Guidance for Executive Order 13673, “Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces”, 58653-58768 [2016-19678]
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Vol. 81
Thursday,
No. 165
August 25, 2016
Part III
Department of Labor
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Office of the Secretary
48 CFR Parts 22 and 52
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, ‘‘Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces’’;
Final Guidance
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
48 CFR Parts 22 and 52
ZRIN 1290–ZA02
Guidance for Executive Order 13673,
‘‘Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces’’
Department of Labor.
Final guidance.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Labor (the
Department) is publishing final
guidance (the Guidance) to assist the
Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council
(the FAR Council) and Federal
contracting agencies in the
implementation of Executive Order
13673, Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces.
Executive Order 13673 (the Order)
contains new requirements designed to
increase efficiency and cost savings in
the Federal contracting process. By law,
Federal agencies already must contract
only with ‘‘responsible’’ sources.
Among other directives, the Order
provides explicit new instructions for
Federal contracting officers to consider
a contractor’s compliance with certain
Federal and State labor laws as a part of
the determination of contractor
‘‘responsibility’’ that contracting officers
presently must undertake before
awarding a Federal contract. In
addition, the Order directs the FAR
Council to propose the rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the
Order and the Department to develop
guidance to help implement the new
requirements. In this final Guidance, the
Department provides detailed
definitions for various terms used in the
Order and the FAR rule to categorize
and classify labor law violations, and
the Department provides a summary of
the processes through which contracting
agencies will assess a contractor’s
overall record of labor law compliance
and carry out their other duties under
the Order.
DATES: This final Guidance is being
published simultaneously with the FAR
Council’s final rule. The final FAR rule
is published elsewhere in this issue of
the Federal Register and is effective on
October 25, 2016. Contractors and
Federal agencies may use this Guidance
beginning August 25, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephanie Swirsky, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Policy, U.S. Department of
Labor, Room S–2312, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210;
telephone: (202) 693–5959 (this is not a
toll-free number). Copies of this final
Guidance may be obtained in alternative
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SUMMARY:
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formats (large print, Braille, audio tape
or disc), upon request, by calling (202)
693–5959 (this is not a toll-free
number). TTY/TDD callers may dial
toll-free [1–877–889–5627] to obtain
information or request materials in
alternative formats.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department publishes this final
Guidance to assist in the
implementation of Executive Order
13673, Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces,
dated July 31, 2014 (79 FR 45309, Aug.
5, 2014). Executive Order 13673 was
amended by Executive Order 13683,
December 11, 2014 (79 FR 75041, Dec.
16, 2014) to correct a statutory citation.
The Order was further amended by
Executive Order to modify the handling
of subcontractor disclosures and clarify
the requirements for public disclosure
of documents.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. GAO Studies of Federal Procurement
B. State and Local Responsible-Contracting
Policies
II. Summary of the Executive Order
III. Overview of the Final Guidance
IV. Summary of Comments Received
V. Discussion of General Comments
A. Comments Requesting Changes to the
Order or the Proposed FAR Rule
B. Comments About Costs and Burdens of
the Order
C. Comments About Alternatives and the
Need for the Order
D. Comments About the Legal Authority
for the Order
Section-By-Section Analysis
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
(Formerly ‘‘Disclosure Requirements’’)
A. Covered Contracts (Formerly ‘‘Who
Must Make Disclosures Under the
Order’’)
B. Labor Law Decisions (Formerly ‘‘What
Triggers the Disclosure Obligations’’)
1. Defining ‘‘Administrative Merits
Determination’’
2. Defining ‘‘Civil Judgment’’
3. Defining ‘‘Arbitral Award or Decision’’
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising
From the Same Underlying Violation
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
(Formerly ‘‘What Information Must Be
Disclosed’’)
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
(Formerly ‘‘Weighing Violations of the
Labor Laws’’)
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
1. Serious Violations
2. Repeated Violations
3. Willful Violations
4. Pervasive Violations
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and
Mitigating Factors (Formerly ‘‘Assessing
Violations and Considering Mitigating
Factors’’)
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor
of a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
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2. Factors That Weigh Against a
Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor’s Record
of Labor Law Compliance
IV. Postaward Disclosure and Assessment of
Labor Law Violations
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
VI. Preassessment
VII. Paycheck Transparency
A. Wage Statement Provisions
1. Rate of Pay
2. Itemizing Additions To and Deductions
From Wages
3. Information To Be Included in the Wage
Statement
4. Weekly Accounting of Overtime Hours
Worked
5. Electronic Wage Statements
6. Substantially Similar State Laws
7. Request to Delay Effective Date
8. FLSA Exempt-Status Notification
B. Independent Contractor Notice
1. Clarifying the Information in the Notice
2. Independent Contractor Determination
3. Frequency of the Independent
Contractor Notice
4. Workers Employed by Staffing Agencies
5. Translation Requirements
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of
Requirements
IX. Other Comments
A. Public Availability of Disclosures and
Assessment Information
B. Participation of Third-Parties
C. Anti-retaliation and Whistleblower
Protections for Reporting Information
I. Background
Spending on Federal contracts has
almost doubled since 2000, and it has
substantially increased as a percentage
of total Federal spending.1 This increase
has spurred new attention by Congress
and the current administration to
address inefficiencies and gaps in
oversight of Federal contractors and
subcontractors, including through
investment in new informationtechnology systems and guidance for the
Federal contracting officers who do the
critical day-to-day work of managing
billions of dollars in contracts.
Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay and
Safe Workplaces (the Order), is one of
several of such initiatives intended to
provide new information, tools, and
guidance for contracting officers to
better serve in their roles as gatekeepers
for and stewards of Federal agency
resources.
The Order reinforces current Federal
procurement procedures. Existing law
requires Federal agencies to contract
1 In 2000, total spending on Federal contracts was
$276.9 billion; by 2012, that number had increased
to $518.4 billion. See Cong. Budget Office, ‘‘Federal
Contracts and the Contracted Workforce,’’ Letter
from Director Douglas Elmendorff 1, 4 (Mar. 11,
2015), Table 1, available at https://www.cbo.gov/
sites/default/files/114th-congress-2015–2016/
reports/49931-FederalContracts.pdf.
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only with ‘‘responsible’’ sources.2 To
implement this responsibility
requirement, an agency contracting
officer must make an affirmative
determination of a contractor’s
responsibility before the contracting
officer makes any contract award.3
Under existing law, a contractor must
have ‘‘a satisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics’’ to be a responsible
source.4 To strengthen this requirement,
the Order now instructs contracting
officers to consider whether a contractor
has a history of certain labor law
violations within the last three years as
a factor in determining if the contractor
has such a satisfactory record.5
Numerous violations of applicable
laws in the course of business
operations should raise questions about
a contractor’s integrity and business
ethics. Even the most limited definition
of ‘‘business ethics’’ requires a business
to obey the law.6 Despite this fact,
multiple studies conducted over the last
two decades suggest that consideration
of contractor labor law violations during
2 10 U.S.C. 2305(b); 41 U.S.C. 3703. This
requirement dates to 1884. See Act of July 5, 1884,
ch. 217, 23 Stat. 107, 109. The Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) contains a similar requirement.
See FAR 9.103(a). The FAR can be found at title 48
of the Code of Federal Regulations. Citations in this
Guidance to the FAR use format FAR [section]
instead of 48 CFR [section].
3 FAR 9.103(b). Agency ‘‘contracting officers’’ are
the only Federal officials who can enter into and
sign contracts on behalf of the Government. Id.
1.601. Contracting officers have authority to enter
into, administer, or terminate contracts and make
related determinations and findings. Id. 1.602–1(a).
They also have the responsibility to ensure that all
requirements of law, Executive orders, regulations,
and all other applicable procedures, including
clearances and approvals, have been met. Id. 1.602–
1(b).
4 41 U.S.C. 113(4); FAR 9.104–1(d).
5 See Order, sections 2(a)(ii) and (iii).
6 See Milton Friedman, ‘‘The Social
Responsibility of Business is to Increase Its Profits,’’
New York Times Magazine (Sept. 13, 1970); see also
Rob Atkinson, ‘‘Growing Greener Grass: Looking
from Legal Ethics to Business Ethics, and Back,’’ 1
U. St. Thomas L.J. 951, 969 (2004) (‘‘A great deal
of business ethics focuses on precisely this issue:
What norms, beyond the minima of obeying the law
and making a profit, govern what business
managers should do?’’). While court cases
addressing the relationship between labor
violations and ‘‘integrity and business ethics’’ are
not common, the Comptroller General has, on
occasion, concluded that the violation of various
labor-related laws can support a finding of lack of
integrity and business ethics. See, e.g., ALM, Inc.,
B–225679 et. al, 87–1 CPD ¶ 493, at 1–2 (Comp.
Gen. May 8, 1987) (discussing alleged violations of
the Service Contract Act (SCA) in the context of
FAR 9.104–1(d)); Gen. Painting Co., B–219449, 85–
2 CPD ¶ 530 at 4 (Comp. Gen. Nov. 8, 1985)
(discussing failure to fulfill minimum wage
requirements as a potential basis for
nonresponsibility under FAR section 9.104–1(d));
Wash. Moving & Storage Co., B–175845, 1973 WL
8012, at 2 (Comp. Gen. Mar. 9, 1973) (upholding
NASA’s debarment of contractor for failure to
comply with labor laws).
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the Federal procurement process has
been the exception rather than the rule.
A. GAO Studies of Federal Procurement
In the mid-1990s, the congressional
General Accounting Office (GAO), now
known as the Government
Accountability Office, issued two
reports finding that Federal contracts
worth billions of dollars had been
awarded to companies that had violated
the National Labor Relations Act
(NLRA) and the Occupational Safety
and Health Act (the OSH Act).7 The
GAO observed that contracting agencies
already had the authority to consider
these violations when awarding Federal
contracts under the existing regulations,
but were not doing so because they
lacked adequate information about
contractors’ noncompliance.8
Over a decade later, with contracting
expenditures escalating, the GAO again
found a similar pattern. Looking at the
companies that had the largest wage
violations and workplace health-andsafety penalties from fiscal years 2005 to
2009, the GAO found that a surprisingly
high percentage of those companies
subsequently received Federal
contracts.9
A 2013 report by the Senate Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP)
Committee corroborated these findings.
That report reviewed violations of the
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and
other laws enforced by the Department’s
Wage and Hour Division (WHD) and
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) between 2007
and 2012 and found that some 49
Federal contractors were responsible for
1,776 separate violations of these laws
7 See U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/
HEHS–96–8, ‘‘Worker Protection: Federal
Contractors and Violations of Labor Law,’’ Report
to Senator Paul Simon (1995) (documenting awards
to companies that had violated the NLRA),
available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/230/
221816.pdf; U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/
HEHS–96–157, ‘‘Occupational Safety and Health:
Violations of Safety and Health Regulations by
Federal Contractors,’’ Report to Congressional
Requesters (1996) (documenting awards to
companies that had violated safety-and-health
regulations), available at https://www.gao.gov/
assets/230/223113.pdf.
8 See U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/T–
HEHS–98–212, ‘‘Federal Contractors: Historical
Perspective on Noncompliance With Labor and
Worker Safety Laws,’’ Statement of Cornelia
Blanchette before the Subcommittee on Oversight
and Investigations, Committee on Education and
the Workforce, House of Representatives, 2 (July 14,
1998) (drawing conclusions from the 1995 and 1996
GAO reports cited above in note 8), available at
https://www.gao.gov/assets/110/107539.pdf.
9 U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO–
10–1033, ‘‘Federal Contracting: Assessments and
Citations of Federal Labor Law Violations by
Selected Federal Contractors,’’ Report to
Congressional Requesters 7–8 (2010), available at
https://www.gao.gov/new.items/d101033.pdf.
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and paid $196 million in penalties and
back wage assessments.10 In 2012, those
same companies were awarded $81
billion in Federal contracts.11 Looking at
the 100 largest wage and OSHA
violations, the Committee found that 35
Federal contractors had violated both
wage and safety-and-health laws.12
As the GAO had done 15 years earlier,
the HELP Committee Report noted that
contracting officers had the legal
authority to consider labor law
violations during the procurement
process, but were not doing so. The
Committee noted that contracting
officers generally do not seek
information regarding responsibility
matters outside of the limited databases
they are required by law to review.13
And, even if they did have access to
such information, the report found,
contracting officers would be reluctant
to act on it because of a lack of guidance
regarding when labor law violations add
up to an unsatisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics.14
B. State and Local ResponsibleContracting Policies
During the decades in which the GAO
and HELP Committee studies of Federal
procurement were conducted, many
State and local governments responded
to similar challenges by incorporating
labor standards into contracting
policies.15 Preaward screening for labor
10 Majority Staff of Senate Committee on Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions, ‘‘Acting
Responsibly? Federal Contractors Frequently Put
Workers’ Lives and Livelihoods at Risk,’’ 1 (2013)
(hereinafter HELP Committee Report), available at
https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Labor
%20Law%20Violations%20by%20Contractors
%20Report.pdf.
11 Id.
12 Id. at 18.
13 Id. at 25.
14 Id. at 27–28.
15 See Paul K. Sonn & Tsedeye Gebreselassie, The
Road to Responsible Contracting: Lessons from
States and Cities for Ensuring That Federal
Contracting Delivers Good Jobs and Quality
Services, 31 Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 459, 464–
87 (2010) (listing examples). In addition,
responsible-contractor policies have been
increasingly employed by private actors. As one
safety consultant for a Fortune 500 company noted,
‘‘[i]n the long term, carefully selected contractors
are amazingly superior to those chosen based on
cost or supposed productivity. The front-end
investment for careful selection delivers an ROI far
beyond the cost to go through the ‘datingengagement-marriage’ process.’’ Mike Williamsen,
‘‘Choosing Great Contractors for Your Needs,’’
Indus. Hygiene News (July/Aug. 2012), available at
https://www.rimbach.com/cgi-bin/Article/IHN/
Number.idc?Number=559. These sorts of long-term
benefits also make responsible-contractor policies
attractive to large pension funds, the largest of
which, CALPERS, has had a responsible-contractor
policy in place for almost 20 years. See California
Public Employees’ Retirement System, ‘‘Statement
of Investment Policy for Responsible Contractor
Program,’’ 7, 16 (2015), available at https://
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law violations became standard practice
in some State and local jurisdictions in
the form of pre-qualification
programs.16 These programs have
‘‘come to be viewed in the public
contracting field as a best practice and
a key management strategy.’’ 17 In North
Carolina, for example, contractors must
be prequalified to bid on projects for the
State’s Department of Transportation.
As part of this prequalification,
contractors have to disclose whether
they have received any final or nonfinal
repeat or willful OSHA violations
within the past 2 years, and they must
include copies of those violations with
the prequalification application.18
Research tracking the results of these
State and local efforts and of other
similar Federal programs has suggested
that responsible-contracting policies—
including those policies that require
payment of prevailing wages—can have
a positive effect on contract
performance, at limited cost and
without negatively affecting
competition. One recent study analyzed
State and Federal highway-construction
contracts in Colorado between 2000 and
2011 and found no statistically
significant difference in the cost of the
State projects, despite the additional
prevailing-wage regulations on the
federally financed projects.19 The study
www.calpers.ca.gov/docs/policy-responsiblecontractor-2015.pdf.
16 Daniel D. McMillan, Erich R. Luschei,
‘‘Prequalification of Contractors by State and Local
Agencies: Legal Standards and Procedural Traps,’’
Constr. Law., Spring 2007, at 21, 22 (‘‘Public
owners in numerous states now view
prequalification as a useful, if not essential, element
to ensure successful completion of construction
projects.’’).
17 Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 15 at 477.
18 North Carolina Dep’t of Transp., Subcontractor
Prequalification Form, 14 (2014), available at
https://connect.ncdot.gov/business/Prequal/
Documents/Subcontractor%20Prequalification
%20Form.pdf. The States of California,
Massachusetts, and Connecticut have similar
programs applicable to a broad array of public
works. See Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 15 at
474–76. Other examples include the Illinois
Department of Transportation; the City of Los
Angeles; the Los Angeles Unified School District;
the Santa Clara County, CA, Valley Transportation
Authority; and the statute authorizing the
construction of the Atlanta Beltline. Id. at 476
(discussing policies of the Illinois Department of
Transportation and the City of Los Angeles);
McMillan et al., supra note 16 at 22 (discussing the
Los Angeles Unified School District program);
P’ship for Working Families, ‘‘Policy & Tools:
Responsible Contracting,’’ https://www.forworking
families.org/page/policy-tools-responsiblecontracting (last visited July 11, 2016) (discussing
for the Santa Clara and Atlanta examples); see also
44 Ill. Admin. Code 650.240 (2006) (implementing
prequalification for the Illinois Department of
Transportation).
19 Kevin Duncan, ‘‘The Effect of Federal DavisBacon and Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
Regulations on Highway Maintenance Costs,’’ 68
ILR Review 212 (2015).
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found that the Federal regulations were
‘‘not associated with reduced bid
competition, an important determinant
of project cost.’’ 20 Similarly, a study of
local prevailing wage regulations in
California in 2012 showed that the
regulations ‘‘[did] not decrease the
number of bidders nor alter the bidding
behavior of contractors relative to the
. . . value of the project.’’ 21 And a
recent study of the use of local
responsible-contractor policies across
the State of Ohio showed no statistically
discernible impact on school
construction bid costs.22
These studies have shown that
strengthening procurement labor
standards and contractor labor-law
compliance policies can play an
important role in appropriately
managing competition in procurement.
When correctly managed, competition
between contractors can increase
accountability and the quality of
services provided.23 However, where
compliance with legal norms is weak,
price competition alone may instead
result in an increase in unlawful
behavior and poor contract
performance.24 State and local
responsible-contracting policies have
shown that contracting agencies can
improve the quality of competition by
encouraging bids from more responsible
contractors that might otherwise abstain
from bidding out of concern about not
being able to compete with less
scrupulous corner-cutting companies.25
20 Id.
21 Jaewhan Kim et al., ‘‘The Effect of Prevailing
Wage Regulations on Contractor Bid Participation
and Behavior,’’ 54 Indus. Relations 874 (2012).
22 C. Jeffrey Waddoups & David C. May, ‘‘Do
Responsible Contractor Policies Increase
Construction Bid Costs?,’’ 53 Indus. Relations, 273
(2014). Similarly, studies of local living-wage
policies have shown ‘‘only a modest impact on
costs, if any.’’ See Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note
15 at 480. A study of Baltimore’s 1994 living-wage
policy, for example, found a contract cost increase
of just 1.2 percent, lower than the rate of inflation.
See id.
23 See Kate Manuel, Cong. Research Serv.,
R40516, ‘‘Competition in Federal Contracting: An
Overview of the Legal Requirements,’’ 2–3 (2011)
(discussing benefits and costs associated with
competition in Federal contracting).
24 See, e.g., Melissa S. Baucus & Janet P. Near,
‘‘Can Illegal Corporate Behavior Be Predicted? An
Event History Analysis,’’ 34 Acad. Mgmt. J., 9, 31
(1991) (‘‘If a firm’s major competitors in an industry
are performing well, in part as a result of illegal
activities, it becomes difficult for managers to
choose only legal actions, and they may regard
illegal actions as a standard industry practice.’’).
25 See Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 16 at 477,
480; see also Maryland Dep’t of Legislative Servs.,
‘‘Impact of the Maryland Living Wage,’’ 10 (2008),
available at https://dlslibrary.state.md.us/
publications/OPA/I/IMLW_2008.pdf (finding that
the average number of bidders for service contracts
increased from 3.7 bidders to 4.7 bidders after
Maryland’s living-wage law took effect).
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In sum, studies of State and local
initiatives have shown that—by
properly managing competition—
responsible-contractor policies can
deliver better quality without significant
cost increases for government agencies
that employ them.
The Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces
Order applies lessons learned from
these developments in State and local
contracting policy, and, by doing so,
addresses the longstanding deficiencies
highlighted in the GAO reports.
II. Summary of the Executive Order
Executive Order 13673 (the Order)
was signed by President Barack Obama
on July 31, 2014. The Order contains
three discrete parts, each designed to
help executive departments and
agencies identify and work with
contractors who will comply with labor
laws while performing Federal
contracts.
The first part of the Order directs
agency contracting officers to consider
contractors’ records of labor law
violations as the agencies make certain
contracting decisions. To assure that
contracting officers have sufficient
information, the Order requires
contractors to disclose their recent labor
law violations to contracting officers.
