLSA definition of ‘‘hours
                                                    importance of ‘‘hours worked’’ data can                  EEO–1.75                                                worked’’ for the EEO–1 promotes
                                                    be illustrated by example. If two men                       Under the FLSA, the term ‘‘hours                     consistency for contractors subject to
                                                    and two women in the same job                            worked’’ includes ‘‘all time an employee                both requirements.
                                                    category are paid comparable wage                        must be on duty, or on the employer’s
                                                                                                             premises or at any other prescribed                     3. Reporting Hours Worked for
                                                    rates, but the men are employed full-                                                                            Nonexempt Employees
                                                    time and the women are employed part-                    place of work, from the beginning of the
                                                    time, it would initially appear on                       first principal activity of the workday to                 The Commission will require private
                                                    Component 2 of the EEO–1—without                         the end of the last principal activity of               employers and contractors to report the
                                                    any data on their hours worked—that                      the workday.’’ 76 Numerous court                        ‘‘hours worked’’ as recorded for FLSA
                                                                                                             decisions have also helped shape this                   purposes for nonexempt employees in
                                                    the employer was paying the women
                                                                                                             definition. The FLSA and its regulations                Component 2 of the proposed EEO–1.
                                                    significantly less than the men (the
                                                                                                             require employers to maintain certain                   ‘‘Hours worked’’ will be reported for the
                                                    women would be counted in a lower
                                                                                                             records for nonexempt employees,                        total number of employees in each pay
                                                    pay band). On the other hand, if it was                                                                          band by ethnicity, race, and gender, for
                                                                                                             including hours the employee worked
                                                    known that the men worked 40 hours                                                                               the entire calendar year. For example,
                                                                                                             each day and the total hours the
                                                    per week and the women worked 20                                                                                 assume an employer reports on the
                                                                                                             employee worked each workweek.77
                                                    hours per week, then their different                     Payroll records are to be preserved for                 EEO–1 that it employs four African
                                                    hours would provide a potential                          at least three years and records upon                   American women as administrative
                                                    explanation of what initially appears to                 which wage computations were made                       support workers in the sixth pay band.
                                                    be a gender-based pay disparity. Of                      (e.g., time cards) should be maintained                 The employer would report their total
                                                    course, explaining a pay disparity in                    for at least two years.78                               ‘‘hours worked’’ for the entire year in
                                                    this way would not rule out the                             Federal contractors that file the EEO–               the appropriate pay band cell under
                                                    possibility that it was also caused by a                 1 also are subject to the 2014 Fair Pay                 ‘‘Hours Worked’’ (for example, 8,160
                                                    discriminatory practice or policy that                   and Safe Workplaces Executive Order,                    hours). If one of the workers resigned
                                                    may be identified through further                        which, once implemented by regulation,                  after the employer took its ‘‘workforce
                                                    investigation.                                           will require them to supply employees                   snapshot’’ but before December 31st, the
                                                       In addition to helping to assess pay                  with a document each pay period                         employer would report only the total
                                                    disparities, hours-worked data may be                    showing the employee’s hours worked,                    number of hours she actually worked
                                                    useful in its own right. The EEOC                        overtime hours, pay, and any additions                  that year prior to her resignation, which
                                                    receives charges of discrimination                       made to, or deductions made from, pay                   would account for her partial-year
                                                    alleging that an employer gave the                       as recorded for purposes of the FLSA.79                 employment (for example, rather than
                                                    charging party fewer hours than other                                                                            2,040 hours, it might report 1,900
                                                    employees, or denied overtime or
                                                                                                               75 Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), all           hours).
                                                                                                             employers with 50 or more full-time employees or
                                                    premium pay hours based on race,                         equivalents are considered applicable large             4. Reporting Hours Worked for Exempt
                                                    ethnicity, sex, or another statutorily-                  employers (ALEs) subject to ACA’s shared                Employees
                                                    protected basis. Collecting ‘‘hours                      responsibility provisions for providing health
                                                                                                             insurance. For this purpose, a full-time employee is,      Although the Commission seeks to
                                                    worked’’ data on the EEO–1 would be                      for a calendar month, an employee employed on           minimize employer burden, the
                                                    useful in the initial stages of such an                  average at least 30 hours of service per week, or 130   importance of hours-worked data
                                                    investigation, as the EEOC seeks to                      hours of service per month. The ACA provides
                                                                                                             employers the flexibility to use different              necessitates its collection on the EEO–
                                                    assess how the employer assigns work                     measurements of hours worked, or ‘‘service hours,’’     1. The EEO–1 Instructions will give
                                                    hours.                                                   for different categories of exempt employees,           employers the option to: (1) Report a
                                                                                                             provided the measures are reasonable and                proxy of 40 hours per week for full-time
                                                    2. Defining ‘‘Hours Worked’’                             consistently applied. 26 CFR 54.4980H–3(b)(3)(i).
                                                                                                               76 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wage and Hour Division,
                                                                                                                                                                     exempt employees, and 20 hours per
                                                       The Commission adopts the FLSA                        Handy Reference Guide to the Fair Labor Standards       week for part-time exempt employees,
                                                    definition for ‘‘hours worked’’ because it               Act (November, 2014), https://www.dol.gov/whd/          multiplied by the number of weeks the
                                                    is familiar to employers, designed in                    regs/compliance/hrg.htm.                                individuals were employed during the
                                                                                                               77 Additional FLSA recordkeeping requirements
                                                    conjunction with pay, and applies to all                                                                         EEO–1 reporting year; or (2) provide
                                                                                                             include (1) the employee’s sex and occupation, (2)
                                                    employers subject to the EEO–1.74 By                     time and day of the week when employer’s
                                                                                                                                                                     actual hours of work by exempt
                                                    contrast, the ACA approach to ‘‘service                  workweek begins, (3) basis on which employee’s          employees during the EEO–1 reporting
                                                    hours’’ gives employers a range of                       wages are paid, (4) employee’s regular hourly rate,     year if the employer already maintains
                                                                                                             (5) employee’s total daily or weekly straight-time      accurate records of this information.
                                                    choices about how to count hours,                        earnings, (6) employee’s total overtime earnings for
                                                                                                             the workweek, (7) employee’s total wages each pay
                                                      74 Under the Fair Labor Standards Act, employers       period, (8) date of payment to employee and pay         40 U.S.C. chapter 31, subchapter IV (also known as
                                                                                                             period covered by payment, and much more. 29            the Davis-Bacon Act); 41 U.S.C. chapter 67 (also
                                                    must keep certain records for employees who are                                                                  known as the Service Contract Act); or equivalent
                                                    subject to the minimum wage provisions alone, or         CFR 516. See also United States Department of
                                                                                                                                                                     State laws, with a document with information
                                                    to both the minimum wage and overtime                    Labor, Wage and Hour Division, Fact Sheet #21:
                                                                                                                                                                     concerning that individual’s hours worked,
                                                    provisions, including records of hours worked each       Recordkeeping Requirements under the Fair Labor
                                                                                                                                                                     overtime hours, pay, and any additions made to or
                                                    workday and total hours worked each workweek. 29         Standards Act (FLSA) (July, 2008), https://
                                                                                                                                                                     deductions made from pay. Agencies shall also
                                                    CFR 516.2(a)(7). Employers are not required to           www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/whdfs21.htm.            require that contractors incorporate this same
                                                                                                               78 Id.
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                                                    maintain hours worked records for employees who                                                                  requirement into subcontracts covered by section 2
                                                    are exempt from minimum wage or minimum wage               79 E.O. 13673, section 5, 79 FR 45309 (Aug. 5,
                                                                                                                                                                     of this order. The document provided to individuals
                                                    and overtime requirements. 29 CFR 516.3. ‘‘Hours         2014). The Paycheck Transparency provision of the       exempt from the overtime compensation
                                                    worked’’ under the FLSA includes ‘‘(a) [a]ll time        Executive Order on Fair Pay Safe Workplaces             requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act need
                                                    during which an employee is required to be on duty       provides: ‘‘(a) Agencies shall ensure that, for         not include a record of hours worked if the
                                                    or on the employer’s premises or at a prescribed         contracts subject to section 2 of this order,           contractor informs the individuals of their overtime
                                                    workplace and (b) all time during which an               provisions in solicitations and clauses in contracts    exempt status. These requirements shall be deemed
                                                    employee is suffered or permitted to work whether        shall provide that, in each pay period, contractors     to be fulfilled if the contractor is complying with
                                                    or not he is required to do so.’’ 29 CFR 778.223.        provide all individuals performing work under the       State or local requirements that the Secretary of
                                                    Unlike the ACA definition, it does not include paid      contract for whom they are required to maintain         Labor has determined are substantially similar to
                                                    days off.                                                wage records under the Fair Labor Standards Act;        those required by this subsection.’’



