99-17497. Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 132 (Monday, July 12, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 37644-37661]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-17497]
    
    
    
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    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    29 CFR Part 1614
    
    
    
    Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 132 / Monday, July 12, 1999 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION
    
    29 CFR Part 1614
    
    RIN 3046-AA66
    
    
    Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity
    
    AGENCY: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This rule revises the Equal Employment Opportunity 
    Commission's federal sector complaint processing regulations to 
    implement the recommendations made by its Federal Sector Workgroup. The 
    rule revises procedures throughout the complaint process, addressing 
    the continuing perception of unfairness and inefficiency in the 
    process. The Commission is requiring that agencies make available 
    alternative dispute resolution programs, and is revising the counseling 
    process, the bases for dismissal of complaints and the procedures for 
    requesting a hearing. EEOC is providing administrative judges with 
    authority to dismiss complaints and issue decisions on complaints. 
    Agencies will have the opportunity to issue a final order stating 
    whether they will implement the administrative judge's decision. The 
    Commission is also revising the class complaint procedures, the appeals 
    procedures, and the attorney's fees provisions.
    
    DATES: Effective Date: This final rule will become effective on 
    November 9, 1999.
        Applicability Dates: The requirement in Secs. 1614.102(b)(2) and 
    1614.105(b)(2) will apply on January 1, 2000 for agencies that do not 
    currently have ADR programs. All actions taken by agencies and by the 
    Commission after November 9, 1999 shall be in accordance with this 
    final rule.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nicholas M. Inzeo, Deputy Legal 
    Counsel, Thomas J. Schlageter, Assistant Legal Counsel or Kathleen 
    Oram, Senior Attorney, Office of Legal Counsel, 202-663-4669 (voice), 
    202-663-7026 (TDD). This final rule is also available in the following 
    formats: large print, braille, audio tape and electronic file on 
    computer disk. Requests for the final rule in an alternative format 
    should be made to EEOC's Publication Center at 1-800-669-3362.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Introduction
    
        The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, as part of an ongoing 
    effort to evaluate and improve the effectiveness of its operations, 
    established the Federal Sector Workgroup, which was composed of 
    representatives from offices throughout the Commission. The Workgroup 
    focused on the effectiveness of the EEOC in enforcing the statutes that 
    prohibit workplace discrimination in the federal government: section 
    717 of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits 
    discrimination against applicants and employees based on race, color, 
    religion, sex and national origin; section 501 of the Rehabilitation 
    Act of 1973, which prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of 
    disability; section 15 of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 
    which prohibits employment discrimination based on age; and the Equal 
    Pay Act, which prohibits sex-based wage discrimination.
        The Workgroup reviewed and evaluated EEOC's administrative 
    processes governing its enforcement responsibilities in the federal 
    sector and, after consulting with affected agencies and groups of 
    stakeholders, developed recommendations to improve its effectiveness. 
    In addition, the review sought to implement the goals of Vice President 
    Gore's National Performance Review (NPR), including eliminating 
    unnecessary layers of review, delegating decision-making authority to 
    front-line employees, developing partnership between management and 
    labor, seeking stakeholder input when making decisions, and measuring 
    performance by results.
        The Commission drafted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that 
    was circulated to all agencies for comment pursuant to Executive Order 
    12067 and subsequently published in the Federal Register on February 
    20, 1998. The Notice proposed changes to the Commission's federal 
    sector complaint processing regulations at 29 CFR Part 1614 to 
    implement the regulatory recommendations of the Federal Sector 
    Workgroup. 63 FR 8594 (1998). It sought public comment on those 
    proposals.
        The Commission received over sixty comments on the NPRM. Federal 
    agencies and departments submitted 19 comments. Ten comments were 
    submitted by civil rights groups and attorneys groups and law firms, 
    four were submitted by federal employee unions and union 
    representatives, one by an association of federal EEO executives, and 
    one was submitted by a Member of Congress. EEOC also received 27 
    comments from individuals, including federal employees, attorneys and 
    other interested persons. The Commission has carefully considered all 
    of the comments and, as stated in the February Notice, also considered 
    the comments of agencies made during the interagency comment period. 
    The Commission has made a number of changes to the proposals contained 
    in the NPRM in response to the comments. In making these changes, the 
    Commission intends to continue its efforts to reform the federal sector 
    discrimination procedures. While the Commission believes that these 
    changes will make the procedures fairer, the Commission will continue 
    to seek improvements in the procedures. The comments on the NPRM and 
    all of the changes to the proposals are discussed more fully below.
    
    Alternative Dispute Resolution
    
        In the NPRM, the Commission proposed to require all agencies to 
    establish or make available an alternative dispute resolution (ADR) 
    program for the EEO pre-complaint process. In addition, EEOC proposed 
    to require that counselors advise aggrieved persons at the initial 
    counseling session that they may choose between participation in the 
    ADR program offered by the agency and the traditional counseling 
    activities provided for in the current regulation.
        The commenters generally supported both proposals, agreeing that 
    providing an ADR mechanism in the pre-complaint stage of the EEO 
    process will resolve more claims earlier in the process. Many of the 
    agency commenters emphasized their need for flexibility in developing 
    their ADR programs. Small agencies, in particular, requested that they 
    have the authority to determine on a case-by-case basis whether to 
    offer ADR to an aggrieved person for his or her claim. Other agencies 
    urged the Commission to ensure that the election provision take into 
    account that ADR should be voluntary for both parties, the aggrieved 
    person and the agency. Commenters also requested that EEOC clarify how 
    the pre-complaint process will operate when ADR is involved and address 
    the responsibilities of the Counselors throughout that process.
        The Commission has revised the ADR and counseling provisions in 
    response to the comments. Agencies will be required to establish or 
    make available an ADR program. The ADR program must be available during 
    both the pre-complaint process and the formal complaint process. The 
    Commission encourages agencies to use ADR as a valuable tool in 
    resolving EEO disputes at all stages of the EEO process.
        Agencies are free to develop ADR programs that best suit their 
    particular
    
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    needs. While many agencies have adopted the mediation model, other 
    resolution techniques are acceptable, provided that they conform to the 
    core principles set forth in EEOC's policy statement on ADR, contained 
    in Management Directive 110. The Commission believes that agencies 
    should have flexibility in defining their ADR programs. EEOC expects 
    that, overall, agencies will develop an array of ADR programs, designed 
    to suit their particular circumstances. Agencies with limited funds and 
    resources could use the services, in whole or in part, of another 
    agency, a volunteer organization or other resources to make available 
    an ADR program.
        In keeping with the Commission's emphasis on voluntariness as a 
    component of ADR, agencies may decide on a case-by-case basis whether 
    it is appropriate to offer ADR to individual aggrieved persons. EEOC 
    does not anticipate that ADR will be used in connection with every 
    claim brought to a Counselor. For example, some agencies may wish to 
    limit pre-complaint ADR geographically (if extensive travel would be 
    required), or by issue (excluding, for example, all claims alleging 
    discriminatory termination). Some agencies may wish to exclude class 
    allegations from their ADR programs. Agencies may not, however, exclude 
    entire bases of discrimination from ADR programs. For example, it would 
    be inappropriate for an agency to exclude from its ADR program all 
    claims alleging race discrimination.
        In response to a comment, the Commission has revised the regulatory 
    provision governing the initial counseling session. The Commission has 
    removed from section 1614.105(b)(1) the requirement that Counselors 
    advise individuals both orally and in writing of their rights and 
    responsibilities, revising the section to require only that Counselors 
    provide that information in writing. Counselors are encouraged to 
    discuss the rights and responsibilities involved in the EEO process 
    orally with individuals, but are only required to provide that 
    information to the individuals in writing.
        When an agency offers ADR to an individual during the pre-complaint 
    process, the individual may choose to participate in the ADR program at 
    any point in the pre-complaint process. In all cases, the Counselor 
    will conduct an initial counseling session, as currently provided, 
    identifying claims and fully informing individuals about their rights. 
    When ADR is selected, resolution attempts through traditional 
    counseling will be eliminated and the limited inquiry of the 
    traditional counseling will change. Counselors must also inform 
    individuals that if the ADR process does not result in a resolution of 
    the dispute, they will receive a final interview and have the right to 
    file a formal complaint. Management Directive 110 will contain 
    additional guidance on these pre-complaint procedures.
        The Commission's intention in requiring an ADR program is that 
    agencies establish informal processes to resolve claims. Thus any 
    activity conducted in connection with an agency ADR program during the 
    EEO process would not be a formal discussion within the meaning of the 
    Civil Service Reform Act. Generally, the agency should have an official 
    at any ADR session with full authority to resolve the dispute. To the 
    extent consultations with other agency officials would be necessary 
    during any session, the agency is accountable for making sure those 
    consultations can be accommodated.
        If the ADR attempt succeeds in resolving the claim, the agency must 
    notify the Counselor that the claim was resolved. If the ADR attempt is 
    unsuccessful, the agency must return the claim to the Counselor to 
    write the counseling report. That report will describe the initial 
    counseling session, frame the issues, and report only that ADR was 
    unsuccessful.
    
    Dismissals
    
        In the NPRM, the Commission proposed three changes to the dismissal 
    provision contained in section 1614.107. First, the Commission proposed 
    to remove the provision contained in section 1614.107(h) permitting 
    agencies to dismiss complaints for failure to accept a certified offer 
    of full relief. As explained in the preamble to the NPRM, the full 
    relief dismissal policy was premised on the view that adjudication of a 
    claim is unnecessary if the agency is willing to make the complainant 
    whole. The regulatory process, however, has been criticized because 
    complainants are placed in the position of risking dismissal of their 
    complaints if they do not believe the offer of their opposing party is 
    an offer of full relief. If a complainant makes the wrong assessment of 
    the offer and EEOC decides on appeal that the agency did offer full 
    relief, the complainant is precluded from proceeding with the complaint 
    or from accepting the offer. In addition, difficulties assessing what 
    constitutes full relief increased when, as a result of the Civil Rights 
    Act of 1991, damages became available to federal employees. The 
    Commission found that offers of full relief must address compensatory 
    damages, where appropriate. Jackson v. USPS, Appeal No. 01923399 
    (1992); Request No. 05930306 (1993). Unless the agency offers the full 
    amount of damages permitted under the statutory caps in the law, it is 
    virtually impossible for the complainant to assess whether the agency 
    has offered full relief.
        The non-agency commenters uniformly supported the proposal to 
    eliminate the full relief dismissal provision. Agency comments were 
    mixed with nearly as many agencies supporting the change as opposing 
    it. For the foregoing reasons, the Commission has decided to remove the 
    failure to accept a certified offer of full relief dismissal basis from 
    the regulations. At the same time, the Commission is retaining the 
    provision from the NPRM that permits agencies to make an offer of 
    resolution in a case. This offer of resolution is similar, but not 
    identical, to the procedure under Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil 
    Procedure for an offer of judgment, and is discussed in greater detail 
    below.
        In the NPRM, EEOC proposed to add two dismissal provisions to 
    section 1614.107. One of the new provisions will require dismissal of 
    complaints that allege dissatisfaction with the processing of a 
    previously filed complaint (spin-off complaints). As was explained in 
    the NPRM, EEOC's regulations at 29 CFR Part 1613, which were superseded 
    by 29 CFR Part 1614 in 1992, expressly permitted complainants to file 
    separate complaints alleging dissatisfaction with agencies' processing 
    of their original complaints. 29 CFR 1613.262 (1991). The procedure 
    resulted in the filing of multiple spin-off complaints. The Commission 
    recognized the need to limit these complaints, and did not include the 
    Part 1613 provision in Part 1614. Guidance was provided in Management 
    Directive 110. Spin-off complaints continued to be filed, however, 
    despite there being no provision in either the regulations or the 
    management directive permitting the filing of a separate complaint on 
    this issue.
        The comments on the proposal to add a dismissal provision for spin-
    off complaints fell into three categories. Agencies favored the 
    addition. Some individual federal employees and attorneys opposed the 
    dismissal provision and others encouraged EEOC to provide detailed 
    guidance in Management Directive 110 on how to handle spin-off 
    allegations outside of the EEO process.
    
