The Columbus Dispatch

Plan to report worker pay by race and gender halted

- By James F. Peltz

The White House has halted an Obama administra­tion rule that would require businesses to report worker pay data by gender, race and ethnic groups in hope of narrowing wage gaps among workers.

The plan was announced by President Barack Obama in early 2016 and was set to take effect early next year.

But the Trump administra­tion, siding with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and others, contended that the data collection would be too burdensome for firms and questioned how effective the informatio­n might be in fighting wage discrimina­tion.

Critics of the White House move, which came in a memo from the Office of Management and Budget on Tuesday, were outraged.

“Make no mistake — it’s an all-out attack on equal pay,” Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women’s Law Center, said in a statement. “Today’s action sends a clear message to employers: If you want to ignore pay inequities and sweep them under the rug, this administra­tion has your back.”

The plan would have expanded a 2014 executive order that the Labor Department collect wage data by gender, race and ethnicity from federal contractor­s.

The Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission had proposed that all employers with at least 100 workers submit the data across 10 job categories and 12 pay ranges on a form they already are required to submit annually that includes employment data by gender, race and ethnicity.

Specific salaries would not be reported and the data would not be made public. The EEOC said it would analyze the informatio­n to better focus investigat­ions into unlawful pay practices.

But Neomi Rao, administra­tor of the OMB’s Office of Informatio­n and Regulatory Affairs, sent a memo to EEOC Acting Chair Victoria Lipnic saying the Office of Management and Budget was “initiating a review and immediate stay” of the new plan.

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