Specifically, the Order requires
contractors to disclose violations of 14
Federal labor laws and Executive orders
and equivalent State laws (collectively,
‘‘Labor Laws’’). The Order instructs
contracting officers to review a
contractor’s Labor Law violations to
assess the contractor’s record of Labor
Law compliance during the preaward
‘‘responsibility’’ determination and
when making postaward decisions such
as whether to exercise contract options.
The Order also creates a new position—
Agency Labor Compliance Advisors
(ALCA)—to assist contracting officers.
The first part of the Order also
contains parallel requirements that
apply to certain subcontractors working
on covered contracts. The Order, as
amended, and the final FAR rule require
these covered subcontractors to disclose
their Labor Law violations to the
Department, which provides advice
regarding subcontractors’ records of
Labor Law compliance. Contractors then
consider this advice from the
Department when determining whether
their subcontractors are responsible
sources.
The second part of the Order creates
new paycheck-transparency protections
for workers on Federal contracts. This
part, section 5 of the Order, contains
two separate requirements. It requires
contracting agencies to ensure that
certain workers on covered Federal
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contracts and subcontracts receive a
wage statement that that contains
information concerning that
individual’s hours worked, overtime
hours, pay, and any additions made to
or deductions made from pay. It also
instructs covered contractors and
subcontractors to inform individuals in
writing if the individual is being treated
as an independent contractor, and not
an employee.
The third part of the Order limits the
use of pre-dispute arbitration clauses in
employment agreements on covered
Federal contracts.
The Order creates detailed
implementation roles for the FAR
Council, the Department, the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), and
the General Services Administration
(GSA). The FAR Council has the
rulemaking responsibility to amend the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to
implement the Order. Section 7 of the
Order provides that the FAR Council
will ‘‘propose such rules and
regulations and issue orders as are
deemed necessary and appropriate to
carry out this order.’’
The Order instructs the Secretary of
Labor (the Secretary) to, among other
duties, develop guidance that defines
certain terms in the Order. The Order
directs the Secretary to define the
categories of Labor Law violations that
contractors must disclose
(administrative merits determinations,
civil judgments, and arbitral awards or
decisions); identify the State laws that
are equivalent to the 14 Federal labor
laws for which violations must be
disclosed; define the terms (serious,
repeated, willful, and pervasive) that
will be used to assess disclosed
violations; consult with ALCAs as they
carry out their responsibilities under the
Order; and specify which State wagestatement laws are substantially similar
to the Order’s wage-statement
requirement.
The Order also directs the Secretary to
develop processes for regular
interagency meetings, develop processes
by which contracting officers and
ALCAs may give appropriate
consideration to determinations and
agreements made by the Department
and other enforcement agencies,
develop processes by which contractors
may enter into agreements with the
Department or other enforcement
agencies, and review and improve the
Department’s data collection systems.
The final Guidance document that
follows this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION contains a more detailed
summary of the Order.
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III. Overview of the Final Guidance
Consistent with its obligations under
the Order, the Department issued its
Proposed Guidance on May 28, 2015, on
the same date that the FAR Council
issued its proposed rule to implement
the Order. See 80 FR 30548 (proposed
FAR rule); 80 FR 30574 (Proposed
Guidance). Both the Department and the
FAR Council solicited public comment,
and the initial written comment periods
closed on July 27, 2015. In response to
requests for additional time to comment,
however, the Department and the FAR
Council extended the comment periods
through August 26, 2015. After
reviewing and carefully considering all
of the timely submitted comments, the
FAR Council and the Department are
now simultaneously publishing final
versions of the rule and the Guidance.
The Proposed Guidance contained
sections addressing the purpose and
summary of the Order, including a
discussion of the existing FAR
framework and the legal authority for
the Order; the disclosure requirements;
weighing Labor Law violations; the
paycheck transparency provisions; an
invitation to comment; and next steps.
The Department solicited written
comments on all aspects of the Proposed
Guidance and also invited public
comment on a variety of specific issues.
In the final Guidance, the Department
has made several significant
adjustments to accurately describe the
modifications that the FAR Council
made to its rule. In addition, in response
to the comments about topics
specifically tasked to the Department,
the Department has clarified various
definitions of terms used in the Order
and included a more detailed narrative
of the process for disclosing,
categorizing, and weighing labor law
violations.
The final Guidance, which follows
this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, has
the same basic structure as the Proposed
Guidance with some additional sections
added for clarity. It contains the
following sections: (I) Purpose and
summary of the Order, (II) Preaward
disclosure requirements, (III) Preaward
assessment and advice, (IV) Postaward
disclosure and assessment, (V)
Subcontractor responsibility, (VI)
Preassessment, (VII) Paycheck
transparency, and (VIII) Effective date
and phase-in of requirements.
This Guidance satisfies most of the
Department’s responsibilities for issuing
guidance, and the Department will
publish at a later date a second guidance
that satisfies its remaining
responsibilities. The second guidance
will be, as this Guidance was, submitted
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for notice and comment, published in
the Federal Register, and accompanied
by a proposed amendment to the FAR
rule. The Department will likewise
submit for notice and comment and
publish any future updates to the
Guidance that will have a significant
effect beyond the operating procedures
of the Department or that will have a
significant cost or administrative impact
on contractors or offerors. The
Department will coordinate with the
FAR Council in determining whether
updates will have a significant cost or
administrative impact.
IV. Summary of Comments Received
The Department received 7,924
comments on the Proposed Guidance
from a wide variety of sources. Among
these comments, some 7,784 were in the
nature of mass mailings expressing
general support for the Order, the FAR
Council’s proposed rule, and the
Department’s Proposed Guidance
(collectively ‘‘the Order and the
proposals’’). Another 30 comments were
in the nature of form letters, most of
which expressed general opposition to
the Order and the proposals. The
Department also received an additional
109 individual submissions.
As discussed above, the FAR Council
is issuing the implementing regulations
for the Order by amending the FAR. The
FAR Council published its proposed
rule on the same date as the Department
published its Proposed Guidance and
similarly extended the comment period
on the proposed rule to August 26,
2015. The Department and the FAR
Council have coordinated efforts to
assure the comments submitted that are
relevant to the Guidance or to the FAR
rule are shared with the appropriate
agency, regardless of which agency may
have initially received any specific
comment.
A wide variety of interested parties
submitted comments on the Proposed
Guidance. Commenters included
Members of Congress; State executive
agencies; individual Federal contractor
entities; national and State-level
employer associations and advocacy
organizations; professional associations;
labor union federations; worker
advocacy organizations; civil rights and
human rights advocacy organizations;
other non-profit advocacy organizations;
and the Small Business
Administration’s Office of Advocacy,
among others.
The Department recognizes and
appreciates the value of comments,
ideas, and suggestions from all those
who commented on the proposal, and
the final Guidance was developed only
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after consideration of all the material
submitted.
V. Discussion of General Comments
This section of the preamble to the
final Guidance discusses the general
comments that the Department received.
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A. Comments Requesting Changes to the
Order or the Proposed FAR Rule
Several industry commenters took
issue with the text of the Order itself. In
promulgating the Guidance and rule, the
Department and the FAR Council are
guided by the plain language of the
Order. For example, several commenters
argued that the FAR Council and the
Department should change the contract
value that will trigger the Order’s
disclosure requirements. Yet this
$500,000 threshold comes from section
2 of the Order itself. Comments such as
these are generally not addressed here.
Similarly, several commenters from
both industry and worker-advocacy
organizations took issue with
requirements specific to the FAR
Council’s proposed rule, and not to the
Guidance. The government’s response to
these comments will appear in the FAR
Council’s final rule. They are generally
not addressed here.
B. Comments About Costs and Burdens
of the Order
A number of employers and employer
associations expressed concern that the
requirements and processes established
by the Order and the proposals will
impose a heavy compliance burden that
will increase their costs and cause
delays in Federal contracting. Several of
these industry commenters suggested
that these potential costs and delays
would harm the government and the
public by increasing bid prices,
discouraging companies from bidding
on Federal contracts, or delaying the
acquisition of key government goods
and services.
Other commenters expressed general
support for the Order and the proposals.
Several argued that the disclosure
requirements do not go far enough.
These commenters suggested that
contractors should be required to
provide more information about each
Labor Law violation than proposed by
the Department, and argued that all of
the information disclosed to contracting
agencies should be compiled in a
public, searchable database.
The Department recognizes that
compliance with the Order’s and the
proposals’ new requirements and
processes will involve costs to
contractors associated with the required
representation and disclosures. These
costs and burdens are addressed in the
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Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) that
accompanies the final FAR rule.
Accordingly, the Department does not
specifically list and respond to each
comment about costs and burdens in
this final Guidance document. Likewise,
comments asserting that the RIA in the
proposed FAR rule was flawed are
addressed by the FAR Council and
therefore are not summarized or
answered here.
C. Comments About Alternatives and
the Need for the Order
Various industry commenters
suggested that the Order and its
requirements are unnecessary because
any problems associated with Labor
Law violations by Federal contractors
can be addressed through existing rules
and processes. Several commenters
suggested that problems associated with
Labor Law violations should be
addressed in the existing suspensionand-debarment process instead of
through the preaward responsibility
process. Others suggested that the
Order’s disclosure requirements,
specifically, are unnecessary because
the government already obtains
information about violations under the
laws covered by the Order. These
commenters argued that enforcement
agencies already have the necessary
information and that the disclosure
requirements are duplicative of other
reporting and information-gathering
projects already in existence.
While these commenters have raised
important issues, the Department does
not believe that the Order is
unnecessary or duplicative of existing
processes. As an initial matter, the
Department emphasizes that the
purpose of the Order is to increase
efficiency in contracting by encouraging
compliance during contract
performance, not to increase the use of
suspension and debarment. The Order’s
new requirements and processes are
designed to identify and help
contractors address Labor Law
violations and come into compliance
before a contracting agency turns to the
suspension-and-debarment process. The
Order does not in any way alter the
suspension-and-debarment process;
however, the expectation is that its new
requirements and processes will help
contractors avoid the consequences of
that process.
The Department believes that focusing
on the preaward process—in addition to
a functional suspension-and-debarment
regime—is efficient for the government
as well as for those contractors that are
given the opportunity to avoid
suspension or debarment. Without
effective preaward screening, the
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government faces the difficult decision
about whether to expend resources on
suspending or debarring a company that
may in fact not be planning to
subsequently bid on a government
contract.26 And, as the chief
construction inspector for the Los
Angeles Bureau of Contract
Administration has explained, front-end
responsibility screening ‘‘is more
effective and more beneficial to the
public than a reactionary system. When
you get a bad contractor on the back
end, they’ve already done the damage,
and then it’s a costly process of kicking
them out.’’ 27
Moreover, when one Federal agency
suspends or debars a contractor, that
action applies across the entire Federal
Government. The collateral
consequences—both for a debarred
contractor and for other contracting
agencies that may need the services of
that contractor—can be severe.28 Thus,
while the suspension-and-debarment
process plays an important role in
addressing significant concerns
regarding an entity’s responsibility and
has a broad-reaching impact,29 the
preaward framework employed by the
Order is an equally important tool, one
that allows responsibility concerns to be
addressed on a procurement-byprocurement basis with attendant
benefits to both the government and the
contracting community.
Recognition of the benefits of early
detection and prevention underlies the
existing Federal procurement rules that
require disclosure and consideration of
various non-labor violations at the
preaward stage. A bidder must disclose
26 See Yuri Weigel, ‘‘Is ‘Protection’ Always in the
Best Interests of the Government?: An Argument to
Narrow the Scope of Suspension and Debarment,’’
81 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 627, 660–61 (2013) (arguing
that suspension and debarment are not always
worth the administrative costs); HELP Committee
Report, supra note 11 at 28–29 (discussing the
inefficacies of the suspension and debarment
process).
27 Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 16, at 476–
77.
28 See Robert Stumberg et al., ‘‘Turning a Blind
Eye: Respecting Human Rights in Government
Purchasing,’’ Int’l Corp. Accountability Roundtable,
39–40 (2014) available at https://icar.ngo/wpcontent/uploads/2014/09/Procurement-ReportFINAL.pdf; see also John B. Warnock, ‘‘Principled
or Practical Responsibility: Sixty Years of
Discussion,’’ 41 Pub. Cont. L.J. 881, 914 (2012)
(‘‘Government-wide debarment is punitive
debarment to the extent that it disregards agencies’
individual requirements and abilities to mitigate
procurement risks.’’).
29 In some cases, denying access to Federal
contracts may in fact ‘‘be the only realistic means
of deterring contractors from [labor violations]
based on a cold weighing of the costs and benefits
of non-compliance.’’ Janik Paving & Constr., Inc. v.
Brock, 828 F.2d 84, 91 (2d Cir. 1987) (holding that
the Department had authority to debar a contractor
over violations of the Contract Work Hours and
Safety Standards Act).
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information such as tax delinquencies
in excess of $3,500 and certain criminal
convictions, indictments, civil
judgments, and charges (for example, for
violations of Federal or State antitrust
statutes related to the submission of
offers, commission of embezzlement,
and making false statements); and a
bidder with Federal contracts and grants
totaling in excess of $10 million must
additionally disclose information such
as civil and administrative findings of
fault and liability in connection with
the award to or performance by the
bidder of a Federal contract or grant.30
By mandating preaward consideration
of Labor Law violations, the Order does
no more than treat such violations the
same as these other existing
responsibility red flags. By doing so, the
Order will facilitate timely
communication, coordination, and
cooperation among Government
officials—including contracting officers,
suspending and debarring officials, and
others—regarding responses to Labor
Law violations to the fullest extent
appropriate to the matter and
permissible by law. By working together
in this way, Federal Government
agencies can better protect the
government’s interests in efficient
contract administration and high-quality
contract performance.
The Department also disagrees with
the commenters that suggested the
Order’s disclosure requirements,
specifically, are unnecessary and
therefore unnecessarily burdensome.
The Order’s disclosure requirements are
carefully tailored: It requires only a
limited yes-or-no representation by all
bidders and reserves the more detailed
disclosure only for bidders for whom
the contracting officer is making a
responsibility determination—which
most often is only the apparent awardee
of the contract. The disclosure
requirement is thus designed to request
information from only those contractors
for whom it is necessary in order for the
contracting officer to assure that he or
she is contracting with a responsible
source, as required under existing law.
While some commenters stated that
this disclosure requirement was
unnecessarily burdensome, others found
the Order’s disclosure requirement to be
appropriate. The National Employment
Law Project, for example, argued that
the contractor is ‘‘best positioned to
furnish complete and accurate records
about its labor violation.’’ The
Department finds this argument to be
persuasive. The Order requires
disclosure of various categories of
information that the Federal
30 See
FAR 52.209–5, 52.209–7.
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Government does not have in its
possession, including information about
State law violations, private litigation,
and arbitration. Contractors are the best
source of this information.
In addition, the Order balances the
disclosure requirement with a parallel
instruction for the Department to review
its own data collection requirements
and processes, and to work with the
Director of the Office of Management
and Budget, the Administrator for the
General Services Administration, and
other agency heads to improve those
processes and existing data collection
systems, as necessary, to reduce the
burden on contractors and increase the
amount of information available to
agencies. See Order, section 4(a)(iii). As
noted in the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis that was part of the
proposed FAR rule, this review and the
related improvement to Federal
databases has been initiated, and the
Department is confident that it will
ultimately be successful in further
reducing the disclosure burden
associated with the Order’s disclosure
requirements. See 80 FR 30562. Until
that time, however, the system of
disclosure created under the Order is
the most efficient and least burdensome
method of making information about
labor violations available to contracting
officers. See id.
D. Comments About the Legal Authority
for the Order
The Department received a number of
comments challenging the legal
authority upon which the Order and the
proposals were issued. The commenters
alleged that several provisions of the
Proposed Guidance were contrary to
Federal law and constitutional
principles. The Department briefly
summarizes those arguments and
provides the following response:
1. The Procurement Act
Several industry commenters
questioned the President’s use of the
Federal Property and Administrative
Services Act (the Procurement Act), 40
U.S.C. 101 et seq., as the legal authority
for the Order. They argued that the
Order and the proposals do not have the
nexus to ‘‘economy and efficiency’’ in
government procurement that courts
have required for Executive action taken
under the Procurement Act. The
commenters argued that, instead, the
Order will lead to higher procurement
costs and a more burdensome
procurement system. Commenters also
questioned whether there is a
relationship at all between labor law
violations and poor contract
performance.
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After carefully reviewing these
comments and the relevant case law, the
Department disagrees with the
commenters. The Order, the FAR rule,
and this Guidance do not exceed the
President’s authority under the
Procurement Act. The Procurement Act
grants the President broad authority to
prescribe policies and directives that the
President considers necessary to carry
out the statutory purposes of ensuring
economical and efficient government
procurement. The requisite nexus exists
where the President’s explanation for
how an Executive order promotes
efficiency and economy is reasonable
and rational. As the Department
discussed in the Proposed Guidance, the
overall objective of the Order is to
increase the government’s ability to
contract with companies that will
comply with labor laws, thereby
increasing the likelihood of timely,
predictable, and satisfactory delivery of
goods and services. The Department
believes that agencies will benefit from
additional information—through the
new disclosure requirements—to better
determine if a potential contractor is a
responsible source.
The Order and the FAR rule provide
ample basis for concluding that the
goals of economy and efficiency in
procurement are served. The RIA cites
various studies showing a correlation
between labor law violations and poor
quality construction, low performance
ratings, wasteful practices, and other
performance problems.31 And, by
looking at contractors’ recent violations
of the law, Federal agencies can
reasonably predict future behavior. As
one academic study found, the existence
of three or more prior violations of the
law by a corporation is a ‘‘highly
significant’’ predictor of subsequent
illegal activity.32 The President’s
explanation for how the Order promotes
economy and efficiency is reasonable
and rational. The final FAR rule and
Department Guidance are therefore
appropriate under the Procurement Act.
31 The Department notes that both a correlation
and a causal relationship exist between labor law
violations and contract performance. In predicting
and explaining unlawful corporate behavior, many
academic researchers have emphasized the
problem, above all, of ‘‘top management in
tolerating, even shaping, a corporate culture that
allows for deviance.’’ William S. Laufer, ‘‘Corporate
Liability, Risk Shifting, and the Paradox of
Compliance,’’ 52 Vand. L. Rev. 1343, 1410–11
(1999) (citing various studies). Thus, in many cases,
labor law violations and other harmful practices
(such as contract fraud)—both of which cause poor
contract performance—may all be symptoms of the
underlying management failures or malfeasance.
32 Baucus & Near, supra note 25 at 27.
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2. Separation of Powers
Several commenters argued that the
Order and the proposals impinge on
separation-of-powers principles. These
arguments were presented in two ways:
(1) The Order is preempted by the Labor
Laws, and (2) the Order improperly
amends Federal laws by creating new
categories of violations and imposing
new penalties. Several commenters
focused specifically on the NLRA, citing
court decisions in Wis. Dep’t. of Indus.
v. Gould, Inc., 475 U.S. 282 (1986), and
Chamber of Commerce v. Reich, 74 F.3d
1322 (D.C. Cir. 1996).33
After careful review of the comments
and the law, the Department concludes
that the Order does not offend
separation-of-powers principles. The
Department disagrees with the
commenters who suggested that
traditional preemption principles apply
to Federal Executive actions. Rather, the
appropriate question is whether the
Executive action under the Procurement
Act conflicts with some more specific
statute Congress has enacted. An
Executive action may not prohibit
activity that Congress has explicitly
declared permissible, or vice versa.
Here, however, the Order and proposals
do neither.
The Department also disagrees with
the characterization of the Order as
creating new categories of violations or
a new penalty—the possibility of being
found nonresponsible and denied
government contract work. The Order
does not materially alter the current
procurement process. As discussed
above in the background section,
contracting officers already may
consider Labor Law violations when
assessing a contractor’s responsibility.
Other than requiring disclosure of Labor
Law violations, the Order does no more
regarding the responsibility
determination process than provide
additional assistance to contracting
officers to assist them in carrying out
their existing duties.
The purpose of the existing FAR
responsibility determination is to
evaluate conduct that may be
remediable or punishable under other
statutes. Contractors are already
required to report numerous types of
conduct, including fraud, anticompetitive conduct, embezzlement,
theft, forgery, bribery, falsification or
33 Various commenters also made a separation-ofpowers type of argument about the Federal
Arbitration Act (FAA) and the Order’s limits on
certain pre-dispute mandatory arbitration clauses.
The Department is not providing guidance
regarding that section of the Order and therefore
does not address the legal arguments about the
FAA. The FAR Council addresses FAA-related legal
arguments in the preamble to its final rule.