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        The Commission continues to believe that any alleged unfairness or 
    discrimination in the processing of a complaint can--and must--be 
    raised during the processing of the underlying complaint and there is 
    ample authority to deal with such allegations in that process. The 
    spin-off allegations are so closely related to the underlying complaint 
    that a separate complaint would result in redundancy, duplication of 
    time and waste of resources. Such allegations need to be addressed 
    within the over-all context of the initial complaint while that 
    complaint is still pending. The Commission has decided to add the 
    provision requiring dismissal of spin-off complaints to ensure that a 
    balance is maintained between fair and nondiscriminatory agency 
    processing of complaints and the need to eliminate the multiple filing 
    of burdensome complaints about the manner in which an original 
    complaint was processed.
        In conjunction with this regulatory change, the Commission will 
    issue detailed companion guidance in Management Directive 110 
    addressing the procedures to be followed to resolve allegations of 
    dissatisfaction with the complaints process quickly and effectively. 
    Individuals who are dissatisfied with the processing of a complaint 
    will be advised to bring this dissatisfaction to the attention of the 
    official responsible for the complaint, whether it be an investigator, 
    the agency EEO manager, an EEOC administrative judge, or the 
    Commission's Office of Federal Operations on appeal. The allegation of 
    dissatisfaction, and any appropriate evidence, will then be considered 
    during the processing of the existing complaint by the individuals 
    responsible for that step of the process, who will be required to take 
    appropriate action. If any official throughout the process becomes 
    aware of a systemic problem of discriminatory complaint processing, 
    that official may refer the matter to the Complaints Adjudication 
    Division of the Office of Federal Operations at EEOC.
        Proper handling of spin-off allegations is important because such 
    allegations involve the overall quality of the complaints process and 
    implicate the resources devoted to those allegations. The procedures in 
    the Management Directive will ensure that any evidence of 
    discriminatory or improper handling will be considered as part of the 
    claim before the agency or Commission without unnecessarily adding 
    complaints to the system. When an individual presents a counselor, an 
    agency official, or the Commission with a spin-off allegation, the 
    complainant shall be advised where and how to have the allegation of 
    dissatisfaction made part of the existing complaint record. The 
    Commission believes that agency and Commission resources should not be 
    used to process the allegation as a separate complaint because many of 
    these allegations involve evidentiary matters or disagreements with 
    agency decisions made in the processing of the underlying complaint. 
    Counselors, investigators and agency officials are required to note 
    these allegations of dissatisfaction in the complaint record so that 
    reviewing entities can ensure that the allegation was properly 
    addressed. As a result, individuals who file separate complaints will 
    have such complaints dismissed by the agency or by the Commission. The 
    Commission has decided to delegate appellate decision-making authority 
    for appeals from dismissals of spin-off complaints to the Office of 
    Federal Operations to ensure expeditious handling of any such appeals.
        The second new dismissal provision proposed by the Commission in 
    the NPRM provides for dismissal of complaints through strict 
    application of the criteria set forth in Commission decisions where 
    there is a clear pattern of abuse of the EEO process. The proposed 
    section would codify the Commission's decisions in Buren v. USPS, 
    Request No. 05850299 (1985), and subsequent cases, in which the 
    Commission has defined ``abuse of process'' as a clear pattern of 
    misuse of the EEO process for ends other than those that it was 
    designed to accomplish. The Commission has stated that it has the 
    inherent power to control and prevent abuse of its processes, orders, 
    or procedures.
        Comments from agencies generally supported the proposal to add 
    abuse of process as a basis for dismissal, while non-agency commenters 
    opposed it or, while supporting its purpose, expressed concern that 
    agencies would invoke this authority too frequently based arbitrarily 
    on the number of complaints filed by an individual. Several commenters, 
    including agencies and individuals, suggested the criteria for 
    dismissal be clearly set forth in the regulation. A few agencies 
    thought the criteria should be expanded beyond those set forth in the 
    Commission's decisions and that the Commission should provide for 
    sanctions for complainants who abuse the process. Some non-agency 
    commenters maintained that only administrative judges should have the 
    authority to dismiss complaints for abuse of process because agencies 
    will abuse their discretion under this provision.
        The Commission has decided to include this dismissal provision in 
    its regulation with additional language defining abuse of process as 
    ``a clear pattern of misuse of the EEO process for a purpose other than 
    the prevention and elimination of employment discrimination'' and 
    setting forth the factors found in Commission decisions. The Commission 
    reiterates that dismissing complaints for abuse of process should be 
    done only on rare occasions because of the strong policy in favor of 
    preserving complainants' EEO rights whenever possible. Kleinman v. 
    Postmaster General, Request No. 05940579 (1994). Evaluating complaints 
    for dismissal for abuse of process requires careful deliberation and 
    application of strict criteria. Agencies must analyze whether a 
    complainant's behavior evidences an ulterior purpose to abuse the EEO 
    process. Improper purposes would include circumventing other 
    administrative processes such as the labor-management dispute process; 
    retaliating against the agency's in-house administrative machinery; or 
    overburdening the EEO complaint system, which is designed to protect 
    individuals from discriminatory practices. Hooks v. USPS, Appeal No. 
    01953852 (1995). Evidence of numerous complaint filings, in and of 
    itself, is an insufficient basis for making a finding of abuse of 
    process. Id. However, as stated in the regulation, evidence of multiple 
    complaint filings combined with the subject matter of the complaints 
    (such as frivolous, similar or identical allegations; lack of 
    specificity in the allegations; and allegations involving matters 
    previously resolved) may be considered in determining whether a 
    complainant has engaged in a pattern of abuse of the EEO process. See 
    Goatcher v. USPS, Request No. 05950557 (1996).
        The Commission will require strict adherence to these criteria. 
    With respect to the argument that only administrative judges should 
    have the authority to dismiss complaints for abuse of process, the 
    Commission sees no reason to treat this basis for dismissal differently 
    than the others listed in section 1614.107 by disallowing it to 
    agencies. The Commission believes that review by the Commission on 
    appeal will fully safeguard complainants against arbitrary or unjust 
    dismissals.
        The Commission believes that the new dismissal provisions for spin-
    off complaints and abuse of process will improve the efficiency and 
    effectiveness of the EEO process. In addition, dealing summarily with 
    abuse of process complaints will make the process fairer both for 
    agencies that must process
    
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    complaints and for complainants who raise bona fide allegations by 
    focusing resources on bona fide allegations.
    
    Partial Dismissals
    
        In the NPRM, the Commission proposed changes to the regulations to 
    eliminate interlocutory appeals of partial dismissals of complaints. 
    Currently, where an agency dismisses part of a complaint, but not the 
    entire complaint, the complainant has the right to immediately appeal 
    the partial dismissal to EEOC. The Commission provided for 
    interlocutory appeals of partial dismissals in Part 1614, hoping to 
    streamline the process and avoid holding two or more hearings on the 
    same complaint. Multiple hearings could have occurred absent an 
    interlocutory appeal when EEOC reversed an agency's partial dismissal 
    after a hearing was held on the rest of the complaint. The Commission 
    believes that this result can be accomplished without the unintended 
    delays or fragmentation of complaints that may have resulted from 
    implementation of the current provision. The Commission proposed to 
    amend section 1614.401 to remove the right to immediately appeal the 
    dismissal of a portion of a complaint. In addition, the Commission 
    proposed to add a paragraph to the dismissals section, section 
    1614.107, explaining how to process complaints where a portion of the 
    complaint, but not the entire complaint, meets one or more of the 
    standards for dismissal contained in that section.
        Comments on eliminating interlocutory appeals for partial 
    dismissals were mixed. Many commenters, agencies and others, supported 
    the proposal believing that it will simplify the process. The 
    commenters who opposed the change expressed concerns that there will be 
    no investigatory record of the portion of a complaint dismissed by an 
    agency but reinstated by the administrative judge or the Office of 
    Federal Operations. Some agencies questioned how the administrative 
    judge will be able to evaluate a partial dismissal if there is no 
    record on that part of the complaint.
        The Commission believes that eliminating interlocutory appeals of 
    partial dismissals will result in a more efficient complaint process 
    and will help avoid fragmentation of complaints. The Commission has 
    decided, therefore, to finalize the proposals without change. The 
    concerns raised by some of the commenters are addressed by the 
    procedure contained in new section 1614.107(b). If an agency determines 
    that a portion of a complaint, but not all of the complaint, meets one 
    or more of the standards for dismissal contained in section 
    1614.107(a), the agency must document the file with its reasons for 
    believing that the portion of the complaint meets the standards for 
    dismissal. Accordingly, the agency must fully explain its reasons for 
    dismissing that portion of the complaint, and, if appropriate, include 
    any evidence or documents necessary to support that conclusion. The 
    agency's rationale and any record supporting that rationale must be 
    sufficiently developed for an administrative judge or the Office of 
    Federal Operations to evaluate the appropriateness of the partial 
    dismissal without further investigation or inquiry. The agency will 
    then investigate the remainder of the complaint.
        If the complainant requests a hearing, the administrative judge 
    will, as soon as practicable, evaluate the reasons given by the agency 
    for believing a portion of the complaint meets the standards for 
    dismissal. If the administrative judge believes that the agency's 
    reasons are not well taken, the entire complaint or all of the portions 
    not meeting the standards for dismissal will continue in the hearing 
    process. Where a portion of a complaint is reinstated in the hearing 
    process and the investigatory record from the agency is incomplete as 
    to the portion the agency dismissed, the administrative judge will 
    oversee supplementation of the record by discovery or any other 
    appropriate method. Administrative judges will no longer remand 
    complaints or portions of complaints for supplemental investigations by 
    the agency, but will ensure that the record is sufficiently developed 
    during the hearing process.
        The administrative judge's decision on the partial dismissal will 
    become part of the decision on the complaint. Where a complainant 
    requests a final decision from the agency without a hearing, the agency 
    will issue a decision addressing all claims in the complaint, including 
    its rationale for dismissing claims, if any, and its findings on the 
    merits of the remainder of the complaint. The complainant may appeal 
    the agency's final action, including any partial dismissals, to the 
    EEOC. If the Office of Federal Operations finds that a dismissal was 
    improper, it will give the complainant the choice between a hearing and 
    an agency final decision on the claim.
    
    Offer of Resolution
    
        The Commission proposed to add this provision, limiting attorney 
    fees and costs when a complainant rejects an offer and subsequently 
    obtains less relief, in place of the dismissal for failure to accept 
    full relief. The purpose of the offer of resolution is to provide 
    incentive to settle complaints and to conserve resources where 
    settlement should reasonably occur. Some commenters preferred the full 
    relief dismissal to the proposed offer of resolution. Two stated that 
    the relief offered should be compared to the relief obtained, rather 
    than to the decision obtained, in order to determine which is more 
    favorable. A few commenters asked for clarification of what the offer 
    must contain, for example, suggesting that it must contain attorney's 
    fees. Several commenters raised concerns that a complainant might not 
    have enough information to judge whether the offer is reasonable or may 
    not fully appreciate the significance of the offer if the offer is made 
    early in the process. Others questioned how non-monetary remedies would 
    be evaluated for determining whether the relief awarded was more 
    favorable than that offered. Some commenters objected that the 
    ``interest of justice'' exception was too vague; some asked that it be 
    defined in the regulation while others suggested that it be deleted for 
    that reason. Finally, several commenters believed the proposed 
    provision was a good alternative to the dismissal for failure to accept 
    full relief.
        After considering these comments, the Commission has decided that 
    the offer of resolution is an appropriate alternative to and preferable 
    to the dismissal for failure to accept full relief, but has made 
    several changes to the provision to address the commenters' concerns. 
    Simply to clarify, we have revised the provision so that the relief 
    offered is compared with the final relief obtained rather than with the 
    decision when determining which is more favorable. That formulation is 
    more practicable and expresses the Commission's original intent. We 
    have also added a sentence stating that the agency's offer, to be 
    effective, must include attorney's fees and costs that have been 
    incurred and must specify any non-monetary relief. With regard to 
    monetary relief, an agency may make a lump sum offer or it may itemize 
    the amounts and types of monetary relief being offered.
        We have revised the offer of resolution provision to include a two-
    tiered approach. An offer of resolution can be made to a complainant 
    who is represented by an attorney at any time from the filing of a 
    formal complaint until 30 days before a hearing. If, however, the 
    complainant is not represented by an attorney, an offer cannot be made 
    before the parties have received notice that an administrative
    
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    judge has been assigned. We will include model language in the 
    Management Directive that agencies are required to include in each 
    offer of resolution.
        We note that, when comparing the relief offered in an offer of 
    resolution with that actually obtained, we intended that non-monetary 
    as well as monetary relief would be considered. Although a comparison 
    of non-monetary relief may be inexact and difficult in some cases, non-
    monetary relief can be significant and cannot be overlooked.
        The Commission believes that equitable considerations may make it 
    unjust to apply the offer of resolution provision in particular cases 
    and, thus, the interest of justice exception is necessary to prevent 
    the denial of fees in those circumstances. We do not envision many 
    circumstances in which the interest of justice provision will apply. 
    One example, however, of appropriate use of the exception would be 
    where the complainant received an offer of resolution, but was informed 
    by a responsible agency official that the agency would not comply in 
    good faith with the offer (e.g., would unreasonably delay 
    implementation of the relief offered). The complainant did not accept 
    the offer for that reason, and then obtained less relief than was 
    contained in the offer of resolution. We believe that it would be 
    unjust to deny attorney's fees and costs in this case.
    