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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                          45489

                                                       With this approach, the company                       EEO–4 report now completed by state                               In Component 2 of the EEO–1,
                                                    official who certifies the firm’s EEO–1                  and local government employers.                                employers will report the number of
                                                    report would certify that the reports are                                                                               employees whose annual W–2 income
                                                    ‘‘accurate and . . . . prepared in                                TABLE 1—EEO–4 PAY BANDS                               falls in each of the job category’s twelve
                                                    accordance with the instructions.’’                                                                                     pay bands. For example, an employer
                                                    Since the new EEO–1 instructions will                        Pay bands                        Pay bands label           may report that it has twelve employees
                                                    give employers the option to record 40                                                                                  in pay band 3 for Professionals, and that
                                                    hours per week for full-time exempt                      1    ..................    $100–$15,999.                       four are white men, four are Asian men,
                                                                                                             2    ..................    $16,000–$19,999.                    and four are white women.
                                                    employees and 20 hours per week for                      3    ..................    $20,000–$24,999.
                                                    part-time exempt employees, or to                                                                                          The EEOC is not convinced that using
                                                                                                             4    ..................    $25,000–$32,999.
                                                    report actual hours-worked data for                      5    ..................    $33,000–$42,999.                    twelve pay bands in conjunction with
                                                    exempt employees, employers using the                    6    ..................    $43,000–$54,999.                    the EEO–1 job categories will
                                                    proxies can certify with confidence that                 7    ..................    $55,000–$69,999.                    undermine the utility of W–2 income
                                                    they completed their EEO–1 reports                       8    ..................    $70,000 and over.                   and hours-worked data. The EEOC does
                                                    accurately and in accordance with the                                                                                   not intend or expect that this data will
                                                    instructions.                                                                                                           identify specific, similarly situated
                                                                                                                  TABLE 2—PROPOSED EEO–1 PAY                                comparators or that it will establish pay
                                                    VIII. How To Report Data in                                             BANDS                                           discrimination as a legal matter.
                                                    Component 2: Pay Bands and Job                                                                                          Therefore, it is not critical that each
                                                    Categories                                                   Pay bands                        Pay bands label           EEO–1 pay band include only the same
                                                       This 30-Day Notice does not change                                                                                   or similar occupations. The data will be
                                                                                                             1 ..................       $19,239 and under.
                                                    the proposal to collect W–2 income and                   2 ..................       $19,240–$24,439.                    useful for identifying patterns or
                                                    hours-worked data in the twelve pay                      3 ..................       $24,440–$30,679.                    correlations that can inform the early
                                                    bands used by the Department of                          4 ..................       $30,680–$38,999.                    stages of the investigative process, as
                                                                                                             5 ..................       $39,000–$49,919.                    explained in more detail in section IX.
                                                    Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
                                                                                                             6 ..................       $49,920–$62,919.                       In addition, many EEO–1 firms and
                                                    Occupational Employment Statistics
                                                                                                             7 ..................       $62,920–$80,079.                    establishments do not report widely
                                                    (OES),80 for each of the 10 EEO–1 job                    8 ..................       $80,080–$101,919.                   divergent occupations in each EEO–1
                                                    categories. Such data will support the                   9 ..................       $101,920–$128,959.                  job category. It also is likely that similar
                                                    EEOC’s ability to discern significant pay                10 ................        $128,960–$163,799.                  firms and establishments in the same
                                                    disparities in the early stages of its                   11 ................        $163,800–$207,999.                  geographic area will have similar
                                                    investigations and, in conjunction with                  12 ................        $208,000 and over.
                                                                                                                                                                            distributions of occupations within the
                                                    other information, to make more                                                                                         job groups and pay bands, thus making
                                                    efficient decisions about how to plan                    B. Public Comments                                             statistical comparisons between EEO–1
                                                    the investigations going forward.                          Many stakeholders argued that the                            reports a reasonable approach to using
                                                    A. 60-Day Notice                                         twelve OES pay bands are overly broad,                         this data.
                                                                                                             particularly for the highest pay band
                                                      The 60-Day Notice proposed that                                                                                       IX. How the EEOC Will Use W–2 and
                                                                                                             ($208,000 and over) and also for the
                                                    Component 2 of the EEO–1 report                                                                                         Hours-Worked Data
                                                                                                             lower or middle income pay bands
                                                    would collect W–2 income and hours-                      ($30,000 to $80,000). Opponents of the                         A. 60-Day Notice
                                                    worked data within twelve distinct pay                   proposal argued that broad pay bands                             As explained in the 60-Day Notice,
                                                    bands for each job category. These pay                   would not produce reliable data because                        Component 2 data would support EEOC
                                                    bands were based on the twelve wage                      the employees within each pay band                             data analysis at the early stages of an
                                                    intervals used by the BLS for the OES                    may have different levels of experience                        investigation, using statistical tests to
                                                    survey, which is a semi-annual survey                    or hold different jobs within an                               identify significant disparities in
                                                    designed to measure employment and                       organization. Some comments                                    reported pay. EEOC enforcement staff
                                                    wage estimates 81 for over 800                           advocated for additional and narrower                          who conduct these analyses would use
                                                    occupations.82 These OES pay bands are                   pay bands to better capture pay                                them, in the larger context of other
                                                    different from the pay bands used on the                 disparities.                                                   available economic data and
                                                       80 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,   C. 30-Day Notice                                               information, to evaluate whether and
                                                    Survey Methods and Reliability Statement for the                                                                        how to investigate the allegations of
                                                                                                               Collecting W–2 income and hours-                             discrimination in more depth.
                                                    May 2015 Occupational Employment Statistics
                                                    Survey, supra note 54 at 3, (stating that
                                                                                                             worked data in the twelve OES pay                              Moreover, the 60-Day Notice also
                                                    ‘‘employment refers to the number of workers who         bands will enable the EEOC to gather                           explained how employers would be able
                                                    can be classified as full-or-part-time employees,        pay data about most employees and                              to use the summary pay data that the
                                                    including workers on paid vacations or other types       EEO–1 filers, as the majority of wages in
                                                    of paid leave; exempt officers, executives, and staff                                                                   EEOC intends to publish to generally
                                                    members of incorporated firms; employees
                                                                                                             the United States are well below the                           assess their own pay practices.
                                                    temporarily assigned to other units; and                 highest OES pay band ($208,000 and
                                                    noncontract employees for whom the reporting unit        over), even after including some types of                      B. Public Comments
                                                    is their permanent duty station regardless of            supplemental income. According to the
                                                    whether that unit prepares their paychecks.’’)                                                                            Employers opposing the proposal
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                                                       81 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,
                                                                                                             U.S. Census Bureau, the estimated                              expressed concern that the EEOC would
                                                    Occupational Employment Statistics Frequently            median earnings for full-time, year                            make unfounded inferences of
                                                    Asked Questions, http://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_             round civilian workers 16 years of age                         discrimination based on its statistical
                                                    ques.htm.                                                and over were $43,545 in 2014. For                             analysis of the EEO–1 Component 2 pay
                                                       82 Id. The OES survey produces estimates of
                                                                                                             management occupations, the median                             data which, in turn, would result in
                                                    wages or salary paid to employees in non-farm
                                                    occupations in the United States, in a particular
                                                                                                             earnings were $71,112.83
                                                    State, or in a particular industry. The occupational                                                                    the Past 12 Months by Sex and Detailed
                                                    wage estimates can be estimates of mean wages or              83 U.S.
                                                                                                                     Census Bureau, Table Packages, Full-                   Occupation: 2014, http://www.census.gov/people/
                                                    percentiles, such as the median wage.                    Time, Year-Round Workers and Median Earnings in                io/publications/table_packages.html.