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destruction of records, making false
statements, tax evasion, receiving stolen
property, and tax delinquencies, that are
unlawful and separately punishable
under existing Federal and State laws.
See FAR 52.209–5(a)(1)(i)(B)–(D). Such
reporting and consideration does not
create a new penalty under those
statutes because the purpose of these
FAR provisions is not to penalize a
contractor, but rather to assure that the
government contracts with responsible
parties as it carries out its proprietary
business. For the same reason, the
Order’s express consideration of the
Labor Laws does not create new
categories of violations or new
penalties.
Finally, the Department disagrees that
this analysis applies differently to the
NLRA than to the other Labor Laws
covered under the Order. Courts have
upheld various Executive orders absent
a direct conflict with the NLRA’s
statutory provisions. The decisions in
Gould and Reich relied upon by the
commenters do not suggest otherwise.
Those two decisions involved initiatives
that directly targeted only NLRAcovered violations. Moreover, the Gould
decision did not involve a Federal
Executive order, but rather a State law,
and one that the Court found to have
‘‘the manifest purpose’’ of enforcing the
requirements of the NLRA and which
could not even ‘‘plausibly be defended
as a legitimate response’’ to local
procurement needs. 475 U.S. at 291. The
Reich decision did involve an Executive
order, but one which the court found to
have the intent and effect of depriving
contractors of the ability to hire
permanent replacements during a
strike—something that ‘‘promise[d] a
direct conflict’’ with the NLRA. 74 F.3d
at 1338. In both cases, the courts found
that the provisions at issue were
intended to affect the relationship
between management and organized
labor as opposed to seeking to advance
a narrow proprietary interest with a
close nexus to achieving economy and
efficiency in Federal procurement. In
contrast, here the Order endeavors only
to treat the NLRA no differently than
any of the other 13 covered Labor Laws.
Thus, unlike in Gould and Reich, the
inclusion of the NLRA in the Order here
demonstrates the Order’s intent to
promote the government’s proprietary
interest in efficient contracting in an
evenhanded manner.
3. Due Process
Many industry commenters expressed
concern that that the Order and the
proposals do not provide contractors
with constitutionally sufficient due
process protections. For example, two
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employer representatives argued that
the Order and the proposals could
infringe upon protected liberty interests
because an adverse responsibility
determination could harm a prospective
contractor’s reputation. Others argued
that a contractor’s protected property
interests may be infringed where
postaward violations lead to an adverse
action such as the non-renewal of an
option, contract termination, or
debarment.
The Department agrees that the
preaward responsibility determination,
the exercise of postaward contract
remedies, and the suspension-anddebarment process each require
consideration of a contractor’s right to
due process. However, the Department
emphasizes that neither the Order nor
the Guidance diminish the existing
procedural safeguards already afforded
to prospective contractors during the
preaward responsibility determination
or to contractors after they have been
awarded a contract. Moreover, the Order
does not infringe upon liberty or
property interests because contractors
receive notice that the responsibility
determination is being made and are
offered a pre-decisional opportunity to
be heard by submission of any relevant
information—including mitigating
circumstances related to any Labor Law
violation that must be disclosed.34
Finally, nothing in the Order diminishes
contractors’ post-decisional opportunity
to be heard through existing
administrative processes and the
Federal courts.
Various commenters also challenged
the Proposed Guidance’s definition of
administrative merits determinations,
claiming that requiring contractors to
report nonfinal and appealable
allegations denies them due process.
Commenters asserted that a contractor
may feel pressured to negotiate or sign
a labor compliance agreement and forgo
a challenge to a nonfinal administrative
merits determination in order to receive
a pending contract.
The Department has carefully
considered this argument, but does not
believe that the specific requirement to
34 See FAR 22.2004–2(b)(1)(ii). Several
commenters argued that the definition of
administrative merits determination will be costly
because it will force contractors to litigate a Labor
Law violation in two separate fora—first, in front of
the enforcement agency that has made the
determination; and, second, by submitting
mitigating circumstances to a contracting officer
when submitting a bid. While mindful of the
additional costs that this process may entail for
some contractors, the Department submits that
contractors’ opportunity to provide relevant
information (including mitigating circumstances)
during the responsibility determination addresses
the due process concerns raised by the employer
associations.
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disclose nonfinal administrative merits
determinations violates contractors’
rights to due process. Though the Order
and FAR rule (and therefore the
Guidance) place value on a contractor’s
effort to remediate violations through a
settlement or labor compliance
agreement, neither contains any
requirement that a contractor must settle
all open cases in order to be found
responsible and receive a contract
award—a fact that the Department has
emphasized in the final Guidance. See
Guidance, section III(B)(1)(a). Similarly,
the final Guidance also emphasizes that
a contractor may enter into a labor
compliance agreement while at the same
time continuing to contest an
underlying Labor Law violation. See id.
section III(C)(1). Because a contractor is
not required to forgo the right to appeal
any nonfinal Labor Law violation in
order to secure a Federal contract, the
requirement to disclose nonfinal
violations clearly does not violate due
process.
4. The Administrative Procedure Act
Some commenters argued that the
Guidance does not comply with the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5
U.S.C. 553(b). They asserted that the
Guidance is, in effect, a legislative rule
that requires notice and comment. The
Department has reviewed these
comments and finds them to be without
merit. The Guidance is not a legislative
rule; it does not bind private parties or
agency officials, and it does not meet
the four-part test for a legislative rule
that would require notice and comment.
See Am. Mining Cong. v. Mine Safety &
Health Admin., 995 F.2d 1106, 1109
(D.C. Cir. 1993).
First and foremost, the Order provides
an independent and adequate basis for
enforcement, apart from the Guidance.
See Am. Mining, 995 F.2d at 1112. The
Order and the FAR Council rule provide
disclosure and process requirements
that bind private parties and agency
officials. The Guidance only supplies
additional clarity to these requirements
through the Department’s interpretation
of certain terms of the Order and
narrative description of the process.
Second, the Department has not
explicitly invoked its general legislative
authority. See id. Rather, it has acted to
create a guidance document at the
explicit instruction of the Order itself.
See Guidance, section I(B). Third, the
Guidance does not effectively amend
the Order or any regulations; rather, it
is consistent with their requirements.
An agency action ‘‘does not, in this
inquiry, become an amendment merely
because it supplies crisper and more
detailed lines than the authority being
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interpreted.’’ Am. Mining, 995 F.2d at
1112. Finally, the Guidance will not be
published in the Code of Federal
Regulations. See id.
Moreover, even if the Guidance were
considered to be a legislative rule, the
Department met the APA’s procedural
requirements by publishing the
Proposed Guidance in the Federal
Register and soliciting and considering
comments before issuing the final
Guidance.
In another set of comments directed at
procedural aspects of the Guidance, a
few employer groups raised concerns
that the impact of the Guidance could
not be properly assessed because the
Department decided to identify only a
small number of the State laws
equivalent to the 14 Federal laws listed
in the Order and to leave the remaining
State laws for a subsequent guidance
document. One commenter also stated
that the Proposed Guidance did not
contain a sufficient justification for this
two-step process, suggesting that the
final Guidance cannot be upheld unless
the Department provides appropriate
reasons for delaying the identification of
equivalent laws. The Department has
reviewed these comments and finds that
they are premature and without merit.
The Department has identified in this
Guidance that OSHA State Plans are
equivalent State laws; but the
Department has decided to delay the
identification of additional equivalent
State laws as part of the phase-in of the
Order’s requirements that will allow
contractors and contracting agencies
time to adjust to the new requirements.
The comments also do not account for
the fact that the additional guidance
released in the future will also be
submitted as a proposal with an
opportunity for comment and
accompanied by a proposed amendment
to the FAR and a Regulatory Impact
Analysis.
Finally, one employer advocacy group
commented that the Order directs the
Department to issue guidance regarding
only a single portion of the paycheck
transparency provision, which is the
identification of substantially similar
State wage-statement laws. This
commenter, Equal Employment
Advisory Council (EEAC), requested
clarification regarding what authority
the Department has for issuing the
‘‘guidance, binding or not, on the
additional provisions of the paycheck
transparency provision.’’ The
commenter misunderstands the reason
that the Department addressed all
aspects of the paycheck-transparency
requirements in the Proposed Guidance.
The Department intends the Guidance
to be a stand-alone document that will
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be helpful to agency officials and
contractors as they implement the
requirements in the Order and the FAR
rule. Accordingly, the Department has
included in the final Guidance a
description of the requirements of the
Order and the FAR—regardless of
whether the Order specifically required
the Department to provide guidance on
those specific provisions.
Section-by-Section Analysis
In addition to submitting general
comments, commenters also commented
on specific elements of the Proposed
Guidance. The Department appreciates
the effort from these commenters to
carefully review the Order and the
Proposed Guidance. The Department
now modifies the final Guidance in
response to those comments in a
number of areas. The comments,
responses, and modifications are
summarized below in a section-bysection analysis.
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
Section I of the Guidance is an
introduction that explains the purpose
of Executive Order 13673, briefly
summarizes the legal authority for the
Order and the existing FAR rules to
which the Order applies, and recites a
summary of the new requirements and
processes contained in the Order. The
subsection on legal authority
specifically identifies the Procurement
Act, 40 U.S.C. 101 et seq., as providing
the statutory authority for the Order.
The Department received a number of
comments questioning whether the
Order would achieve its stated purpose
of increasing economy and efficiency in
Federal procurement, and—as a related
matter—whether the President was
justified in issuing the Order under the
Procurement Act. As discussed above,
the Department disagrees with those
commenters that have questioned the
purpose of and authority for the Order.
The Department therefore concludes
that it is not necessary to amend this
section in response to these comments.
The Department does, however, amend
section I of the final Guidance to
include the discussion of the purpose of
the Order previously included in
another section of the Proposed
Guidance, to conform the summary to
changes made to the FAR rule, to add
language reiterating that the Guidance is
not a legislative rule, and to improve its
clarity.
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
(Formerly ‘‘Disclosure Requirements’’)
During both the preaward and
postaward periods, the Order requires
contractors and subcontractors
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(collectively, ‘‘contractors’’) to disclose
administrative merits determinations,
civil judgments, and arbitral awards or
decisions rendered for violations of the
Labor Laws (collectively, ‘‘Labor Law
decisions’’).35 Section II of the Guidance
assists agencies in interpreting the
preaward disclosure requirements in the
Order and the FAR rule.36 Because the
FAR rule governs the requirements
discussed below, the Department has
modified the Guidance to parallel
changes made in the final FAR rule and
has included additional descriptions of
the rule’s requirements to assist
contractors and contracting agencies.
A. Covered Contracts (Formerly ‘‘Who
Must Make Disclosures Under the
Order’’)
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The first part of section II of the
Guidance discusses the types of
contracts covered by the Order and the
scope of a contractor’s requirement to
disclose Laboe Law decisions. These
types include contracts between Federal
agencies and prime contractors that
meet certain conditions (covered
procurement contracts). And they
include subcontracts that meet similar,
but not identical, conditions (covered
subcontracts). The Guidance uses the
term ‘‘covered contract’’ to refer to both
covered procurement contracts and
covered subcontracts.
The Department received several
comments requesting that the definition
of the various types of covered contracts
be amended. One industry commenter,
the Aerospace Industries Association
(AIA), suggested that all commercial
item contracts—and especially
commercial item subcontracts—should
be excluded from the Order’s disclosure
requirements. AIA noted that the Order
does expressly exclude subcontracts for
commercially available off-the-shelf
items (COTS), and it asserted that there
is no basis for distinguishing between
contracts for COTS items and contracts
for commercial items. It noted that there
is a ‘‘major government initiative’’ to
increase government acquisition of
commercial items.
35 The Department has made several
nonsubstantive changes to the Guidance in the
disclosure section for clarity. The final Guidance
now uses ‘‘contractors’’ to refer to both prime
contractors and subcontractors; where relevant,
however, the distinction between prime contractors
and subcontractors is noted. In addition, the
Guidance now refers to a contractor’s requirement
to provide information as ‘‘disclosure’’ instead of
‘‘reporting.’’ This change is intended only for
consistency with the language of the FAR rule.
36 The Department has summarized the FAR’s
rules on postaward disclosures and assessment in
section IV of the Guidance. The comments
regarding the postaward process are discussed in a
parallel section below.
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The Department declines to amend
the Guidance as suggested. The
definition of covered contracts is within
the jurisdiction of the FAR Council. As
the FAR Council indicates in the
preamble to its final rule, the plain
language of the Order does not provide
for a blanket exclusion of commercial
item contracts, which are distinct from
COTS contracts in the FAR. The Order
expressly excludes contracts for COTS
items from covered subcontracts, see
Order, section 2(a)(iv), and does not
specifically address commercial items.
Had the Order intended to also exclude
contracts for commercial items, it would
have done so expressly. The Guidance
thus adopts the proposed definitions of
‘‘covered procurement contracts,’’
‘‘covered subcontracts,’’ and ‘‘covered
contracts;’’ and the Department has
added additional language to highlight
the applicability of the Order to
procurement contracts for both COTS
and commercial items.
The Department also received
multiple comments about the definition
of a ‘‘contractor’’ in this section. The
Proposed Guidance explained that
references to ‘‘contractors’’ include both
individuals and entities and both
offerors on and holders of contracts.
Several employer organizations asked
the Department to clarify whether this
definition of ‘‘contractor’’ requires
parties bidding on or holding covered
contracts to disclose the violations of
their parent corporations, subsidiaries,
or affiliates. One commenter, the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, suggested that
the Guidance the term contractor be
limited to mean ‘‘the entity that legally
executes a contract with the
Government’’ and should not include
‘‘affiliated legal entities.’’ Another
commenter, the Society for Human
Resource Management et al.,
recommended that disclosure be at the
Commercial and Government Entity
(CAGE) Code level because it would be
less burdensome and because any
alternative would not be reasonably
related to the responsibility of the
‘‘specific entity that will perform the
federal contract.’’ Other industry
commenters requested clarity on which
entity is obligated to report the
violations of affiliated entities after
acquisitions, spinoffs, and mergers
occur and any violations that occurred
at facilities no longer in use.
In contrast, union and workeradvocacy organizations suggested that
the Guidance define ‘‘contractor’’ to
expressly include a contractor’s
affiliates and/or recommended that the
Guidance otherwise require contractors
to report the Labor Law violations of
their affiliates. Some recommended that
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the Guidance use the FAR definition of
‘‘affiliates’’ at FAR 2.101, which defines
‘‘affiliates’’ in the context of direct or
indirect control of an entity or business.
The Department declines to amend
the definition of ‘‘contractor’’ in the
final Guidance. The applicability of the
Order’s disclosure requirements to a
contracting entity’s corporate affiliates
is within the jurisdiction of the FAR
Council. As the FAR Council indicates
in the preamble to its final rule, the
scope of prime contractor and
subcontractor representations and
disclosures follows the general
principles and practice of the FAR that
are the same for other FAR provisions
requiring representations and
disclosures. The requirement to
represent and disclose applies to the
legal entity whose name and address is
entered on the bid/offer and that will be
legally responsible for performance of
the contract. Consistent with current
FAR practice, representations and
disclosures do not apply to a parent
corporation, subsidiary corporation, or
other affiliates, unless a specific FAR
provision (e.g., FAR 52.209–5) requires
that additional information. The
Department additionally notes that the
Order’s disclosure requirements do not
amend the existing FAR provisions
regarding the relationship between a
contractor’s affiliates and its
responsibility. The FAR continues to
require contracting officers to consider
all relevant information when reviewing
a contractor’s responsibility—including
the past performance and integrity of a
contractor’s affiliates when they affect
the prospective contractor’s
responsibility. See FAR 9.104–3(c).
The Department also received
comments specifically directed at
‘‘covered subcontracts.’’ In the final
Guidance, the Department created a new
section dedicated specifically to
subcontractor responsibility. See
Guidance, section V. The comments
about subcontract coverage are
addressed in a parallel section of the
section-by-section analysis below.
B. Labor Law Decisions (Formerly ‘‘What
Triggers the Disclosure Obligations’’)
The second part of section II discusses
the categories of Labor Law decisions
that contractors must disclose. The
Order requires contractors to disclose
Labor Law decisions rendered against
them within the preceding 3-year period
for a violation of the Labor Laws. See
Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A). The
Proposed Guidance interpreted the
relevant 3-year period to be the 3-year
period preceding the date of the offer,
contract bid, or proposal. 80 FR 30574,
30578. Labor Law decisions rendered
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during that 3-year period must be
disclosed even if the underlying
unlawful conduct occurred more than 3
years prior to the date of the report. See
id. The Proposed Guidance further
explained that contractors must disclose
Labor Law decisions that were issued
during the relevant 3-year period even
if they were not performing or bidding
on a covered contract at the time of the
decision. Id. at 30578–79.
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Timing of the Initial Representation
Requirement
The FAR Council proposed rule
provided that, consistent with the
Order, all ‘‘offerors’’ must initially
represent at the time of their bids
whether they have decisions that must
be disclosed. See 80 FR 30552. One
industry commenter proposed that only
the contractor selected for an award of
the contract should have to make the
initial representation required by the
Order. The FAR rule reasonably creates
a two-step process requiring an initial
representation equivalent to ‘‘yes or
no.’’ See FAR 22.2004–1(a). And only
contractors for whom a contracting
officer will initiate a responsibility
determination must make more detailed
disclosures. Id. This staggered process
provides an appropriate balance by
requiring detailed disclosures only from
offerors for whom the contracting officer
is conducting a responsibility
determination.
The 3-Year Disclosure Period
Several commenters addressed the 3year disclosure period. For example, the
Aerospace Industries Association (AIA)
argued that, at least with respect to
administrative merits determinations,
‘‘only those determinations based on
conduct that occurred or ceased within
the prior three years’’ should be
disclosed. However, the Order states
that contractors must disclose violations
‘‘rendered against’’ the contractor
within the 3-year disclosure period.
Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A). This
language clearly refers to the date of the
Labor Law decision, as opposed to when
the underlying conduct occurred. The
final Guidance includes an additional
example to illustrate this principle.
The Council of Defense and Space
Industry Associations (CODSIA)
requested that the period of coverage for
the disclosure requirements be reduced
to 6 or 12 months. The plain language
of the Order provides for a 3-year
disclosure period, see Order, section
2(a)(i); thus it is not possible to
permanently reduce the disclosure
period. However, as described in section
VIII of the Guidance and the
corresponding section of the section-by-
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section analysis below, the final FAR
rule phases in the disclosure period so
that the full 3-year period will not be
fully effective until October 25, 2018.
Proposal To Add Labor Laws
Some commenters suggested requiring
disclosures for violations of statutes
other than the enumerated Labor Laws.
For example, the United Food and
Commercial Workers International
Union (UFCW) proposed adding ‘‘the
anti-discrimination provisions of the
Immigration and Nationality Act as
amended by the Immigration Reform
and Control Act of 1986 which are
codified at [8 U.S.C. 1324b].’’ Two labor
union commenters urged the
Department to require disclosure of
safety-and-health violations under
statutory authority separate from the
OSH Act, such as the Atomic Energy
Act, 42 U.S.C. 2282c.37
The Department declines to adopt
these proposals. The Order specifically
identifies 14 Federal laws and Executive
orders for which violations must be
disclosed. Order, section 2(a)(i)(A)–(N).
The Department cannot alter the list of
laws covered by the Order.
Disclosure of Criminal Violations
The Center for American Progress
Action Fund (CAPAF) requested
clarification as to whether the Order
requires disclosure of criminal
violations of the Labor Laws, as the
FLSA, the Migrant and Seasonal
Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(MSPA), and the OSH Act provide for
criminal sanctions. CAPAF is concerned
that, if not, there would be a ‘‘significant
loophole.’’
The Department declines to modify
the final Guidance in response to this
comment. The Order does not reference
criminal violations of the Labor Laws.
The Order requires disclosure only of a
civil judgment, arbitral award or
decision, or administrative merits
determination, and a criminal
conviction is not encompassed within
those terms.38
37 Although the Order does not require the
disclosure of violations of other Federal
occupational safety-and-health statutes, such
violations may be otherwise considered during the
contracting process. For example, a contractor may
bid on a Department of Energy contract for which
the work will be covered by the Atomic Energy Act
rather than the OSH Act. Such a contractor,
however, may be performing work, or has
performed work, that is covered by the OSH Act for
another government agency or in the private sector.
It is clear from the plain terms of the Order that a
contractor, when bidding on a contract, must
disclose any violations of the OSH Act, even if the
work for which the contractor is bidding will not
be covered by the OSH Act.