    Fragmentation
    
        In the NPRM, the Commission requested public comment on the issue 
    of fragmentation of complaints in the federal sector EEO process. 
    Specifically, the Commission asked whether regulatory changes are 
    necessary to correct the fragmentation problem. EEOC believes that 
    agencies are not properly distinguishing between factual allegations in 
    support of a legal claim and the legal claim itself, resulting in the 
    fragmentation of some claims that involve a number of different 
    allegations. Certain kinds of claims are especially susceptible to 
    fragmentation, for example, harassment claims and continuing violation 
    claims. Fragmentation of claims is undesirable both because it 
    unnecessarily multiplies complaints and can improperly render non-
    meritorious otherwise valid and cognizable claims.
        The Commission received some comments on the fragmentation issue. 
    Commenters recommended the elimination of remands by administrative 
    judges, the elimination of partial dismissals (see discussion above), 
    and the revision of the consolidation procedures in the regulation. 
    Commenters also suggested that EEO Counselors need more training to 
    recognize the difference between claims and allegations.
        The Commission has revised the regulation in several places to 
    address the fragmentation problem. Section 1614.108(b) has been amended 
    to replace the phrase ``matter alleged to be discriminatory'' with the 
    word ``claim.'' The Commission believes that agencies may be 
    interpreting ``matter'' to mean something less than a claim. Where a 
    complainant raises a claim of retaliation or a claim involving terms 
    and conditions of employment, subsequent events or instances involving 
    the same claim should not be filed as separate complaints, but should 
    be treated as part of the first claim. For the same reasons, the 
    Commission has revised section 1614.603 to remove the word 
    ``allegations'' and replace it with ``claims.''
        The Commission is removing from the hearings section the provision 
    permitting administrative judges to remand issues to agencies for 
    counseling or other processing. The Commission intends that 
    administrative judges will have full responsibility for complaints 
    after they enter the hearing stage and should no longer remand them to 
    the agencies. This change and others involving hearings are discussed 
    more fully below.
        Finally, the Commission is adding a provision permitting amendment 
    of complaints, and is revising the consolidation section of the 
    regulation. Section 1614.106 now permits complainants to amend 
    complaints to add issues or claims that are like or related to the 
    original complaint any time prior to the conclusion of the 
    investigation. After requesting a hearing, complainants may seek leave 
    from the administrative judge to amend a complaint to add issues or 
    claims that are like or related to the original complaint by filing a 
    motion to amend. The Commission has amended section 1614.606, which 
    governs joint processing and consolidation of complaints, to require 
    that agencies consolidate two or more complaints filed by the same 
    complainant. The current consolidation provision is permissive only. 
    Moreover, the current provision, the Commission believes, may serve to 
    discourage consolidation of complaints because it provides that the 
    date of the first filed complaint controls the applicable complaint 
    processing time frames. Under this provision, if a complainant filed a 
    second complaint 175 days after the first complaint, the current 
    regulation would provide the agency with only 5 days to investigate the 
    second complaint if it were consolidated with the first complaint. As 
    part of the revision to the consolidation section, the Commission 
    provides in the final rule that when a complaint has been consolidated 
    with an earlier filed complaint the agency must complete its 
    investigation within the earlier of 180 days after the filing of the 
    last complaint or 360 days after the filing of the original complaint, 
    except that a complainant may request a hearing from an administrative 
    judge on the consolidated complaints any time after 180 days from the 
    date of the first filed complaint. If a complainant requests a hearing 
    on consolidated complaints prior to the agency's completion of the 
    investigation, the administrative judge will decide how best to insure 
    an appropriate record, whether by staying the hearing process for some 
    period of time during which the agency can finish its investigation or 
    by supplementation of the record through discovery or other methods 
    ordered by the administrative judge. When an administrative judge 
    becomes aware that one or more complaints in the agency process should 
    be consolidated with a complaint in the hearing process, the 
    administrative judge may consolidate all claims at the hearing stage or 
    hold the complaint in the hearing process until the others are ready 
    for hearing.
        Management Directive 110 will contain additional guidance on 
    amendment of complaints, consolidation of complaints, and 
    fragmentation, including what constitutes a cognizable claim under the 
    employment discrimination statutes.
    
    Hearings
    
        The Commission proposed several changes to the hearings provisions 
    in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the most significant being the 
    proposal to make administrative judge's decisions final in complaints 
    referred to them for hearing. The Commission received dozens of 
    comments on this proposal, with the majority of agency commenters 
    opposing it and the non-agency commenters overwhelmingly favoring it. A 
    number of agencies challenged EEOC's statutory authority to make 
    administrative judges' decisions final, arguing that section 717(c) of 
    Title VII requires that agencies take final action on EEO complaints 
    before a complainant may appeal to EEOC. In addition, an agency argued 
    that agency final action is required to trigger federal court suit 
    rights. Section 717(c) permits an individual to file a lawsuit in 
    federal court in four instances, including within 90 days of receipt of 
    notice of final
    
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    action. One agency suggested that EEOC could make administrative 
    judges' decisions final by moving the hearing process to the appellate 
    stage. Agencies also expressed concern about EEOC's resources, 
    believing that there will be an increase in requests for hearings if 
    administrative judges' decisions are made final. Agencies also 
    questioned the quality and consistency of administrative judges' 
    decisions in opposing the change. Several agencies complained that they 
    would be unable to defend themselves if administrative judges' 
    decisions were made final.
        Several agencies, however, supported the proposal. One noted that 
    EEOC's statistics demonstrate a problem with the EEO process 
    government-wide that undermines the confidence of complainants in the 
    system and creates a perception of unfairness. The civil rights groups, 
    unions and attorneys' groups that commented on the proposal strongly 
    supported it and some noted that it is the most important change 
    proposed by EEOC in the NPRM.
        The Commission has carefully considered all of the comments on this 
    issue. The Commission strongly believes that allowing agencies to 
    reject or modify an administrative judge's findings of fact and 
    conclusions of law and to substitute their own decision leads to an 
    unavoidable conflict of interest and creates a perception of unfairness 
    in the federal EEO system. While the Commission believes that its 
    interpretation of the statute regarding the Commission's authority is 
    correct, the Commission has decided to revise the proposal in order to 
    make needed improvements in the procedures while recognizing the 
    concerns expressed by the agencies. At the same time the Commission 
    will preserve the functional goal of the earlier proposal: agencies 
    will no longer be able to simply substitute their view of a case for 
    that of an independent decision-maker.
        In response to comments from agencies that the Office of Federal 
    Operations was upholding agency decisions that reversed administrative 
    judge's decisions finding discrimination, we made two independent 
    inquiries of EEOC's information systems. The Commission had not 
    previously studied that information or reported it, although it had 
    collected it. The first inquiry showed that in 1994 and 1996, there 
    were 80 administrative judges' decisions favorable to complainants that 
    were reversed by the agency, appealed to the Office of Federal 
    Operations, and for which the Office of Federal Operations issued a 
    decision on the merits. Of those 80 decisions, EEOC upheld the 
    administrative judge in 53 instances and upheld the agency in 27 
    instances. In the second inquiry, we found that in fiscal year 1998, 
    there were 157 decisions by the Office of Federal Operations reviewing 
    administrative judges' decisions adverse to agencies. Of those 
    decisions, 135 (86%) affirmed the administrative judge in whole, 8 (5%) 
    reversed in whole or in part, and 14 (9%) modified the administrative 
    judge's decision. These inquiries demonstrated that the arguments made 
    by the agencies were not supported by the facts. EEOC upholds 
    administrative judges' decisions in a significant majority of all 
    cases.
        The final rule provides that administrative judges will issue 
    decisions on all complaints referred to them for hearings. Agencies 
    will have the opportunity to take final action on the complaint by 
    issuing a final order within 40 days of receipt of the hearing file and 
    the administrative judge's decision. The final order will notify the 
    complainant whether or not the agency will fully implement the decision 
    of the administrative judge and will contain notice of the 
    complainant's suit and appeal rights. If the agency's final order does 
    not fully implement the decision of the administrative judge, the 
    agency must simultaneously file an appeal of the decision with EEOC. In 
    this way, agencies will take final action on complaints referred to 
    administrative judges by issuing a final order, but they will not 
    introduce new evidence or write a new decision in the case. Agencies 
    will have an additional 20 days to file a brief in support of their 
    appeal.
        To parallel the provision on interim relief in section 1614.502(b), 
    we are adding a provision requiring an agency to provide interim relief 
    in limited circumstances when the agency appeals. When the agency 
    issues a final order notifying the complainant that it will not fully 
    implement the administrative judge's decision, the case involves 
    removal, separation or suspension continuing beyond the date of the 
    order, and the administrative judge's decision provided for retroactive 
    restoration, the agency must comply with the decision to the extent of 
    the temporary or conditional restoration of the employee to duty status 
    in the position stated by the administrative judge pending the outcome 
    of the appeal. In response to agency comments, we have revised the 
    regulation to more closely track the MSPB's interim relief provision, 
    including a provision permitting agencies to decline to return the 
    complainant to his or her place of employment if it determines that the 
    return or presence of the complainant will be unduly disruptive to the 
    work environment. Prospective pay and benefits must be provided, 
    however. In addition, we have noted in the regulation that an employee 
    may decline an offer of interim relief, and a grant of interim relief 
    does not insulate a complainant from subsequent disciplinary or adverse 
    action for another reason. Interim relief does not apply in cases where 
    the complainant alleges that she or he was not retained beyond the 
    period of a temporary appointment which expired prior to the appeal or 
    that the temporary position was not converted to a permanent position. 
    For example, where the Census hires temporary employees and the 
    temporary appointment would have expired prior to the appeal, or the 
    employee was not converted to a career position, the interim relief 
    provision would not apply.
        In another proposed change to the hearings process in the NPRM, we 
    proposed that at the end of the investigation or after 180 days, 
    complainants who want to request a hearing will send their requests 
    directly to the EEOC office instead of to the agency EEO office in 
    order to eliminate delays. Almost all of the commenters agreed with 
    this proposal. A few commenters asked that complainants be required to 
    notify the agency at the same time that they make the request to EEOC. 
    That requirement was already contained in the proposal so no change is 
    being made. We have made some minor changes to the provision. We added 
    a requirement that all requests for hearings must be in writing. The 
    proposal stated that EEOC would request the complaint file after it 
    received a request for hearing. The final rule has been revised to 
    state that the agency must forward the file within 15 days of the date 
    of receipt of the request for hearing. Since the agency will be 
    receiving notice directly from the complainant when a hearing is 
    requested, eliminating the request from EEOC and the time incident to 
    preparation of that letter will result in a more efficient process. If 
    any agency receives a request for a hearing that has not also been 
    submitted to EEOC, the agency should forward the request along with the 
    file to EEOC and should advise the complainant of its actions and of 
    the requirement that requests be submitted directly to EEOC.
        In response to comments, the Commission has decided to revise 
    section 1614.109(a) to better explain the administrative judge's 
    responsibilities in the hearing process and to remove the current 
    provision permitting
    
    [[Page 37650]]
    
    administrative judges to remand for counseling issues that are like or 
    related to those issues raised in the complaint. Section 1614.109(a) 
    now provides that upon appointment, the administrative judge will 
    assume full responsibility for adjudication of the complaint, including 
    overseeing the development of the record. The Commission intends that 
    the administrative judge will take complete control of the case once a 
    hearing is requested. The new sentence clarifies that the agency's 
    authority to dismiss a complaint ceases once a hearing is requested. 
    Administrative judges will preside over any necessary supplementation 
    of the record in the hearing process without resort to remands of 
    complaints to agencies for additional investigations. Remands of 
    complaints to agencies for supplemental investigations have 
    proliferated, resulting in fragmentation or unwarranted delays. The 
    changes to the regulation will eliminate these remands and improve the 
    timeliness and efficiency of the complaint process.
        In the NPRM, the Commission proposed to add a new section 
    1614.109(b) providing that administrative judges have the authority to 
    dismiss complaints during the hearing process for all of the reasons 
    contained in section 1614.107. Nearly all commenters, agencies and 
    others, supported this proposal. In response to comments, the 
    Commission has revised the regulation to provide that administrative 
    judges may dismiss complaints on their own initiative, after notice to 
    the parties, or upon an agency's motion to dismiss a complaint.
        The Commission has made several minor revisions to the hearings 
    section of the regulations. In response to a comment, we have added a 
    new section (f)(1) providing that the administrative judge must serve 
    all orders to produce evidence on both parties. We have revised section 
    1614.109(i) to provide that the time frame for issuing a decision will 
    run from the administrative judge's receipt of the complaint file from 
    the agency, rather than, as currently provided, from receipt by EEOC of 
    a request for a hearing. In addition, the Commission has revised the 
    section to provide that administrative judges send the hearing record, 
    rather than the entire record, to the parties with the final decision. 
    Finally, the Commission has removed the requirement that administrative 
    judges send final decisions and the record to the parties by certified 
    mail. This will save the Commission scarce resources.
    