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                                                    45490                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    unwarranted and burdensome EEOC                           1 job category.85 They also might use                    investigation of charges of
                                                    investigations. Some interested parties                   statistical tools to determine generally                 discrimination and has found them to
                                                    criticized the particular statistical                     whether there are significant disparities                be effective.87 The EEOC used two
                                                    analyses that the EEOC described in the                   in reported pay in job groups based on                   databases to test the utility of the
                                                    60-Day Notice, arguing that these tests                   race, gender, or ethnicity.                              planned analyses. The first was the
                                                    would not yield meaningful results                           EEOC enforcement staff could then                     EEO–4 database that the EEOC currently
                                                    when applied to data reported in pay                      examine how the employer compares to                     uses to collect and analyze pay data
                                                    bands and broad EEO–1 job categories.                     similar employers in its labor market 86                 from state and local governments. Since
                                                    These commenters also raised concerns                     by using a statistical test to compare the               the EEO–4 has fewer and different pay
                                                    about the dangers of Type I or Type II                    distribution of women’s pay in the                       bands than the EEOC proposes for the
                                                    errors in analyzing Component 2 data:                     respondent’s EEO–1 report to the                         EEO–1 pay data collection, the EEOC
                                                    In statistics, ‘‘Type I’’ errors are referred             distribution of women’s pay among the                    also used a synthetic database. The term
                                                    to as ‘‘false positives’’ and ‘‘Type II’’                 respondent’s competitors in the same                     ‘‘synthetic’’ does not mean that the data
                                                    errors are ‘‘false negatives.’’ 84                        labor market. With the proposed                          was not real. Rather, the EEOC created
                                                      Finally, employers expressed                            addition of hours-worked data to the                     a large confidential database from HRIS
                                                    skepticism that the EEOC’s reports                        EEO–1, statistical tests could be used to                data obtained in actual EEOC
                                                    based on aggregated EEO–1 pay data                        determine whether pay disparities                        investigations that contained certain
                                                    would be useful for evaluating their                      remain among relevant groups such as                     variables of interest, in particular pay
                                                    own pay practices and promoting                           men and women, controlling for hours                     rate history and job titles for all
                                                    voluntary compliance. Several                             worked. More specifically, statistical                   employees, and the statistical tests
                                                    employers explained that they do not                      tests could determine whether factors                    referenced above were run. Other
                                                    use W–2 data to analyze their own                         such as race, ethnicity, gender, and                     important variables such as ‘‘race,’’
                                                    compensation practices, but rather rely                   hours worked impact the distribution of                  ‘‘gender,’’ and ‘‘EEO–1’’ job codes were
                                                    on more complete compensation data                        individuals in pay bands. The EEOC                       randomly generated for databases that
                                                    that they have at their disposal.                         envisions that any statistical test would                lacked this information. The results
                                                    C. 30-Day Notice                                          be accompanied by an indication of the                   supported the EEOC’s conclusion that
                                                                                                              practical significance of pay differences.               these statistical tests provide insights
                                                      This 30-Day Notice expands on the                                                                                that are useful in developing a request
                                                                                                                 After considering the results of
                                                    discussion in the 60-Day Notice and                                                                                for information or deciding whether an
                                                                                                              several statistical analyses in
                                                    explains in more detail how the data                                                                               investigation of a charge should have a
                                                                                                              conjunction with allegations in the
                                                    collected with this information                                                                                    more limited scope.88
                                                                                                              charge, and sometimes also assessing
                                                    collection will support enforcement of,                                                                               As noted above, some critics disputed
                                                    and compliance with, Title VII, the EPA,                  how the EEO–1 pay data compares to
                                                                                                              statistics for comparable workers using                  the EEOC’s choice of statistical tests,
                                                    and E.O. 11246.                                                                                                    arguing that they would not be useful
                                                                                                              Census data, EEOC enforcement staff
                                                    1. Early Assessment of Charges of                         would decide how to focus the                            for data reported in broad pay bands
                                                    Discrimination                                            investigation and what information to                    and job categories. The EEOC’s Pilot
                                                                                                              request from the employer. When EEOC                     Study reported on a 2007 study finding
                                                       Currently, the EEOC enforcement staff                                                                           that, even if collecting income data in
                                                    can retrieve a respondent’s EEO–1                         enforcement staff requests information
                                                                                                              from an employer, the employer has the                   bands results in a loss of information,
                                                    report using existing EEO–1 analytics                                                                              that loss would likely be small and of
                                                    software to assess the distribution of                    opportunity to explain its practices,
                                                                                                                                                                       little concern to many researchers, and
                                                    different demographics (sex, race, and                    provide additional data, and explain the
                                                                                                                                                                       would be balanced by reduced cost and
                                                    ethnicity) in an employer’s job groups.                   non-discriminatory reasons for its pay
                                                                                                                                                                       burden.89 Other researchers have
                                                    When W–2 income and hours-worked                          practices and decisions. Only after
                                                                                                                                                                       identified the value of banded pay data
                                                    data is added to the EEO–1 report, the                    considering all of this information, and
                                                                                                                                                                       even to the point of being useful in
                                                    EEOC’s EEO–1 analytic software tool                       possibly additional information, would
                                                                                                                                                                       estimating mean incomes within an
                                                    will be expanded to allow for the                         the EEOC reach a conclusion about
                                                                                                                                                                       accuracy of 1–3 percent.90 This research
                                                    examination of pay disparities based on                   whether discrimination was the likely
                                                                                                                                                                       suggests that critics who argue that one
                                                    job category, pay bands, and gender,                      cause of the pay disparities.
                                                                                                                                                                       cannot detect mean differences that are
                                                    ethnicity, or race. For example, if a                        The EEOC has tested whether                           smaller than the pay bands, or bins, are
                                                    charging party alleges that she was paid                  statistical tests, and the EEO–1 pay data,               incorrect.91
                                                    less than her male colleagues in a                        would be useful tools in the                                In addition, the EEOC is confident
                                                    similar job, the EEOC’s enforcement                                                                                that the risk of Type I (false positive) or
                                                                                                                 85 Enforcement staff could choose to compare
                                                    staff might use the expanded EEO–1                                                                                 Type II (false negative) errors will not
                                                                                                              men and women in one particular EEO–1 job
                                                    analytics tool to generate a report                       category, for multiple job categories, or even all job   undermine its statistical analyses of
                                                    comparing the distribution of the pay of                  categories.                                              Component 2 data. The chances of
                                                    women to that of men in the same EEO–                        86 EEO–1 reports are identified by location and by
                                                                                                                                                                       incurring Type I errors (false positives)
                                                                                                              each establishment’s 5-dight NAICS industry codes.       are related to the probability level used
                                                       84 Type I errors represent the possibility of          The U.S. Census Bureau maintains only one NAICS
                                                    rejecting a null hypothesis when it is correct. For       code for each establishment based on its primary
                                                                                                                                                                         87 Sage   Computing, supra notes 3, 52, and 56.
                                                    example, a null hypothesis might be that the              business activity. The Census Bureau states:
                                                                                                                                                                         88 Id.
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                                                    earnings of African Americans and whites are the          ‘‘[i]deally, the primary business activity of an
                                                                                                              establishment is determined by relative share of           89 Id. citing Micklewright, John and Schnepf,
                                                    same and a Type I error would be rejecting it as
                                                    false when it is true. Type II errors represent the       production costs and/or capital investment. In           Sylke V., How Reliable are Income Data Collected
                                                    opposite: The possibility of accepting the null           practice, other variables, such as revenue, value of     with a Single Question? (Nov., 2007), http://
                                                    hypothesis (for example, that the earnings of             shipments, or employment, are used as proxies. The       papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_
                                                    African Americans and whites are the same) as true        Census Bureau generally uses revenue or value of         id=1047981.
                                                                                                              shipments to determine an establishment’s primary          90 Paul T. von Hippel, Samuel V. Scarpino and
                                                    when in fact it is false. Type I errors in this context
                                                    could suggest a need for an investigation where it        business activity.’’ U.S. Census Bureau, ‘‘North         Igor Holas, Robust estimation of inequality from
                                                    may not be needed; Type II errors in this context         American Industry Classification System—                 binned incomes, Sociological Methodology (Jun. 6,
                                                    could result in victims of pay discrimination not         Frequently Asked Questions,’’ https://                   2016), http://arxiv.org/abs/1402.4061.
                                                    receiving relief for discrimination.                      www.census.gov/eos/www/naics/faqs/faqs.html.               91 Id.




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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                            45491

                                                    in the statistical significance test. The                and compensation practices.’’ 94                        X. Confidentiality of EEO–1 Data
                                                    EEOC follows judicially recognized                       Although the OFCCP rule does not                          This 30-Day Notice expands on the
                                                    statistical standards for identifying                    create new obligations with respect to a                discussion in the 60-Day Notice
                                                    meaningful discrepancies,92 and                          covered contractor’s self-assessment of                 regarding the privacy and
                                                    therefore is confident that the                          its compensation practices, it does                     confidentiality protections for
                                                    probability level it uses is effective at                provide additional guidance about the                   Component 2 data. The EEOC has
                                                    minimizing the risk of Type I (false                     kinds of compensation practices the                     successfully protected the
                                                    positive) errors. By contrast, the risk of               contractors should evaluate to ensure                   confidentiality of EEO–1 data for over
                                                    Type II (false negative) error is inversely              their compliance with E.O. 11246.                       50 years, since this data was first
                                                    related to the sample size: The smaller                                                                          collected. Recognizing that employers
                                                                                                             3. EEOC Training on the Pay Data
                                                    the sample size, the more likely a Type                                                                          are concerned both about the
                                                                                                             Collection
                                                    II error. If a sample size is so small that                                                                      confidentiality of their business data
                                                    the EEOC enforcement staff is                               The EEOC will ensure its internal
                                                                                                                                                                     and the privacy of employees’ pay
                                                    concerned about Type II errors, it will                  capacity to use the EEO–1 pay data
                                                                                                                                                                     information, the EEOC and OFCCP have
                                                    consider analyzing a differently                         effectively by supplementing existing
                                                                                                                                                                     committed to vigorously guarding its
                                                    configured, larger sample. Even if it                    training for EEOC statisticians,
                                                                                                                                                                     privacy and confidentiality, as
                                                    forgoes such analysis due to an elevated                 investigators, and attorneys about how
                                                                                                                                                                     explained below.
                                                    risk of Type II errors, enforcement staff                EEO–1 pay data and the updated EEO–
                                                    will study the EEO–1 for other relevant                  1 analytics tool can be used to improve                 A. 60-Day Notice
                                                    information and analyze additional data                  the agency’s enforcement work. EEOC                       The 60-Day Notice emphasized that
                                                    from other sources. In fact, EEOC                        enforcement staff will receive periodic                 Title VII subjects the EEOC to strict
                                                    enforcement staff expects to analyze                     training on how to use the expanded                     confidentiality requirements, subject to
                                                    data from other sources regardless of the                EEO–1 analytics software tool to                        criminal penalties; that OFCCP defers to
                                                    risk of error.                                           examine pay data and identify any                       the EEOC on disclosure of all non-
                                                                                                             disparities. EEOC personnel who                         contractor data; and that the OFCCP
                                                    2. EEOC Publications Analyzing                           conduct intake also would receive
                                                    Aggregate EEO–1 Data                                                                                             ensures the confidentiality of contractor
                                                                                                             periodic training to help them ‘‘issue                  data to the maximum extent permissible
                                                       Using aggregated EEO–1 data, Census                   spot’’ potential pay discrimination and                 by law. In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC
                                                    data, and potentially other data sources,                ask appropriate questions to collect                    explained that EEO–1 Component 2 data
                                                    the EEOC expects to periodically                         relevant anecdotal evidence of possible                 would not include any employee
                                                    publish reports on pay disparities by                    discrimination and information about                    personally identifiable information and,
                                                    race, sex, industry, occupational                        employer policies and practices.                        since EEO–1 pay and hours-worked data
                                                    groupings, and Metropolitan Statistical                  Further, the agency would provide                       would be anonymous and aggregated,
                                                    Area (MSA). Particularly after a few                     specialized training to its lead systemic               personally identifying information
                                                    years of data collection, these reports                  investigators. Finally, as discussed more               would not be readily apparent.
                                                    will provide useful comparative data.                    fully below, the EEOC would continue
                                                    For smaller employers and others that                    to ensure that staff is trained with regard             B. Public Comments
                                                    do not hire consultants to analyze their                 to confidentiality obligations with                        Employers expressed concern that the
                                                    compensation structures, these reports                   respect to pay data.                                    addition of sensitive pay data to the
                                                    will be especially informative in light of                  The EEOC also would provide                          EEO–1 would make it more valuable to
                                                    the business case for equal pay and the                  enhanced technical assistance and                       their competitors and that any breach in
                                                    need to comply with state equal pay                      support to employers with seminars or                   confidentiality would be significantly
                                                    laws.                                                    webinars, training, and outreach and                    more costly than with the current EEO–
                                                       The EEOC’s publication of aggregated                  education materials. Such materials may                 1. They also expressed concern about
                                                    pay data, in conjunction with the                        include best practice guides and self-                  the privacy of the data, because an
                                                    employer’s preparation of the EEO–1                      assessment tools to promote voluntary                   individual’s pay could be disclosed if,
                                                    report itself, may be useful tools for                   compliance and assist employers in                      for example, the employee was one of
                                                    employers to engage in voluntary self-                   identifying and correcting                              only a few employees matching a
                                                    assessment of pay practices. For                         discriminatory pay policies and                         particular race/ethnicity background
                                                    contractors, such self-assessment is                     practices. They may also identify                       and gender in a cell on the EEO–1 and
                                                    encouraged by the OFCCP Rule on                          practices that could lead to pay                        the EEO–1 report were disclosed. Some
                                                    Discrimination on the Basis of Sex.93                    discrimination, such as subjective pay                  employers expressed concern that
                                                    OFCCP states that ‘‘[e]ach contractor                    decision-making practices, establishing                 federal and state agencies may not be
                                                    may continue to choose the assessment                    salary by relying heavily on prior salary,              bound by Title VII’s confidentiality
                                                    method that best fits with its workforce                 and setting salary based in large part on               requirements, and some employers
                                                                                                             negotiations.                                           urged the EEOC to prevail on Congress
                                                       92 Hazelwood Sch. Dist. v. United States, 433 U.S.
                                                                                                                Finally, the EEOC would conduct                      to amend Title VII to expressly extend
                                                    299, 311 n.17 (1977) (explaining that ‘‘a fluctuation    outreach to other stakeholders,
                                                    of more than two or three standard deviations                                                                    the statute’s confidentiality provisions
                                                    would undercut the hypothesis that decisions were        including employees and their                           to other federal and state agencies that
                                                    being made randomly with respect to [a protected         advocates, and academic researchers.                    might get EEO–1 data.
                                                    trait]’’); Wright v. Stern, 450 F.Supp.2d 335, 363       Outreach to employees and their
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                                                    (S.D.N.Y. 2006) (denying motion for summary              advocates would focus on ‘‘know your                    C. 30-Day Notice
                                                    judgment in case alleging discrimination against
                                                    African-American and Hispanic employees in               rights’’ trainings with respect to equal                1. Legal Confidentiality
                                                    promotions and compensation, the court noted that,       pay for equal work and also include
                                                    ‘‘[t]hough not dispositive, statistics demonstrating a   training about how to use the EEOC’s                    a. EEOC
                                                    disparity of two standard deviations outside of the                                                                 As recognized by employers and
                                                    norm are generally considered statistically
                                                                                                             planned aggregated pay data reports for
                                                    significant.’’).                                         research and informational purposes.                    explained in the 60-Day Notice, Title VII
                                                       93 41 CFR 60–20. See also 81 FR 39109 (June 15,                                                               forbids the EEOC or any EEOC officer or
                                                    2016).                                                        94 Id.                                             employee from making public any