38 While disclosure of criminal convictions is not
required under the provisions of the Order, the
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OSHA State Plans
The Order directs the Department to
define the State laws that are equivalent
to the 14 identified Federal labor laws
and Executive orders. Order, section
2(a)(i)(O). The Proposed Guidance
stated that OSHA-approved State Plans
are equivalent State laws for purposes of
the Order’s disclosure requirements
because the OSH Act permits certain
States to administer OSHA-approved
State occupational safety-and-health
plans in lieu of Federal enforcement of
the OSH Act. See 80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several commenters addressed the
inclusion of OSHA-approved State
Plans as equivalent State laws. One
labor organization commenter agreed
that State Plans are equivalent to the
OSH Act, as the State Plans function in
lieu of the OSH Act in those States, and
the National Council for Occupational
Safety and Health (National COSH)
called it ‘‘essential’’ to the Order’s
purpose that both the OSH Act and ‘‘its
state law equivalents’’ be included.
In contrast, the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce argued that the State Plans
are not equivalent State laws. The
Chamber noted that while State Plans
must be ‘‘at least as effective’’ as the
Federal OSHA program,39 substantial
differences nevertheless exist, because
some State Plans ‘‘impose requirements
. . . that are not required by, or differ
from, federal law.’’
The Department declines to modify
this aspect of the Proposed Guidance.
As an initial matter, the Department
interprets the Chamber’s comment to
suggest that a State law must be
identical to be considered ‘‘equivalent’’
under the Order. The Department notes
that other commenters emphasized that
‘‘equivalent’’ does not equate to
‘‘identical.’’ The Department agrees with
these commenters; requiring equivalent
State laws to be identical would be
underinclusive because State laws are
rarely if ever identical to Federal laws.
The Department finds State Plans to
be equivalent to the OSH Act because
they perform the same functions as
OSHA—setting standards, conducting
enforcement inspections, and issuing
citations. OSHA has only limited
enforcement authority in those twentytwo States with State Plans, so failing to
include OSHA State Plans as equivalent
State laws would lead to a gap in
disclosure for safety-and-health
violations in those States under the
Order. Including the State Plans results
Department notes that the FAR does require
contractors to disclose criminal convictions in
certain circumstances. See FAR 52.209–7.
39 See Section 18(c) of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 667
(c).
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in a more level playing field than would
excluding them. For these reasons, the
Guidance adopts the inclusion of
OSHA-approved State Plans as
equivalent State laws. The Guidance
now also includes additional resources
about State Plans and a link to a list of
OSHA-approved State Plans on the
OSHA Web site.
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Disclosure of All Relevant Violations
Several industry commenters objected
to disclosing Labor Law violations
where the underlying conduct did not
occur in the course of performance of a
Federal contract. In contrast, several
employee-advocacy groups supported
requiring contractors to disclose Labor
Law violations regardless of whether the
violation arose from the performance of
a Federal contract.
The Order’s disclosure requirement
does not distinguish between violations
committed during performance of a
Federal contract and those that are not.
See Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A).
The Order aims to incorporate the full
picture of a contractor’s Labor Law
compliance into the responsibility
determination process. A contractor’s
past performance—whether in the
course of performing a Federal contract
or not—is an indicator of the
contractor’s future performance.40 It is
also relevant to a determination of the
contractor’s integrity and business
ethics. The existing responsibility
determination process already requires
contractors to disclose unlawful
conduct that may not have occurred
during work on government contracts.
FAR 52.209–5(a)(1)(i)(B)–(D). Thus,
contractors must disclose any Labor
Law decision issued for a violation of
the Labor Laws, even if the violation
was not committed in the performance
of work on a Federal Government
contract or subcontract. Because some
commenters thought this was not clear
in the Proposed Guidance, the
Department modifies the Guidance for
clarity.
Violations Related to Actions or
Omissions of a Federal Agency
Several industry commenters
suggested that contractors should not be
required to disclose Labor Law
violations that result from actions or
omissions of the contracting agency. For
example, two such commenters cited a
wage violation resulting from the failure
40 This principle is the same one a contractor uses
when conducting a review of prospective
subcontractors. A contractor would consider any
prior misconduct or performance problems by the
subcontractor, regardless of where the problems
occurred and for which contractor the subcontractor
was working at the time they occurred.
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of the contracting agency to include the
applicable clause or wage determination
in the contract. Furthermore, although
one trade association commenter and
one advocacy organization commenter
acknowledged that the Proposed
Guidance would allow contractors to
present additional information and
mitigating factors along with the
disclosed violation, they expressed
concern that the information will not be
properly evaluated.
The Department declines to adopt the
proposed changes to the Guidance. It
recognizes that some Labor Law
violations may result where a Federal
contract did not include a required
clause or wage determination. Whatever
the reason for the failure to include the
required clause or wage determination,
a violation still occurred. See, e.g., 41
CFR 60–1.4(e) (stating that the Executive
Order 11246 equal opportunity clause
‘‘shall be considered to be a part of
every [covered] contract . . . whether or
not it is physically incorporated in such
contracts’’). Thus, the Department
believes the better approach is to take
this information into account as a
mitigating factor, rather than to make
exceptions to the disclosure
requirements.
The Proposed Guidance was clear that
contractors are encouraged to submit
any additional information they believe
may be helpful in assessing the
violations at issue—particularly
mitigating information. The Proposed
Guidance stated that mitigating factors
can include situations where the
findings of the enforcement agency,
court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel
support a conclusion that the contractor
acted in good faith and had reasonable
grounds for believing that it was not
violating the law. 80 FR 30574, 30591.
As discussed below, the Guidance lists
‘‘good faith and reasonable grounds’’ as
a mitigating factor that weighs in favor
of a recommendation that a contractor
has a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. That discussion
specifically provides the example of a
situation where a violation is caused by
the failure of a contracting agency to
include a required clause in the
contract.
Disclosure of ‘‘Relatively Minor’’
Violations
The Association of General
Contractors (AGC) suggested that it is
‘‘burdensome and unfair’’ to require the
disclosure of ‘‘relatively minor
violations’’ that are not serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive as
defined by the Department. Because
only violations deemed serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive bear on
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the assessment of the contractor’s
integrity and business ethics, AGC
recommended that only those violations
should be disclosed.
The Department declines to adopt
AGC’s proposal. The Order plainly
requires contractors to disclose all
violations of the Labor Laws that result
in Labor Law decisions. The disclosed
violations are then classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive—or
not. See Order, sections 2(a)(i),
2(a)(iv)(A), 4(a)–(b). Only those
violations classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive will
be considered as part of the weighing
step and will factor into the ALCA’s
written analysis and advice. Violations
determined by the ALCA to not be
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
will be annotated as such in the analysis
that the ALCA provides to the
contracting officer.
Disclosure of Violations That Are
Subsequently Settled
Jenner & Block LLP commented that
it was unfair to require disclosure of
violations that have been settled, thus
rendering them ‘‘potentially
sanctionable[ ] event[s].’’ According to
the comment, doing so would cause
‘‘the Federal government to violate its
own contractual obligations’’ when
there is a non-admission provision in
the settlement agreement.
The Department declines to amend
the Guidance’s treatment of settled
violations. The Order requires the
disclosure of violations, and the fact
that a violation was subsequently settled
does not negate the fact that the
enforcement agency, after a thorough
investigation, found a violation to have
occurred.
In some settlements, the enforcement
agency may agree as part of the
settlement to vacate a prior
administrative merits determination. In
such a case, the settlement would have
the same effect as a court decision
reversing or vacating the original
violation. As the Guidance notes, in
such a circumstance, the contractor does
not need to disclose the original Labor
Law decision. See Guidance, section
II(B)(4).
Unless an enforcement agency has
agreed to vacate or rescind the
underlying violation entirely, however,
the contractor must still disclose the
related Labor Law decisions when
required by the Order, notwithstanding
any settlement agreement. A nonadmission provision, for example, does
not generally involve an enforcement
agency’s agreement to withdraw any
finding of a violation. Thus, a nonadmission provision does not affect the
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existence of any prior Labor Law
decision, and therefore does not change
the Order’s requirement that a
contractor must disclose any Labor Law
decision that preceded the settlement.
Similarly, an enforcement agency will
not include, and an ALCA will not
consider, language in a settlement
agreement purporting to determine or
affect whether a violation or related
Labor Law decision must be disclosed
under the Order.41
Although settlement agreements will
not affect a contractor’s disclosure
requirements under the Order, a
settlement agreement may be an
important factor in the ALCA’s overall
assessment of the contractor’s
compliance record. The Order requires
ALCAs to consider steps taken to correct
the violation or improve compliance,
and the Guidance accordingly provides
that the remediation of a Labor Law
violation through a settlement
agreement is an important mitigating
factor that can weigh in favor of a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. See Guidance, section
III(B)(1).
Comments About Specific Subsections
The Order instructs the Department to
define the three categories of Labor Law
decisions that must be disclosed:
‘‘administrative merits determination,’’
‘‘civil judgment,’’ and ‘‘arbitral award or
decision.’’ Order, section 2(a)(i).
1. Defining ‘‘Administrative Merits
Determination’’
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department described an administrative
merits determination as including
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notices or findings—whether final or subject
to appeal or further review—issued by an
enforcement agency following an
investigation that indicates that the
contractor or subcontractor violated any
provision of the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30574, 30579–80.
The Department defined
‘‘enforcement agency’’ as including the
Department and its agencies—OSHA,
WHD, and the Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP).
Enforcement agencies also include the
Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission (OSHRC); the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC); the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB); and certain State
agencies.
41 Nor will an enforcement agency include, or an
ALCA consider, language in a settlement agreement
purporting to determine how a violation will be
classified under the Order (e.g., language stating
that, for the purposes of the Order, the violation
was not serious, willful, repeated, or pervasive).
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The Department identified the
specific notices and findings issued by
these agencies that are administrative
merits determinations. The Department
provided that administrative merits
determinations also include ‘‘a
complaint filed by or on behalf of an
enforcement agency with a Federal or
State court, an administrative judge, or
an administrative law judge alleging
that the contractor or subcontractor
violated any provision of the Labor
Laws,’’ and ‘‘any order or finding from
any administrative judge, administrative
law judge, the Department’s
Administrative Review Board [(ARB)],
the [OSHRC] or State equivalent, or the
[NLRB] that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of
the Labor Laws.’’ 80 FR 30574, 30579–
80. This list of notices, findings, and
documents was an exhaustive one.
a. Inclusion of Nonfinal and Appealable
Decisions
A number of industry commenters
objected on due process and related
grounds to the inclusion of nonfinal and
appealable decisions in the definition of
‘‘administrative merits determination.’’
These commenters characterized such
determinations as ‘‘allegations.’’ One
form comment submitted by various
employers and employer groups
asserted that requiring disclosure of
nonfinal agency actions could cause
contractors to lose a contract because of
cases that are not yet fully adjudicated.
The form comment stated that this
would infringe upon Federal
contractors’ due process rights.
These commenters also argued that
the notices, findings, and documents
identified as administrative merits
determinations in the Proposed
Guidance often reflect mistakes by the
enforcement agencies and/or are often
reversed or settled, and that requiring
disclosure of nonfinal and appealable
determinations assumes that contractors
are guilty until proven innocent. One
form comment asserted that a number of
the proposed administrative merits
determinations are ‘‘routinely
overturned once the initial
determination is challenged.’’ A few of
these commenters asserted that the
disclosure of ‘‘nonfinal allegations’’ may
cause economic and reputational harms
to contractors, particularly if the
reported violation is later reversed.
For these commenters, administrative
merits determination should include
only final and adjudicated agency
decisions. Jenner & Block, in a
representative comment, suggested that
only ‘‘final decision[s] of administrative
bodies with quasi-judicial authority’’
should be administrative merits
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determinations. These commenters
suggested that such a limit might
include only decisions of administrative
bodies such as OSHRC or the ARB, and
those decisions of individual
administrative law judges that are not
appealed and therefore become final
agency actions.
Several commenters, including the
Society for Human Resource
Management, the Council for Global
Immigration, and the College and
University Professional Association for
Human Resources, also noted that the
FAR Council’s ‘‘Contractor
Responsibility’’ rulemaking in 2000 ,42
which was later rescinded, would have
required the reporting of ‘‘adverse
decisions by federal administrative law
judges, boards or commissions’’ but not
‘‘preliminary agency assessments.’’ One
industry commenter asserted that the
FAR Council previously rejected the
notion that nonfinal allegations should
influence the procurement process.
In contrast, union and workeradvocacy commenters supported the
scope of agency determinations
included in the proposed definition of
administrative merits determination.
For example, Change to Win (CTW)
emphasized its strong support for
including initial agency findings in the
responsibility inquiry because,
otherwise, violations would go
undisclosed while ‘‘awaiting the
outcome of potentially and often
frivolous employer challenges to such
findings and orders.’’ Another
commenter, North America’s Building
Trades Unions (NABTU), explained
that:
[t]he fact that a government enforcement
agency has decided, after conducting an
investigation, to pursue a citation, complaint
or other action against a contractor is a signal
of potential serious problems that could go
unreported if the contractor were permitted
to wait until the case is completely
adjudicated—a process that can take years[.]
The Department believes that the due
process and related critiques of the
proposed definition of administrative
merits determination are unwarranted.
The Order delegates to the Department
the authority to define the term. See
Order, section 2(a)(i). The proposed
definition is consistent with the Order
and the authority delegated. The
Department limited the definition to a
finite number of findings, notices, and
documents—and only those issued
‘‘following an investigation by the
42 Federal Acquisition Regulation; Contractor
Responsibility, Labor Relations Costs, and Costs
Relating to Legal and Other Proceedings, 65 FR
80256 (Dec. 20, 2000).
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relevant enforcement agency.’’ 80 FR
30574, 30579.
If the Department limited its
definition of administrative merits
determination solely to findings of an
ALJ, board, or commission, then
thousands of uncontested enforcement
agency determinations that Labor Laws
have been violated would go
undisclosed. For example, most WHD
determinations that the FLSA’s
minimum wage and/or overtime
provisions have been violated are never
contested before an adjudicative body;
rather, they are resolved prior to any
litigation by the employer agreeing to
pay the back wages reflected in a WH–
56 form. Likewise, 89.1 percent of
citations issued by OSHA between
October 1, 2012 and September 30, 2015
were not contested or were settled using
OSHA’s informal settlement agreements
or expedited informal settlement
agreements.43 And, at the NLRB, the
settlement rate for meritorious unlawful
labor practices cases was 92.4 percent in
fiscal year 2015.44
Moreover, a narrower definition of
administrative merits determination
would also exclude all those initial
agency determinations that a contractor
is actively contesting. Excluding these
determinations would in many cases
result in a particularly long delay
between the prohibited conduct and the
obligation to disclose. For example,
contested OSHA citations frequently
take years to become final. In the
interim, a contractor with many OSHA
citations could secure Federal contracts
without any consideration of those
citations. In addition, the assertion by
some commenters that administrative
merits determinations are routinely
overturned is not the case. For example,
in fiscal year 2015 the NLRB’s litigation
success rate before ALJs and the Board
was 88 percent, and 80 percent of Board
decisions were enforced in whole or in
part by courts of appeals.45 An even
smaller percentage of all OSHA
citations—less than 2 percent—are later
vacated.
The definition of administrative
merits determination simply delineates
the scope of contractors’ disclosure
obligations—the first stage in the
Order’s process. Not all disclosed Labor
43 This information and additional information
below regarding OSHA citations were compiled
from citations issued by Federal OSHA offices (as
opposed to by State agencies under OSHAapproved State Plans) and recorded in OSHA’s
Information System.
44 NLRB, ‘‘NLRB FY 2015 Performance and
Accountability Report’’ 36, https://www.nlrb.gov/
sites/default/files/attachments/basic-page/node1674/14445%20NLRB%20PAR%202015%20v2_
508.pdf.
45 Id. at 36, 58.
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Law decisions are relevant to a
recommendation regarding a
contractor’s integrity and business
ethics. Only those that involve
violations classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive will
be considered as part of the weighing
step and will factor into the ALCA’s
written analysis and advice.46
Moreover, when disclosing Labor Law
decisions, a contractor has the
opportunity to submit all relevant
information it deems necessary to
demonstrate responsibility, including
mitigating circumstances and steps
taken to achieve compliance with Labor
Laws. See FAR 22.2004–2(b)(1)(ii). As
the Guidance provides, the information
that the contractor is challenging or
appealing an adverse administrative
merits determination will be carefully
considered. The Guidance also states
that Labor Law violations that have not
resulted in final determinations,
judgments, awards, or decisions should
be given lesser weight. The Department
believes that contractors’ opportunity to
provide all relevant information—
including mitigating circumstances—
and the Guidance’s explicit recognition
that nonfinal administrative merits
determinations should be given lesser
weight resolve any due process
concerns raised by the commenters.
b. Specific Categories of Administrative
Merits Determinations
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department enumerated an agency-byagency list of notices, findings, and
documents that will be considered to be
administrative merits determinations. A
number of commenters commented
about these agency-specific lists.
WH–56 Summary of Unpaid Wages
Form
The Proposed Guidance identified
several types of documents issued by
WHD, including a WH–56 ‘‘Summary of
Unpaid Wages’’ form (WH–56 form), as
administrative merits determinations.
See 80 FR 30574, 30579. Several
industry commenters objected to the
inclusion of the WH–56 form as an
administrative merits determination.
For example, one commenter, SAIC,
stated that a WH–56 form is ‘‘not an
admission of liability’’ but ‘‘a
mechanism of settlement to resolve
conflicts arising out of the investigation,
and has been used as a practical and
effective means of resolving complaints
short of the litigation process.’’ Another
46 In addition, contractors are encouraged to
disclose the subsequent reversal or modification of
Labor Law decisions, which will reduce the
potential impact of any erroneous administrative
merits determination.
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commenter, Jenner & Block, argued that
a WH–56 form is ‘‘not a ‘merits
determination’ at all,’’ ‘‘includes solely
a list of names, dates, and dollars
owed,’’ and ‘‘contains no description of
the purported violation, and no findings
regarding any investigation that may
have preceded its issuance.’’ And
another commenter, Jackson Lewis LLC,
asserted that WH–56 forms are regularly
issued ‘‘before the employer has been
provided a full opportunity to refute the
basis of alleged violations and/or back
pay calculated by the DOL in
connection with the alleged violation,’’
and are issued in a ‘‘speculative and
inconsistent’’ manner.47
The Department retains the WH–56
form as an administrative merits
determination in the Guidance. WH–56
forms reflect WHD’s determination that
an employer violated one or more wageand-hour laws and owes back wages.
The WH–56 forms contain the specific
amount of back wages due to each
employee, the statute(s) violated, and
the date(s) of the violation(s). WHD
issues WH–56 forms only after an
investigation—during which employers
are given the opportunity to provide
relevant information and articulate their
legal position. Moreover, WHD’s policy
is to issue a WH–56 form only after the
employer has been informed of the
investigation findings, has been
provided an opportunity to explain the
reasons for the violation(s), has been
advised of how to comply with the
law(s) at issue, and, most importantly,
has agreed to fully comply with the
law(s) going forward. In almost every
case when WHD issues a WH–56 form,
there is no further violation
determination by WHD, a court, or an
ALJ; the WH–56 is almost always the
final assessment of an employer’s back
wage liability. In 88.2 percent of cases
concluded in fiscal years 2013 through
2015 in which WHD issued a WH–56
form after determining that a Labor Law
was violated, the employer paid all or
some (usually all) of the back wages due
on the form.48
47 One commenter, Littler’s Workplace Policy
Institute, stated that the Department ‘‘would require
a contractor to report as an ‘administrative merits
determination’ a FLSA letter determination from
the Wage and Hour Division, yet the agency has
vigorously argued that such letters do not constitute
final agency action that a company can challenge.’’
However, the Order does not indicate that the
required disclosures be defined by reference to the
Administrative Procedure Act. Rather, the Order
requires the disclosure of ‘‘administrative merits
determinations’’ and authorizes the Department to
define that term.
48 This information was compiled from data
recorded in the Wage and Hour Investigative
Support and Reporting Database maintained by
WHD. When the employer does not pay back wages
due, it may be because it is unable to pay or refuses
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OSHA Citations
The Proposed Guidance identified
several types of documents issued by
OSHA, including citations, as
administrative merits determinations.
See 80 FR 30574, 30579. Some industry
commenters opposed the use of OSHA
citations as administrative merits
determinations. For example, Jenner &
Block, citing OSHA’s regulations at 29
CFR 1903.14(a)–(b) and 1903.15(a),
argued that ‘‘an OSHA citation is merely
an ‘alleged violation,’ not a merits
determination,’’ and ‘‘is issued merely if
an OSHA Area Director ‘believes’ that
an employer has violated an OSHA law
or regulation, not after a ‘determination’
has been made’’ (emphasis in original).