    Procedures for Handling Clearly Meritless Cases
    
        The growing inventory of cases pending at agencies, in the hearings 
    units and on appeal to the Commission causes delays across the board. 
    The problem is exacerbated by the allocation of scarce resources to 
    meritless cases. Many commenters representing all points of view 
    identified this situation as an urgent priority, and the Federal Sector 
    Workgroup devoted considerable attention to the problem. The Workgroup 
    noted the widespread concern among stakeholders that the system is 
    overburdened by meritless complaints and misused as a forum for 
    workplace disputes that do not involve EEO matters. Its Report 
    concluded that ``Government resources should be targeted to addressing 
    colorable claims of discrimination. Excessive resources devoted to non-
    meritorious claims of discrimination undermines the credibility of the 
    process and impairs the rights of those with meritorious claims.'' The 
    Commission agrees.
        Among the measures proposed by the Commission in its NPRM to 
    address this problem were two provisions to give administrative judges 
    additional procedures for quickly resolving complaints that are 
    inappropriately in the EEO process or that lack merit. First, the 
    Commission proposed to give administrative judges the authority to 
    dismiss complaints during the hearing process for all of the reasons 
    contained in the dismissal section, 29 CFR 1614.107, including for 
    failure to state a claim. As discussed above, the Commission has 
    included this proposed section 1614.109(b), which most commenters 
    supported, in its final rule.
        The second proposal was a provision for decisions without a hearing 
    in cases that lack merit, which would have supplemented administrative 
    judges' existing authority to issue summary judgment decisions 
    currently contained in 29 CFR 1614.109(e). The Commission proposed to 
    add a provision, section 1614.109(g)(4), permitting administrative 
    judges to issue a decision without a hearing where they determine, even 
    though material facts remain in dispute, that there is sufficient 
    information in the record to decide the case, that the material facts 
    in dispute can be decided on the basis of the written record, that 
    there are no credibility issues that would require live testimony in 
    order to evaluate a witness' demeanor and that the case lacks merit.
        Almost all non-agency commenters as well as about half of the 
    agency commenters opposed granting administrative judges this new 
    authority, arguing that there must be a hearing if material facts are 
    in dispute. Individual commenters and those representing civil rights 
    groups and unions also doubted that the administrative judge would have 
    sufficient information in the record to decide the case under this 
    procedure because the agency compiles the record and the complainant is 
    likely not to have had an opportunity to develop evidence. Some 
    suggested that complainants have won cases that may have seemed non-
    meritorious when filed, based on discovery and live testimony at the 
    hearing. Several agency commenters believed the procedure would also 
    adversely affect agencies by leading to erroneous decisions based on 
    incomplete evidence. Agencies also thought it was unclear and difficult 
    to distinguish from traditional summary judgment. A number of agency 
    commenters supported the proposal as an appropriate way to streamline 
    the process and deal with the increasing workload. When the 
    investigatory record is complete, they argued, a hearing may waste 
    resources and cause agency employees to be absent from work when their 
    testimony is not really necessary.
        The Commission has decided that it is not necessary to add this 
    provision at this time. We believe that the problem of meritless 
    complaints can be addressed through appropriate application of the 
    failure to state a claim dismissal basis and the traditional summary 
    judgment provision. Dismissal for failure to state a claim is 
    appropriate when a complaint alleges conduct that does not rise to the 
    level of a violation of the anti-discrimination statutes. Summary 
    judgment under section 1614.109(e) is appropriate for complaints that 
    state a claim but that involve no genuine dispute over material facts. 
    Continued processing of cases that should have been dismissed for 
    failure to state a claim or decided on summary judgment contributes to 
    the growing inventory and the perception that the system gives too much 
    consideration to trivial matters. Such cases should be resolved more 
    quickly at earlier stages in the process using existing legal 
    standards. The Commission summarizes these standards below and intends 
    to provide more detailed guidance in Management Directive 110.
        Dismissal for Failure to State a Claim: Existing section 
    1614.107(a) requires that agencies dismiss a complaint that fails to 
    state a claim under section 1614.103. Under the new section 
    1614.109(b), administrative judges may dismiss complaints for the same 
    reasons
    
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    as contained in section 1614.107. In determining whether a complaint 
    states a claim, the proper inquiry is whether the conduct as alleged 
    would constitute an unlawful employment practice under the EEO 
    statutes. Cobb v. Department of the Treasury, Request No. 05970007 
    (March 13, 1997). See Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, 118 S. 
    Ct. 2257, 2268-9 (1998)(referencing cases in which courts of appeals 
    considered whether various employment actions were sufficient to state 
    a claim under the civil rights laws).
        When a complainant does not challenge agency action or inaction 
    with respect to an employment decision or a specific term, condition or 
    privilege of employment, but alleges a hostile and discriminatory 
    working environment, the severity of the alleged conduct must be 
    evaluated to determine whether the complaint is actionable under the 
    statutes. As the Supreme Court has stated, ``Conduct that is not severe 
    or pervasive enough to create an objectively hostile or abusive work 
    environment--an environment that a reasonable person would find hostile 
    or abusive--is beyond Title VII's purview.'' Harris v. Forklift 
    Systems, Inc., 510 U.S. 17, 21-22 (1993); see Meritor Savings Bank, FSB 
    v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 67 (1986).
        In Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 118 S. Ct. 2275 (1998), the 
    Court reemphasized that conduct must rise above a certain minimum level 
    to be actionable: `` `[S]imple teasing,' * * * offhand comments, and 
    isolated incidents (unless extremely serious) will not amount to 
    discriminatory changes in the `terms and conditions of employment.' '' 
    118 S. Ct. at 2283 (citations omitted). To determine whether an 
    environment is sufficiently hostile or abusive, courts must look at all 
    of the circumstances, including the frequency and severity of the 
    conduct. Id. These standards should ``ensure that Title VII does not 
    become a `general civility code.' * * * Properly applied, they will 
    filter out complaints attacking `the ordinary tribulations of the 
    workplace'' * * *.'' Id. at 2283-84 (citations omitted).
        The Commission also has repeatedly stated that isolated comments, 
    petty slights, and trivial annoyances are not actionable. See EEOC 
    Compliance Manual Section 8, ``Retaliation,'' No. 915.003 (May 20, 
    1998) at 8-13; EEOC Policy Guidance on Current Issues of Sexual 
    Harassment, No. N-915.050 (March 19, 1990) at 14; EEOC Enforcement 
    Guidance on Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc., No. 915.002 (March 8, 
    1994) at 6 n.4; see also, e.g., Cobb v. Department of the Treasury, 
    supra.; Moore v. United States Postal Service, Appeal No. 01950134 
    (April 17, 1997); Backo v. United States Postal Service, Request No. 
    05960227 (June 10, 1996); Phillips v. Department of Veterans Affairs, 
    Request No. 05960030 (July 12, 1996); Miller v. United States Postal 
    Service, Request No. 05941016 (June 2, 1995); Banks v. Department of 
    Health and Human Services, Request No. 05940481 (February 16, 1995) . 
    However, a persistent pattern of harassing conduct or a particularly 
    severe individual incident, when viewed in light of the work 
    environment as a whole, may constitute a hostile environment. See, 
    e.g., Brooks v. Department of the Navy, EEOC Request No. 05950484 (June 
    25, 1996).
        The Commission cautions that before dismissing a complaint the 
    administrative judge must ensure that the claim has not been fragmented 
    inappropriately into more than one complaint. As discussed above under 
    the heading ``Fragmentation,'' a series of subsequent events or 
    instances involving the same claim should not be treated as separate 
    complaints, but should be added to and treated as part of the first 
    claim.
        Summary Judgment: The problem identified by the Workgroup can also 
    be addressed through more effective use of the existing summary 
    judgment authority. Summary judgment is proper when ``material facts 
    are not in genuine dispute.'' 29 CFR 1614.109(e). Only a dispute over 
    facts that are truly material to the outcome of the case should 
    preclude summary judgment. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 
    242, 248 (1986) (only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome 
    of the suit under the governing law, and not irrelevant or unnecessary 
    factual disputes, will preclude the entry of summary judgment). For 
    example, when a complainant is unable to set forth facts necessary to 
    establish one essential element of a prima facie case, a dispute over 
    facts necessary to prove another element of the case would not be 
    material to the outcome. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23 
    (1986).
        Moreover, a mere recitation that there is a factual dispute is 
    insufficient. The party opposing summary judgment must identify the 
    disputed facts in the record with specificity and demonstrate that 
    there is a dispute by producing affidavits or records that tend to 
    disprove the facts asserted by the moving party. In addition, the non-
    moving party must explain how the facts in dispute are material under 
    the legal principles applicable to the case. 29 CFR 1614.109(e)(2); 
    Anderson, 477 U.S. at 257; Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322-24; Patton v. 
    Postmaster General, Request No. 05930055 (1993) (summary judgment 
    proper where appellant made only a general pleading that his job 
    performance was good but set forth no specific facts regarding his 
    performance and identified no specific inadequacies in the 
    investigation).
    
    Class Complaints
    
        The Federal Sector Workgroup identified a series of concerns with 
    the class complaint process. It found that despite studies indicating 
    that class-based discrimination may continue to exist in the federal 
    government, recent data reflect that very few class complaints are 
    filed or certified at the administrative level. While an effective 
    administrative process for class complaints offers several important 
    advantages over litigation in federal court, including informality, 
    lower cost, and speed of resolution, the Workgroup found that the 
    current process does not adequately address class-based discrimination 
    in the federal government. As a result, complainants often have elected 
    to pursue their complaints in federal court.
        Class actions play a particularly vital role in the enforcement of 
    the equal employment laws. They are an essential mechanism for 
    attacking broad patterns of workplace discrimination and providing 
    relief to victims of discriminatory policies or systemic practices. The 
    courts have long recognized that class actions ``are powerful stimuli 
    to enforce Title VII,'' providing for the ``removal of artificial, 
    arbitrary, and unnecessary barriers to employment when the barriers 
    operate invidiously to discriminate on the basis of racial or other 
    impermissible classification.'' Wetzel v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 508 
    F.2d 239, 254 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 1011 (1975). The class 
    action device exists, in large part, to vindicate the interests of 
    civil rights plaintiffs. See 5 James W. Moore, Moore's Federal Practice 
    Sec. 23.43[1][a], at 23-191 (3d ed. 1997).
        These same policies apply with equal force in the federal sector. 
    Accordingly, the Commission is making several changes in its regulation 
    to strengthen the class complaint process. The purpose of these changes 
    is to ensure that complaints raising class issues are not unjustifiably 
    denied class certification in the administrative process and that class 
    cases are resolved under appropriate legal standards consistent with 
    the principles applied by federal courts.
        In the NPRM, the Commission proposed four regulatory changes to the 
    class complaint procedures found at 29
    
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    CFR 1614.204. The Commission proposed to revise section 1614.204(b) to 
    provide that a complainant may move for class certification at any 
    reasonable point in the process when it becomes apparent that there are 
    class implications raised in an individual complaint. If a complainant 
    moves for class certification after completing counseling, the 
    complainant will not be required to return to the counseling stage. 
    Individual commenters and those representing civil rights groups 
    uniformly endorsed the proposed change. Some agency commenters 
    supported the change but asked that the regulation define ``reasonable 
    point in the process''; some suggested that this point be during the 
    investigation or within a short time after distribution of the agency 
    investigative file, rather than during discovery. Other agencies 
    opposed the change, arguing that it would entail additional 
    investigative costs, cause delays and invite abuse by complainants 
    seeking to bypass the counseling process by making frivolous class 
    allegations. They maintained that a complainant should have to elect 
    between a class or an individual claim at the pre-complaint stage. If a 
    complainant can move for class certification on the eve of hearing, 
    they argued, the agency would be required to put the individual 
    complaint on hold and start its investigation all over again as a class 
    case. Others objected only to eliminating counseling, as that is how 
    the complainant is informed of his or her rights and responsibilities 
    as class agent.
        The Commission believes that this revision is an important step 
    toward removing unnecessary barriers to class certification of 
    complaints that are properly of a class nature. The Commission has 
    consistently recognized that its decisions on class certification must 
    be guided by the complainant's lack of access to pre-certification 
    discovery on class issues; this is different from the situation of a 
    federal court Rule 23 plaintiff who does have access to pre-
    certification discovery on class issues. Similarly, an individual 
    complainant often will not have reason to know at the counseling stage, 
    and sometimes even after the agency's investigation, that the 
    challenged action actually reflects an agency policy or practice 
    generally applicable to a class of similarly situated individuals.
        Because of the importance of discovery, the Commission has decided 
    not to place the restrictions suggested by some of the commenters on 
    the time at which a complainant may seek class certification. The 
    Commission intends that ``reasonable point in the process'' be 
    interpreted to allow a complainant to seek class certification when he 
    or she knows or suspects that the complaint has class implications, 
    i.e., it potentially involves questions of law or fact common to a 
    class and is typical of the claims of a class. Normally, this point 
    will be no later than the end of discovery at the hearing stage. The 
    complainant must seek class certification within a reasonable time 
    after the class nature of the case becomes apparent. The administrative 
    judge will deny class certification if the complainant has unduly 
    delayed in moving for certification. In response to the comments, the 
    Commission has added language to this effect in the regulation. The 
    Commission disagrees with those commenters who advocated returning the 
    complaint for additional counseling. It will be the responsibility of 
    the agency or administrative judge, as appropriate, to ensure that the 
    class agent is advised of his or her obligations at the time the 
    complainant moves for certification. The Commission believes it is 
    impracticable and unproductive to require the complainant to return to 
    counseling at this stage.
        A request for class certification made after the filing of an 
    individual complaint but before the issuance of the notice required by 
    section 1614.108(f) will be forwarded to an EEOC administrative judge 
    for a decision on whether to accept or dismiss a class complaint. The 
    administrative judge's decision will be appealable to the Office of 
    Federal Operations. The filing of an appeal will not stay further 
    proceedings, although either party may request that the administrative 
    judge stay the administrative process pending a decision on appeal.
        The Commission proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to 
    amend section 1614.204(d) to provide that administrative judges would 
    issue final decisions on whether a class complaint will be accepted (or 
    certified) or dismissed. Currently, administrative judges make 
    recommendations to agencies on acceptance or dismissal. For the same 
    reasons noted in the discussion of administrative judges' decisions 
    above, the Commission has decided to provide that administrative judges 
    will issue decisions to accept or dismiss class complaints, and 
    agencies will take final action by issuing a final order, and, 
    simultaneously appealing the decision to EEOC if the final order does 
    not fully implement the decision of the administrative judge. Some 
    agency commenters said they supported making certification decisions 
    final only if the agency is given the right to an interlocutory appeal. 
    That was the Commission's intent. The Commission has revised current 
    section 1614.401(b) (redesignated section 1614.401(c)), which sets 
    forth appeal rights in all the situations that might arise in class 
    cases, to include agency interlocutory appeals from administrative 
    judges' certification decisions.
        In the proposed rule, the Commission proposed to amend section 
    1614.204(g)(2) to require that administrative judges must approve class 
    settlement agreements pursuant to the ``fair and reasonable'' standard, 
    even when no class member has asserted an objection to the settlement. 
    Some agency commenters supported this proposal while most others 
    disagreed, arguing that it would add an unnecessary layer of review 
    when the parties are satisfied with the settlement and that adequate 
    safeguards exist in section 1614.204(g)(4), which gives dissatisfied 
    class members the right to petition to vacate a settlement, and 
    1614.204(a)(2), which requires the class agent to fairly and adequately 
    represent the class.
        Because it believes that the administrative judge's approval of 
    settlements in all cases is the best way to protect the interests of 
    the class, the Commission has decided to add this proposal to its 
    regulation. As one agency commenter noted, class agents sometimes seek 
    to settle their individual claims without full regard for the interests 
    of the class. The change makes the regulations consistent with the 
    practice in federal courts where the court must approve any settlement 
    of a class case under a fair and reasonable standard. Thus, the same 
    standard applies whether or not any petitions to vacate the resolution 
    have been filed. In response to the suggestion of one agency, the 
    Commission has elaborated upon the standard by revising the regulation 
    to follow the language used by the Court of Appeals for the District of 
    Columbia Circuit in Thomas v. Albright, 139 F.3d 227, 233 (1998), which 
    held that to approve a settlement under Rule 23, a district court must 
    find that it is ``fair, adequate, and reasonable to the class as a 
    whole.'' The court is to evaluate the terms of the settlement in 
    relation to the strength of the plaintiffs' case, and should not reject 
    a settlement merely because individual class members contend that they 
    would have received more had they prevailed after a trial. 139 F.3d at 
    231, 232. See also Manual for Complex Litigation (Third) (1995) 
    Secs. 30.41-.42.
        The Commission also has made additional revisions to the procedures 
    for notice and approval of settlements contained in section 
    1614.204(g)(4) to
    