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                                                    45492                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    information, including EEO–1 data,                       turn, is subject to Title VII                          detection systems, compliance with
                                                    before a Title VII proceeding is                         confidentiality and cannot disclose any                security benchmark configuration
                                                    instituted that involves that                            of its EEO–1 data to the public, except                settings, deep discovery advanced
                                                    information.95 EEOC staff who violate                    in an aggregated format that protects the              network security analysis and
                                                    this prohibition are guilty of a criminal                confidentiality of each employer’s                     monitoring, secure domain name server
                                                    misdemeanor and can be imprisoned.                       information. Any FOIA request by a                     configurations, automatic server/
                                                       The EEOC directly imposes this Title                  member of the public for such                          firewall monitoring and logging,
                                                    VII confidentiality requirement on all of                disaggregated EEO–1 data will be                       security awareness training, and
                                                    its contractors, including contract                      denied by the EEOC under Exemption 3                   comprehensive disaster recovery
                                                    workers and contractor companies, as a                   of the FOIA.                                           planning and testing.
                                                    condition of their contracts. With                                                                                 The online EEO–1 portal of the Joint
                                                    respect to other federal agencies with a                 2. Data Protection and Security
                                                                                                                                                                    Reporting Committee allows firms that
                                                    legitimate law enforcement purpose, the                     The EEOC takes extensive measures to                currently upload EEO–1 data files to
                                                    EEOC gives access to information                         protect the confidentiality and integrity              encrypt their data or even create a file
                                                    collected under Title VII only if the                    of EEO–1 data in its possession. First,                transfer site for EEOC to download the
                                                    agencies agree, by letter or                             all EEOC and FEPA staff 98 receive                     data. After collecting and reconciling
                                                    memorandum of understanding, to                          annual training in data protection and                 EEO–1 data through a process that may
                                                    comply with the confidentiality                          security. The EEOC maintains a robust                  involve input from the employer or
                                                    provisions of Title VII.                                 cyber security and privacy program, in                 contractor, the Joint Reporting
                                                       Finally, the text of Title VII itself                 compliance with the Federal                            Committee at the EEOC provides the
                                                    states that the EEOC may only give state                 Information Security Modernization Act                 database to OFCCP on an encrypted
                                                    and local fair employment practices                      of 2014.99                                             storage device.
                                                    agencies (FEPAs) information (including                     The EEOC also complies with a
                                                    EEO–1 data) about employers in their                     comprehensive set of security and                      XI. Paperwork Reduction Act Burden
                                                    jurisdiction on the condition that they                  privacy controls to protect                            Estimates
                                                    not make it public.96                                    organizational operations and                          A. Background
                                                       For the EEOC, its agents and                          information system assets against a
                                                    contractors, and the FEPAs, Title VII                    diverse set of threats, including hostile                The revised EEO–1 data collection has
                                                    only permits disclosure of information                   cyber-attacks, natural disasters,                      two components. The first component
                                                    after suit is filed on the issues that were              structural failures, and human errors.                 (Component 1) will collect information
                                                    investigated at the administrative level.                The EEOC’s systems are monitored on                    identical to that collected by the
                                                                                                             an ongoing basis to assure compliance                  currently approved EEO–1, through
                                                    b. OFCCP                                                                                                        which employers report data on
                                                                                                             with an extensive set of security and
                                                       Even though OFCCP obtains EEO–1                       privacy requirements derived from                      employees’ ethnicity, race, and sex by
                                                    reports for federal contractors and                      legislation, Executive Orders, policies,               job category. The second component
                                                    subcontractors (contractors) through the                 directives, and standards.100 Agency                   (Component 2) will collect data on
                                                    Joint Reporting Committee with the                       information technology systems are                     employees’ W–2 (Box 1) income and
                                                    EEOC, OFCCP obtains this information                     subjected to weekly security scans by                  hours worked. Because of the
                                                    pursuant to its own legal authority                      the Department of Homeland Security,                   complexity of this PRA burden
                                                    under E.O. 11246 and its implementing                    annual internal audits performed by the                calculation, the EEOC is providing the
                                                    regulations.97                                           EEOC’s Office of Inspector General, and                following background information to
                                                       OFCCP will notify contractors of any                  expert third-party audits for best                     explain the rationale behind its
                                                    FOIA request for their EEO–1 pay and                     practices and compliance with cyber-                   methodologies for calculating the
                                                    hours-worked data. If a contractor                       security standards. Current protections                annual and one-time burden of filing
                                                    objects to disclosure, OFCCP will not                    include regular internal and external                  EEO–1 reports.
                                                    disclose the data if OFCCP determines                    vulnerability scanning and penetration                   The OMB’s PRA guidance prescribes
                                                    that the contractor’s objection is valid.                testing, comprehensive real-time anti-                 the factors for agencies to consider in
                                                    FOIA Exemptions 3 and 4 recognize the                    virus scanning and protection on all                   calculating annual reporting and one-
                                                    value of this data and provide, in                       desktops and servers, Internet and email               time implementation costs. The
                                                    combination with the Trade Secrets Act,                  filtering for malware and spam, strong                 prescribed PRA calculation is focused
                                                    the necessary tools to appropriately                     firewall protections and intrusion                     on the time it takes filers to complete
                                                    protect it from public disclosure.                                                                              the tasks required for the proposed
                                                    OFCCP will protect the confidentiality                     98 As noted in text above, all FEPAs sign a          information collection and the hourly
                                                    of EEO–1 pay and hours-worked data to                    contractual agreement with the EEOC that requires      rates of the employees who spend that
                                                                                                             them to follow the confidentiality provisions set
                                                    the maximum extent possible consistent                   forth in Title VII.
                                                                                                                                                                    time. For this reason, the following
                                                    with FOIA.                                                 99 44 U.S.C. 3551; see also relevant provision 44    discussion of the costs of transitioning
                                                       With respect to companies that are                    U.S.C. 3554 discussing federal agency                  and annually filing Components 1 and
                                                    not federal contractors or subcontractors                responsibilities for protecting federal information    2 of the EEO–1 must be formulated
                                                    under OFCCP’s jurisdiction, the                          and information systems.                               through the PRA analysis of hours spent
                                                                                                               100 40 U.S.C. 1401 et seq., Information
                                                    confidentiality provision of Section                                                                            and hourly rates.
                                                                                                             Technology Management Reform Act, identifying
                                                    709(e) applies. OFCCP will refer all                                                                              OMB’s PRA regulations also require
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                                                                                                             standards and guidelines developed by the National
                                                    such FOIA requests for EEO–1 data to                     Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for       consideration of how to reduce the
                                                    the EEOC for a response. The EEOC, in                    federal computing systems. NIST, NIST Special          burden of a data collection through the
                                                                                                             Publication 800–53, Rev 4, Security and Privacy
                                                                                                             Controls for Federal Information Systems and
                                                                                                                                                                    use of technology and automation.101
                                                      95 42 U.S.C. 2000e–8(e).                               Organizations (April 2013), http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/
                                                      96 42 U.S.C. 2000e–8(d). See also EEOC, EEO–1                                                                    101 Agencies must ‘‘evaluat[e] . . . whether (and
                                                                                                             nistpubs/SpecialPublications/NIST.SP.800-53r4.pdf
                                                    Survey System Privacy Impact Assessment, https://        (explaining specific security controls required by     if so, to what extent) the burden on respondents can
                                                    www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/                       the Federal Information Security Management Act        be reduced by use of automated, electronic,
                                                    privacyimpact.cfm.                                       of 2002 and thereafter the Federal Information         mechanical, or other technological collection
                                                      97 41 CFR 60–1.7(a)(1).                                Security Modernization Act of 2014).                   techniques or other forms of information



