How Do I File an Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Complaint?
Information on the Administrative Processing of Discrimination Complaints
Background
What is the Legal Foundation for Filing an EEO Complaint?
Who May File a Complaint?
How Do I Make an EEO Complaint?
How Are Complaints Processed?
How Can I Appeal the Decision?
Can Anyone Help Me?
Background
It is the policy of the federal government to provide equal employment opportunity for all persons and to prohibit discrimination in employment. Any employee or applicant for employment who believes that they have been discriminated against because of their race, color, religion, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, age, physical or mental disability, and/or reprisal in an employment matter may file a complaint of discrimination.
What is the Legal Foundation for Filing an EEO Complaint?
Several statutes have been enacted to enforce the obligation of equal employment opportunity and protect the rights of employees and applicants:
- Title VII of the
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (as amended) prohibits individual and class
discrimination in the federal government on the basis of race, color, sex,
national origin, religion;
- The Age Discrimination
in Employment Act specifically prohibits discrimination in the federal government
on the basis of age when the complainant is 40 years of age or older;
- The Rehabilitation
Act of 1973 (as amended) prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability
and ;
- The Equal Pay Act
prohibits sex-based wage discrimination.
Retaliation prohibited by the above statutes is also prohibited.
Pursuant to 29 CFR § 1614, this organization has adopted procedures for processing individual and class complaints of discrimination.
Who May File a Complaint?
Any employee or applicant for employment who believes that he or she
has been discriminated against because of race, color, religion, sex, national
origin, sexual orientation, age, physical or mental disability, and/or reprisal
in an employment matter including Equal Pay Act (EPA) complaints may file an
individual complaint of discrimination. A group of employees, former employees
or applicants for employment who believe that they have been or are being adversely
affected by an agency personnel management policy or practice that discriminates
against the group on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin,
sexual orientation, age, physical or mental disability, and/or reprisal may
file a class complaint.
How Do I Make an EEO Complaint?
Employees and applicants with an EEO complaint must first have their
complaint counseled. Counseling consists of an informal effort to resolve the
complaint. Only after a complaint is counseled may a formal complaint be filed.
You must contact a counselor within 45 days of the matter alleged to be discriminatory.
To obtain a counselor, please click onto Locations
of EEO Offices.
How Are Complaints Processed?
All complaints of discrimination are counseled in an attempt to find
an informal resolution. If counseling does not produce a resolution, you will
be given the opportunity to file a formal complaint. Pursuant to 29 CFR § 1614, this organization has adopted
procedures for processing individual and class complaints of discrimination.
If the complaint complies with 29 CFR § 1614, it will be accepted and investigated.
The investigation should be completed within 180 days of filing of the complaint.
Within 30 days of the completion of the investigation, you may choose to have
the merits of your claim considered by either an Administrative Judge at the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) or the Department of Homeland Security, Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL). For a more detailed overview of the administrative
processing of an EEO complaint, please see EEO
Complaint Processing.
How Can I Appeal the Decision?
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Administrative Judge's initial
decision is subject to rejection or modification by the Complaint Adjudication
Office within 60 days after receipt. Decisions issued by the CAO can be appealed
either to the EEOC's Office of Federal Operations or to the United States District
Court.
Can Anyone Help Me?
For further information regarding federal EEO complaint processing, please see
the EEOC
Webpage.
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