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    reflect the changes in the administrative judge's authority. Currently, 
    any member of the class who is dissatisfied may petition the agency EEO 
    Director to vacate the resolution because it benefits only the class 
    agent or is otherwise not fair and reasonable. The administrative judge 
    issues a recommended decision, and the agency makes the final decision 
    whether to vacate the resolution. 29 CFR 1614.204(g)(4). In the new 
    section 1614.204(g)(4), a class member may petition the administrative 
    judge to vacate the resolution. The administrative judge reviews the 
    notice of resolution and considers any petitions filed. The 
    administrative judge must issue a decision vacating or approving the 
    settlement on the basis of whether it is fair, adequate and reasonable 
    to the class as a whole. A decision to vacate a settlement, as well as 
    a decision to approve settlement over the objections of petitioning 
    class members, is appealable to the Office of Federal Operations.
        Finally, the Commission proposed to amend section 1614.204(l)(3) in 
    the proposed rule to clarify the burdens of proof applicable to 
    individual class members who believe they are entitled to relief. The 
    change makes explicit that the burdens enunciated in Teamsters v. 
    United States, 431 U.S. 324 (1977), and subsequent lower court 
    decisions apply. In Teamsters, the Court stated that where a finding of 
    discrimination has been made, there is a presumption of discrimination 
    as to every individual who can show he or she is a member of the class 
    and was affected by the discrimination during the relevant period of 
    time. 431 U.S. at 361-62. Lower courts have held that this presumption 
    may be rebutted only by clear and convincing evidence that the class 
    member is not entitled to relief. See McKenzie v. Sawyer, 684 F.2d 62, 
    77-78 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Trout v. Lehman, 702 F.2d 1094, 1107 (D.C. Cir. 
    1983), vacated on other grounds, 465 U.S. 1056 (1984); United States v. 
    City of Chicago, 853 F.2d 572, 575 (7th Cir. 1988); Cox v. American 
    Cast Iron Pipe Co., 784 F.2d 1546, 1559 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 479 
    U.S. 883 (1986); Baxter v. Savannah Sugar Refining Corp., 495 F.2d 437, 
    444-45 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 419 U.S. 1033 (1974); Reynolds v. 
    Alabama Department of Transportation, 996 F. Supp. 1156, 1195 (N.D. 
    Ala. 1998). Other courts, however, have held that the standard is 
    preponderance of the evidence. See Wooldridge v. Marlene Indus. Corp., 
    875 F.2d 540, 549 (6th Cir. 1989); Craik v. Minnesota State Univ. Bd., 
    731 F.2d 465, 470 n.8 (8th Cir. 1984); Sledge v. J.P. Stevens & Co., 
    Inc., 585 F.2d 625, 637 (4th Cir. 1978); Richerson v. Jones, 551 F.2d 
    918, 923-25 (3d Cir. 1977).
        Comments on this provision were divided, with non-agency commenters 
    uniformly endorsing it and most agency commenters objecting that 
    ``clear and convincing'' was too high a standard, inappropriate for a 
    class case, and a misreading of Teamsters. The objecting commenters 
    wanted the standard to be preponderance of the evidence.
        The Commission has decided to retain the ``clear and convincing'' 
    standard and emphasizes that this regulatory revision merely codifies 
    the longstanding rule in the federal sector, see McKenzie v. Sawyer, 
    supra. In 1992, when the Commission first issued its Part 1614 
    regulation, we considered the burden of proof issue with respect to 
    relief when discrimination has been found. The Commission determined at 
    that time that no change was required to its requirement, included in 
    the predecessor Part 1613 regulation and in the new section 1614.501, 
    that relief should be provided to an individual when discrimination is 
    found unless clear and convincing evidence indicates that the personnel 
    action at issue would have been taken even absent discrimination. See 
    57 Fed. Reg. 12634, 12641 (April 10, 1992); 29 CFR 1614.501. The 
    Commission concluded that the Supreme Court's decision in Price 
    Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989), which held that an employer 
    could avoid liability in a mixed motive case under a preponderance of 
    the evidence standard, did not require a change in the regulation. As 
    we then noted, the Hopkins decision cited and distinguished the 
    Commission's Part 1613 regulation on the basis that it relates to proof 
    at the relief stage rather than the liability stage. 490 U.S. at 253-
    54. The Commission further noted that the relief provision in the 
    regulation ``will be applied most often to determining whether class 
    members are entitled to individual relief after a class finding of 
    discrimination, but it is also applicable to individual cases where 
    there has been a finding of discrimination.'' 57 FR at 12641.
        The Commission is now making this presumption explicit in its 
    revised class regulation. The Commission believes that requiring proof 
    at the ``clear and convincing'' level when the agency has been found to 
    have engaged in classwide discrimination furthers the remedial and 
    deterrent purposes of the statutes. ``By making it more difficult for 
    employers to defeat successful plaintiffs'' claims to retroactive 
    relief, the higher standard of proof may well discourage unlawful 
    conduct by employers. . . . In addition, the higher standard of proof 
    is justified by the consideration that the employer is a wrongdoer 
    whose unlawful conduct has made it difficult for the plaintiff to show 
    what would have occurred in the absence of that conduct.'' Toney v. 
    Block, 705 F.2d 1364,1373 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Tamm, J., concurring); see 
    also Teamsters, 341 U.S. at 359 n.45, 372.
        Thus, agencies are required to show by clear and convincing 
    evidence that any class member is not entitled to relief, as is 
    provided currently in sections 1614.501(b) and (c). To be presumptively 
    entitled to relief, the class member first must have filed a written 
    claim pursuant to section 1614.204(l)(3) making a specific, detailed 
    showing that the claimant is a class member who was affected by the 
    discriminatory policy or practice, and that the discriminatory action 
    took place within the period of time for which class-wide 
    discrimination was found. To reflect the administrative judge's new 
    role and to provide a procedure for resolving issues related to 
    individual relief, the Commission additionally has revised section 
    1614.204(l)(3) to state that the administrative judge may hold a 
    hearing or otherwise supplement the record on a claim filed by a class 
    member.
        In response to a comment, we have clarified that the agency or the 
    Commission may find classwide discrimination, and provide a remedy, for 
    any policy or practice in existence within 45 days of the class agent's 
    initial contact with the counselor. We also note, as we stated when 
    Part 1614 was promulgated in 1992, that the 45-day time limit in 
    section 204(l)(3) defining the period for which class-wide 
    discrimination can be found is not intended to limit the two-year time 
    period for which back pay can be recovered by a class member. See 57 FR 
    12634, 12644 (April 10, 1992); 29 CFR 1614.204(l)(3). Under the 
    continuing violation theory, moreover, incidents occurring earlier than 
    45 days before contact with the counselor must also be remedied 
    provided that the initial contact with the counselor was timely and the 
    earlier incidents were part of the same continuing policy or practice 
    found to have been discriminatory. That is, where contact with the 
    counselor is timely as to one of the events comprising the continuing 
    violation, then the counseling contact is timely as to the entire 
    violation.
    
    Appeals
    
        In the proposed rule, the Commission proposed two different appeal 
    briefing schedules, depending on the matter
    
    [[Page 37654]]
    
    being appealed: 30 days to file both a notice of appeal and any 
    statement or brief in support of the appeal from a dismissal (a 
    ``procedural'' appeal); and 30 days to file a notice of appeal and an 
    additional 30 days thereafter to file a brief or statement in support 
    of an appeal from a final decision (a ``merits'' appeal). Those who 
    commented on this section were nearly unanimous that this distinction 
    was confusing and that there should be a single briefing schedule. The 
    Commission has revised the regulation to provide that a complainant 
    must file an appeal within 30 days of receipt of the agency dismissal 
    or final action, and any supporting statement or brief shall be filed 
    within 30 days of the filing of the notice of appeal. In cases where 
    there has been a decision by an administrative judge, agencies must 
    take final action on the complaint by issuing a final order within 40 
    days of receipt of the hearing file and the administrative judge's 
    decision. If the final order does not fully implement the 
    administrative judge's decision, agencies must simultaneously file an 
    appeal with the EEOC. They have an additional 20 days to file a brief 
    in support of that appeal. The final regulation also provides that 
    briefs or statements in support of an appeal and papers filed in 
    opposition to an appeal can be filed by facsimile, provided that they 
    are no more than 10 pages in length. Briefs and statements longer than 
    10 pages must be mailed or delivered in person.
        In response to the Commission's statement in the NPRM that the 
    Commission will strictly apply appellate time frames, a number of 
    commenters suggested that provision be made for extending the appellate 
    time limits for good cause shown. Part 1614 already provides that 
    regulatory time limits ``are subject to waiver, estoppel and equitable 
    tolling.'' 29 CFR Sec. 1614.604(c).
        Most commenters agreed with the Commission's proposal that the 
    Office of Federal Operations be empowered to impose sanctions or 
    otherwise take appropriate action regarding any party who fails, 
    without good cause shown, to comply with appellate procedures or to 
    respond fully and timely to a Commission request for information. Some 
    commenters were concerned that this provision could unfairly impact 
    unrepresented complainants. To the extent an unrepresented complainant 
    fails to comply due to mistake, lack of knowledge, or misunderstanding, 
    the Commission will take such factors into consideration when 
    determining whether good cause has been shown.
        Most commenters also agreed with the proposed appellate standards 
    of review --factual findings rendered by administrative judges after a 
    hearing will be subject to a substantial evidence standard of review; 
    all other decisions will be subject to a de novo review. No new 
    evidence will be considered on appeal unless the evidence was not 
    reasonably available during the hearing process. As we noted in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule, the substantial evidence standard does 
    not preclude meaningful review of factual findings. Moreover, applying 
    the de novo standard of review to the factual findings in 
    administrative judges' final decisions after hearings would be an 
    inefficient use of EEOC's limited resources.
        Finally, the Commission proposed to revise the reconsideration 
    process to approximate the process used by the MSPB, reallocate some 
    resources to the improvement of the appellate process and discourage 
    automatic requests for reconsideration whenever a party loses on 
    appeal. Parties may still request reconsideration but it will only be 
    granted, in the discretion of the Commission, if the requester has 
    demonstrated that the appellate decision involved a clearly erroneous 
    interpretation of material fact or law, or the appellate decision will 
    have a substantial impact on the policies, practices or operations of 
    the agency. The comments received were mixed. The unfavorable comments 
    were mostly from agencies although many other agencies favored the 
    change. The objectors raised the same objections discussed in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule. After considering all comments, we have 
    decided to adopt the proposed rule without change. The proposal makes 
    the reconsideration procedure available for those cases where the 
    requestor demonstrates that there are errors of fact or law that would 
    affect the outcomes of the cases and for those cases that will have a 
    substantial impact. By preserving the Commission's discretion, it also 
    will allow the Commission to reallocate its resources to the 
    improvement of the appellate process.
    