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                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                            45493

                                                    This consideration is particularly                       burden calculation in the 60-Day Notice                  Second, the EEOC no longer assumes
                                                    relevant to EEO–1 reporting. In the years                was based on the number of firms filing               that all the EEO–1 reports for 2017 and
                                                    since the EEOC first estimated the PRA                   one or more EEO–1 reports, not on the                 2018 will be submitted by one data
                                                    burden of the EEO–1 based only on the                    number of reports submitted or the                    upload filed by the firm on behalf of all
                                                    time to fill in the cells on a paper EEO–                number of separate establishments                     the establishments. While still reflecting
                                                    1 report, there have been major                          submitting reports. The EEOC’s PRA                    that the bulk of the tasks performed in
                                                    advances in technology both for                          burden calculations also assumed that                 completing the EEO–1 report will be
                                                    employers and the Joint Reporting                        all employees working on the EEO–1                    completed at the firm level due to the
                                                    Committee. Many employers now rely                       would be administrative staff paid an                 centrality of automation, the EEOC’s 30-
                                                    on HRIS and automated payroll                            hourly rate of $24.23 per hour.                       Day Notice recognizes that there are
                                                    systems.102 The Joint Reporting                             The EEOC’s intent in calculating                   certain tasks that will be performed at
                                                    Committee now utilizes an online EEO–                    respondent burden for the 60-Day                      the establishment level for employers
                                                    1 portal for the confidential filing of                  Notice was to recognize the cost and                  who enter their EEO–1 data directly
                                                    EEO–1 reports, either by digital upload                  time savings associated with the                      onto the Joint Reporting Committee’s
                                                    or by data entry onto a password-                        accelerating trend toward greater                     secure portal. Therefore, the 30-Day
                                                    protected, partially pre-populated                       automation. However, employers’                       Notice burden calculations are based on
                                                    digital EEO–1.                                           public comments indicated that the                    the number of hours needed to complete
                                                       Throughout the Joint Reporting                        EEOC’s estimates reflected a level of                 the tasks at the firm level and also at the
                                                    Committee’s transition to this new                       automation that was unlikely to be                    establishment level for the proportion of
                                                    system, the EEOC continued to calculate                  attained imminently. Some of these                    EEO–1 filers who do not now use
                                                    the PRA burden based on its original                     comments included estimates about the                 centralized, secure data uploads. To
                                                    method of counting all the cells on a                    annual time and costs of completing the               make these calculations, the EEOC
                                                    paper report and calculating the time                    EEO–1. While some firms stated that                   distinguished the time spent at the firm
                                                    needed to enter data into each of them.                  they spent less time each year on the                 and establishment levels on the
                                                    However, with the 60-Day Notice, the                     EEO–1 than the EEOC estimated in the                  different types of EEO–1 reports, such as
                                                    EEOC concluded that both digital                         60-Day Notice, many firms reported that               single-establishment Type 1 reports,
                                                    recordkeeping and digital filing were                    they spent more time and used more                    Type 2 consolidated reports for
                                                    sufficiently well-established to                         varied professional staff. These same                 employers with multiple
                                                    transition to a new PRA methodology                      commenters observed that they used                    establishments, and Type 6 or 8 reports
                                                    more suited to the new technology and                    data uploads less frequently than the                 for small establishments (under 50
                                                    the time-savings it generated.103 The                    EEOC had projected.                                   employees).
                                                    EEOC’s new PRA methodology—                                 The EEOC carefully considered
                                                                                                                                                                      For those employers who have staff
                                                    necessarily expressed in the PRA’s                       employers’ input, yet, their comments
                                                                                                                                                                   enter EEO–1 data online, which is
                                                    terms of hours and hourly labor rates—                   as a whole reflected widely discrepant
                                                                                                                                                                   closest digital equivalent to completing
                                                    focuses on the time needed by the                        estimates of the time needed, jobs
                                                                                                             involved, and HRIS and software costs                 a paper form by hand, the Joint
                                                    employer’s staff to complete tasks such                                                                        Reporting Committee’s password-
                                                    as reading the EEO–1 instructions,                       associated with digital EEO–1 reporting.
                                                                                                             Although the EEOC recognizes that the                 protected, individualized portal
                                                    collecting, verifying, validating,                                                                             prompts the employer with pre-
                                                    certifying, and submitting the report.                   EEO–1 may involve more time than it
                                                                                                             estimated in the 60-Day Notice, the                   populated EEO–1 forms that already
                                                    Therefore, in the 60-Day Notice, the                                                                           include identifying information and the
                                                                                                             EEOC also concludes that the amount of
                                                    EEOC considered for the first time the                                                                         prior year totals. Moreover, the Joint
                                                                                                             time a filer spends each year completing
                                                    time savings generated by this task-                                                                           Reporting Committee’s online portal
                                                                                                             this report varies, because each
                                                    based approach stemming from                                                                                   does not compel these employers to
                                                                                                             employer is different in terms of number
                                                    technology.104 This is the reason that                                                                         enter ‘‘zeros’’ in the cells for which they
                                                                                                             of establishments, number of employees
                                                    the burden of filing the EEO–1 actually                                                                        do not submit data. No EEO–1 filers
                                                                                                             involved in producing the report, time
                                                    declined with the PRA calculations in                                                                          enter data in every cell, so basing the
                                                                                                             spent by those employees and their rates
                                                    60-Day Notice, relative to the paper-                                                                          annual PRA burden on the total number
                                                                                                             of pay, and sophistication of HRIS. Due
                                                    based calculation method previously                                                                            of cells on the EEO–1 form would be
                                                                                                             to the wide range of estimates provided
                                                    used.                                                    about annual reporting costs, the EEOC                inaccurate.
                                                       In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC                                                                                 Therefore, as explained in detail
                                                                                                             also relied on its own experience
                                                    concluded that most employers would                                                                            below, the total estimated annual
                                                                                                             collecting the EEO–1 reports and
                                                    be filing the EEO–1 with a digital file                                                                        burden hour cost in 2017 and 2018 for
                                                                                                             working with EEO–1 stakeholders over
                                                    upload by the time they file their EEO–                                                                        those contractors that will complete and
                                                                                                             the years.
                                                    1 reports for 2017 and 2018. Therefore,                     In conclusion, the EEOC adjusted its               submit only Component 1 (contractors
                                                    in the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC                           methodology for calculating PRA annual                with 50–99 employees) will be
                                                    reasoned that ‘‘each additional report                   burden in this 30-Day Notice. First, the              $1,872,792.41. The total estimated
                                                    filed [would have] just a marginal                       EEOC took into account the time and                   annual burden hour cost in 2017 and
                                                    additional cost.’’ 105 Accordingly, the                  pay rates for a range of employees at                 2018 for employers and contractors that
                                                                                                             both the firm- and establishment- levels              will complete both Components 1 and 2
                                                    technology, e.g., permitting electronic submission                                                             will be $53,546,359.08.
                                                                                                             who are responsible for preparing and
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                                                    of responses.’’ 5 CFR 1320.8(a)(5).
                                                       102 International Public Management Association       filing the EEO–1. The EEOC now                           The EEOC estimates that for these
                                                    for Human Resources, Public Personnel                    accounts for time to be spent annually                filers submitting both Component 1 and
                                                    Management, Volume 39, No. 3, Fall 2010, http://         on EEO–1 reporting by everyone from                   2 data in 2017 and 2018, the addition
                                                    ipma-hr.org/files/pdf/ppm/ppmfall2010.pdf                the executive who certifies it, to the                of pay data will increase the estimated
                                                    (reporting that 90% of human resources
                                                    departments used some form of HRIS).                     lawyer who reviews it and the human                   annual burden hour costs by a total of
                                                       103 81 FR 5113, 5120 (Feb. 1, 2016).                  resource professionals who prepare it                 $25,364,064.80 or an average of $416.58
                                                       104 Id.                                               with the support of information                       per EEO–1 filer each year, using the 30-
                                                       105 Id.                                               technology professionals and clericals.               Day PRA analysis. This is an average


