July
20, 2004
The Honorable Judd Gregg The
Honorable Frank Wolf
Chairman Chairman
Senate Commerce, Justice, State, and House Commerce,
Justice, State and
the
Judiciary Appropriations Subcommittee the Judiciary Appropriations Subcommittee
U.S. Senate
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20510 Washington, D.C. 20515
The Honorable Ernest F. Hollings The Honorable Jose
Serrano
Ranking Member Ranking
Member
Senate Commerce, Justice, State, and House Commerce,
Justice, State and
the Judiciary Appropriations Subcommittee the Judiciary
Appropriations Subcommittee
U.S. Senate U.S.
House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20510 Washington, D.C. 20515
Dear Chairmen Gregg and Wolf and Ranking
Members Hollings and Serrano:
The undersigned organizations write to urge
that your subcommittees include restrictive language in the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission’s appropriation bill, which would prevent the agency
from creating a privatized call center and reducing field offices. These two initiatives, which are encompassed in EEOC’s $5 million
request for “Workforce Repositioning,” would harm the ability of the agency to
carry out its important mission. Forty
years ago, pursuant to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Congress established the
EEOC to prevent and eliminate discrimination in the workplace. However, even though discrimination
persists today, the EEOC’s Chair Cari Dominguez is asking Congress for funding
to be used to diminish the agency’s quality of service and physical presence
throughout the country. Also, the EEOC
is diminishing services to Federal workers, by instituting a triage system in
its Washington Field Office, which denies employees the right to a hearing and
to discover evidence to support their claims of discrimination.
The EEOC’s proposed national call center is
bad for your constituents, both employers and employees, for three reasons.
First , it will hinder rather than help individuals in filing complaints and
getting accurate answers to pursue their claim. Presently, experienced EEOC professionals, including
investigators, mediators, and attorneys, respond to calls from private and
Federal sector employees regarding allegations of discrimination in the
workplace. The EEOC would like to steer
questions instead to privatized contract operators, who will have only six to
seven days training in EEOC laws. The
logical result will be that callers will receive inaccurate information or will
be subjected to an unnecessary layer of aggravation, when the operator cannot
answer the question and transfers the call to the EEOC. We are all familiar with calling a customer
service line, being transferred around, waiting on hold, sometimes being
disconnected, and often not getting an answer to our question. Are we going to trust legal rights to such
a system?
The second reason the call center is
misguided is that it will contract out inherently governmental work, which is
capably performed now by Federal employees.
Even worse, the EEOC is not allowing Federal employees to compete for
the call center contract. Instead the
EEOC is falsely claiming that this is “new work,” even though its employees
have responded to calls from the public since the agency opened its doors four
decades ago.
Finally, paying for a costly call center
siphons money from the EEOC’s already tight budget, which would be better
devoted to replacing the three hundred employees who have been lost during a
three year hiring freeze that Chair Dominguez imposed upon her
appointment. With the likely
expectation that EEOC will at best be allocated no more than inflationary
increases, how will it pay for a call center without making changes in
operations that will result in reduced services to the public? It is counterintuitive to pay for a costly
call center to do what EEOC staff are now capably performing, without added
expense to the budget.
Likewise, there is no justification for EEOC’s
plan to collapse 51 field offices into 10 or 11 mega offices. At a recent American Bar Association
meeting, EEOC Commissioner Paul Miller stated: “I don't understand how the
plan to designate 10 or 11 district offices as 'mega‑offices' either
strengthens our mission or addresses the agency's funding issue." The undersigned organizations agree. Community-based offices can better serve the
public, because they are more accessible and are more knowledgeable regarding
local issues of concern. Conversely,
reducing offices means reducing services to your constituents.
Therefore, we are requesting that you
continue to support the EEOC by providing it adequate funds for its mission,
most crucially for hiring, in order to restore the three hundred positions
which have been lost during the hiring freeze.
Additionally, we strenuously urge you to include restrictive language
in the EEOC’s appropriation bill which will prevent the agency from wasting
resources on a national call center and diminishing its presence by closing or
downsizing offices. Finally, despite a public
notice in the Federal Register stating that a date is still “to be determined”
for Federal Sector reform, the EEOC has implemented substantive regulatory
changes in its Washington Field Office that short circuit the right to a
hearing and discovery. Please call on
Chair Dominguez to abide by the regulatory process and halt these premature
reforms.
Sincerely,
American Federation of Government Employees,
AFL-CIO
American Federation of Labor and Congress
of Industrial Organizations
American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees
Broward County Commission on the Status of
Women
Eastern Pennsylvania Chapter of the National
Employment Lawyers Association
Hawaii Chapter of the National Employment
Lawyers Association
Individual Rights and Responsibilities
Section of the State Bar of Wisconsin
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
Metropolitan Washington Employment Lawyers
Association
Minnesota Chapter of the National Employment
Lawyers Association
National Council of EEOC Locals, No. 216,
AFGE/AFL-CIO
National Organization for Women
New Hampshire Chapter of the National
Employment Lawyers Association
9 to 5, National Association of Working Women
People for the American Way
Public Interest Law Section of the State Bar
of Wisconsin
Southern Poverty Law Center
West Virginia Employment Lawyers
Wisconsin Employment Lawyers Association