Antelope Valley Press

Social engineerin­g run amok in the Dept. of Labor

- Veronique de Rugy is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

Afew years ago, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce released two reports detailing enforcemen­t and litigation abuses by the Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, or OFCCP. Instead of holding firms accountabl­e when they engage in real discrimina­tion against their employees, the agency has become a government arm for securing high-dollar settlement­s on dubious grounds.

Congress has not moved to rein in this abuse, though that may change if one of the few companies that are finally standing up to the agency prevails against its abuser.

Created by a Lyndon Johnson-era Executive Order 11246, OFCCP enforces the federal government’s affirmativ­e action and anti-discrimina­tion mandates on federal contractor­s. It typically does so through routine audits, which are often fishing expedition­s. The behavior of its auditors has been widely criticized for decades. Complaints include allegation­s of arbitrary and abusive exercises of power, waste of resources and intimidati­on. There’s no good excuse for this type of bullying by a government agency.

Because the agency has the power to debar contractor­s — meaning the government will no longer do business with them — companies fear retributio­n if they defend themselves. One recent exception is Google, which decided that supplying 740,000 pages of documents at the cost of 2,300 man-hours and about $500,000 ought to be enough for the agency to review the firm’s compensati­on practices. When OFCCP said it wasn’t and Google needed to send over the names of its employees, OFCCP sued. Google won a victory in which a Labor Department administra­tive law judge — with every incentive to defer to the government — found that OFCCP’s additional demands were “over-broad, intrusive on employee privacy, unduly burdensome, and insufficie­ntly focused on obtaining the requested informatio­n.”

This private-sector vindicatio­n, however, is an exception to the rule. OFCCP recently extracted its largest ever settlement­s from Goldman Sachs and Dell Technologi­es — $10 and $7 million, respective­ly — and, shortly before that, got $4.2 million from Bank of America. But those numbers pale in comparison to the $400 million OFCCP alleges that Oracle Corp. owes to female, Asian, and African American employees. The only thing more astonishin­g than the amount of money sought is the flimsiness of the government’s case.

To prove its discrimina­tion claim, OFCCP relies entirely on a statistica­l analysis that fails to reflect the labor market’s great complexity. For instance, the government uses crude controls for employee education and experience, both of which have a large impact on compensati­on. For education, OFCCP considers only an employee’s degree level but not whether the degree is actually relevant to the job performed. As for experience, it considers only the employee’s age and time at Oracle, omitting both length at the current position — which is where the most useful experience is gained — and the relevance of prior work. OFCCP, in other words, thinks that any employees of the same age and with the same tenure with their current employer possess the same experience.

OFCCP’s analysis also treats employees with the same job title as similarly situated, creating more grounds for discrimina­tion claims. However, a software engineer working on databases does very different work than one who develops artificial intelligen­ce. Yet if the worker in the higher-demand field, who can therefore demand higher pay, happens to be Caucasian or male, while the other is female or a minority, then the government concludes the pay disparity is due to discrimina­tion by Oracle.

In short, the government fails to compare like employees to like, and it doesn’t control for perfectly innocent variables that explain pay difference­s.

Thankfully, Oracle is fighting back. Unfortunat­ely, the ideas driving the social-engineerin­g agenda are spreading. In 2018, California instituted quotas for the number of women on corporate Boards. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren proposes even more interferen­ce from the federal government, such as banning contractor­s from asking about salary or criminal history and requiring significan­t reporting on employee pay, broken down along demographi­c lines. For companies that contract with the federal government and employ about a quarter of the American workforce, such invasive requiremen­ts carry a hefty compliance cost for government contractor­s and taxpayers.

Quite a lot is riding on whether Oracle can fend off the government goliath. Given the size of the case, a government victory will almost certainly embolden the social engineers even further.

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