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                                                    45494                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    estimate per filer, and actual costs will                   • One-Time Implementation Burden:                  assumes that, at the firm level, computer
                                                    vary, as explained in this Notice.                       The estimated one-time implementation                 specialists would need to spend 4
                                                                                                             burden hour cost for submitting the                   hours, senior human resource managers,
                                                    B. 60-Day Notice
                                                                                                             information required by Component 2 of                corporate legal counsel, and chief
                                                       In the 60-Day Notice, the EEOC                        the revised EEO–1 Report was estimated                executive officers would each spend 1
                                                    estimated burden based on centralized                    as $23,000,295.108 This calculation was               hour, and data entry clerks and clerical
                                                    electronic, rather than paper, filing of                 based on the one-time cost for                        staff would each spend 0.5 hours, for a
                                                    the EEO–1. Costs were calculated                         developing queries related to                         total of 8 hours to complete firm-level
                                                    assuming that all tasks were performed                   Component 2 in an existing human                      functions.
                                                    at the firm level.                                       resources information system, which                      Based on information received during
                                                       Burden Statement—2016: For                            was estimated to take 8 hours per filer               the comment period, the addition of
                                                    reporting year 2016, when all filers will                at a wage rate of $47.22 per hour.                    Component 2 data would increase the
                                                    continue to submit only Component 1                         The 60-Day Notice also estimated that              total time spent by each of these
                                                    demographic data, the EEOC estimated                     the addition of W–2 income data to the                employees by a factor of 1.9. Therefore,
                                                    the total annual burden hours required                   EEO–1 would result in the EEOC                        the EEOC estimates that beginning with
                                                    to complete the EEO–1 as 228,296.4                       incurring $318,000 in one-time costs                  the 2017 EEO–1, each firm reporting
                                                    hours, with an associated total annual                   and would raise the EEOC’s recurring                  both Component 1 and Component 2
                                                    burden hour cost of $5,531,621.77.                       internal staffing cost by $290,478 due to             data would require 7.6 hours by
                                                       Burden Statement—Component 1                          the increased staff time needed to                    computer specialists, 1.9 hours each by
                                                    Only: The 60-Day Notice stated that                      process the additional data.                          senior human resource managers,
                                                    starting in 2017, the estimated number                                                                         corporate legal counsel, and chief
                                                    of annual respondents (contractor filers)                C. 30-Day Notice                                      executive officers, and 0.95 hours each
                                                    who will submit Component 1 only                           In response to concerns raised in the               by data entry clerks and clerical staff,
                                                    would be 6,260.106 The 60-Day Notice                     public comments to the 60-Day Notice,                 for a total of 15.2 hours per firm for
                                                    estimated the burden in 2017 on                          this 30-Day Notice reflects an increased              firm-level functions.
                                                    contractor filers with 50 to 99                          burden estimate by: (1) Reflecting                       In order to analyze annual reporting
                                                    employees as follows:                                    varying labor costs for the different                 burden as accurately as possible, the
                                                       • Annual Burden Calculation: The                      types of staff involved with preparing                EEOC now also considers the time and
                                                    total annual burden hours required to                    the EEO–1, (2) adding labor costs for                 effort associated with completing the
                                                    complete Component 1 of the EEO–1                        report-level functions, and (3)                       different types of EEO–1 reports. There
                                                    data collection in 2017 and 2018 was                     increasing the total number of burden                 are six types of EEO–1 reports, as
                                                    estimated to be 21,284 hours each year,                  hours a firm would need to read the                   detailed in the footnote.109 All reports
                                                    with an associated total annual burden                   EEO–1 instructions and to collect,                    except the Type 6 report include the
                                                    hour cost of $515,711.32. This figure                    verify, and enter EEO–1 data on the                   requested EEO–1 workforce data; the
                                                    used an average wage rate of $24.23 for                  EEO–1 online portal. This methodology                 Type 6 report includes only the
                                                    employees working on the EEO–1, based                    increases the total number of hours                   employer’s name, address, and the
                                                    on the conclusion that administrative                    spent annually, even though the 30-Day                number of employees in each
                                                    support staff would perform the work in                  Notice reduced overall burden by no                   establishment with fewer than 50
                                                    completing an EEO–1 report.                              longer requiring employers to make                    employees. An employer having
                                                       Burden Statement—Components 1                         special W–2 income calculations for the               establishments with fewer than 50
                                                    and 2: The 60-Day Notice estimated the                   EEO–1. This reflects employers’                       employees chooses between filing one
                                                    number of annual respondents that                        feedback about the annual EEO–1                       Type 6 report or multiple Type 8 reports
                                                    would submit both Components 1 and                       reporting burden.                                     (a full EEO–1 report for the
                                                    2 starting with the 2017 reporting cycle                                                                       establishment). If it chooses to file
                                                                                                             1. Annual Burden Hours                                separate Type 8 reports for each
                                                    at 60,886 private industry and
                                                    contractor filers. Filers required to                       The 30-Day Notice revises the annual               establishment with fewer than 50
                                                    complete both Components 1 and 2                         burden hour estimates to add the                      employees, the Joint Reporting
                                                    were estimated to incur 401,847.6                        estimated time spent on firm-level                    Committee does not require it to
                                                    burden hours annually or 6.6 hours per                   functions by several different types of               complete a consolidated EEO–1 for the
                                                    filer.                                                   employees. These estimates are                        entire firm; rather, the Joint Reporting
                                                       • Annual Burden Calculation: The                      informed by the comments on the 60-                   Committee’s software generates a Type
                                                    estimated total annual burden hours                      Day Notice, based on the EEOC’s                       2 report for the employer. However, if
                                                    needed for filers to report demographic                  experiences in providing technical                    the employer chooses to submit a Type
                                                    and W–2 income and hours-worked data                     assistance to employers, and within the               6 report, it must also complete a full
                                                    via Components 1 and 2 of the revised                    range of time suggested by public                     consolidated report. Accordingly, firms
                                                    EEO–1 was estimated at 401,847.6, with                   comments.                                             that have establishments with fewer
                                                    an associated total annual burden hour                      To submit a report containing EEO–1                than 50 employees either submit Type
                                                    cost of $9,736,767.35. This burden                       Component 1 data, the EEOC now                        8 reports (one for each establishment) or
                                                    estimate includes reading instructions                                                                         a Type 6 report (a list covering all
                                                    and collecting, merging, validating, and                 Employee Compensation—December 2013 (March            establishments) plus a Type 2 report.
                                                                                                             2014), http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/
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                                                    reporting the data electronically.107                    ecec_03122014.htm (listing total compensation for
                                                                                                                                                                      Finally, based on the EEOC’s
                                                                                                             administrative support as $24.23 per hour).           experience, most firms complete all the
                                                      106 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). Of the 67,146 firms        108 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). This estimate was
                                                    that filed EEO–1 reports in 2014, 6,260 were federal     calculated as follows: 8 hours per respondent ×         109 Type 1 (single establishment firm); Type 2
                                                    contractor filers with fewer than 100 employees.         60,886 employers = 487,088 × $47.22 per hour =        (consolidated report for headquarters and multi-
                                                      107 81 FR 5113 (Feb. 1, 2016). This estimate was       $23,000,295. See also U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau     establishment firm); Type 3 (headquarters report);
                                                    calculated as follows: 6.6 hours per respondent ×        of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee      Type 4 (report for establishments with over 50
                                                    60,886 respondents = 401,847.6 hours × $24.23 per        Compensation—December 2013, supra note 108            employees); Type 6 (list of establishments with
                                                    hour = $9,736,767.35. See also U.S. Dept. of Labor       (listing total compensation for a professional as     under 50 employees); and Type 8 (detailed report
                                                    Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for           $47.22 per hour).                                     for establishments with under 50 employees).



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                                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                                              45495

                                                    tasks associated with filing EEO–1 Type                                    each spend 0.5 hours on establishment-                                  2. Hourly Wage Rates
                                                    1, 2, and 6 reports at the firm level. By                                  level functions, for a total of 1 hour per                                 Using figures reflecting median pay
                                                    contrast, for Type 3, 4 and 8 reports,                                     report. Beginning in 2017, firms filing                                 obtained from the Bureau of Labor
                                                    some of the tasks are performed at the                                     both Component 1 and Component 2 of                                     Statistics,112 the EEOC’s 30-Day Notice
                                                    firm level, but others are performed at                                    the EEO–1 would require 0.95 hours                                      uses hourly wage rates as follows:
                                                    the establishment level. The EEOC’s 30-                                    each from the human resource specialist                                 Computer specialist $24.75, senior
                                                    Day Notice annual burden estimates                                         and the data entry clerk on                                             human resource manager $50.21,
                                                    therefore reflect time spent on                                            establishment-level functions, for a total                              corporate legal counsel $55.69, chief
                                                    establishment-level tasks associated                                       of 1.9 hours per report.                                                executive officer $49.37, data entry clerk
                                                    with Type 3, 4, and 8 reports, while                                                                                                               $13.69, clerical staff $15.41, and human
                                                    time spent on tasks associated with                                           In 2014, 1,449 firms submitted their
                                                                                                                               EEO–1 reports via data upload, but they                                 resource specialist $28.06. See Table 3
                                                    Type 1, 2, and 6 reports (and the firm-                                                                                                            for an illustration of the jobs, hours, and
                                                    level functions associated with Types 3,                                   submitted 329,944 Type 3, 4, and 8
                                                                                                                               reports.111 The EEOC estimates that                                     wage rates described in this Notice.
                                                    4, and 8) are included in the firm-level                                                                                                           Based on the EEOC’s experience, the
                                                    estimates.110                                                              firms using data upload will need to
                                                                                                                               spend less time at the establishment                                    bulk of the work is now performed by
                                                       The EEOC assumes that human                                                                                                                     computer specialists and senior human
                                                                                                                               level than firms submitting their reports
                                                    resource specialists and data entry                                                                                                                resource managers. At the establishment
                                                                                                                               by data entry. For firms using data
                                                    clerks will perform all establishment-                                                                                                             level, the EEOC concluded that EEO–1
                                                    level functions. For firms filing only                                     upload, the EEOC estimates that data                                    reporting work is more likely to be
                                                    Component 1 of the EEO–1, the EEOC                                         entry clerks will not need to perform                                   performed by data entry clerks and
                                                    estimates that for each establishment                                      any establishment-level tasks.                                          human resource specialists, resulting in
                                                    report submitted, a human resource                                                                                                                 a lower average wage rate for
                                                    specialist and a data entry clerk would                                                                                                            establishment-level functions.

