USA TODAY US Edition

Civil rights agency fails Black employees

EEOC triage system gives some racial bias claims low priority

- Nick Penzenstad­ler USA TODAY

A noose in the workplace and a string of racist commentary were the final straw for Los Angeles juvenile correction­s worker Darren Gales.

A trained equal employment opportunit­y instructor, Gales gathered his evidence and lodged official complaints with the nation’s anti-discrimina­tion agency, expecting swift accountabi­lity against his longtime employer.

That was four years ago. To his chagrin, the agency created in the image of civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. punted his complaint into a low-priority case management system even after he provided photos, affidavits, recordings, witness statements and a mountain of records.

Managers set up that system decades ago to triage a crush of discrimina­tion claims that threatened to overload the mission of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission. Since then, they’ve adopted a strategy to prioritize cases. Discrimina­tion claims

that involve new areas of employment law, including transgende­r discrimina­tion, could get priority. Traditiona­l cases based on racial discrimina­tion can fall to the bottom of the list.

All of these factors contribute to a secret reality: Some Black workers who complain about discrimina­tion are being discrimina­ted against by the EEOC itself.

That reality shows up clearly in a slice of the agency’s internal tracking data obtained by USA TODAY, which shows the scant attention claims from Black workers received in several regional offices. The informatio­n provides a small window into the highest priority cases from September 2019 to August 2020.

In many places, staff deemed few or no Black discrimina­tion charges met its top categories by showing “strategic significan­ce.” The data showed the offices in Albuquerqu­e, Boston and Dallas flagged only one Black discrimina­tion case each. Chicago identified none.

Combined, those regions are home to millions of Black workers.

Problems with the triage system were highlighte­d by interviews with 15 current and former EEOC staffers and complainan­ts. Several people still employed within the federal government spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retributio­n at their jobs. Others spoke openly, saying the Priority Charge Handling Procedure has run amok.

With dwindling staff, the EEOC has embraced employee incentives like time off and Subway gift cards, and punishment­s like delayed career advancemen­t, to ensure investigat­ors close cases as quickly as possible – to the point that EEOC workers say they are abandoning clear and winnable cases of racial discrimina­tion.

Workers at the agency told USA TODAY the situation at the EEOC has become untenable for investigat­ors, who face a dizzying matrix of priority ranking that grew from an informal quota system with an “A, B, C” grading system – a claim backed by leaked emails – alongside the whim and idiosyncra­sies of district managers and the ever-present pressure to reduce backlog.

“It’s mind-boggling and dishearten­ing,” said Brandon Washington, the EEOC investigat­or tasked with investigat­ing the Gales case.

Gales took matters into his own hands, hired a private attorney and got a settlement last week just before his case was expected to go to trial before a federal judge.

Washington felt so strongly that Gales’ case should be given the agency’s attention that he fought his supervisor­s – eventually lodging formal complaints with local and national officials. EEOC supervisor­s fired him earlier this year for “unacceptab­le performanc­e” in managing his case inventory. Washington, who is Black, sees it as retaliatio­n for his complaints.

Charles Coleman, a private attorney in New York who worked in the legal department at EEOC from 2009 to 2018, said he constantly pushed for more race cases to get attention.

“There was a very strong hesitance to pursue and litigate race-based claims,” Coleman said. “For me, as a Black man, I was disappoint­ed . ... Our core mission was rooted in racial equality.”

EEOC leaders responded to detailed questions with a written statement from Chairwoman Charlotte Burrows, a Biden administra­tion appointee. She wrote that “the heart of EEOC’s work is to advance equal opportunit­y in the nation’s workplaces.”

But she acknowledg­ed: “Keeping up with the volume of incoming charges has always been a challenge for the agency. That challenge has become more acute as the need for our services has increased and our staffing levels have not kept pace.”

Advent of the triage system

Formed in the crucible of the civil rights era, by the 1990s the EEOC became backlogged with so many cases that it created a triage system. Now, investigat­ors and workers say that system squeezes out some of the very Black workers it was designed to protect.

EEOC investigat­ors, who fielded more than 67,000 formal charges nationwide last year, are supposed to collect evidence and then determine if labor laws were broken. The agency has just under 2,000 employees and a budget of $390 million – the smallest it has been in three decades.

The Priority Charge Handling Procedure seeks to prioritize cases most likely to find provable discrimina­tion but puts extra emphasis on employers with systemic problems or those that can set precedents in employment law.