This comment emphasized that ‘‘when
a contractor receives a citation, the
employer has received very limited
information about the enforcement
agency’s facts and legal position
regarding the alleged violation . . . a
citation is merely an allegation of
violation of specified or general duty
OSHA standards.’’ Associated Builders
and Contractors asserted that ‘‘most
OSHA citations are routinely changed
after investigation and negotiation
between the employer and the
investigating agency, resulting in a
lesser fine or type of citation.’’
The Department retains the OSHA
citation as an administrative merits
determination in the Guidance. OSHA
issues citations only after conducting
inspections during which OSHA affords
employers the opportunity to put forth
their position. The OSHA regulations
cited above simply recognize that, under
the applicable administrative scheme,
citations are not ‘‘final,’’ may be
contested, and are ‘‘alleged’’ until they
are made final—either by OSHRC
adjudication or because they were not
contested. See 29 U.S.C. 659(a), (c). That
does not mean that citations are not
reasoned agency determinations that an
OSH Act violation has occurred.
Moreover, as the Supreme Court has
recognized, OSHA citations can be
entitled to deference:
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The Secretary’s interpretation of OSH Act
regulations in an administrative adjudication,
however, is agency action, not a post hoc
rationalization of it. Moreover, when
embodied in a citation, the Secretary’s
interpretation assumes a form expressly
provided for by Congress.
Martin v. OSHRC, 499 U.S. 144, 157
(1991) (citing 29 U.S.C. 658) (emphasis
in original).
Furthermore, contrary to some
commenters’ claims, OSHA citations are
to pay, or for some other reason. When the
employer does not pay, the Department may pursue
further action, including litigation.
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rarely overturned. Of citations issued
between October 1, 2012 and September
30, 2015, 89.1 percent were not formally
contested and either became final under
29 U.S.C. 659(a) or were settled using
OSHA’s informal settlement agreements
or expedited informal settlement
agreements. Of those that were
contested, over one-half (58.7 percent)
have settled, and the vast majority (82
percent) of those settlements upheld at
least part of the citation. Of those that
did not settle, the citation was upheld
in the vast majority (81.6 percent) of
contested cases that have been resolved
by an ALJ, OSHRC, or a court as of April
2016 (some contested cases from the
time period are ongoing), more often
than not without any reduction in
penalty. Less than 2 percent of all of the
citations issued during the time period
have been vacated.
OFCCP Show Cause Notices
The Proposed Guidance identified ‘‘a
show cause notice for failure to comply’’
issued by OFCCP as an administrative
merits determination. See 80 FR 30,574,
30,579. OFCCP uses such notices to
enforce the affirmative action and
nondiscrimination rules in Executive
Order 11246 and other laws.
Some industry commenters argued
that OFCCP show cause notices should
not be considered administrative merits
determinations. For example, one
commenter, Roffman Horvitz, objected
to the inclusion of show cause notices
because they are not ‘‘final agency
determinations reviewable in the
Federal courts under the Administrative
Procedures Act.’’ According to this
comment, OFCCP issues show cause
notices to contractors at the outset of
audits if the contractor does not provide
the requested information within an
initial 30-day period. The commenter
alleged that OFCCP ‘‘has become
extremely reluctant to grant extensions
of time’’ of that period and ‘‘approaches
conciliation with a take-it-or-leave-it
attitude.’’
Another commenter, DirectEmployers
Association, stated that a show cause
notice generally contains ‘‘alleged
violations related to highly technical
Affirmative Action Program drafting and
recordkeeping issues, or a failure to
engage in adequate outreach and
recruitment of women and/or
minorities.’’ This commenter asserted
that a ‘‘very small minority of the [show
cause notices] that OFCCP issues may
also contain allegations of unlawful
discrimination (typically fewer than in
2 percent of all OFCCP audits).’’
The same commenter also stated that
‘‘routine’’ show cause notices are issued
‘‘prior to . . . completion of the
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58667
investigatory phase of the audit’’ and
‘‘prior to considering the contractor’s
response to the agency’s preliminary
investigative conclusions’’ (emphasis in
original). According to this commenter,
‘‘oftentimes the alleged violations raised
in [a show cause notice] are voluntarily
withdrawn by OFCCP,’’ ‘‘are resolved
through conciliation, or are later
dismissed by an administrative court.’’
The Department retains the OFCCP
show cause notice as an administrative
merits determination. OFCCP issues a
show cause notice when it determines
that a contractor has violated one or
more of the laws under OFCCP’s
jurisdiction. See Federal Contract
Compliance Manual, ch. 8D01 (Oct.
2014). OFCCP issues fewer than 200
show cause notices per year, and issues
them after a substantial process. OFCCP
typically issues show cause notices after
it has investigated, made findings,
issued a notice of violation,49 given the
contractor an opportunity to respond,
considered any response from the
contractor, and attempted to resolve the
issue through conciliation. OFCCP may
issue a show cause notice if a contractor
fails, after being requested by OFCCP, to
submit the affirmative action plans or
other information that it is required by
law to maintain. Contrary to the
commenter’s assertion, OFCCP gives a
contractor multiple chances, including
extensions of time, to provide the
requested information; and it gives a
contractor the opportunity to explain its
position before issuing a show cause
notice. OFCCP must, if other efforts are
unsuccessful, issue show cause notices
in those few circumstances when
contractors refuse to comply with their
legal obligations to provide information.
These obligations are crucial to OFCCP’s
ability to enforce its laws and
investigate potential violations. Indeed,
OFCCP cannot determine whether there
was in fact unlawful discrimination
until it receives the plans or other
information that the contractor is
required by law to maintain and
provide.
EEOC Letters and Actions
The Proposed Guidance identified ‘‘a
letter of determination that reasonable
cause exists to believe that an unlawful
employment practice has occurred or is
occurring’’ issued by the EEOC and ‘‘a
civil action filed on behalf of the EEOC’’
as administrative merits determinations.
See 80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several industry commenters
objected. Some argued that reasonable
cause letters are a preliminary action
49 Notices of violations are not administrative
merits determinations under the Order.
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and are not based on sound proof that
a violation actually occurred. Some
asserted that few reasonable cause
findings result in a court complaint or
an eventual judgment. Others noted that
reasonable cause findings are often
excluded as evidence in subsequent
litigation because their prejudicial value
outweighs their probative value.
The Department retains reasonable
cause letters as a type of administrative
merits determination. An EEOC
reasonable cause determination reflects
an assessment of a charge’s merits: ‘‘that
there is reasonable cause to believe that
the charge is true,’’ 42 U.S.C. 2000e–
5(b), based on information obtained in
the investigation, including that
provided by the employer, see EEOC,
‘‘What You Can Expect After a Charge
is Filed,’’ https://www.eeoc.gov/
employers/process.cfm. In fiscal year
2015, about 3.5 percent of charges filed
with the EEOC resulted in reasonable
cause determinations.50 After making a
reasonable cause determination, the
agency transitions from its investigatory,
fact-finding role to its role as a
conciliator and, if conciliation efforts
fail, the agency becomes a potential
litigant with authority to file a lawsuit
to protect the public interest, including
to obtain relief for individuals harmed
by the discriminatory practices on
which reasonable cause was found. The
agency does not revisit the reasonable
cause determination in conciliation.
Rather, the EEOC must try to
‘‘eliminate’’ the ‘‘alleged unlawful
employment practice’’ through
conciliation before it can sue. 42 U.S.C.
2000e–5(b).
That the EEOC decides to sue in a
relatively small percentage of cases in
which it has found reasonable cause has
little to no bearing on the
determinations’ merits. A large portion
of reasonable cause determinations are
conciliated. See 42 U.S.C. 2000e–5(b)
(describing the conciliation process).
For example, in fiscal years 2014 and
2015 combined, the EEOC successfully
conciliated 41 percent of its reasonable
cause determinations. Because of
limited resources, EEOC can file
lawsuits in only a small proportion of
cases where it finds reasonable cause.
Rather, the EEOC decides which cases
to litigate based on a range of factors,
including ‘‘the wider impact the lawsuit
could have on EEOC efforts to combat
workplace discrimination.’’ EEOC,
‘‘Litigation Procedures,’’ https://
www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/litigation/
50 The EEOC data in this paragraph and the
following paragraph are available on the EEOC’s
Web site at https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/statistics/
enforcement/all.cfm.
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procedures.cfm. Thus, the Department
concludes that it is appropriate to
include EEOC reasonable cause letters
as administrative merits determinations.
As mentioned above, the Proposed
Guidance also included as an EEOC
administrative merits determination ‘‘a
civil action filed on behalf of the
EEOC.’’ 80 FR 30574, 30579. This was
unnecessary because the Proposed
Guidance generally identified
complaints filed by or on behalf of
enforcement agencies with courts as
administrative merits determinations.
The Department eliminates this
redundancy in the final Guidance.
NLRB Complaints
The Proposed Guidance identified ‘‘a
complaint issued by any Regional
Director’’ of the NLRB as an
administrative merits determination. 80
FR 30574, 30579. Several industry
commenters opposed this proposal,
arguing that such complaints are only
allegations. For example, one such
commenter, the Littler Workplace Policy
Institute, characterized such complaints
as being based on ‘‘investigatory
findings without judicial or quasijudicial safeguards.’’ This commenter
further argued that ‘‘[e]ven the [NLRB]’s
own determinations are not selfenforcing, as section 10 of the NLRA
makes clear, because only a court of
appeals can enforce orders of the
Board.’’
Industry commenters also asserted
that a relatively low percentage of
complaints issued by NLRB Regional
Directors result in NLRB
determinations, and that even fully
litigated NLRB decisions are often
overturned by courts of appeals. And
commenters stated that the NLRB
sometimes pursues legal theories that
have been rejected by some U.S. Courts
of Appeals, meaning a contractor could
be forced to disclose a decision
involving conduct that some courts have
ruled does not amount to a violation.
Others argued that they must
purposefully violate the NLRA in
certain circumstances in order to test
the validity of the NLRB’s certification
of a representation election in Federal
court.
The Department retains the definition
of administrative merits determinations
for NLRA violations as proposed. The
Department disagrees with the premise
of the industry commenters’ comments.
As discussed above, the fiscal year 2015
NLRB settlement rate was 92.4 percent,
the litigation success rate of General
Counsel complaints before ALJs and the
Board was 88 percent, and 80 percent of
Board decisions were enforced in whole
or in part by Courts of Appeals. The
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Department also disagrees that NLRB
complaints should not be disclosed
because some employers may
purposefully violate the NLRA to ‘‘test’’
the validity of an election. Disclosure is
only the first step in the Order’s process;
when disclosing Labor Law decisions,
contractors are encouraged to submit all
relevant information, including
mitigating factors.
Some labor organizations suggested
that the definition of ‘‘administrative
merits determination’’ should be
expanded. These commenters advocated
including as administrative merits
determinations those NLRB General
Counsel findings in which the General
Counsel notifies employers that it will
issue a complaint absent settlement. The
Department considers this addition to
be unwarranted. If the General Counsel
does issue a complaint, the complaint
itself will be an administrative merits
determination that must be disclosed.
Accordingly, the Department maintains
the definition as proposed.
Complaints Filed With Courts or
Administrative Agencies
The list of administrative merits
determinations in the Proposed
Guidance included ‘‘a complaint filed
by or on behalf of an enforcement
agency with a Federal or State court, an
administrative judge, or an
administrative law judge alleging that
the contractor or subcontractor violated
any provision of the Labor Laws.’’ 80 FR
30574, 30579.
Several industry commenters
criticized this category. One commenter,
Jenner & Block, stated that a civil action
‘‘can only represent a set of allegations
and can never be viewed as a
determination on the merits’’ (emphasis
added). Another commenter questioned
whether the Department was justified in
distinguishing between a government
agency’s complaint and a private
litigant’s complaint—as the latter was
not included as an administrative merits
determination.
The Department retains the Guidance
as proposed. The distinction between
complaints filed by an enforcement
agency and complaints filed by private
parties to initiate lawsuits is valid.
Agencies pursue litigation only after
fully investigating the case, soliciting
the adverse party’s position, and making
efforts to resolve the matter. Thus, the
filing of a complaint by an enforcement
agency in court or before an
administrative agency is an agency
determination that the relevant law has
been violated.51 Moreover, the inclusion
51 Jenner & Block asserted that including ‘‘civil
actions as reportable events directly conflicts with
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merits determinations to ‘‘a letter
indicating that an investigation
disclosed a violation of sections six or
seven of the FLSA . . .’’ 53 To assure
that WHD letters finding a retaliation
violation will be disclosed, the
Department has revised the Guidance to
remove the phrase ‘‘of sections six or
seven.’’ Thus, a WHD determination
letter finding any FLSA violation—not
just minimum wage and overtime
violations—is an administrative merits
determination.
One commenter expressed concern
that violations of the anti-retaliation
provisions of the statutes enforced by
the EEOC may not meet the definition
of administrative merits determinations
because it is possible that retaliation is
not an ‘‘unlawful employment
practice.’’ The Department and the
EEOC consider the phrase ‘‘unlawful
employment practice’’ to include
unlawful retaliation.
Retaliation Violations
Several commenters representing
labor and worker advocacy
organizations advocated that the
definition of ‘‘administrative merit
determinations’’ include notices or
findings of violations of the antiretaliation provisions of the OSH Act,
29 U.S.C. 660(c) (‘‘Section 11(c)’’), and
the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3) (‘‘Section
15(a)(3)’’). These anti-retaliation
provisions are vital components to the
enforcement of the OSH Act and the
FLSA, and the Department did not
intend to exclude them. The relevant
administrative merits determination for
these anti-retaliation violations is a
complaint filed on behalf of the agency
in court. As discussed above, such
complaints are included in the
Guidance’s definition of ‘‘administrative
merits determination.’’ 52
In addition to such court actions,
WHD also may issue determination
letters finding retaliation in violation of
FLSA section 15(a)(3). The Proposed
Guidance incorrectly limited the
residual category of administrative
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of court complaints filed by or on behalf
of enforcement agencies is necessary
because some of the most egregious
violations of the Labor Laws found by
agencies may be enforced only through
court actions depending on the
particular Labor Law’s enforcement
scheme.
Finally, while it is true that not every
complaint filed by an enforcement
agency succeeds, the Department
reiterates that the definition of
administrative merits determination is
relevant only to the initial disclosure
requirement. The definition simply
determines the scope of contractors’
disclosure obligations—the first step in
the Order’s process. Not all disclosed
violations are relevant to contractors’
integrity and business ethics; only those
that are serious, repeated, willful, and/
or pervasive will be considered as part
of the weighing step and will factor into
the ALCA’s written analysis and advice.
False Statement Violations Under the
OSH Act
One commenter requested that the
Guidance include violations of section
17(g) of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 666(g),
which prohibits knowingly making false
statements in reports or other
documents required to be maintained by
the OSH Act, as violations that must be
disclosed under the Order. False
statement violations have only criminal
sanctions under the OSH Act. See id. As
discussed above, criminal convictions of
the Labor Laws are not reflected in the
administrative merits determinations,
civil judgments, or arbitral awards or
decisions that must be disclosed. The
Department therefore declines to amend
the Guidance as requested.
the terms of the Order, which requires only ‘civil
judgments’ to be reported.’’ (emphasis added).
However, the Order separately requires
‘‘administrative merits determinations’’ to be
disclosed, and for the reasons explained above, a
complaint filed by an enforcement agency in court
or before and administrative agency is an
administrative merits determination even though it
is not a civil judgment.
52 This would also cover the OSHA-approved
State Plans that enforce their equivalents to section
11(c) through State courts. To the extent some State
Plans enforce their anti-retaliation provisions
through administrative processes, the relevant
administrative merits determinations will be
identified in the second guidance to be issued by
the Department identifying the State laws that are
equivalent to the Federal Labor Laws.
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c. Settlements
Several commenters representing
labor and worker advocacy
organizations urged the Department to
define administrative merits
determination to expressly include
settlements reached with an
enforcement agency before the
institution of legal proceedings, which
would mean that contractor would be
required by the Order to disclose any
such settlements as ‘‘Labor Law
decisions.’’ Commenters argued that
their proposal would address a concern
that employers might repeatedly
negotiate preemptive settlements with
an enforcement agency during an
investigation, and thus avoid the
issuance of a Labor Law decision that
would otherwise have to be disclosed.
53 Sections six and seven refer to the FLSA’s
minimum wage and overtime provisions, 29 U.S.C.
206, 207.
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In such situations, according to these
commenters, these employers’
apparently clean records would not
reflect their repeated unlawful conduct.
Another commenter agreed that
settlements should not be considered
reportable findings of violation, but
argued that they should nevertheless be
disclosed as part of a responsibility
determination. Another sought
clarification whether a settlement
reached prior to a complaint being filed
must be disclosed under the Order.
The Department maintains the
Guidance as proposed. Settlements are
not administrative merits
determinations, and therefore
contractors are not required by the
Order to disclose them. The Department
believes that the inclusion of
settlements as administrative merits
determinations could serve as a
disincentive against settlements.
Settlements at the earliest possible stage
of a dispute are often the ideal outcome
for both employers and their employees
and the most efficient outcome for
contracting agencies, as early
settlements generally include improved
compliance with the Labor Laws. The
Department also notes that most
settlements of agency investigations or
enforcement actions follow or are
accompanied by a notice or finding from
the agency that meets the definition of
an administrative merits determination.
For example, OSHA settlements usually
include the affirmation of citations.
Those citations are themselves
administrative merits determinations
that must be disclosed. Likewise,
settlements of FLSA investigations are
often accompanied by a WH–56 form
indicating WHD’s determination that
back wages are due because of an FLSA
violation. The WH–56 form is an
administrative merits determination and
must be disclosed. However, any
settlement agreement itself is not an
administrative merits determination and
therefore need not be disclosed.
Although settlement agreements are
not administrative merits
determinations, a settlement including
remediation of violations is considered
to be a mitigating factor that the
contractor may choose voluntarily to
disclose. As a result, in cases where a
settlement accompanies or follows a
Labor Law decision that must be
disclosed, the Department anticipates
that contractors will voluntarily disclose
the settlement because it is in the
contractor’s interest to show that it has
remedied the violation. As discussed in
the preaward assessment and advice
section of the Guidance, remediation of
a violation is the most important
mitigating factor in the weighing
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process before an ALCA
recommendation. See Guidance, section
III(B).
In sum, the Department considers the
addition of settlements themselves as a
type of administrative merits
determination to be unwarranted.
2. Defining ‘‘Civil Judgment’’
The Proposed Guidance defined ‘‘civil
judgment’’ as
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any judgment or order entered by any Federal
or State court in which the court determined
that the contractor or subcontractor violated
any provision of the Labor Laws, or enjoined
or restrained the contractor or subcontractor
from violating any provision of the Labor
Laws.
80 FR 30574, 30580. The Proposed
Guidance discussed the types of court
judgments or orders that meet the
definition of ‘‘civil judgment’’ and
explained that a ‘‘private settlement
where the lawsuit is dismissed by the
court without any judgment being
entered is not a civil judgment.’’ Id. The
Proposed Guidance provided that ‘‘civil
judgment’’ includes a judgment or order
that is not final or is subject to appeal.
Id.
A number of industry commenters
who objected to the inclusion of
nonfinal agency determinations in the
definition of administrative merits
determination had similar concerns
about the definition of civil judgment.
They objected to defining civil
judgments to include court judgments
that are either nonfinal or still subject to
appeal, and they were concerned that
they could lose a contract as a result of
a judgment that is later reversed. For
these commenters, a civil judgment
should include only final orders or
judgments where all appeals have been
exhausted or not pursued. In addition,
several industry commenters objected to
including preliminary injunctions.
The Department has carefully
considered all of these comments and
declines to limit the definition of civil
judgment. The Proposed Guidance
defined civil judgment to include some
nonfinal and subject-to-appeal court
judgments for the same reasons that it
defined administrative merits
determinations to include nonfinal
agency determinations. In addition to
those reasons, which the Department
incorporates here as well, the
Department notes that it would make
little sense to exclude Federal court
judgments that follow a full discovery
process under the Federal rules simply
because these judgments still may be
subject to appeal or have been appealed
to a Federal court of appeals.