    Attorney's Fees
    
        In its NPRM, the Commission proposed two changes to the attorney's 
    fees regulatory scheme: administrative judges would be authorized to 
    determine the amount of the fee award, not just entitlement to the 
    award; and attorney's fees and costs would be available to prevailing 
    complainants for services rendered prior to the filing of the formal 
    complaint (e.g., during the counseling and ADR phases). Most commenters 
    were in favor of the former change. Comments were split on the latter 
    change; agencies were opposed and plaintiffs' attorneys and employees 
    were in favor of the proposal.
        The commenters opposed to an administrative judge determining the 
    amount of attorney's fees and costs to be awarded generally were 
    concerned that an administrative judge would not be able to assess 
    adequately the reasonableness of the time spent by an attorney working 
    on the complaint prior to the hearing. The Commission believes that an 
    administrative judge is in a comparable position to a federal district 
    court judge in making a determination of attorney's fees. To address 
    this concern, though, the Commission has clarified section 
    1614.501(e)(2) to provide that, when a decision-making authority, that 
    is, an agency, an administrative judge, or the Commission, determines 
    that a complainant is entitled to an award of attorney's fees and 
    costs, the complainant's attorney shall submit a statement of fees and 
    costs to the decision-making authority. The agency may respond to and 
    comment on the statement of fees and costs. The decision-making 
    authority will then determine the amount of fees and costs to be 
    awarded. The Commission believes this procedure will best facilitate 
    the determination of the amount of attorney's fees and costs to be 
    awarded, once an entitlement to a fee award has been determined. The 
    Commission has also updated the discussion in the regulation on 
    calculating fees. Management Directive 110 will contain additional 
    guidance on attorney's fees.
        The Commission received many comments on the second change to the 
    attorney's fees provisions, allowing fees for services rendered prior 
    to the formal complaint filing. Agencies expressed significant concern 
    about the proposal, arguing that the change would render the 
    preliminary complaint processing phase more formal and adversarial. The 
    decision was made to provide that agencies are not required to pay for 
    attorney's fees for services rendered during the pre-complaint process 
    unless an administrative judge issues a decision finding 
    discrimination, the agency issues a final order disagreeing with the 
    finding, and EEOC upholds the administrative judge's finding on appeal. 
    In addition, the agency and the complainant can agree that the agency 
    will pay attorney's fees for pre-complaint process representation. 
    These changes were made to preserve the incentive to resolve matters 
    during the
    
    [[Page 37655]]
    
    pre-complaint process and, at the same time, to create the incentive 
    for agencies to accept administrative judges' decisions, unless they 
    are clearly erroneous.
    
    Matters of General Applicability
    
        The Commission proposed to amend section 1614.103(b) of the 
    regulations to include the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and 
    the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Corps 
    in the coverage of part 1614. As we noted in the preamble to the NPRM, 
    we intended these changes to clarify coverage of these employees and be 
    consistent with the determination of the Solicitor General, in 
    connection with litigation, that Commissioned Corps members are covered 
    by federal sector anti-discrimination statutes. Congress amended the 
    Public Health Service Act, however, in Public Law 103-183, and, as a 
    result, we have decided not to finalize the amendment to section 
    1614.103(b) adding the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. We are 
    making final the inclusion of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
    Administration Commissioned Corps. In the final rule, the Commission is 
    also amending section 1614.103(b) to make the regulation consistent 
    with the changes made to section 717(a) by the Congressional 
    Accountability Act of 1995, Pub. L. 104-1, Sec. 201(c), 109 Stat. 8, 
    and the Workforce Investment Act of 1998, Pub. L. 105-220, Sec. 341(a), 
    112 Stat. 936, 1092. These Acts amended the scope of coverage of 
    section 717, eliminating the legislative branch and adding several 
    agencies. We are amending section 1614.103(b) to remove the legislative 
    branch from coverage and to add the Government Printing Office and the 
    Smithsonian Institution to Part 1614 coverage.
        Some commenters suggested that the Commission adopt its private 
    sector charge prioritization procedures in whole or in part in the 
    federal sector. We are making one change to the regulation related to 
    those comments. The current regulation requires a full and fair 
    investigation of every complaint that is not dismissed. Some have 
    interpreted it to require the same amount of investigative effort in 
    each case. That interpretation is not reasonable or desirable and is 
    inconsistent with EEOC's private sector charge prioritization 
    procedures. The Commission believes that the proper scope of an 
    investigation should be dictated by the facts at issue and that a 
    cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all approach wastes resources and 
    needlessly delays resolution of that complaint and all other 
    complaints. The investigation and the amount of effort expended should 
    be appropriate to determine the issues raised by the complaint. To 
    remedy the misconception that more is required, we have revised 
    sections 1614.106(e)(2) and 1614.108(b) to remove the word ``complete'' 
    and replace with ``appropriate.'' An appropriate investigation is one 
    that allows a reasonable fact finder to draw conclusions as to whether 
    discrimination occurred.
        Based on comments the Commission received pertaining to the 
    administrative EEO process in general, the Commission has decided to 
    fine-tune certain sections. In section 1614.604, which pertains to 
    methods of filing and the computation of time limits, the Commission is 
    replacing the phrase ``delivered in person'' with the word 
    ``received.'' This change is intended to ensure that a document will be 
    deemed timely if it is received on or before the applicable due date 
    regardless of the manner in which it is transmitted or delivered.
        Section 1614.605(d), pertaining to service of papers and 
    computation of time when a complainant has a representative, has been 
    modified. Under the current language, if a complainant is represented 
    by an attorney, correspondence is to be served only on the attorney. 
    The section has been revised to require all papers to be served on both 
    the attorney and the complainant. Dual notification currently is 
    required under section 1614.605(d) if the representative is a non-
    attorney. For reasons of consistency, the same service rules will apply 
    regardless of the status of the representative. Timeframes for receipt 
    of materials shall be computed, however, from the time of receipt by 
    the attorney where the representative is an attorney.
    
    Regulatory Procedures
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        In promulgating this final rule, the Commission has adhered to the 
    regulatory philosophy and applicable principles of regulation set forth 
    in section 1 of Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review. 
    This regulation has been designated as a significant regulation and 
    reviewed by OMB consistent with the Executive Order.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        In addition, the Commission certifies under 5 U.S.C. Sec. 605(b), 
    enacted by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354), that this 
    rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities, because it applies exclusively to employees 
    and agencies and departments of the federal government. For this 
    reason, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This regulation contains no information collection requirements 
    subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
    
    List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1614
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Aged, Civil rights, Equal 
    employment opportunity, Government employees, Individuals with 
    disabilities, Religious discrimination, Sex discrimination.
    
        For the Commission.
    Ida L. Castro,
    Chairwoman.
    
        Accordingly, for the reasons set forth in the preamble, chapter XIV 
    of title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 1614--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for 29 CFR part 1614 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 29 U.S.C. 206(d), 633a, 791 and 794a; 42 U.S.C. 
    2000e-16; E.O. 10577, 3 CFR, 1954-1958 Comp., p. 218; E.O. 11222, 3 
    CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 306; E.O. 11478, 3 CFR, 1969 Comp., p. 133; 
    E.O. 12106, 3 CFR, 1978 Comp., p. 263; Reorg. Plan No. 1 of 1978, 3 
    CFR, 1978 Comp., p. 321.
    
        2. Section 1614.102 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (b)(2) 
    through (b)(6) as paragraphs (b)(3) through (b)(7), by adding paragraph 
    (b)(2) and by revising paragraph (c)(5) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.102  Agency program.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) Establish or make available an alternative dispute resolution 
    program. Such program must be available for both the pre-complaint 
    process and the formal complaint process.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (5) Assuring that individual complaints are fairly and thoroughly 
    investigated and that final action is taken in a timely manner in 
    accordance with this part.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 1614.103 is amended by removing the word ``and'' at the 
    end of paragraph (b)(3), revising paragraph (b)(4), and adding 
    paragraphs (b)(5) through (b)(7) to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 37656]]
    
    Sec. 1614.103  Complaints of discrimination covered by this part.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (4) All units of the judicial branch of the Federal government 
    having positions in the competitive service, except for complaints 
    under the Rehabilitation Act;
        (5) The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 
    Commissioned Corps;
        (6) The Government Printing Office; and
        (7) The Smithsonian Institution.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 1614.105 is amended by redesignating paragraph (b) as 
    paragraph (b)(1), revising the first sentence of redesignated paragraph 
    (b)(1), adding paragraph (b)(2), revising the first sentence of 
    paragraph (d) and revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.105  Pre-complaint processing.
    
    * * * * *
        (b)(1) At the initial counseling session, Counselors must advise 
    individuals in writing of their rights and responsibilities, including 
    the right to request a hearing or an immediate final decision after an 
    investigation by the agency in accordance with Sec. 1614.108(f), 
    election rights pursuant to Secs. 1614.301 and 1614.302, the right to 
    file a notice of intent to sue pursuant to Sec. 1614.201(a) and a 
    lawsuit under the ADEA instead of an administrative complaint of age 
    discrimination under this part, the duty to mitigate damages, 
    administrative and court time frames, and that only the claims raised 
    in precomplaint counseling (or issues or claims like or related to 
    issues or claims raised in pre-complaint counseling) may be alleged in 
    a subsequent complaint filed with the agency. * * *
        (2) Counselors shall advise aggrieved persons that, where the 
    agency agrees to offer ADR in the particular case, they may choose 
    between participation in the alternative dispute resolution program and 
    the counseling activities provided for in paragraph (c) of this 
    section.
    * * * * *
        (d) Unless the aggrieved person agrees to a longer counseling 
    period under paragraph (e) of this section, or the aggrieved person 
    chooses an alternative dispute resolution procedure in accordance with 
    paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the Counselor shall conduct the final 
    interview with the aggrieved person within 30 days of the date the 
    aggrieved person contacted the agency's EEO office to request 
    counseling.* * *
    * * * * *
        (f) Where the aggrieved person chooses to participate in an 
    alternative dispute resolution procedure in accordance with paragraph 
    (b)(2) of this section, the pre-complaint processing period shall be 90 
    days. If the claim has not been resolved before the 90th day, the 
    notice described in paragraph (d) of this section shall be issued.
    * * * * *
        5. Section 1614.106 is amended by redesignating paragraph (d) as 
    paragraph (e), adding a new paragraph (d), and revising redesignated 
    paragraph (e) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.106  Individual complaints.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) A complainant may amend a complaint at any time prior to the 
    conclusion of the investigation to include issues or claims like or 
    related to those raised in the complaint. After requesting a hearing, a 
    complainant may file a motion with the administrative judge to amend a 
    complaint to include issues or claims like or related to those raised 
    in the complaint.
        (e) The agency shall acknowledge receipt of a complaint or an 
    amendment to a complaint in writing and inform the complainant of the 
    date on which the complaint or amendment was filed. The agency shall 
    advise the complainant in the acknowledgment of the EEOC office and its 
    address where a request for a hearing shall be sent. Such 
    acknowledgment shall also advise the complainant that:
        (1) The complainant has the right to appeal the final action on or 
    dismissal of a complaint; and
        (2) The agency is required to conduct an impartial and appropriate 
    investigation of the complaint within 180 days of the filing of the 
    complaint unless the parties agree in writing to extend the time 
    period. When a complaint has been amended, the agency shall complete 
    its investigation within the earlier of 180 days after the last 
    amendment to the complaint or 360 days after the filing of the original 
    complaint, except that the complainant may request a hearing from an 
    administrative judge on the consolidated complaints any time after 180 
    days from the date of the first filed complaint.
        6. Section 1614.107 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (a) 
    through (h) as paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(8), redesignating the 
    introductory text as paragraph (a) introductory text and revising it, 
    removing the word ``or'' at the end of redesignated paragraph (a)(7), 
    revising redesignated paragraph (a)(8) and adding new paragraphs (a)(9) 
    and (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.107  Dismissals of complaints.
    
        (a) Prior to a request for a hearing in a case, the agency shall 
    dismiss an entire complaint:
    * * * * *
        (8) That alleges dissatisfaction with the processing of a 
    previously filed complaint; or
        (9) Where the agency, strictly applying the criteria set forth in 
    Commission decisions, finds that the complaint is part of a clear 
    pattern of misuse of the EEO process for a purpose other than the 
    prevention and elimination of employment discrimination. A clear 
    pattern of misuse of the EEO process requires:
        (i) Evidence of multiple complaint filings; and
        (ii) Allegations that are similar or identical, lack specificity or 
    involve matters previously resolved; or
        (iii) Evidence of circumventing other administrative processes, 
    retaliating against the agency's in-house administrative processes or 
    overburdening the EEO complaint system.
        (b) Where the agency believes that some but not all of the claims 
    in a complaint should be dismissed for the reasons contained in 
    paragraphs (a)(1) through (9) of this section, the agency shall notify 
    the complainant in writing of its determination, the rationale for that 
    determination and that those claims will not be investigated, and shall 
    place a copy of the notice in the investigative file. A determination 
    under this paragraph is reviewable by an administrative judge if a 
    hearing is requested on the remainder of the complaint, but is not 
    appealable until final action is taken on the remainder of the 
    complaint.
        7. Section 1614.108 is amended by removing the first sentence of 
    paragraph (b) and adding two sentences in its place, revising paragraph 
    (f) and adding a new paragraph (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.108  Investigation of complaints.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) In accordance with instructions contained in Commission 
    Management Directives, the agency shall develop an impartial and 
    appropriate factual record upon which to make findings on the claims 
    raised by the written complaint. An appropriate factual record is one 
    that allows a reasonable fact finder to draw conclusions as to whether 
    discrimination occurred. * * *
    * * * * *
        (f) Within 180 days from the filing of the complaint, or where a 
    complaint was amended, within the earlier of 180 days after the last 
    amendment to the
    
    [[Page 37657]]
    
    complaint or 360 days after the filing of the original complaint, 
    within the time period contained in an order from the Office of Federal 
    Operations on an appeal from a dismissal, or within any period of 
    extension provided for in paragraph (e) of this section, the agency 
    shall provide the complainant with a copy of the investigative file, 
    and shall notify the complainant that, within 30 days of receipt of the 
    investigative file, the complainant has the right to request a hearing 
    and decision from an administrative judge or may request an immediate 
    final decision pursuant to Sec. 1614.110 from the agency with which the 
    complaint was filed.
        (g) Where the complainant has received the notice required in 
    paragraph (f) of this section or at any time after 180 days have 
    elapsed from the filing of the complaint, the complainant may request a 
    hearing by submitting a written request for a hearing directly to the 
    EEOC office indicated in the agency's acknowledgment letter. The 
    complainant shall send a copy of the request for a hearing to the 
    agency EEO office. Within 15 days of receipt of the request for a 
    hearing, the agency shall provide a copy of the complaint file to EEOC 
    and, if not previously provided, to the complainant.
        8. Section 1614.109 is amended by revising paragraph (a), 
    redesignating paragraphs (b) through (g) as paragraphs (d) through (i), 
    adding new paragraphs (b) and (c), removing the introductory text of 
    redesignated paragraph (f) and adding a heading, adding a sentence at 
    the end of redesignated paragraph (f)(1), revising the introductory 
    text of redesignated paragraph (f)(3), in the heading of redesignated 
    paragraph (g) removing the words ``Findings and conclusions'' and 
    adding, in their place the word ``Decisions'', in redesignated 
    paragraphs (g)(2) and (g)(3) removing the phrases ``findings and 
    conclusions'' and adding, in their place, the words ``a decision'', and 
    revising redesignated paragraph (i) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.109  Hearings.
    