                                                                                                                         TABLE 3—EEO–1 JOBS, HOURS, AND WAGES
                                                                                                                                                                                                      Hours spent       Hours spent
                                                                                                                                                                                                       on EEO–1          on EEO–1           Hourly wage
                                                                                                                     Job title                                                                        Component 1       Components             rates
                                                                                                                                                                                                          only             1&2

                                                                                                                                                 Firm-Level Functions

                                                    Computer Specialist .....................................................................................................................                      4                7.6             $24.75
                                                    Senior Human Resource Manager ..............................................................................................                                   1                1.9              50.21
                                                    Corporate Legal Counsel .............................................................................................................                          1                1.9              55.69
                                                    Chief Executive Officer ................................................................................................................                       1                1.9              49.37
                                                    Data Entry Clerk ..........................................................................................................................                  0.5               0.95              13.69
                                                    Clerical Staff ................................................................................................................................              0.5               0.95              15.41

                                                                                                                                                Report-Level Functions

                                                    Human Resource Specialist ........................................................................................................                           0.5               0.95               28.06
                                                    Data Entry Clerk ..........................................................................................................................                  0.5               0.95               13.69



                                                    XII. Formal Paperwork Reduction Act                                        http://10.5.0.211/employers/eeo1survey/                                 1. 2016 Overview of Information
                                                    Statement                                                                  2016_new_survey.cfm.                                                    Collection—Component 1
                                                                                                                                 For the 2016 reporting cycle, there                                      Collection Title: Employer
                                                    A. Overview of Information Collection                                      will be no change to the EEO–1                                          Information Report (EEO–1).
                                                       The EEOC has submitted to OMB a                                         reporting requirement. All EEO–1 filers                                    OMB Control Number: 3046–0007.
                                                    request for a three-year PRA approval of                                   will continue to submit the data on race,                                  Frequency of Report: Annual.
                                                    a revised EEO–1. The revised EEO–1                                         ethnicity, sex, and job category that is                                   Description of Affected Public: Private
                                                    data collection has two components.                                        currently collected by the EEO–1 report.                                industry filers with 100 or more
                                                    The first component (Component 1) will                                     The EEOC refers to this demographic                                     employees and federal government
                                                    collect information identical to that                                      and job category data as Component 1                                    contractor filers with 50 or more
                                                    collected by the currently approved                                        data. Beginning with the 2017 reporting                                 employees.
                                                    EEO–1. The second component                                                cycle, the EEOC proposes to require                                        Number of Respondents: 67,146 firms
                                                    (Component 2) will collect data on                                         EEO–1 filers with 100 or more                                           filing 683,275 establishment reports.
                                                    employees’ W–2 pay and hours worked.                                       employees to submit data on pay and                                        Reporting Hours: 1,055,471.
                                                    Component 1 can be found at http://                                        hours worked (Component 2 data) in                                         Respondent Burden Hour Cost:
                                                    www.eeoc.gov/employers/eeo1survey/                                         addition to Component 1 data. However,                                  $30,055,086.62.
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                                                    upload/eeo1-2.pdf. An illustration of                                      federal contractor filers with 50 to 99                                    Federal Cost: $1,330,821.
                                                    the data to be collected by both                                           employees will only submit Component                                       Number of Forms: 1.
                                                    Components 1 and 2 can be found at                                         1 data.                                                                    Form Number: EEOC Form 100.
                                                      110 Because of this, the EEOC’s burden estimates                         opt to complete Type 8 reports do not also submit                        112 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,

                                                    for firm-level tasks are inflated for those firms                          a Type 2 or Type 6 report.                                              Occupational Outlook Handbook, http://
                                                    electing to file Type 8 reports, because the firm-                           111 In 2014, contractor filers with 50–99
                                                                                                                                                                                                       www.bls.gov/ooh/.
                                                    level estimates include time spent completing a                            employees submitted 86 Type 3, 4, and 8 reports
                                                    Type 2 and a Type 6 report, even though firms that                         via data upload.



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                                                    45496                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices

                                                    2. 2017 and 2018 Overview of                             hours in 2016 or 8 hours per filer for                  these contractor filers is estimated as
                                                    Information Collection—Components 1                      firm-level functions plus an additional                 follows:
                                                    and 2                                                    one hour per report for establishment-                     • Annual Burden Calculation: The
                                                      Collection Title: Employer                             level functions.115 The associated                      estimated total annual burden hours
                                                    Information Report (EEO–1).                              burden hour cost for the 2016 reporting                 required to complete Component 1 of
                                                      OMB Control Number: 3046–0007.                         cycle is $30,055,086.62.116 This estimate               the EEO–1 data collection in 2017 and
                                                      Frequency of Report: Annual.                           assumes electronic filing through the                   2018 is 59,166,118 with an associated
                                                      Number of Forms: 1.                                    EEO–1 online portal either by data entry                total annual burden hour cost of
                                                      Form Number: EEOC Form 100.                            or data upload, and accounts for time                   $1,872,792.41.119
                                                      Federal Cost: $318,000 for one-time                    and cost savings now associated with                       Burden Statement—Components 1
                                                    costs and $1,621,300 113 for recurring                   submission of the EEO–1 via data                        and 2: Starting in 2017, the estimated
                                                    staffing costs.                                          upload.                                                 number of annual respondents that will
                                                                                                                                                                     submit Components 1 and 2 is 60,886
                                                    a. Component 1 (Demographic and Job                      2017 and 2018: Components 1 and 2                       private industry and contractor filers.
                                                    Category Data)                                                                                                   Filers required to complete both
                                                                                                                With respect to the EEO–1 reporting
                                                       Description of Affected Public: In                                                                            Components 1 and 2 are estimated
                                                                                                             cycles for 2017 and 2018, this Notice
                                                    2017 and 2018, contractor filers with 50                                                                         annually to incur a total of 15.2 hours
                                                                                                             will discuss the burden estimates
                                                    to 99 employees will submit only the                                                                             per filer for firm-level functions plus an
                                                                                                             associated with two distinct groups of
                                                    demographic and job category data                                                                                additional 1.9 hours per individual
                                                                                                             filers. The first group consists of
                                                    collected by Component 1.                                                                                        report for establishment-level functions.
                                                                                                             contractor filers with 50 to 99                         The estimated burden is based on
                                                       Number of Respondents: 6,260 firms                    employees. This group of filers will
                                                    filing 9,129 establishment reports.                                                                              electronic filing.
                                                                                                             continue to submit only the Component                      The burden imposed on all private
                                                       Reporting Hours: 59,166.                              1 data, just as they have done in
                                                       Respondent Burden Hour Cost:                                                                                  industry employer filers and contractor
                                                                                                             previous years. The second group of                     filers with 100 or more employees as a
                                                    $1,872,792.41.                                           filers includes all EEO–1 filers with 100               result of the proposed collection of
                                                    b. Components 1 and 2 (Demographic                       or more employees, whether private                      Component 1 and 2 data is estimated as
                                                    and Job Category Data Plus W–2 and                       industry or contractor filers. This larger              follows:
                                                    Hours Worked Data)                                       group will continue to submit                              • Annual Burden Calculation: The
                                                       Description of Affected Public: In                    Component 1 data as they have always                    estimated total annual burden hours
                                                    2017 and 2018, EEO–1 filers with 100 or                  done, but will also submit the newly-                   needed for all filers required to report
                                                    more employees will submit pay and                       added W–2 and hours-worked data of                      Components 1 and 2 data is 1,892,979.5
                                                    hours worked data under Component 2                      Component 2.                                            hours,120 with an associated total
                                                    in addition to demographic and job                          Burden Statement—Component 1                         annual burden hour cost of
                                                    category data under Component 1.                         Only: Starting in 2017, the estimated                   $53,546,359.08.121 The EEOC estimates
                                                       Number of Respondents: 60,886 firms                   number of annual respondents who are
                                                                                                                                                                        118 This estimate calculates total time spent by
                                                    filing 674,146 establishment reports.                    contractor filers with 50 to 99
                                                                                                                                                                     firms assuming no data upload, then subtracts the
                                                       Reporting Hours: 1,892,979.5.                         employees is 6,260.117 Again, this                      estimated time saved by firms using data upload,
                                                       Respondent Burden Hour Cost:                          calculation assumes 8 hours per filer for               as follows: 8 hours per firm for firm-level functions
                                                    $53,546,359.08.                                          firm-level functions plus an additional                 × 6,260 firms = 50,080 hours; 1 hour per report for
                                                                                                             one hour per individual report for                      establishment-level functions × 9,129 reports =
                                                    B. 30-Day Notice PRA Burden Statement                    report-level functions. The burden on                   9,129 hours; 50,080 + 9,129 = 59,209 total hours;
                                                                                                                                                                     0.5 hours per report of data entry clerk time saved
                                                    2016: Component 1                                                                                                by data upload × 86 reports filed by data upload =
                                                                                                                115 This estimate calculates total time spent by     43; 59,209¥43 = 59,166.
                                                       Burden Statement: In 2016, all EEO–                   firms assuming no data upload, then subtracts the          119 To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied
                                                    1 filers will submit Component 1, which                  estimated time saved by firms using data upload,        the adjusted hourly rates for each job by the
                                                    only includes the data collected by the                  as follows: 8 hours per firm for firm-level functions   estimated hours spent by each job in completing the
                                                    currently approved EEO–1. No filer will                  × 67,146 firms = 537,168 hours; 1 hour per report       report to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level
                                                                                                             for establishment-level functions × 683,275 reports     functions of $268.82 and a per-report cost for
                                                    be required to submit the Component 2                    = 683,275 hours; 537,168 + 683,275 = 1,220,443          establishment-level functions of approximately
                                                    data during the 2016 reporting cycle.                    total hours; 0.5 hours per report of data entry clerk   $20.88 (rounded). The burden hour cost for firm-
                                                    The estimated number of respondents                      time saved by data upload × 329,944 reports filed       level functions is $1,682,813.2 and the burden hour
                                                    required to submit the annual EEO–1                      by data upload = 164,972; 1,220,443¥164,972 =           cost for establishment-level functions is
                                                                                                             1,055,471.                                              $190,567.875. Firms using data upload are
                                                    report is 67,146.114 This data collection                   116 To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied      estimated to save $588.67 (data entry clerk hourly
                                                    is estimated to impose 1,055,471 burden                  the hourly wage rates for each job by the estimated     wage rate of $13.69 × 0.5 hours × 86 reports filed
                                                                                                             hours spent by each job in completing the EEO–1         by data upload). Total firm-level burden hour cost
                                                       113 The addition of W–2 pay data to the EEO–1         to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level functions   of $1,682,813.2 + total establishment-level burden
                                                    is expected to increase EEOC’s internal staffing         of $268.82 and a per-report cost for establishment-     hour cost of $190,567.875¥cost savings from data
                                                    costs by approximately $290,478. The annual              level functions of approximately $20.88 (rounded).      upload of $588.67 = a total annual burden hour cost
                                                    federal cost figure of $1,621,300 includes both the      The total burden hour cost for firm-level functions     of $1,872,792.41.
                                                    increase in contract costs resulting from the            is $18,050,187.7 and the total burden hour cost for        120 This estimate calculates total time spent by