The Department also reiterates that
the Guidance’s definition of civil
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judgment does not include all court
decisions that are nonfinal. The
Guidance’s definition is limited to those
judgments or orders in which the court
‘‘determined’’ that there was a Labor
Law violation or ‘‘enjoined or
restrained’’ a violation. This means that,
for example, a court order denying an
employer’s motion to dismiss a
complaint about an alleged Labor Law
violation or an order denying an
employer’s motion for summary
judgment would not be ‘‘civil
judgments.’’ In both of those examples,
the court has found only that it is
possible that the complainant may be
able to succeed later at trial; it has not
made a determination that a Labor Law
has been violated.
As several commenters noted, a type
of nonfinal court order that the
Department explicitly included as a
civil judgment in the Proposed
Guidance is a preliminary injunction
that ‘‘enjoins or restrains a violation of
the Labor Laws.’’ 80 FR 30574, 30580.
Preliminary injunctions issued in
Federal court are not considered to be
‘‘final’’ orders. However, enforcement
agencies may pursue injunctive relief
when faced with the most egregious
violations of the Labor Laws (for
example, imminent danger actions
under the OSH Act or 10(j) injunctions
under the NLRA), and courts grant
preliminary injunctions only in
extraordinary circumstances and after a
strong showing of a likelihood of
success. Accordingly, the Department
concludes that the granting of such
relief may be relevant to the assessment
of a contractor’s respect for legal
obligations and workplace conditions. It
is therefore appropriate to require
disclosure.
Finally, the Department reiterates that
the definition of ‘‘civil judgment’’
simply determines the scope of
contractors’ disclosure obligations—the
first stage in the Order’s process. Not all
disclosed violations are relevant to
contractors’ integrity and business
ethics. Only those that are later
determined to be serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive will be
considered as part of the weighing step
and will factor into the ALCA’s written
analysis and advice. Moreover,
contractors have an opportunity to
submit any additional information—
including mitigating information—that
they believe may be helpful in assessing
their overall record of compliance. In
sum, court judgments and orders that
meet the definition of ‘‘civil judgment’’
must be disclosed—even where nonfinal
or still subject to appeal.
While the Department is not changing
the definition of civil judgment, two
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clarifications are necessary. One
commenter, the Equal Employment
Advisory Council (EEAC), expressed
concern that the definition of civil
judgment would include temporary
restraining orders (TROs). The Proposed
Guidance did not intend to include
TROs under the definition of civil
judgment. TROs are distinct from
preliminary injunctions under the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and
can, in certain circumstances, be issued
without notice to the adverse party.
Compare Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 65(a)
(preliminary injunctions) with Fed. R.
Civ. Proc. 65(b) (TROs). To avoid any
confusion, the Guidance has been
revised to clarify that TROs are not civil
judgments for the purposes of the Order,
and need not be disclosed.
Another commenter, National
Security Technologies, LLC, requested
that the Department limit the definition
of civil judgements to exclude
judgments entered pursuant to accepted
Offers of Judgment under Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure 68, which are ‘‘in the
nature of settlements.’’ The Department
agrees that accepted offers of judgment
under Rule 68 are akin to settlements
and are not ‘‘civil judgments’’ for the
purposes of the Order. The Guidance
has been revised accordingly.
3. Defining ‘‘Arbitral Award or
Decision’’
The Proposed Guidance defined
‘‘arbitral award or decision’’ as
any award or order by an arbitrator or arbitral
panel in which the arbitrator or arbitral panel
determined that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of the
Labor Laws, or enjoined or restrained the
contractor or subcontractor from violating
any provision of the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30580. The Proposed Guidance
stated that arbitral awards and decisions
must be disclosed ‘‘even if the arbitral
proceedings were private or
confidential.’’ Id. It further provided
that ‘‘arbitral award or decision’’
includes an award or order that is not
final or is subject to being confirmed,
modified, or vacated by a court. Id.
Several industry commenters objected
to disclosing arbitral awards or
decisions that are confidential or
private. The AARP, on the other hand,
supported the disclosing of private or
confidential arbitration awards and
decisions. Industry commenters
contended that disclosing awards may
have a chilling effect on arbitration, that
disclosure may require the breaking of
arbitration or labor contracts, and that
the confidentiality of arbitration is
provided by some State laws. One
commenter, the Aerospace Industries
Association, suggested excluding
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arbitral awards from confidential or
private arbitrations conducted under
arbitration agreements executed before
the effective date of any final rule
implementing the Order.
The Department declines to narrow its
interpretation of the disclosure
requirement to exclude confidential or
private arbitrations. The Order
specifically requires the disclosure of
arbitral awards or decisions without
exception, see Order, section 2(a)(i), and
confidentiality provisions generally
have exceptions for disclosures required
by law. Moreover, there is nothing
particularly sensitive about the four
pieces of basic information that
contractors must publicly disclose about
each arbitral award or decision—the
Labor Law that was violated, the case
number, the date of the award or
decision, and the name of arbitrator. See
FAR 22.2004–2(b)(1)(i). Parties routinely
disclose more information about an
arbitral award when they file a court
action seeking to have the award
vacated, confirmed, or modified.
In addition to the commenters
discussed above who object generally to
disclosing any nonfinal determinations
or judgments, some industry
commenters specifically objected to
disclosing nonfinal arbitration awards
or decisions. The Department declines
to modify the Guidance in response to
these comments. The disclosure of
arbitral awards that are nonfinal or still
subject to court review is appropriate for
all of the same reasons discussed above
supporting the Department’s inclusion
of administrative merits determinations
and civil judgments that are nonfinal or
subject to appeal. Furthermore, the
Department notes that the Federal
Arbitration Act provides a very high
standard that must be met for a court to
vacate or modify an arbitral award. See
9 U.S.C. 10 (standard for vacating
award); 9 U.S.C. 11 (standard for
modifying award).
The AARP supported the proposed
definition of arbitral award or decision,
but proposed broadening the definition
to include awards and decisions where
the employee has succeeded ‘‘on any
significant issue or receives even some
of the benefits sought.’’ Under this
proposal, an award or decision would
have to be disclosed, ‘‘even if there was
no formal determination of a legal
violation.’’ The Department declines to
modify the Guidance in response to this
comment. The Order requires disclosure
of arbitral awards or decisions rendered
against the contractor ‘‘for violations of
any of the [Labor Laws].’’ Order, section
2(a)(i). The Department believes that
this requires a finding that a Labor Law
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was violated in order to trigger the
Order’s disclosure requirement.
Two industry commenters requested
clarification about arbitral decisions that
involve both a collective bargaining
agreement (CBA) and one of the Labor
Laws. One asserted that the Guidance’s
disclosure requirements should
expressly exclude arbitral decisions
finding CBA violations that do not
amount to statutory violations. The
other commenter, the Association of
General Contractors of America (AGC),
stated that arbitral decisions involving
CBAs are often unclear about whether
their rulings are ‘‘on a matter of law,
contract, or both.’’ The Department
agrees that an arbitrator’s decision
finding only a CBA violation does not
trigger the disclosure requirement.
However, where the arbitrator does
make an express finding that there was
a violation of one of the Labor Laws,
then the decision or award must be
disclosed, regardless of whether the
same conduct also violated the CBA.
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions
Arising From the Same Underlying
Violation
The Proposed Guidance addressed
and gave examples regarding how
contractors should disclose successive
administrative merits determinations,
civil judgments, and/or arbitral awards
or decisions that arise from the same
underlying violation. See 80 FR 30580–
81. One commenter, Jackson Lewis LLC,
stated that this discussion would have
been ‘‘unnecessary’’ had the Department
not required disclosure of ‘‘alleged
violations.’’ According to this comment,
‘‘[n]othing in the already dense DOL
Guidance is more complex than sorting
what successive determinations must be
reported and what need not be
reported.’’ After considering this
comment, the Department modifies this
section of the Guidance for improved
readability—but does not make any
substantive changes. The Department
believes that the examples provided,
including a new example, will help
contractors meet their disclosure
obligations under the Order.
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
(Formerly ‘‘What Information Must Be
Disclosed’’)
The Order itself contains guidance for
what information a contractor must
disclose. See Order, section 2(a). And
the FAR rule includes specific
disclosure requirements and processes.
See FAR 22.2004–1(a). This section of
the Proposed Guidance directly tracked
the language of the proposed FAR rule.
Where the FAR Council has modified
relevant language in its final rule, the
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58671
Department has modified the final
Guidance accordingly. In addition, in
one nonsubstantive change to this
section of the Guidance, the Department
has created a separate subsection to
highlight the process for contracting
officers to give contractors the
opportunity to submit any additional
relevant information (including
mitigating factors) about Labor Law
violations. Several commenters
submitted concerns or suggestions about
this section; however, because
comments took issue with the content of
the FAR rule, the FAR Council has
addressed those comments, and the
comments are not summarized or
discussed here.
Specific Disclosure Requirements
The Proposed Guidance included the
requirements from the proposed FAR
rule about the specific information that
a contractor must disclose, at the time
of the responsibility determination,
about each Labor Law decision. It
provided that, for each decision, the
contractor disclose: (1) The Labor Law
that was violated; (2) the case number,
inspection number, charge number,
docket number, or other unique
identification number; (3) the date of the
determination, judgment, award, or
decision; and (4) the name of the court,
arbitrator(s), agency, board, or
commission that rendered it. See 80 FR
30574, 30581.
Several labor unions and employee
advocacy organizations suggested
requiring disclosure of more
information than the four types of
information listed above. The
Department retains the Guidance as
proposed. The specific disclosure
requirements are promulgated in the
final FAR rule, FAR 22.2004–2(b)(1)(i),
and they are included in the Guidance
only for completeness. Moreover, the
Department notes that contracting
officers have an existing duty under the
FAR to obtain such additional
information as may be necessary to be
satisfied that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics, see FAR 9.105–1(a), and
the FAR rule requires contracting
officers to request Labor Law decision
documents from contractors where the
ALCA is otherwise unable to obtain
them, see FAR 22.2004–2(b)(2)(iii).
While the Department has not amended
the list of specific disclosure
requirements, it has added to the final
Guidance a list of the relevant unique
identification numbers for each category
of violation.
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Accuracy of Contractor Disclosures
One group of worker-advocacy
organizations expressed concern that
the Guidance does not instruct
contracting officials to verify the
accuracy of the information that a
contractor submits. The comment noted
that a new Labor Law violation might be
found against a contractor after the
contractor’s initial representation about
its record. In such a case, the comment
suggested, a contractor that responds
negatively at the initial representation
stage should be required at the
subsequent preaward stage to provide
an update about any new violations
(assuming that a responsibility
determination is undertaken at that
point).
Several unions and worker-advocacy
groups applauded the proposed FAR
rule and the Proposed Guidance for
significantly improving reporting
requirements and public disclosures;
however, they also expressed concerns
that the penalties for contractors who
misrepresent or omit information when
disclosing Labor Law violations should
be strengthened. Several of these
commenters argued that disclosures
regarding Labor Law violations should
be provided under oath and/or under
penalty of perjury. Another commenter,
the AARP, suggested that the FAR
Council should clearly state that
‘‘failure to report violations will lead to
a determination of nonresponsibility.’’
The Department does not believe that
contractor representations regarding
Labor Law matters should be treated
differently than other representations
related to responsibility. Under the
FAR, a contractor who fails to furnish a
certification related to responsibility
matters or to furnish such information
as may be requested by the contracting
officer related to that contractor’s
responsibility shall be given an
opportunity to remedy the deficiency.
See FAR 9.104–5. Ultimately, failure to
furnish the certification or such
information ‘‘may render the offeror
nonresponsible.’’ Id. In addition, wellestablished penalties already exist for
bad faith and material
misrepresentations regarding
responsibility matters.54
54 A contractor may be disqualified, the award
canceled, or the contract terminated if the
misrepresentation is made in bad faith or has
materially influenced the agency’s responsibility
determination. See Impresa Construzioni Geom.
Domenico Garufi v. United States, 238 F.3d 1324,
1339–40 (Fed. Cir. 2001). Where the award is
canceled, the contractor can be precluded from
bidding on a reprocurement contract. See Northrop
Grumman Corp. v. United States, 50 Fed. Cl. 443,
468 (2001). Moreover, under appropriate
circumstances, a contractor may also be suspended
or debarred, or held liable under the False Claims
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The Department does recognize that a
substantial period of time may pass
between the contractor’s initial
representation and the date of the
award. In particular, as the commenter
referenced above suggested, a contractor
may initially represent that it has no
Labor Law decisions to disclose, but a
Labor Law decision may be rendered
against it after that initial representation
prior to the date of an award.
Contractors have a duty to provide an
update to the contracting officer prior to
the date of an award if the contractor’s
initial representation is no longer
accurate. Thus, the final FAR rule now
provides that if a new Labor Law
decision is rendered or the contractor
otherwise learns that its representation
is no longer accurate, the contractor
must notify the contracting officer of an
update to its representation. See FAR
52.222–57(e). This means that if the
contractor made an initial
representation that it had no Labor Law
decision to disclose, and since the time
of the offer the contractor has a Labor
Law decision to disclose, the contractor
must notify the contracting officer. The
reverse is also true: If, for example, an
offeror made an initial representation
that it has a Labor Law decision to
disclose, and since the time of the offer
that Labor Law decision has been
vacated by the enforcement agency or a
court, the contractor must notify the
contracting officer.
Postaward Disclosure Updates
The disclosure section of the
Proposed Guidance included a
description of the Order’s requirement
that contractors update their disclosures
postaward, during performance of a
covered procurement contract. See 80
FR 30574, 30581. The Department has
reorganized the final Guidance to
consolidate discussion of postaward
disclosure and assessment issues in a
new section (Section IV). Comments
about the postaward disclosure are
addressed in a parallel section of this
preamble section-by-section analysis,
below.
Subcontractor Disclosures
The disclosure section of the
Proposed Guidance also included an
explanation of the Order’s subcontractor
disclosure provisions. See 80 FR 30574,
30582. The Department has reorganized
the final Guidance to consolidate
discussion of subcontractor issues in a
new section (Section V). Comments
about the subcontractor disclosure
provisions are addressed in a parallel
Act, among other available remedies. See 31 U.S.C.
3730; 18 U.S.C. 1001.
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section of this preamble section-bysection analysis, below.
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
(Formerly ‘‘Weighing Violations of the
Labor Laws’’)
Section III of the Guidance explains
the process by which ALCAs classify,
weigh, and provide advice about a
contractor’s violations of the Labor Laws
during the preaward period. Based on
the comments received, the Department
believes that the separate steps in this
process may not have been emphasized
clearly enough in the Proposed
Guidance. Several commenters, for
example, appeared to conflate the
determination that a contractor had
committed a serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive violation with a
finding of nonresponsibility.
In response to these comments, the
final Guidance clarifies that the ALCA’s
preaward assessment of a contractor’s
Labor Law violations and the
contracting officer’s responsibility
determination are separate process
points, performed by two separate
individuals: The ALCA assesses the
nature of the violations and provides
analysis and advice; the contracting
officer, informed by the ALCA’s analysis
and advice, makes the responsibility
determination—the determination of
whether the contractor is a responsible
source to whom a contract may be
awarded. Contracting officers consider
assessments provided by ALCAs
consistently with advice provided by
other subject matter experts during the
responsibility determination.
The final Guidance also clarifies that
the ALCA’s role involves a three-step
process. First, an ALCA reviews all of
the contractor’s violations to determine
if any are serious, repeated, willful, and/
or pervasive. Second, the ALCA then
weighs any serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive violations in light of
the totality of the circumstances,
including the severity of the
violation(s), the size of the contractor,
and any mitigating factors that are
present. Third, after this holistic review,
the ALCA provides written analysis and
advice to the contracting officer
regarding the contractor’s record of
Labor Law compliance, and whether a
labor compliance agreement or other
action is warranted.
As noted above, the final Guidance
clarifies that it is the contracting officer
who makes the final determination of
whether a contractor is, or is not, a
responsible source.
The assessment of violations
postaward, during the performance of
the contract, is now addressed
separately in section IV of the Guidance.
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Similarly, the assessment of
subcontractor violations is addressed
separately in section V of the Guidance.
The Department has modified
Appendix E to reflect changes in the
final Guidance’s description of the
PreAward Assessment and Advice
process.
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A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
(Step One)
The first step in this process is the
classification of Labor Law violations as
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive. The Order specifically directs
the Department to develop guidance to
assist agencies in making these
classification determinations. Order,
section 4(b)(i). The Order specifies that
the Department’s Guidance should
‘‘incorporate existing statutory
standards for assessing whether a
violation is serious, repeated, or willful’’
where they are available. Id. In addition,
the Order provides the Department with
parameters for developing standards
where none are provided by statute. Id.
Subjectivity of Classification Criteria
A number of industry commenters
argued that the Proposed Guidance’s
definitions of serious, repeated, willful,
and pervasive violations are too
subjective and do not provide enough
direction for contractors to determine
whether their violations could put them
at risk of losing Federal contracts. Some
commenters expressed concern that
whether a violation is serious, repeated,
or willful may depend in some cases on
an exercise of discretion by the official
or investigator at the enforcement
agency that issued the underlying
administrative merits determination. In
contrast, many worker-advocacy
organizations and labor unions
expressed support for the flexibility of
these classification criteria and the
Department’s overall approach to
weighing violations and assessing
mitigating factors.
While the Department acknowledges
that some of the criteria for classifying
Labor Law violations require closer
analysis, the Department notes that
many of the definitions set out objective
criteria that leave little, if any, room for
ambiguity. For example, whether a
violation involves at least $10,000 in
back wages or $5,000 in fines or
penalties (one of the criteria for
classifying serious violations), or
whether a violation occurs within 3
years of a prior violation (one of the
criteria for classifying repeated
violations) are straightforward matters.
Furthermore, the Department expects
that ALCAs will develop substantial
expertise in administering the Order
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and will be well-positioned to classify
and weigh each violation. In some cases,
as set forth below, the Department has
modified criteria that were not
sufficiently clear.
Moreover, the Department disagrees
that the contracting officer’s
responsibility determination will be
arbitrary if it includes consideration of
the ALCA’s assessment of Labor Law
enforcement actions that themselves
involve the exercise of prosecutorial
discretion, such as an enforcement
agency’s decision as to how much of a
fine or penalty to assess, or whether to
find one violation or multiple
violations. The Department believes that
the legitimate exercise of such
discretion is inherent in prosecuting
Labor Law violations—just as it is for
prosecuting violations of fraud, tax, and
other laws that are already expressly
considered in the responsibility
determination under the FAR—and does
not undermine the contracting officer’s
consideration of Labor Law enforcement
actions under the Order.
Furthermore, ALCAs are advisors to
the contracting officer on one aspect of
responsibility: Integrity and business
ethics with regard to labor law
compliance. Contracting officers
consider the information provided by
advisors such as ALCAs, as well as
advice from other experts in fields such
as audit, law, engineering, information
security, and transportation.
Relationship of Classification Criteria to
Disclosure Requirements
A few commenters representing
employers also expressed concern that
they would be uncertain as to which
violations must be disclosed due to
perceived ambiguities in the definitions
of serious, repeated, willful, and
pervasive violations. Such comments
misapprehended the role that these
definitions play in the implementation
of the Order. All Labor Law decisions
must be disclosed, whether or not they
involve violations that are serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive. As
described above, the definitions of these
four terms are used by ALCAs during
the classification process to screen out
minor infractions that have been
disclosed, not by contractors to
determine whether the decisions must
be disclosed in the first place. The
Department clarifies this point in the
final Guidance.
Standard for Determining Application of
Classification Criteria
One industry commenter questioned
what quantum of evidence will be
necessary to support a determination
that a Labor Law violation meets one of
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the criteria for establishing that a
violation is serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive. In this regard, the commenter
focused on language in the Proposed
Guidance stating that a violation would
meet one of the classification criteria if
the Labor Law decision ‘‘support[s] a
conclusion’’ that the criterion in
question had been met, and the
commenter expressed concern that this
standard suggested that contractors
could be found to have committed a
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
violation based on only scant evidence
in the record supporting such a
classification.
The Department has clarified in the
Guidance that to serve as the basis for
a determination that a violation is
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive, the relevant criteria must be
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decision itself. This means that
ALCAs should not second-guess or relitigate enforcement actions or the
decisions of reviewing officials, courts,
and arbitrators. It also means that a
contractor will not be deemed to have
committed a serious, repeated, willful,
or pervasive violation based on a
minimal or arguable showing. While
ALCAs and contracting officers may
seek additional information from the
enforcement agencies to provide
context, they should rely on only the
information contained in the Labor Law
decisions themselves to determine
whether violations are serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive.