        (a) When a complainant requests a hearing, the Commission shall 
    appoint an administrative judge to conduct a hearing in accordance with 
    this section. Upon appointment, the administrative judge shall assume 
    full responsibility for the adjudication of the complaint, including 
    overseeing the development of the record. Any hearing will be conducted 
    by an administrative judge or hearing examiner with appropriate 
    security clearances.
        (b) Dismissals. Administrative judges may dismiss complaints 
    pursuant to Sec. 1614.107, on their own initiative, after notice to the 
    parties, or upon an agency's motion to dismiss a complaint.
        (c) Offer of resolution. (1) Any time after the filing of the 
    written complaint but not later than the date an administrative judge 
    is appointed to conduct a hearing, the agency may make an offer of 
    resolution to a complainant who is represented by an attorney.
        (2) Any time after the parties have received notice that an 
    administrative judge has been appointed to conduct a hearing, but not 
    later than 30 days prior to the hearing, the agency may make an offer 
    of resolution to the complainant, whether represented by an attorney or 
    not.
        (3) The offer of resolution shall be in writing and shall include a 
    notice explaining the possible consequences of failing to accept the 
    offer. The agency's offer, to be effective, must include attorney's 
    fees and costs and must specify any non-monetary relief. With regard to 
    monetary relief, an agency may make a lump sum offer covering all forms 
    of monetary liability, or it may itemize the amounts and types of 
    monetary relief being offered. The complainant shall have 30 days from 
    receipt of the offer of resolution to accept it. If the complainant 
    fails to accept an offer of resolution and the relief awarded in the 
    administrative judge's decision, the agency's final decision, or the 
    Commission decision on appeal is not more favorable than the offer, 
    then, except where the interest of justice would not be served, the 
    complainant shall not receive payment from the agency of attorney's 
    fees or costs incurred after the expiration of the 30-day acceptance 
    period. An acceptance of an offer must be in writing and will be timely 
    if postmarked or received within the 30-day period. Where a complainant 
    fails to accept an offer of resolution, an agency may make other offers 
    of resolution and either party may seek to negotiate a settlement of 
    the complaint at any time.
    * * * * *
        (f) Procedures.
        (1) * * * The administrative judge shall serve all orders to 
    produce evidence on both parties.
    * * * * *
        (3) When the complainant, or the agency against which a complaint 
    is filed, or its employees fail without good cause shown to respond 
    fully and in timely fashion to an order of an administrative judge, or 
    requests for the investigative file, for documents, records, 
    comparative data, statistics, affidavits, or the attendance of 
    witness(es), the administrative judge shall, in appropriate 
    circumstances:
    * * * * *
        (i) Decisions by administrative judges. Unless the administrative 
    judge makes a written determination that good cause exists for 
    extending the time for issuing a decision, an administrative judge 
    shall issue a decision on the complaint, and shall order appropriate 
    remedies and relief where discrimination is found, within 180 days of 
    receipt by the administrative judge of the complaint file from the 
    agency. The administrative judge shall send copies of the hearing 
    record, including the transcript, and the decision to the parties. If 
    an agency does not issue a final order within 40 days of receipt of the 
    administrative judge's decision in accordance with 1614.110, then the 
    decision of the administrative judge shall become the final action of 
    the agency.
        9. Section 1614.110 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.110  Final action by agencies.
    
        (a) Final action by an agency following a decision by an 
    administrative judge. When an administrative judge has issued a 
    decision under Sec. 1614.109(b), (g) or (i), the agency shall take 
    final action on the complaint by issuing a final order within 40 days 
    of receipt of the hearing file and the administrative judge's decision. 
    The final order shall notify the complainant whether or not the agency 
    will fully implement the decision of the administrative judge and shall 
    contain notice of the complainant's right to appeal to the Equal 
    Employment Opportunity Commission, the right to file a civil action in 
    federal district court, the name of the proper defendant in any such 
    lawsuit and the applicable time limits for appeals and lawsuits. If the 
    final order does not fully implement the decision of the administrative 
    judge, then the agency shall simultaneously file an appeal in 
    accordance with Sec. 1614.403 and append a copy of the appeal to the 
    final order. A copy of EEOC Form 573 shall be attached to the final 
    order.
        (b) Final action by an agency in all other circumstances. When an 
    agency dismisses an entire complaint under Sec. 1614.107, receives a 
    request for an immediate final decision or does not receive a reply to 
    the notice issued under Sec. 1614.108(f), the agency shall take final 
    action by issuing a final decision. The final decision shall consist of 
    findings by the agency on the merits of each issue in the complaint, 
    or, as appropriate, the rationale for dismissing any claims in the 
    complaint and, when discrimination is found,
    
    [[Page 37658]]
    
    appropriate remedies and relief in accordance with subpart E of this 
    part. The agency shall issue the final decision within 60 days of 
    receiving notification that a complainant has requested an immediate 
    decision from the agency, or within 60 days of the end of the 30-day 
    period for the complainant to request a hearing or an immediate final 
    decision where the complainant has not requested either a hearing or a 
    decision. The final action shall contain notice of the right to appeal 
    the final action to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the 
    right to file a civil action in federal district court, the name of the 
    proper defendant in any such lawsuit and the applicable time limits for 
    appeals and lawsuits. A copy of EEOC Form 573 shall be attached to the 
    final action.
    
    
    Sec. 1614.201  [Amended]
    
        10. Section 1614.201 is amended by removing the words ``Federal 
    Sector Programs, 1801 L St., NW., Washington, DC 20507'' in the second 
    sentence of paragraph (a) and adding the words ``at P.O. Box 19848, 
    Washington, DC 20036, or by personal delivery or facsimile'' in their 
    place, removing the words ``issued a final decision'' in paragraph 
    (c)(1) and adding the words ``taken final action'' in their place and 
    removing the words ``the issuance of a final decision'' in paragraph 
    (c)(2) and adding the words ``final action'' in their place.
        11. Section 1614.204 is amended by revising paragraph (b), removing 
    the words ``recommend that the agency'' from paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(3), 
    (d)(4), and (d)(5), removing the word ``recommend'' and adding the word 
    ``decide'' in its place in paragraph (d)(6), revising paragraphs 
    (d)(7), (e)(1), (g)(2), (g)(4), and (l)(3), and removing the word 
    ``agency'' and adding the word ``agent'' in its place in paragraph 
    (j)(7), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.204  Class complaints.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Pre-complaint processing. An employee or applicant who wishes 
    to file a class complaint must seek counseling and be counseled in 
    accordance with Sec. 1614.105. A complainant may move for class 
    certification at any reasonable point in the process when it becomes 
    apparent that there are class implications to the claim raised in an 
    individual complaint. If a complainant moves for class certification 
    after completing the counseling process contained in Sec. 1614.105, no 
    additional counseling is required. The administrative judge shall deny 
    class certification when the complainant has unduly delayed in moving 
    for certification.
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (7) The administrative judge shall transmit his or her decision to 
    accept or dismiss a complaint to the agency and the agent. The agency 
    shall take final action by issuing a final order within 40 days of 
    receipt of the hearing record and administrative judge's decision. The 
    final order shall notify the agent whether or not the agency will 
    implement the decision of the administrative judge. If the final order 
    does not implement the decision of the administrative judge, the agency 
    shall simultaneously appeal the administrative judge's decision in 
    accordance with Sec. 1614.403 and append a copy of the appeal to the 
    final order. A dismissal of a class complaint shall inform the agent 
    either that the complaint is being filed on that date as an individual 
    complaint of discrimination and will be processed under subpart A or 
    that the complaint is also dismissed as an individual complaint in 
    accordance with Sec. 1614.107. In addition, it shall inform the agent 
    of the right to appeal the dismissal of the class complaint to the 
    Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or to file a civil action and 
    shall include EEOC Form 573, Notice of Appeal/Petition.
        (e) * * * (1) Within 15 days of receiving notice that the 
    administrative judge has accepted a class complaint or a reasonable 
    time frame specified by the administrative judge, the agency shall use 
    reasonable means, such as delivery, mailing to last known address or 
    distribution, to notify all class members of the acceptance of the 
    class complaint.
    * * * * *
        (g) * * *
        (2) The complaint may be resolved by agreement of the agency and 
    the agent at any time pursuant to the notice and approval procedure 
    contained in paragraph (g)(4) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (4) Notice of the resolution shall be given to all class members in 
    the same manner as notification of the acceptance of the class 
    complaint and to the administrative judge. It shall state the relief, 
    if any, to be granted by the agency and the name and address of the 
    EEOC administrative judge assigned to the case. It shall state that 
    within 30 days of the date of the notice of resolution, any member of 
    the class may petition the administrative judge to vacate the 
    resolution because it benefits only the class agent, or is otherwise 
    not fair, adequate and reasonable to the class as a whole. The 
    administrative judge shall review the notice of resolution and consider 
    any petitions to vacate filed. If the administrative judge finds that 
    the proposed resolution is not fair, adequate and reasonable to the 
    class as a whole, the administrative judge shall issue a decision 
    vacating the agreement and may replace the original class agent with a 
    petitioner or some other class member who is eligible to be the class 
    agent during further processing of the class complaint. The decision 
    shall inform the former class agent or the petitioner of the right to 
    appeal the decision to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and 
    include EEOC Form 573, Notice of Appeal/Petition. If the administrative 
    judge finds that the resolution is fair, adequate and reasonable to the 
    class as a whole, the resolution shall bind all members of the class.
    * * * * *
        (l) * * *
        (3) When discrimination is found in the final decision and a class 
    member believes that he or she is entitled to individual relief, the 
    class member may file a written claim with the head of the agency or 
    its EEO Director within 30 days of receipt of notification by the 
    agency of its final decision. Administrative judges shall retain 
    jurisdiction over the complaint in order to resolve any disputed claims 
    by class members. The claim must include a specific, detailed showing 
    that the claimant is a class member who was affected by the 
    discriminatory policy or practice, and that this discriminatory action 
    took place within the period of time for which the agency found class-
    wide discrimination in its final decision. Where a finding of 
    discrimination against a class has been made, there shall be a 
    presumption of discrimination as to each member of the class. The 
    agency must show by clear and convincing evidence that any class member 
    is not entitled to relief. The administrative judge may hold a hearing 
    or otherwise supplement the record on a claim filed by a class member. 
    The agency or the Commission may find class-wide discrimination and 
    order remedial action for any policy or practice in existence within 45 
    days of the agent's initial contact with the Counselor. Relief 
    otherwise consistent with this Part may be ordered for the time the 
    policy or practice was in effect. The agency shall issue a final 
    decision on each such claim within 90 days of filing. Such decision 
    must include a notice of the right to file an appeal or a civil action 
    in accordance with
    
    [[Page 37659]]
    
    subpart D of this part and the applicable time limits.
    
    
    Sec. 1614.302  [Amended]
    
        12. Section 1614.302 is amended by removing the words ``5 CFR 
    1201.154(a)'' in paragraph (d)(1)(i) and adding the words ``5 CFR 
    1201.154(b)(2)'' in their place.
        13. Section 1614.401 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (b) 
    through (d) as paragraphs (c) through (e), revising paragraph (a), 
    adding a new paragraph (b), and revising redesignated paragraph (c) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.401  Appeals to the Commission.
    
        (a) A complainant may appeal an agency's final action or dismissal 
    of a complaint.
        (b) An agency may appeal as provided in Sec. 1614.110(a).
        (c) A class agent or an agency may appeal an administrative judge's 
    decision accepting or dismissing all or part of a class complaint; a 
    class agent may appeal a final decision on a class complaint; a class 
    member may appeal a final decision on a claim for individual relief 
    under a class complaint; and a class member, a class agent or an agency 
    may appeal a final decision on a petition pursuant to 
    Sec. 1614.204(g)(4).
    * * * * *
        14. Section 1614.402 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.402  Time for appeals to the Commission.
    