                                                    addition of the pay data collection and the              establishment-level functions is $14,263,365.6.         firms assuming no data upload, then subtracts the
                                                    estimated internal staffing costs. It reflects an        Firms using data upload are estimated to save           estimated time saved by firms using data upload,
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    increase of more than $290,478 compared to the           $2,258,466.68 (data entry clerk hourly wage rate of     as follows: 15.2 hours per firm for firm-level
                                                    estimated federal costs provided in previously           $13.69 × 0.5 hours × 329,944 reports filed by data      functions × 60,886 firms = 925,467.2 hours; 1.9
                                                    published Federal Register notices seeking PRA           upload). Total firm-level burden hour cost of           hours per report for establishment-level functions ×
                                                    approval of this information collection because past     $18,050,187.7 + total establishment-level burden        674,146 reports = 1,280,877.4 hours; 925,467.2 +
                                                    estimates reflected the cost of the contract with the    hour cost of $14,263,365.6¥cost savings from data       1,280,877.4 = 2,206,344.6 total hours; 0.95 hours
                                                    vendor whose services the EEOC procures to assist        upload of $2,258,466.68 = a total annual burden         per report of data entry clerk time saved by data
                                                    with administration and processing of the EEO–1          hour cost of $30,055,086.62.                            upload × 329,858 reports filed by data upload =
                                                    but did not include EEOC’s internal staffing costs          117 Of the 67,146 firms that filed EEO–1 reports     313,365.1; 2,206,344.6¥313,365.1 = 1,892,979.5.
                                                    associated with processing the EEO–1.                    in 2014, 6,260 were federal contractor filers with         121 To reach this estimate, the EEOC multiplied
                                                       114 In 2014, 67,146 firms filed EEO–1 reports.        fewer than 100 employees.                               the adjusted hourly rates for each job by the



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                                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 135 / Thursday, July 14, 2016 / Notices                                                     45497

                                                    that for these filers submitting both                             systems, or purchasing software updates                   Dated: July 11, 2016.
                                                    Component 1 and 2 data in 2017 and                                from vendors, would be extremely                          For the Commission.
                                                    2018, the addition of pay data will                               expensive. Some of these employers                      Jenny R. Yang,
                                                    increase the estimated annual burden                              estimated the one-time implementation                   Chair.
                                                    hour costs by a total of $25,364,064.80                           cost of bridging HRIS and payroll                       [FR Doc. 2016–16692 Filed 7–13–16; 8:45 am]
                                                    or an average of $416.58 per EEO–1 filer                          records to report Component 2 data                      BILLING CODE P
                                                    each year. This burden estimate                                   estimated costs could range from $5,000
                                                    includes reading instructions and                                 per firm to $20,000, $30,000, or $40,000
                                                    collecting, merging, validating, and                              per firm. Although the estimates did not
                                                    reporting the data electronically.                                provide details explaining how they                     FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                                       • One-Time Implementation Burden:                              were calculated, the EEOC has                           COMMISSION
                                                    The 60-Day Notice estimated the one-                              considered this feedback and increased
                                                    time implementation burden hour cost                              the one-time implementation burden. It                  Open Commission Meeting, Thursday,
                                                    associated with submitting the                                    has done so by reflecting that                          July 14, 2016
                                                    information required by Component 2 of                            specialized computer software experts
                                                    the revised EEO–1 Report to be                                    with a higher wage rate will be required                July 7, 2016.
                                                    $23,000,295. This was based on the one-                           to do the work necessary to implement                     The Federal Communications
                                                    time cost for developing queries related                          the one-time changes required for this                  Commission will hold an Open Meeting
                                                    to Component 2 in an existing HRIS,                               proposal.                                               on the subjects listed below on
                                                    which was estimated to take 8 hours per                             Using an hourly wage rate for a                       Thursday, July 14, 2016 which is
                                                    filer at a wage rate of $47.22 per hour.                          computer programmer of $55.81, the                      scheduled to commence at 10:30 a.m. in
                                                       Employers filing public comments                               EEOC now estimates one-time burden                      Room TW–C305, at 445 12th Street SW.,
                                                    stated that bridging pay and HRIS                                 hour cost of $27,184,381.28.122                         Washington, DC.

                                                         Item No.                                   Bureau                                                                     Subject

                                                    1 ......................   Wireless   Tele-Commucations,    Inter-                 Title: Use of Spectrum Bands Above 24 GHz For Mobile Radio Services (GN
                                                                                national And Office Of Engineering &                      Docket No. 14–177); Establishing a More Flexible Framework to Facilitate Sat-
                                                                                Technology.                                               ellite Operations in the 27.5–28.35 GHz and 37.5–40 GHz Bands (IB Docket No.
                                                                                                                                          15–256); Petition document of the Fixed Wireless Communications Coalition to
                                                                                                                                          Create Service Rules for the 42–43.5 GHz Band (RM–11664); Amendment of
                                                                                                                                          Parts 1, 22, 24, 27, 74, 80, 90, 95, and 101 To Establish Uniform License Re-
                                                                                                                                          newal, Discontinuance of Operation, and Geographic Partitioning and Spectrum
                                                                                                                                          Disaggregation Rules and Policies for Certain Wireless Radio Services (WT
                                                                                                                                          Docket No. 10–112); Allocation and Designation of Spectrum for Fixed-Satellite
                                                                                                                                          Services in the 37.5–38.5 GHz, 40.5–41.5 GHz and 48.2–50.2 GHz Frequency
                                                                                                                                          Bands; Allocation of Spectrum to Upgrade Fixed and Mobile Allocations in the
                                                                                                                                          40.5–42.5 GHz Frequency Band; Allocation of Spectrum in the 46.9–47.0 GHz
                                                                                                                                          Frequency Band for Wireless Services; and Allocation of Spectrum in the 37.0–
                                                                                                                                          38.0 GHz and 40.0–40.5 GHz for Government Operations (IB Docket No. 97–
                                                                                                                                          95).
                                                                                                                                       Summary: The Commission will consider a document that would make spectrum in
                                                                                                                                          bands above 24 GHz available for flexible use wireless services, including for
                                                                                                                                          next-generation, or 5G, networks and technologies.
                                                    2 ......................   Wireline Competition ................................   Title: Technology Transitions (GN Docket No. 13–5); USTelecom Petition for De-
                                                                                                                                          claratory Ruling that Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers Are Non-Dominant in
                                                                                                                                          the Provision of Switched Access Services (WC Docket No. 13–3); Policies and
                                                                                                                                          Rules Governing Retirement of Copper Loops by Incumbent Local Exchange
                                                                                                                                          Carriers (RM–11358).
                                                                                                                                       Summary: The Commission will consider a document that adopts a framework to
                                                                                                                                          guide transitions to next-generation communications technologies while pro-
                                                                                                                                          tecting the interests of consumers and competition.




                                                    estimated hours spent by each job in completing the               $31,098,011.6 + total establishment-level burden        contribution for ‘‘management, professional,
                                                                                                                      hour cost of $26,738,315.7¥cost savings from data
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    report to arrive at a per-firm cost for firm-level                                                                        related.’’ U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor
                                                    functions of approximately $510.76 and a per-report               upload of $4,289,968.22 = a total annual burden         Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook:
                                                    cost for establishment-level functions of                         hour cost of $53,546,359.08.                            Computer Programmers, http://www.bls.gov/ooh/
                                                    approximately $39.66 (these figures are rounded).                   122 This estimate is calculated as follows: 8 hours   computer-and-information-technology/computer-
                                                    The burden hour cost for firm-level functions is                  per respondent × 60,886 employers = 487,088 ×           programmers.htm; see also U.S. Dept. of Labor,
                                                    $31,098,011.6 and the burden hour cost for                        $55.81 per hour = $27,184,381.28. The higher one-       Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for
                                                    establishment-level functions is $26,738,315.7.                   time implementation burden estimate in this Notice      Employee Compensation—Dec. 2015 (Mar. 2016),
                                                    Firms using data upload are estimated to save                     as compared to the one-time implementation              http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_
                                                    $4,289,968.22 (data entry clerk hourly wage rate of               burden estimate in the 60-Day Notice is due to the      03102016.htm (computing the rate of employer
                                                    $13.69 × 0.95 hours × 329,858 reports filed by data               higher wage rate for the computer programmer,           contribution by dividing total compensation by
                                                    upload). Total firm-level burden hour cost of                     multiplied by 1.46, which is the employer               total salary).



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Document Created: 2016-07-14 01:55:03
Document Modified: 2016-07-14 01:55:03
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionNotice.
DatesSubmit comments on or before August 15, 2016.
ContactRonald Edwards, Director, Program Research and Surveys Division, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 131 M Street NE., Room 4SW30F, Washington, DC 20507; (202) 663-4949 (voice) or (202) 663-7063 (TTY). Requests for this notice in an alternative format should be made to the Office of Communications and Legislative Affairs at (202) 663-4191 (voice) or (202) 663-4494 (TTY).
FR Citation81 FR 45479 

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