Subcontractor Violation Classification
Some of the comments by employer
groups voiced additional concern about
the way the Proposed Guidance
described the process for a prime
contractor to classify and weigh its
subcontractors’ Labor Law violations.
These commenters asserted that many
prime contractors, especially small
businesses, will not have access to labor
law experts or legal counsel familiar
with the intricacies of the fourteen
Labor Laws, and that these prime
contractors would not be well-equipped
to evaluate whether violations are
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive.
The Guidance now contains a
separate section addressing
subcontractor responsibility (Section V).
The Department addresses comments
related to subcontractor responsibility
in a parallel section of the preamble
section-by-section analysis, below.
Scope of Classification Criteria
Many commenters representing
employer groups argued that the criteria
for serious, repeated, willful, and
pervasive violations were too broad and
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would encompass too many violations,
which would increase the burden of the
Order by subjecting more contractors to
scrutiny. These commenters expressed
concern that a prospective contractor
would be found nonresponsible based
on, for example, a pair of violations that
were inadvertent but nonetheless met
the criteria for repeated violations; or
one or two OSH Act violations that,
while meeting the statutory criteria for
serious violations, caused no harm and
were addressed swiftly. Some feared
that even a single serious violation
would necessarily lead to a
nonresponsibility determination.
The Department believes that this fear
is misplaced. Below, in parts 1 through
4 of this subsection, the Department
responds to commenters’ specific
concerns regarding the criteria used to
classify violations as serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive. In some cases, as
explained below, the definitions have
been narrowed in response to concerns
of over-inclusiveness.
The Department believes the final
Guidance appropriately defines its
criteria, given their use in the
classification and weighing process. It is
important to note that the classification
of a contractor’s violation as serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive does not
mean that the contractor loses an award.
Rather, as noted in the Guidance, one of
the purposes of classifying violations as
serious, repeated, willful, and pervasive
is to screen out many violations that
may be inadvertent or less likely to have
a significant impact. These
classifications limit consideration of a
contractor’s violations to those that may
merit closer examination. After the
initial screening, ALCAs will conduct a
review of these more significant
violations, taking into account the
totality of the circumstances, including
any mitigating factors. In this weighing
phase, the serious, repeated, willful, and
pervasive classifications provide a
useful framework for analysis and help
ensure government-wide consistency. In
the final Guidance, the Department
clarifies the description of this process
and has reiterated that classifying a
violation as serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive does not automatically result
in a finding that a contractor lacks
integrity and business ethics.
In sum, the Department believes the
criteria set forth in the final Guidance
for determining whether violations are
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
are fair, appropriate, and administrable.
Classification of Violations Involving
Retaliation
Some commenters representing
employee interests expressed concern
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that the definitions of serious, repeated,
and willful violations did not
sufficiently account for violations
involving retaliation. In general, it is the
intent of the Guidance that violations of
the Labor Laws that involve retaliation
must be reported and assessed under the
Order. The Department has made a
number of modifications to the
Guidance—discussed further below in
the separate sections on serious,
repeated, and willful violations—to
ensure that this is the case. As stated in
both the proposed and final Guidance,
all violations involving retaliation are
considered serious violations under the
Order.
Effect of Reversal or Vacatur of Basis for
Classification
Some commenters expressed concern
that under the Proposed Guidance, a
violation could be classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
based on a determination by an agency,
arbitrator, or court that was later
reversed, vacated, or otherwise
rescinded. For example, some of these
commenters expressed concern that a
contractor could be found to have
committed a serious violation based on
an OSHA citation that was originally
classified as ‘‘serious’’ and later changed
to ‘‘other than serious’’ or withdrawn
entirely.
In response to these comments, the
final Guidance clarifies that if a Labor
Law decision or portion thereof that
would otherwise cause a violation to be
classified as serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive is reversed or vacated,
the violation will not be classified as
such under the Order. Just as a Labor
Law decision that is reversed or vacated
in its entirety need not be disclosed, so
too, if a Labor Law decision is modified
such that the underlying basis for the
violation’s classification as serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive has been
reversed or vacated, the classification no
longer applies.
The sections below discuss comments
received regarding the criteria for
classifying violations as serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive and the
changes that the Department has made
to the Guidance in response to these
comments. In addition to the changes
discussed below, where necessary, the
Department has also made conforming
changes to the examples in the four
appendices listing examples of the four
categories of violations.
1. Serious Violations
The Proposed Guidance set forth
several classification criteria for
determining whether a violation is
serious under the Order. As an initial
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matter, some commenters indicated that
the Proposed Guidance was unclear as
to whether a violation needs to meet
only one of the listed criteria in order
to be considered serious. The
Department believes that the Proposed
Guidance was clear on this point in that
it stated that a Labor Law violation that
meets ‘‘at least one’’ of the listed
classification criteria for seriousness
will be considered a serious violation.
To provide additional clarity, the final
Guidance states that a violation
involving ‘‘any one’’ of the listed criteria
will be classified as serious. The
Guidance also further clarifies that
separate criteria apply to OSH Act
violations enforced through citations, as
discussed in the section below.
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations and Equivalent State
Documents (Formerly ‘‘OSH Act’’)
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department stated that a violation is
serious under the Order if OSHA or an
OSHA-approved State Plan issued a
citation that it designated as serious,
issued a notice of failure to abate, or
issued an imminent danger notice. The
Proposed Guidance also listed several
criteria under which violations of any of
the Labor Laws can be classified as
serious. The Department received
several comments regarding the
classification of violations under the
OSH Act and OSHA-approved State
Plans.
Classification of Non-Citation OSHA
Violations
Several commenters requested
clarification about the classification of
OSH Act and OSHA-approved State
Plan violations that are not enforced
through citations—such as retaliation,
false-statement violations, notices of
failure to abate, and imminent danger
notices (‘‘non-citation OSHA
violations’’). These commenters noted
that such violations are enforced not
through citations but through notices or
through complaints filed in court. Thus,
for these violations, OSHA and State
Plan agencies never make a designation
of ‘‘serious,’’ as they do with OSH Act
and State Plan violations enforced by
citation (‘‘citation OSHA violations’’).
These commenters suggested that the
Guidance should be clarified to ensure
that non-citation OSHA violations may
still be classified as serious under the
Order.
The Department agrees that noncitation OSHA violations may still be
classified as serious under the Order.
The final Guidance therefore clarifies
the treatment of OSH Act violations by
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dividing serious violations into two
categories. The first consists of citation
OSHA violations, while the second
consists of all other violations of the
Labor Laws. This second category
includes all non-citation OSHA
violations, as well as violations of the
other Labor Laws. The final Guidance
states that a citation OSHA violation is
serious if—and only if—the violation
involves a citation or equivalent State
document that was designated as
serious or an equivalent State
designation.55 Non-citation OSHA
violations are classified as ‘‘serious’’
according to the same criteria that are
used to classify violations of the other
Labor Laws. For example, if a court
issues a civil judgment finding that a
contractor violated the OSH Act’s antiretaliation provisions by firing a worker
in retaliation for filing a complaint with
OSHA, an ALCA should find that this
violation is serious because it meets the
retaliation criterion for serious violation
under the Order, as discussed below in
section III(A)(1)(b)(vi) of this section-bysection analysis.56
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Classification of Citation OSHA
Violations
With respect to OSH Act and State
Plan violations enforced through
citations, the Department received
several comments. Employee advocates
generally supported the Department’s
proposal to use OSHA or OSHAapproved State Plan designations of
‘‘serious’’ as the basis for classifying
violations as ‘‘serious’’ under the Order.
In contrast, industry commenters
expressed concern with this approach.
The industry commenters pointed out
that a substantial majority of OSHA
violations were designated as serious.57
They argued that while the term
‘‘serious’’ may be appropriate in the
context of OSH Act enforcement, the
use of the OSH Act’s ‘‘serious’’
designation for the Order is inconsistent
with the Proposed Guidance’s goal of
identifying those violations that are
‘‘most concerning and bear on an
55 Thus, OSH Act and State Plan citations that
were designated by the relevant enforcement agency
as other-than-serious cannot be classified as serious
under the Order, even if they satisfy one of the
criteria applicable to other violations of the Labor
Laws (such as violations that affect 25 percent of
the workforce).
56 As a result of this clarification, notices of
failure to abate a violation and imminent danger
notices, which are non-citation OSHA violations,
are now discussed below in subsection (v) of
section III(A)(1)(b), ‘‘All other violations of the
Labor Laws.’’
57 In 2015, approximately 74 percent of OSHA
violations were designated as serious. This data is
available on OSHA’s Web site at https://
www.osha.gov/dep/2015_enforcement_
summary.html.
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assessment of a contractor’s or
subcontractor’s integrity and business
ethics.’’ Some of the industry
commenters noted that serious
violations under the OSH Act may in
some cases include what they
characterized as ‘‘technical violations’’
of certain standards.
While the Department recognizes
these commenters’ concerns, the final
Guidance retains this aspect of the
definition of serious violations. The
Order requires that the Department’s
Guidance ‘‘shall . . . where available,
incorporate existing statutory standards
for assessing whether a violation is
serious, repeated, or willful.’’ Order,
section 4(b)(i)(A). The OSH Act is alone
among the Labor Laws identified in the
Order in that it contains an explicit
statutory standard for assessing whether
a violation is serious. See 29 U.S.C.
666(k) (stating that a violation is serious
‘‘if there is a substantial probability that
[the hazard created by the violation
could result in] death or serious
physical harm . . . unless the employer
did not, and could not with the exercise
of reasonable diligence, know’’ of the
existence of the violation). This
standard reflects a congressional
determination that OSH Act violations
that meet the above definition are
serious and should be evaluated and
enforced accordingly. Moreover, this
standard underscores the severe
consequences that can result from such
violations, regardless of their relative
prevalence.
Accordingly, the Guidance’s
definition explicitly incorporates the
OSH Act’s definition of a serious
violation, as contemplated by the Order.
The Guidance retains the approach
under which ALCAs will classify as
‘‘serious’’ under the Order any citation
that the relevant enforcement agency
designated as serious. As noted above,
the classification of a violation as
serious under the Order does not mean
that the contractor will not receive an
award. Rather, the purpose of
classifying certain violations as serious
is to limit the scope of violations that
will be considered by an ALCA to those
that merit closer examination.
Moreover, in the second step of the
assessment process, ALCAs will review
all mitigating factors provided by the
contractor, including whether a
violation has been remediated.
b. All Other Violations of the Labor
Laws
The Proposed Guidance listed several
other criteria that, if met, would result
in the classification of a violation as
serious. As noted above, under the final
Guidance, these criteria apply to all
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violations except OSH Act and OSHAapproved State Plan violations that are
enforced through citations and
equivalent State documents. Comments
on each of these classification criteria
are addressed in turn below.
i. Violation Affects at Least 10 Workers
Making up at Least 25 Percent of the
Contractor’s Workforce at the Worksite
or Overall (Formerly ‘‘25% of the
Workforce Affected’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
Labor Law violation is serious if the
affected workers made up 25 percent or
more of the workforce at the worksite.
Consistent with the Order’s direction,
the Department believes that violations
impacting a significant number of
employees are serious. The Department
specifically sought comments on this
classification criterion.
Some unions and employee-advocacy
organizations argued that this threshold
may exclude violations that affect
significant numbers of people—such as
a violation that affects all of the workers
in a particular job category—but do not
reach the 25 percent threshold. Some
groups advocated for a lower threshold
such as 5 percent, while others argued
that additional thresholds should be
added, such as deeming a violation
serious if it affects at least a certain
number of employees (e.g., at least 50
employees). Some of these groups also
argued that a violation should be serious
if it affects at least 25 percent of a
contractor’s overall workforce—in
addition to the worksite-specific
threshold.
In contrast, some employer groups
argued that the 25 percent threshold is
too low and will be over-inclusive.
Some asserted that certain types of
violations, such as an employer’s failure
to post required employee-rights notices
or establishment of general workplace
policies that are found to violate the law
but whose consequences may not be
readily apparent, should not qualify as
serious. Some of these commenters
proposed eliminating the 25 percent
criterion, raising the threshold, tailoring
it to each Labor Law, or permitting it to
be waived under appropriate
circumstances. Some recommended that
this threshold, if it remains in the
Guidance, apply only to employers with
at least a specified minimum number of
employees to avoid situations in which
the threshold is triggered by a very
small number of affected workers.
Additionally, some commenters
requested that the Department clarify
how the 25 percent threshold would
apply to violations spanning multiple
worksites. Two of these commenters
criticized the Department’s definition of
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the term ‘‘worksite,’’ suggesting that it
was ambiguous when compared with
the regulatory definition under the
Worker Adjustment and Retraining
Notification (WARN) Act, 29 U.S.C.
2101–2109. See 20 CFR 639.3. Two
commenters requested the Department
clarify how the 25 percent threshold
would apply to construction
contractors. One proposed that the
Guidance state that ‘‘a violation is
serious if it affects 25 [percent] of the
workforce of the particular contractor or
subcontractor, working at a specific
construction site.’’ Another noted that
in the construction industry the number
of workers at a worksite often varies, so
it would be difficult to determine the
total number of workers for this
analysis.
After careful consideration of all these
comments, the Department retains the
25 percent threshold for this criterion in
the final Guidance, though with some
modifications. The Order explicitly
directs the Department to take into
account ‘‘the number of employees
affected’’ in determining whether a
violation is serious. Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(1). Accordingly, the
Department considers a violation
affecting numerous employees to be
serious, even if it may not result in
significant back wages or penalties or
place workers in danger of immediate
harm. This includes precisely the types
of violations identified by industry
commenters. Failing to post a legally
required notice, for example, is serious
because it deprives employees of
knowledge of their rights under the
Labor Laws, which could result in
violations not being detected. The
Department believes that the threshold
is appropriate.
In response to the commenters’
concerns, however, the Department has
modified the 25 percent threshold so it
applies only when the violation affects
at least 10 workers. This change avoids
triggering the 25 percent threshold
when only a few workers are affected.
The Department declines to set a higher
minimum number of workers because it
believes that violations affecting a
significant percentage of a workforce are
serious even if the overall size of a
workforce is small. For example, if a
small business that employs only 40
employees commits a violation that
affects 15 of those employees, such a
violation should be considered serious
even though the overall number of
affected employees is relatively low.
The Department has also added an
example to the Guidance to help clarify
how this criterion applies to worksites
with multiple employers. The Proposed
Guidance stated that for purposes of
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calculating the 25 percent threshold, the
number of workers at the worksite
does not include workers of another entity,
unless the underlying violation of the Labor
Laws includes a finding that the contractor
or subcontractor is a joint employer of the
workers that the other entity employs at the
worksite.
80 FR 30583. The final Guidance now
explains that if a contractor employs 40
workers at a worksite, then a violation
is serious if it affects at least 10 of the
contractor’s workers at the site, even if
other companies also employ an
additional 40 workers at the same site.
The Department declines to replace
the 25 percent threshold entirely with a
threshold based on an absolute
minimum number of workers. Such a
threshold would disproportionately
affect larger employers. The Department
also declines to adopt a criterion based
on a violation’s effect on all employees
in a particular job classification. Such a
criterion would not be easily
administrable because it would
frequently require ALCAs to perform the
difficult task of distinguishing between
job classifications.
The Department also declines to
lower the threshold of affected workers
from 25 percent. While any threshold
will necessarily include some violations
and exclude others, the Department
believes that 25 percent is an
appropriate benchmark for determining
whether a violation affects a sufficient
number of workers to be considered
serious—therefore warranting further
review. While recognizing the concerns
of employee advocates that certain
violations may fall short of the
threshold, the Department notes that
these violations may meet other criteria
for seriousness. The Department also
recognizes the concerns of employer
groups that the 25 percent threshold is
overinclusive, but the Department
believes that these concerns will be
addressed by the overall assessment of
a contractor’s violations, and
particularly the assessment of mitigating
factors.
The Department declines to make
other changes to the definition of
‘‘worksite.’’ The Department notes that
the definition in the Guidance is already
similar to the definition of ‘‘single site
of employment’’ under WARN Act
regulations. Both definitions provide
that: (1) A worksite can be a single
building or a group of buildings in one
campus or office park, but that separate
buildings that are not in close proximity
are generally separate worksites; and (2)
for workers who do not have a fixed
worksite, their worksite is the site to
which they are assigned as their home
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base, from which their work is assigned,
or to which they report. See 20 CFR
639.3(i). These similarities support the
Department’s conclusion that the
definition of ‘‘worksite’’ in the Guidance
is appropriate.
With regard to construction workers
specifically, the Department anticipates
that construction workers who regularly
work at multiple sites will in most cases
fall into the latter category described
above; namely, their worksite will be
the site to which they are assigned as
their home base, from which their work
is assigned, or to which they report. The
FMLA’s implementing regulations,
which adopt a similar definition of
worksite, provide helpful examples for
determining the number of workers at
construction worksites. See 29 CFR
825.111(a)(2).
The Department agrees with the
commenters who suggested that a
violation should be serious if it affects
at least 25 percent of a contractor’s
overall workforce (provided that it
affects at least 10 workers). The final
Guidance has been modified
accordingly. In practice, in the vast
majority of cases (if not all cases) in
which a violation affects at least 25
percent of a contractor’s overall
workforce, it will also affect at least 25
percent of the contractor’s workforce at
a particular worksite; however, this
criterion has been added to ensure
coverage of violations that are not
specific to a particular worksite.
ii. Fines, Penalties, and Back Wages
(Formerly ‘‘Fines, Penalties, Back
Wages, and Injunctive Relief’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
violation would be serious if fines and
penalties of at least $5,000 were
assessed, back wages of at least $10,000
were due, or injunctive relief was
imposed by an enforcement agency or a
court.
Threshold Amounts
Numerous commenters addressed the
proposed $5,000 and $10,000
thresholds. These commenters were
divided as to whether the thresholds
were too high or too low. Industry
commenters advocated raising these
amounts. In particular, they argued that
the $10,000 back-wage threshold is
overbroad and would encompass too
many violations. A few of these
commenters addressed the fine-andpenalty thresholds and urged the
Department to base them on the amount
collected rather than assessed. One
commenter suggested that the back wage
threshold should be tied to the size of
the contractor. Another organization
argued that such a standard is overbroad
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as it applies to violations of antidiscrimination Labor Laws. This
commenter asserted that the monetary
thresholds under this criterion would
disproportionately classify
discrimination violations as serious
when compared, for instance, to wageand-hour violations. Another
commenter similarly asserted that most
actions under Title VII, the ADA, the
ADEA, and the NLRA seeking backpay
would trigger a finding of a serious
violation using a $10,000 threshold.
In contrast, many employee-advocacy
and union commenters asserted that the
$10,000 back-wage threshold is too high
and would not capture violations
affecting low-wage workers. Several
requested clarification regarding
whether the back-wage threshold could
be satisfied by adding together the back
wages due to multiple employees in the
same matter. Three of these commenters
proposed, as an alternative or additional
metric, that a violation be characterized
as serious when the amount of back
wages due is equal to ten percent or
more of wages paid the worker
annually. Some commenters also
suggested that the Department define a
violation as serious any time that fees
are awarded or penalties are assessed for
wage-and-hour violations.
After carefully reviewing all of these
comments, the Department retains the
$5,000 and $10,000 thresholds in the
final Guidance. The Order explicitly
instructs the Department to take into
account ‘‘the amount of damages
incurred or fines or penalties assessed
with regard to the violation.’’ Order,
section 4(b)(i)(B)(1).
While violations of some Labor Laws
may satisfy the monetary thresholds
more often than others, the Department
concludes that creating statute-specific
thresholds would not further the goals
of the Order. First, even if
discrimination violations are more
likely than wage-and-hour law
violations to result in back-wage awards
of greater than $10,000, in both cases an
employer has wrongfully denied
employee(s) $10,000 in wages.58 In
terms of the economic impact on the
workforce, $10,000 in lost wages due to
discrimination is just as serious as
$10,000 in lost wages due to a wageand-hour violation. A sum of $10,000 is
over 18 percent of the median
household income in the United States,
58 The Department has removed one paragraph
from the Guidance relating to statistics on the WHD
administrative merits determinations that would
meet the $10,000 and $5,000 thresholds. This
modification is intended to eliminate extraneous
information from the final Guidance and does not
indicate any substantive change in its application.