It can mean prioritizi­ng “sizzle” or “hot button” cases over yet another instance of Black or brown workers being discrimina­ted against in the workplace, investigat­ors said.

The EEOC’s case intake personnel are the gatekeeper­s for aggrieved employees. Anyone who wants to file a federal lawsuit alleging discrimina­tion against their employer must first file a charge with the agency.

About a third of the claims receive top priority help from investigat­ors or a legal filing on their behalf. Most of the rest are given a “Notice of Right to Sue” letters and the go-ahead to pursue private litigation on their own.

Not true to the mission

The priority rankings for which cases get EEOC help and which don’t have strayed from their original mission, said Rae Vann, an employment lawyer who testified before Congress on behalf of the Equal Employment Advisory Council, a labor law nonprofit now known as the Center for Workplace Compliance.

“It’s obviously important to set enforcemen­t priorities, but it’s crucially important to train investigat­ors so that garden variety charges don’t fall through the cracks,” Vann said.

She said the EEOC also has long prioritize­d charges as a means to develop case law that could help protect the next generation of workers nationwide.

That can mean pushing the boundaries of LGBTQ discrimina­tion in the wake of the Supreme Court’s 2020 Bostock ruling, which extended workplace protection to employees based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

While Black workers may receive less attention in any given region, the deprioriti­zation also could leave Asian, older or Hispanic workers without much help.

It can mean putting employers with name recognitio­n and cache on the front burner because those cases are more likely to gain attention from the public, she said, and in turn drive wider changes.

“The name of an employer shouldn’t matter, but they’re looking at impact across an organizati­on, industry or community,” Vann said. “Kate and Ray’s mom and pop bodega is not going to have the same impact from a deterrent standpoint as going after a highly publicized action against Whole Foods.”

Several current and former EEOC investigat­ors say decisions on where to focus also often reflect the whim of individual district managers.

Internal EEOC data from Dallas shows that from 2015 to 2019, Black workers in the area – which includes San Antonio, El Paso and parts of New Mexico – have formally filed more than 7,100 discrimina­tion claims with the agency. The district investigat­ed and substantia­ted the claims in 13 of those cases, about 1 in 550.

For context, data shared with Congress and posted online on all national claims – not just Black claims – for 2019 shows the agency investigat­ed and substantia­ted about 1 in 70.

A-B-Cs of EEOC procedure

In 1995, the EEOC adopted the first version of the Priority Charge Handling Procedure, calling for case triage based on “the likelihood of an investigat­ion resulting in a finding of reasonable cause to believe discrimina­tion occurred.”

Cases in the A bucket would mean discrimina­tion likely occurred; B’s needed further investigat­ion; and C’s would be those that likely won’t result in a finding of discrimina­tion even with more investigat­ion – the same rankings that exist today.

A rating of C “does not necessaril­y mean the claims have no merit; it is a determinat­ion about where best to apply the EEOC’s limited law enforcemen­t resources,” a spokeswoma­n wrote to USA TODAY. Employees with that grade can still file a private lawsuit.

But in practice, investigat­ors say, C’s are the end of the road for most workers.

“What does it mean to get a C? It means you’re done. We’re crushing your soul,” one current EEOC investigat­or told USA TODAY on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliatio­n from his supervisor­s.

“You fought traffic downtown ... paid $20 for parking, came upstairs and waited an hour to speak with me,” he said. “Now you have to explain a ‘prima facie’ case even though you work at Lowe’s or do constructi­on. And you’re facing an investigat­or trying to keep their inventory low. ‘Oh, you don’t have witnesses for your case? Oh, you never complained formally to your boss?’ Nothing we can do.”

The investigat­or said the case handling procedure has slowly created a class divide that the public never sees. For workers who lack the financial resources to hire an attorney to prepare an EEOC complaint, not getting help from the agency is a dead end.

In training material released under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, investigat­ors are told to prioritize cases through the system according to the national and local guidelines but provided a key reminder: “Although (the Priority Charge Handling Procedure) must take into account the agency’s limited resources, it should not be applied in a way that deprives charging parties of a fair opportunit­y to present their case.”

In August, EEOC officials posted the first public glimpse of the A-B-C charge categoriza­tion after pressure from Congress. Those statistics show that the commission reduced its backlog of cases by 45% in five years – from 76,000 in 2015 to 42,000 in 2020.

It also revealed that B and C charges represente­d 70% to 80% of all cases over the past five years. That means only a fraction of all charges receive any type of meaningful investigat­ion by EEOC staffers.