        (a) Appeals described in Sec. 1614.401(a) and (c) must be filed 
    within 30 days of receipt of the dismissal, final action or decision. 
    Appeals described in Sec. 1614.401(b) must be filed within 40 days of 
    receipt of the hearing file and decision. Where a complainant has 
    notified the EEO Director of alleged noncompliance with a settlement 
    agreement in accordance with Sec. 1614.504, the complainant may file an 
    appeal 35 days after service of the allegations of noncompliance, but 
    no later than 30 days after receipt of an agency's determination.
    * * * * *
        15. Section 1614.403 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.403  How to appeal.
    
        (a) The complainant, agency, agent, grievant or individual class 
    claimant (hereinafter appellant) must file an appeal with the Director, 
    Office of Federal Operations, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 
    at P.O. Box 19848, Washington, DC 20036, or by personal delivery or 
    facsimile. The appellant should use EEOC Form 573, Notice of Appeal/
    Petition, and should indicate what is being appealed.
        (b) The appellant shall furnish a copy of the appeal to the 
    opposing party at the same time it is filed with the Commission. In or 
    attached to the appeal to the Commission, the appellant must certify 
    the date and method by which service was made on the opposing party.
        (c) If an appellant does not file an appeal within the time limits 
    of this subpart, the appeal shall be dismissed by the Commission as 
    untimely.
        (d) Any statement or brief on behalf of a complainant in support of 
    the appeal must be submitted to the Office of Federal Operations within 
    30 days of filing the notice of appeal. Any statement or brief on 
    behalf of the agency in support of its appeal must be submitted to the 
    Office of Federal Operations within 20 days of filing the notice of 
    appeal. The Office of Federal Operations will accept statements or 
    briefs in support of an appeal by facsimile transmittal, provided they 
    are no more than 10 pages long.
        (e) The agency must submit the complaint file to the Office of 
    Federal Operations within 30 days of initial notification that the 
    complainant has filed an appeal or within 30 days of submission of an 
    appeal by the agency.
        (f) Any statement or brief in opposition to an appeal must be 
    submitted to the Commission and served on the opposing party within 30 
    days of receipt of the statement or brief supporting the appeal, or, if 
    no statement or brief supporting the appeal is filed, within 60 days of 
    receipt of the appeal. The Office of Federal Operations will accept 
    statements or briefs in opposition to an appeal by facsimile provided 
    they are no more than 10 pages long.
        16. Section 1614.404 is amended by adding a new paragraph (c) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.404  Appellate procedure.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) When either party to an appeal fails without good cause shown 
    to comply with the requirements of this section or to respond fully and 
    in timely fashion to requests for information, the Office of Federal 
    Operations shall, in appropriate circumstances:
        (1) Draw an adverse inference that the requested information would 
    have reflected unfavorably on the party refusing to provide the 
    requested information;
        (2) Consider the matters to which the requested information or 
    testimony pertains to be established in favor of the opposing party;
        (3) Issue a decision fully or partially in favor of the opposing 
    party; or
        (4) Take such other actions as appropriate.
        17. Section 1614.405 is amended by revising the third sentence of 
    paragraph (a), by removing the words ``certified mail, return receipt 
    requested'' from the last sentence of paragraph (a) and adding the 
    words ``first class mail'' in their place and revising paragraph (b) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.405  Decisions on appeals.
    
        (a) * * * The decision on an appeal from an agency's final action 
    shall be based on a de novo review, except that the review of the 
    factual findings in a decision by an administrative judge issued 
    pursuant to Sec. 1614.109(i) shall be based on a substantial evidence 
    standard of review. * * *
        (b) A decision issued under paragraph (a) of this section is final 
    within the meaning of Sec. 1614.407 unless the Commission reconsiders 
    the case. A party may request reconsideration within 30 days of receipt 
    of a decision of the Commission, which the Commission in its discretion 
    may grant, if the party demonstrates that:
        (1) The appellate decision involved a clearly erroneous 
    interpretation of material fact or law; or
        (2) The decision will have a substantial impact on the policies, 
    practices or operations of the agency.
    
    
    Sec. 1614.407  [Removed]
    
    
    Secs. 1614.408 through 1614.410  [Redesignated as Secs. 1614.407 
    through 1614.409]
    
        18. Section 1614.407 is removed and Secs. 1614.408 through 1614.410 
    are redesignated as Secs. 1614.407 through 1614.409.
        19. Redesignated Sec. 1614.407 is amended by removing the words 
    ``final decision'' from paragraph (a) and adding the words ``final 
    action'' in their place and by removing the words ``a final decision 
    has not been issued'' from paragraph (b) and adding the words ``final 
    action has not been taken'' in their place.
        20. Section 1614.501 is amended by revising the last sentence of 
    the introductory text of paragraph (e)(1), and revising paragraphs 
    (e)(1)(iv) and (e)(2)(i), the first sentence of paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) 
    and paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.501  Remedies and relief.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Attorney's fees or costs--(1) * * * In a decision or final 
    action, the agency, administrative judge, or Commission may award the 
    applicant or employee
    
    [[Page 37660]]
    
    reasonable attorney's fees (including expert witness fees) and other 
    costs incurred in the processing of the complaint.
    * * * * *
        (iv) Attorney's fees shall be paid for services performed by an 
    attorney after the filing of a written complaint, provided that the 
    attorney provides reasonable notice of representation to the agency, 
    administrative judge or Commission, except that fees are allowable for 
    a reasonable period of time prior to the notification of representation 
    for any services performed in reaching a determination to represent the 
    complainant. Agencies are not required to pay attorney's fees for 
    services performed during the pre-complaint process, except that fees 
    are allowable when the Commission affirms on appeal an administrative 
    judge's decision finding discrimination after an agency takes final 
    action by not implementing an administrative judge's decision. Written 
    submissions to the agency that are signed by the representative shall 
    be deemed to constitute notice of representation.
        (2) * * * (i) When the agency, administrative judge or the 
    Commission determines an entitlement to attorney's fees or costs, the 
    complainant's attorney shall submit a verified statement of attorney's 
    fees (including expert witness fees) and other costs, as appropriate, 
    to the agency or administrative judge within 30 days of receipt of the 
    decision and shall submit a copy of the statement to the agency. A 
    statement of attorney's fees and costs shall be accompanied by an 
    affidavit executed by the attorney of record itemizing the attorney's 
    charges for legal services. The agency may respond to a statement of 
    attorney's fees and costs within 30 days of its receipt. The verified 
    statement, accompanying affidavit and any agency response shall be made 
    a part of the complaint file.
        (ii)(A) The agency or administrative judge shall issue a decision 
    determining the amount of attorney's fees or costs due within 60 days 
    of receipt of the statement and affidavit. * * *
        (B) The amount of attorney's fees shall be calculated using the 
    following standards: The starting point shall be the number of hours 
    reasonably expended multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate. There is a 
    strong presumption that this amount represents the reasonable fee. In 
    limited circumstances, this amount may be reduced or increased in 
    consideration of the degree of success, quality of representation, and 
    long delay caused by the agency.
    * * * * *
        21. Section 1614.502 is amended by revising the first sentence of 
    paragraph (a), revising the introductory text of paragraph (b), 
    revising paragraph (b)(2) and adding a new paragraph (b)(3) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.502  Compliance with final Commission decisions.
    
        (a) Relief ordered in a final Commission decision is mandatory and 
    binding on the agency except as provided in this section. * * *
        (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, when the agency 
    requests reconsideration and the case involves removal, separation, or 
    suspension continuing beyond the date of the request for 
    reconsideration, and when the decision orders retroactive restoration, 
    the agency shall comply with the decision to the extent of the 
    temporary or conditional restoration of the employee to duty status in 
    the position specified by the Commission, pending the outcome of the 
    agency request for reconsideration.
    * * * * *
        (2) When the agency requests reconsideration, it may delay the 
    payment of any amounts ordered to be paid to the complainant until 
    after the request for reconsideration is resolved. If the agency delays 
    payment of any amount pending the outcome of the request to reconsider 
    and the resolution of the request requires the agency to make the 
    payment, then the agency shall pay interest from the date of the 
    original appellate decision until payment is made.
        (3) The agency shall notify the Commission and the employee in 
    writing at the same time it requests reconsideration that the relief it 
    provides is temporary or conditional and, if applicable, that it will 
    delay the payment of any amounts owed but will pay interest as 
    specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Failure of the agency to 
    provide notification will result in the dismissal of the agency's 
    request.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 1614.504  [Amended]
    
        22. Section 1614.504 is amended by removing the words ``final 
    decisions'' from the section heading and adding the words ``final 
    action'' in their place, removing the words ``A final decision'' from 
    the second sentence of paragraph (a) and adding the words ``Final 
    action'' in their place, and removing the word ``final'' from the third 
    sentence of paragraph (a) and the second sentence of paragraph (b).
        23. Section 1614.505 is added to subpart E to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.505  Interim relief.
    
        (a)(1) When the agency appeals and the case involves removal, 
    separation, or suspension continuing beyond the date of the appeal, and 
    when the administrative judge's decision orders retroactive 
    restoration, the agency shall comply with the decision to the extent of 
    the temporary or conditional restoration of the employee to duty status 
    in the position specified in the decision, pending the outcome of the 
    agency appeal. The employee may decline the offer of interim relief.
        (2) Service under the temporary or conditional restoration 
    provisions of paragraph (a)(1) of this section shall be credited toward 
    the completion of a probationary or trial period, eligibility for a 
    within-grade increase, or the completion of the service requirement for 
    career tenure, if the Commission upholds the decision on appeal. Such 
    service shall not be credited toward the completion of any applicable 
    probationary or trial period or the completion of the service 
    requirement for career tenure if the Commission reverses the decision 
    on appeal.
        (3) When the agency appeals, it may delay the payment of any 
    amount, other than prospective pay and benefits, ordered to be paid to 
    the complainant until after the appeal is resolved. If the agency 
    delays payment of any amount pending the outcome of the appeal and the 
    resolution of the appeal requires the agency to make the payment, then 
    the agency shall pay interest from the date of the original decision 
    until payment is made.
        (4) The agency shall notify the Commission and the employee in 
    writing at the same time it appeals that the relief it provides is 
    temporary or conditional and, if applicable, that it will delay the 
    payment of any amounts owed but will pay interest as specified in 
    paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Failure of the agency to provide 
    notification will result in the dismissal of the agency's appeal.
        (5) The agency may, by notice to the complainant, decline to return 
    the complainant to his or her place of employment if it determines that 
    the return or presence of the complainant will be unduly disruptive to 
    the work environment. However, prospective pay and benefits must be 
    provided. The determination not to return the complainant to his or her 
    place of employment is not reviewable. A grant of interim relief does 
    not insulate a complainant from subsequent disciplinary or adverse 
    action.
        (b) If the agency files an appeal and has not provided required 
    interim relief, the complainant may request dismissal
    
    [[Page 37661]]
    
    of the agency's appeal. Any such request must be filed with the Office 
    of Federal Operations within 25 days of the date of service of the 
    agency's appeal. A copy of the request must be served on the agency at 
    the same time it is filed with EEOC. The agency may respond with 
    evidence and argument to the complainant's request to dismiss within 15 
    days of the date of service of the request.
    
    
    Sec. 1614.603  [Amended]
    
        24. Section 1614.603 is amended by removing the word 
    ``allegations'' from the last sentence and adding the word ``claims'' 
    in its place.
    
    
    Sec. 1614.604  [Amended]
    
        25. Section 1614.604 is amended by removing the words ``delivered 
    in person'' and adding the word ``received'' in their place in 
    paragraph (b).
        26. Section 1614.605 is amended by revising the second sentence of 
    paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.605  Representation and official time.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * * When the complainant designates an attorney as 
    representative, service of all official correspondence shall be made on 
    the attorney and the complainant, but time frames for receipt of 
    materials shall be computed from the time of receipt by the attorney. * 
    * *
    * * * * *
        27. Section 1614.606 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1614.606  Joint processing and consolidation of complaints.
    
        Complaints of discrimination filed by two or more complainants 
    consisting of substantially similar allegations of discrimination or 
    relating to the same matter may be consolidated by the agency or the 
    Commission for joint processing after appropriate notification to the 
    parties. Two or more complaints of discrimination filed by the same 
    complainant shall be consolidated by the agency for joint processing 
    after appropriate notification to the complainant. When a complaint has 
    been consolidated with one or more earlier filed complaints, the agency 
    shall complete its investigation within the earlier of 180 days after 
    the filing of the last complaint or 360 days after the filing of the 
    original complaint, except that the complainant may request a hearing 
    from an administrative judge on the consolidated complaints any time 
    after 180 days from the date of the first filed complaint. 
    Administrative judges or the Commission may, in their discretion, 
    consolidate two or more complaints of discrimination filed by the same 
    complainant.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-17497 Filed 7-9-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6570-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/12/1999
Department:
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-17497
Pages:
37644-37661 (18 pages)
RINs:
3046-AA66: Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity Procedures
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3046-AA66/federal-sector-equal-employment-opportunity-procedures
PDF File:
99-17497.pdf
CFR: (27)
29 CFR 23.43[1][a]
29 CFR 1614.204(g)(4)
29 CFR 1614.102
29 CFR 1614.103
29 CFR 1614.105
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