1 labor & employment women executives networking briefing ofccp, federal contractors & the...
TRANSCRIPT
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Labor & Employment Women Executives Networking Briefing
OFCCP, Federal Contractors & The Obama Administration
The New Compliance Requirements
April 1, 2009
Washington, D.C.
Presenters:
Constance A. Wilkinson, Esq.
John Ki, Esq.
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Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
Federal government contractors subject to Executive Order 11246, Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Vietnam Veterans’ Readjustment Act of 1974 (all as amended)
Taken together, these laws prohibit discrimination and require Federal contractors and subcontractors to take affirmative action to ensure that all individuals have an equal opportunity for employment, without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability or status as a Vietnam era or special disabled veteran.
Enforced by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP)
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FY 2008
During Fiscal Year (FY) 2008, the OFCCP recovered a record $67,510,982 in back pay and salary and benefits on behalf of 24,508 individuals
The FY 2008 financial recovery is a more than 20% increase over the amount recovered in FY 2007 ($51,680,950) and a 133% increase over the amount recovered in FY 2001 ($28,975,000)
99% was recovered in cases of systemic discrimination or those involving a significant number of workers or applicants subjected to discrimination because of an unlawful employment practice or policy
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Not Your Father’s Affirmative Action
Specifically prohibits quota and preferential hiring and promotions under the guise of affirmative action numerical goals (41 CFR 60-2.12(e), 60-2.30 and 60-2.15)
“No quotas” mantra was emphasized under Bush administration
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Affirmative Action Plans
Goal Setting Reports Workforce Analysis or Organizational Profile Job Group Analysis Availability Analysis and Backup Census Data Utilization (Comparison of Incumbency to Availability) Goals Personnel Activity Reports Placement Activity Report Narrative Discussion of Prior Years’ Goals Impact Ratio Analysis
• Adverse Impact Analysis • Overall Selection Rate Analysis • Two Standard Deviation Analysis
Compensation Analysis
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Special Rules
Internet Applicant Rule
Racial categories (two or more races)
Focus on statistical analysis: impact-ratio analysis
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What Now?
What do you do with your written AAP?
Self-Analysis
Identification of Problem Areas
Proactive Approach
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OFCCP Audits
“Contracts First”
Corporate Scheduling Announcement Letters (CSAL)
30-Days from receipt of letter to submit AAP
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Audit Review
“Active Case Management” (ACM)
Priority review – looking for statistical indicators of adverse impact
Desk audit vs. On site audit
1 in every 50 will be subject to full on-site review
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Best practices
NO RED FLAGS
Ensure that underlying data is accurate and reliable
If red flags appear, address them “as much as possible” before submitting the AAP
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Consequences
Conciliation Agreement
Monetary penalties, including fines
Back pay
Debarment
Ongoing scrutiny
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What to look forward to. . .
Continued focus on statistical indicators, but expect a pullback from “single-minded focus” on statistical back to other aspects of AAPs
Online filing of AAPsCompensation analysisMore enforcement
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Obama Executive Orders
"Notification of Employee Rights Under Federal Labor Laws”
Requires employers that contract with the federal government to formally notify employees of their rights under the NLRA
Until now, employers have generally not been required to affirmatively post notices advising employees of their rights under the NLRA.
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Obama Executive Order
"Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service Contractors"
Requires contractors, when they replace another contractor, to offer employment to the previous contractor’s employees on that job (other than managerial and supervisory personnel) — giving the workers a so-called “right of first refusal.”
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Obama Executive Order
"Economy in Government Contracting“
Prohibits government agencies from considering
as "allowable costs" those costs and expenses incurred by federal contractors to influence workers in deciding whether to form unions and/or engage in collective bargaining.
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Final Rule: Federal Ethics
Contractor Business Ethics Compliance Program and Disclosure Requirements, 73 Fed. Reg. 67064-67093 (Nov. 12, 2008), effective Dec. 12, 2008– Revised FAR 52.203-13 to impose more stringent
compliance and reporting requirements– For all contractors:– Mandatory disclosure– Code of business ethics and conduct– For other than small business or commercial items:– Business ethics awareness and compliance program – Internal control system– Subcontract flow down (if >$5M, 120 days term)
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Mandatory Disclosure
WHAT? Timely disclose “credible evidence” of --– “Significant overpayments”, under FAR– Federal criminal law violations, including fraud,
conflict of interest, bribery, improper gratuities – Civil False Claims Act violations– In connection with contract/subcontract award,
performance, closeout BY WHOM? Include conduct of the contractor’s
principal, employee, agent or subcontractor TO WHOM? Disclose to the agency OIG, copy
the Contracting Officer
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Mandatory Disclosure
WHEN? “Timely” is undefined “Credible evidence” standard is undefined
but requires “preliminary examination of the evidence to determine its credibility”– Conduct internal investigation of allegations– Determine whether “credible evidence” of a
violation exists, based on the facts, the legal standards, and expert advice, as necessary
– Document the investigation and the basis for the decision whether or not to disclose
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Mandatory Disclosure
STARTING WHEN? Multi-year contracts may include FAR 52.203-13 (December 2007), but
Mandatory disclosure requirement, effective 12/12/08, is driven by statute
FAR subjects contractors to penalty for noncompliance with mandatory disclosure requirement, “whether or not the clause at 52.203–13 is applicable,” by providing that a contractor may be suspended and/or debarred for knowing failure by a principal to timely disclose credible evidence of the referenced violations
Three-year “look-back” period is based on “final payment” under closed contacts– Prior contracts may be subject to reporting obligations depending on
timing of audit/closeout
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Implications for Federal Contractors
Cost accounting and chargingCertifications
– Certificate of Current Cost or Pricing Data– Certification of Final Indirect Costs– Certification and Disclosure of Payments to
Influence Certain Federal Transactions– COI certifications
Reports– EEO, Small Business Subcontracting Plan
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Comparison to 2007 Rule
Awareness-compliance program expressly requires an “effective training program”– “Reasonable steps to communicate
periodically and in a practical manner” the contractor’s standards and procedures
– Extends to “principals” and subcontractors and agents, as appropriate
Internal control system requires screening of principals and periodic review of program to assess effectiveness and risk
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Compliance Strategies
List contracts within scope of reporting obligation
Identify “principals” – Principal means an officer, director, owner,
partner, or a person having primary management or supervisory responsibilities within a business entity
– Intended to be construed broadly
Survey and obtain disclosure statements
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Compliance Strategies
Assess/supplement training materials to ensure appropriate coverage of legal standards– False Claims Act, conflict of interest, procurement integrity
Review adequacy of internal procedures to identify and assess possible violations for determination of “credible evidence”– Coordination by CCO or others?– Need for revision of subcontract/teaming agreements to flow-down
disclosure requirements and permit investigation and disclosure of business partner violations
Consider appropriate level of legal involvement in internal investigation and deliberation– Process, but not underlying violation, may be subject to attorney-client
communication and attorney work-product privileges Mark written disclosures with restrictive legend
– Confidential and Proprietary - Exempt from release under FOIA
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Open Issues/Questions
Agency-specific requirements for content/form of disclosure
Effect of consideration of disclosures in past performance and responsibility determinations
Need to reconcile the “adequate evidence” standard for suspension decisions (FAR 9.407-1(B)(1) with the “credible evidence” standard for mandatory disclosures
Timeframe for incorporating DEC 2008 version of clause into current contracts– Modification with consideration?
• Extension of time for implementation?