EEOC spokeswoma­n Christine Nazer pointed out that even after the commission decides not to investigat­e, workers are free to “exercise their rights to bring a private court action.” In all, EEOC statistics show it helped resolve about 3,000 charges of race discrimina­tion in fiscal year 2020, resulting in about $75 million in settlement­s and conciliati­ons for workers.

USA TODAY requested summary priority charge data for each district, which would not have included names or identifyin­g informatio­n. The commission withheld those records on grounds they would harm the confidenti­al and sensitive EEOC investigat­ive process. The newspaper appealed the denial, and the commission again declined this month.

Unwritten quotas?

Esaid Olvera was labeled an “all-star” investigat­or at EEOC offices in Seattle and Dallas. His supervisor­s loved him because he closed cases faster than all his peers. Now, he says, the system was rigged against those it was meant to protect.

“Hell yeah I feel guilty,” Olvera said. “I remember sitting there with these grown men in their 60s that just lost their marriage and were fired by a 26year-old, and I’m having to explain I’m doing ‘aggressive’ (handling procedures) and close his case while he’s sitting across from me crying.”

There was an unwritten quota at the Dallas office to close cases, he said. His supervisor tracked closures with a sign on her door, and he’d be rewarded with Subway gift cards.

“I would close a stack every day; sometimes 15 or 20 a day,” Olvera said.

Records released to USA TODAY under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act show some investigat­ors push through many more cases than their peers.

Data from 2016 to 2020 show that of the 865 investigat­ors who handled charges of discrimina­tion, eight handled more than 1,000 each. The top-performing investigat­or cleared more than 1,200 – nearly 250 a year on average.

The concerns over case expediency drew the attention of Congress in 2019, which called commission chair Janet Dhillon before a House committee. In response to written questions about quotas, Dhillon said there were no quotas.

“We have not imposed charge closure quotas on EEOC staff,” she wrote the committee, “and there is no quota on the number of charges that must be categorize­d as A, B, or C.”

That belies what’s happening behind the scenes, investigat­ors say.

An internal email provided to USA TODAY sent from the EEOC’s Miami district director to investigat­ors just months before Dhillon’s testimony spelled out his expectatio­ns of case closure and grading.

“We have an extraordin­arily inflated number of ‘A’ cases at intake and a dramatical­ly lower number of ‘C’ cases than the rest of the county. This is unacceptab­le,” then-director Michael Farrell wrote, calling an “emergency 1-hour meeting” to address the issue.

National officials did not respond to questions about Farrell’s emails. The agency found he failed to follow up on complaints and “incidents of harassment not only continued but have escalated,” according to a news report in Law360. He’s now a program manager for the agency’s intake informatio­n group.

Weeks after USA TODAY pressed the commission about reports of quotas, investigat­ors shared notes with reporters from managers who had changed their tune, directing their staff not to hit specific numeric quotas.

One in Dallas, sent in August, read: “This is a reminder that there are no agency mandated C charge targets, goals, or quotas.”

Wanting to be heard

Darren Gales said the year-and-ahalf process for the EEOC to deprioriti­ze his claim left him dejected. He expected the agency to help investigat­e and litigate his claims.

“I’ve been dealing with these types of behaviors for a long time – and my grandmothe­r used to say you have to pick your battles,” Gales said before his out-of-court settlement.

Los Angeles County officials defended their actions, saying they acted swiftly when notified of the discrimina­tory conduct by investigat­ing it and disciplini­ng the co-worker Gales said harassed him.

Washington, the former EEOC investigat­or, effectivel­y ended his career over the Gales case. He has appealed his own firing.

“His case fit every single part of our manual. This is a slam dunk,” Washington said. “But instead of protecting the rights of people who come to us for help, we’re prioritizi­ng the employer.”

USA

 ?? HARRISON HILL/USA TODAY ?? Los Angeles juvenile correction­s worker Darren Gales wanted accountabi­lity after he says he found a hangman’s noose left for him at work.
HARRISON HILL/USA TODAY Los Angeles juvenile correction­s worker Darren Gales wanted accountabi­lity after he says he found a hangman’s noose left for him at work.
 ?? ALLISON ZAUCHA/USA TODAY ?? Former EEOC investigat­or Brandon Washington fought his supervisor­s over Gales’ case. He was fired earlier this year.
ALLISON ZAUCHA/USA TODAY Former EEOC investigat­or Brandon Washington fought his supervisor­s over Gales’ case. He was fired earlier this year.
 ?? MIKE THOMPSON/USA TODAY NETWORK ??
MIKE THOMPSON/USA TODAY NETWORK

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