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and over 31 percent of the median
nonfamily household income.59
Second, as described above,
classifying violations as serious,
repeated, willful, and pervasive aims to
screen out Labor Law violations that are
less significant for purposes of the Order
and to focus on those violations that are
more likely to implicate a contractor’s
integrity and business ethics. After this
initial screening, an ALCA then weighs
these violations in light of the totality of
the circumstances and any mitigating
factors that are present. Thus, while a
single civil judgment awarding $15,000
in back wages to an employee in a Title
VII lawsuit will be classified as serious
under the Order, an ALCA generally
should not make a negative assessment
of the contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance based on this violation
standing alone.
It is also noteworthy that, as
discussed below, many violations of the
Labor Laws will not implicate these
thresholds at all because back wages
and penalties have not, or cannot, be
assessed. For example, reasonable cause
determinations by the EEOC cannot
implicate these thresholds because they
do not specify an amount of back wages.
Similarly, as discussed below, the
$5,000 threshold for fines and penalties
(as opposed to back wages) will only be
implicated in administrative
enforcement matters where fines and
penalties are assessed, and not private
litigation or arbitration where they are
not.
The Department also declines to
lower the amounts of the monetary
thresholds under this criterion because
it believes the amounts are appropriate.
Some unions and employee advocates
appeared to construe the Proposed
Guidance as suggesting that the $10,000
back-wage threshold applied only on a
per-employee basis. The Department
clarifies in the final Guidance that the
thresholds are cumulative; i.e., they can
be satisfied by summing the fines and
penalties assessed for all workers
affected by the violation or by summing
the back wages due to all affected
employees.
Similarly, the Department rejects the
proposal to classify as serious all wageand-hour violations involving fees or
penalties. The Order instructs the
Department to take into account ‘‘the
amount’’ of fines or penalties assessed
in defining serious violations. Order,
section 4(b)(i)(B(1). Thus, the Order
contemplates that the Department will
59 See U.S. Census Bureau, ‘‘Income, Poverty and
Health Insurance Coverage in the U.S.: 2015,’’
https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/
2015/cb15-157.html (Sept. 16, 2015).
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establish a threshold for fines or
penalties assessed for the purposes of
determining whether a violation is
serious.
The Department also does not adopt
the proposal to use an alternative
criterion for serious violations based on
the ratio of back wages due compared
with the affected workers’ annual pay.
While this could be an informative
metric, this information will generally
not be readily ascertainable from Labor
Law decisions. To facilitate efficient and
consistent enforcement of the Order, the
Department seeks to ensure that ALCAs
rely only on information that can be
easily obtained by reviewing Labor Law
decisions.
However, in response to these and
other comments, the Department has
modified the guidance on monetary
thresholds in several respects. First, the
Proposed Guidance stated that the
threshold amounts are measured by the
amount the enforcement agency
‘‘assessed.’’ Many employer groups
argued that this threshold should
instead take into consideration any later
reduction in the assessed amount—
either where the enforcement agency
unilaterally reduces this amount or
where it is reduced during settlement
negotiations. These commenters
asserted that enforcement agencies may
initially assess a very high amount or
the statutory maximum as a negotiating
tactic with little regard for the
seriousness of the violation. One
commenter further argued that the
meaning of ‘‘assessed’’ is ambiguous
given that some enforcement agencies,
such as the NLRB, typically do not
quantify or otherwise assess monetary
amounts in a complaint.
The Department agrees with industry
commenters on this point and has
modified the Guidance accordingly. The
final Guidance states that the thresholds
are measured by the amount ‘‘due.’’
This means that if an enforcement
agency consents to accept a reduced
amount of either back wages or
penalties for a violation, it is that lesser
amount that will be used to determine
seriousness. As stated in the Proposed
Guidance, a reduced settlement amount
may be based on factors other than the
seriousness of a violation. In other
circumstances, however, the reduction
may reflect the enforcement agency’s
judgment that a lower assessment more
appropriately reflects the seriousness of
a particular violation. The Department
believes that reliance on the final
agreed-upon amount will avoid
confusion because this amount will
likely be the one memorialized in the
parties’ records. Similarly, if the amount
initially assessed by an enforcement
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agency is later reduced by an
adjudicative body—for example, if the
Department files a civil complaint in an
FLSA case seeking $15,000 in back
wages but a court awards only $8,000—
it is the reduced amount that is relevant
for evaluating seriousness.
Reliance on a lesser amount will not
apply if an employer files for
bankruptcy and cannot pay the full
amount, or simply refuses to pay such
that the full penalty is never collected.
In such cases, the original assessed
amount is the amount due, and
therefore should be used when
evaluating seriousness.
The Department has also modified the
definition of ‘‘fines and penalties’’ that
will implicate the $5,000 threshold.
Specifically, this definition now
includes only monetary penalties
imposed by an administrative agency
and does not include liquidated
damages under the ADEA or punitive
damages under other statutes. This
change has been made both in response
to concerns about the scope of the
$5,000 threshold and to simplify
administration of the Order. As noted in
Guidance, however, liquidated damages
under the FLSA are included in the
calculation of back wages because they
are compensatory in nature.
For clarity, the Department has also
added a paragraph to the Guidance
explaining that if an enforcement
agency issues an administrative merits
determination that does not include an
amount of back wages due or fines or
penalties assessed—for example, if the
Department files a complaint seeking
back wages but does not specify the
amount—then the violation cannot be
classified as serious using this criterion
until the amount has been determined.
Finally, one commenter
recommended clarifying the Guidance
to address any mitigation of damages
from an employee’s interim
employment. The commenter argued
that employees’ earnings from obtaining
interim employment should not be
factored into the amount of total back
wages for the purpose of the $10,000
threshold. The Department declines to
modify the Guidance on this point.
ALCAs will use the amount of back
wages due set forth in the Labor Law
decision, whether or not that amount
reflects an adjustment for mitigation. To
facilitate efficient and consistent
enforcement of the Order, the
Department seeks to ensure that ALCAs
rely only on information that is readily
ascertainable from Labor Law decisions.
Injunctive Relief
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
violation would be classified as serious
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if injunctive relief ‘‘was imposed by an
enforcement agency, a court, or an
arbitrator or arbitral panel.’’ 80 FR at
30584.
In response to the proposal, some
industry groups commented that the
imposition of injunctive relief alone
should not justify classifying a violation
as serious. In their view, injunctive
relief is often imposed regardless of the
nature or severity of the violation, and
as a result, they expressed concern that
this criterion would capture minor or
technical violations. For example, these
commenters noted that the NLRB
always or almost always imposes
injunctive relief, including requiring the
employer to post a notice that it has
been found in violation of the NLRA.
These commenters suggested that this
criterion should be eliminated or
modified to include additional criteria
justifying the conclusion that the
violation was serious. In contrast,
commenters representing workers
agreed with the Proposed Guidance that
the imposition of injunctive relief
warrants characterizing the violation as
serious, given that such relief is rarely
imposed by courts.
After the consideration of the above
comments, the Department has removed
injunctive relief from the list of criteria
used to classify violations as serious in
the final Guidance. The Department
agrees that including all injunctions
entered by courts, arbitrators, and
enforcement agencies as serious may
include violations that do not
necessarily bear on a contractor’s
integrity and business ethics.
However, the Department believes
that the imposition of injunctive relief
by courts could be relevant to the
ALCA’s ultimate assessment of a
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance. Courts issue injunctions
only in rare circumstances.60 A
preliminary injunction—an injunction
entered before a final judgment—is an
‘‘extraordinary remedy.’’ Winter v.
Natural Res. Def. Council, 555 U.S. 7,
22, 24 (2008). Specifically,
[a] plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction
must establish that he is likely to succeed on
the merits, that he is likely to suffer
irreparable harm in the absence of
preliminary relief, that the balance of equities
tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in
the public interest.
60 For example, as an article cited by one
commenter noted, studies have found that courts
issue injunctions in less than 3 percent of Federal
employment discrimination cases. See Mark D.
Gough, ‘‘The High Costs of an Inexpensive Forum:
An Empirical Analysis of Employment
Discrimination Claims Heard in Arbitration and
Civil Litigation,’’ 35 Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 91,
105 n.62 (2015).
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Id. at 20. Thus, in cases involving the
enforcement of the Labor Laws,
preliminary injunctions will be issued
only when a court has concluded that
the employer has likely violated one of
the Labor Laws and that such conduct
threatens to irreparably harm workers
and the public interest. A permanent
injunction—one issued at the end of
litigation—requires essentially the same
showing, except that the plaintiff must
show actual success on the merits rather
than a likelihood of success. See Amoco
Prod. Co. v. Vill. of Gambell, AK, 480
U.S. 531, 546 n.12 (1987).
Because both preliminary and
permanent injunctions imposed by
courts are rare and require a showing of
compelling circumstances, including
irreparable harm to workers and a threat
to the public interest, the Department
believes that if a contractor has already
been found to have committed serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
violations, ALCAs should examine
whether any of those violations resulted
in the imposition of injunctive relief by
a court. The Department has therefore
moved the discussion of injunctive
relief into the ‘‘weighing’’ section of the
Guidance: ‘‘Factors that weigh against a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance.’’ See Guidance, section
III(B)(2). Thus, the imposition of
injunctive relief alone will not result in
a violation being classified as serious.
However, if a violation has already been
classified as serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive, the imposition of
injunctive relief for such a violation will
weigh against a finding that the
contractor is responsible.
iii. Any Violations That Cause or
Contribute to Death or Serious Injury
(Formerly ‘‘MSPA or Child Labor
Violations That Cause or Contribute to
Death or Serious Injury’’)
Under the Proposed Guidance, any
violation of MSPA or the FLSA child
labor provisions that causes or
contributes to the death or serious
injury of one or more workers is a
serious violation.
Several employee advocacy
organizations suggested that a violation
of any Labor Law, not just MSPA or the
FLSA, should be serious when the
violation causes or contributes to the
death or serious injury of a worker.
Many also requested that physical
assault—whether or not it results in
death or a serious injury—be considered
a serious violation. They argued that
any physical assault was inherently
severe and so should be deemed serious.
Similarly, some commenters suggested
that any violation involving sexual
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harassment should be deemed a serious
violation.
The Department adopts the first of
these proposals but not the latter two.
The Proposed Guidance limited this
criterion to MSPA and the FLSA childlabor provisions because, other than the
OSH Act and State Plans, violations of
MSPA’s health-and-safety provisions
and the FLSA’s child-labor provisions
are most likely to have the potential to
result in death or serious injury.61
However, in the less likely event that a
violation of one of the remaining Labor
Laws causes or contributes to death or
serious injury, the Department agrees
that the violation would be serious. The
Department therefore adopts this change
in the final Guidance. As a related
matter, the final Guidance also modifies
the definition of ‘‘serious injury’’ for
purposes of this criterion; rather than
incorporating by reference the meaning
of ‘‘serious injury’’ from the FLSA’s
child labor provisions, the Guidance
explicitly defines ‘‘serious injury’’ as an
injury that requires the care of a medical
professional beyond first-aid treatment
or results in more than five days of
missed work.
The Department does not adopt the
suggestions regarding physical assault
or sexual harassment. While the
Department agrees that many violations
involving physical assault or sexual
harassment are serious, the Department
declines to broaden this criterion
because these terms can also include
more minor workplace altercations or
interactions.
iv. Employment of Minors Who Are Too
Young To Be Legally Employed or in
Violation of a Hazardous Occupations
Order
The Department did not receive
comments directly addressing this
criterion. The Department retains the
Guidance as proposed.
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v. Notices of Failure To Abate and
Imminent Danger Notices
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
violation is serious under the Order if it
involves a notice of failure to abate an
OSH Act violation or an imminent
danger notice under the OSH Act or an
OSHA-approved State Plan. The
Department did not receive comments
specifically addressing these criteria,
with the exception of the comments
61 The Proposed Guidance did not reference the
OSH Act or OHSA-approved State Plans here
because any violation of the OSH Act or OSHAapproved State Plans involving a risk of death or
serious injury will be enforced with a citation
designated as serious and thus will already be a
serious violation under the Order. This criterion is
intended to capture violations of other Labor Laws
that result in death or serious injury.
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described above requesting that the
Department clarify that non-citation
OSHA violations such as these are
serious under the Order despite not
having being designated as ‘‘serious’’ by
the relevant enforcement agency.
As noted above, the Department has
clarified this matter in the final
Guidance by dividing OSH Act and
OSHA-approved State Plan violations
into two categories: Citation OSHA
violations, which are serious if, and
only if, they were designated as such by
the relevant enforcement agency; and
Non-Citation OSHA Violations, which
are serious if they meet other criteria
listed in the Guidance. Because notices
of failure to abate and imminent danger
notices fall into the second category, the
final Guidance lists them separately
from citation OSHA violations. The
final Guidance also clarifies that notices
of failure to abate State Plan violations
(as well as any State equivalents of
notices of failure to abate or imminent
danger notices) are serious violations
because failing to correct a hazard after
receiving formal notification of the need
to do so represents a serious disregard
for the law.
vi. Retaliation (Formerly ‘‘Adverse
Employment Actions or Unlawful
Harassment for Exercising Rights Under
Labor Laws’’)
The Proposed Guidance classified
violations involving ‘‘adverse
employment actions or unlawful
harassment for exercising rights under
Labor Laws,’’ i.e., retaliation, as serious.
The Department defined ‘‘adverse
employment actions’’ to include
discharge, refusal to hire, suspension,
demotion, or threats.
A number of commenters expressed
general support for the inclusion of
retaliation within the definition of a
serious violation. Some supportive
commenters were concerned, however,
that the Department had limited
‘‘adverse employment action’’ to only
the five types of adverse action
explicitly listed in the Proposed
Guidance. These commenters urged the
Department to adopt instead the
Supreme Court’s definition of adverse
employment action in Burlington
Northern & Santa Fe Railway Company
v. White, 548 U.S. 53 (2006). Under
Burlington Northern, to prove retaliation
under Title VII, a plaintiff ‘‘must show
that a reasonable employee would have
found the challenged action materially
adverse, which in this context means it
well might have dissuaded a reasonable
worker from making or supporting a
charge of discrimination.’’ Id. at 68
(internal citations and quotation marks
omitted). While this definition does not
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include ‘‘petty slights, minor
annoyances, and simple lack of good
manners,’’ it does include constructive
discharges; transfers to undesirable
shifts, locations, or positions; or changes
in other terms and conditions of
employment, see id., none of which
were specifically listed in the Proposed
Guidance.
The Department finds the comments
regarding Burlington Northern
persuasive. In particular, it agrees with
the AARP comment that ‘‘[r]etaliation
that could deter a reasonable worker
from exercising a protected right [under
the Labor Laws] is per se serious.’’ The
Department concludes that Burlington
Northern provides a useful standard for
what constitutes an adverse action
sufficient to support a finding of
retaliation, and modifies the Guidance
to adopt it. The Department further
notes that the list of examples of adverse
actions in the Guidance is not meant to
be exclusive.
In contrast to the generally supportive
comments about this criterion from
employee-advocacy groups, several
employer groups opposed the
classification of violations involving
retaliation as serious. These industry
commenters argued that many
allegations of discrimination include
accusations of retaliation as a matter of
course, and that many large employers
will have one or more such allegations
pending at any given time.
The Department retains retaliation as
a classification criterion for serious
violations. As noted in the Proposed
Guidance, retaliation is serious because
it dissuades workers from reporting
violations and therefore may mask other
serious conduct by employers. In
response to concerns that retaliation
allegations may be included in
discrimination complaints as a matter of
course, the Department reiterates that a
private complaint is not disclosable as
a Labor Law decision under the Order
unless and until it leads to an
administrative merits determination, a
civil judgment, and or an arbitral award
or decision. A complaint alone must be
disclosed only if it has been filed by an
enforcement agency following an
investigation, and therefore constitutes
an administrative merits determination.
In sum, the Department believes that
retaliation is serious, and the final
Guidance retains this criterion.
While retaining the criterion, the
Department modifies it for clarity. Two
industry commenters suggested that the
language in the Proposed Guidance
could have allowed a finding that an
‘‘adverse employment action’’ alone is a
serious violation under the Order—
regardless of whether it was taken in
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retaliation for protected activity. That
was not the Department’s intent. Rather,
an adverse employment action only
becomes relevant to this criterion when
it is taken in retaliation for a worker
exercising a right protected by any of
the Labor Laws. To clarify the Guidance,
the Department has changed the title of
this criterion to ‘‘retaliation’’ and has
adjusted the wording of the description
accordingly.62
One commenter expressed concern
about the NLRA example of a serious
violation in Appendix A, which
describes a contractor that fired the
employee who was the lead union
adherent during the union’s organizing
campaign. The commenter noted that
such behavior would only be unlawful
if the discharge was in retaliation for the
employee’s protected activity. The
Department agrees with the commenter
and modifies the example in the
Appendix A of the final Guidance to
clarify this point.
vii. Pattern or Practice of Discrimination
or Systemic Discrimination
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The Proposed Guidance stated that
violations involving a ‘‘pattern or
practice of discrimination or systemic
discrimination’’ are serious.
Specifically, the Proposed Guidance
defined a pattern or practice of
discrimination as involving ‘‘intentional
discrimination against a protected group
of employees, rather than
discrimination that occurs in an isolated
fashion.’’ 80 FR 30585. Systemic
discrimination involves ‘‘a pattern or
practice, policy, or class case where the
discrimination has a broad impact on an
industry, profession, company or
geographic area.’’ Id. Systemic
discrimination also includes ‘‘policies
and practices that are seemingly neutral
but may cause a disparate impact on
protected groups.’’ Id.
Several employee-advocacy
commenters argued that the Guidance
should explicitly state that systemic
discrimination is not limited to class
actions or government agency
enforcement, so that individual or
multi-plaintiff lawsuits challenging a
widely-applicable practice or rule
62 Similarly, the Business Roundtable commented
on one of the Proposed Guidance’s examples of
retaliatory behavior that referenced an employee
who is disciplined for making a complaint about
potential violations of Labor Laws. The Business
Roundtable expressed concern that any employee
complaint could be deemed a serious violation.
However, the Proposed Guidance did not suggest
that the employee’s complaint itself could be
considered a serious violation; rather, the relevant
serious violation would be where an administrative
merits determination, civil judgment, or arbitral
award or decision finds that the employer retaliated
against the employee for making the complaint.
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should fall within the definition of
serious. Because the definition in the
Proposed Guidance singled out ‘‘class
cases,’’ these commenters believed that
one could infer that the Guidance
excludes individual or multi-plaintiff
non-class action cases in which the
Labor Law decision includes a finding
that systemic discrimination occurred.
The Department agrees that systemic
discrimination is not limited to
litigation brought in a class action, and
has clarified this point in the final
Guidance.
Several of these commenters also
advocated that this criterion for serious
violations should not be limited to
‘‘systemic discrimination,’’ but instead
should include all ‘‘systemic labor law’’
violations. Commenters cited the
misclassification of employees as
independent contractors and the failure
to provide adequate safety equipment to
an entire workforce as systemic
violations involving company-wide
policies that should be deemed serious.
The Department declines to expand
the definition of systemic
discrimination. The term ‘‘systemic
discrimination’’ has a well-established
meaning under anti-discrimination
laws, and the Department intended to
restrict this criterion to such violations.
Moreover, the Department expects that
many widespread violations unrelated
to discrimination will likely be
classified as serious under other criteria
in the Guidance.
Finally, one industry commenter
criticized the systemic discrimination
criterion, asserting that it was too broad
because virtually all of OFCCP’s
discrimination allegations are ‘‘pattern
or practice’’ or systemic allegations. The
Department disagrees. While OFCCP
does focus on this category of
discrimination, only a small fraction of
OFCCP’s show-cause notices include a
finding that systemic discrimination has
occurred. Additionally, as noted earlier,
OFCCP issues fewer than 200 showcause notices per year; thus, the overall
number of OFCCP cases implicated by
this criterion is not large. In the
Department’s view, systemic or patternor-practice discrimination remains an
appropriate criterion for determining
whether a violation is serious.
While the Department has not made
any substantive changes to the
definitions for this criterion, the
Department has added a list of the Labor
Laws to which this criterion will
generally apply, as well as a reference
to a leading Supreme Court case
defining ‘‘pattern or practice,’’
International Brotherhood of Teamsters
v. United States, 431 U.S. 324, 336
(1977).
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viii. Interference With Investigations
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
Labor Law violation is serious if the
Labor Law decision’s findings support a
conclusion that the contractor interfered
with an enforcement agency’s
investigation. The Proposed Guidance
also listed several examples of
interference.
Several industry commenters voiced
concern about this category.
Specifically, these commenters argued
that this category could penalize
contractors for raising good-faith
challenges to the scope of an agency’s
investigation. For example, commenters
stated that a contractor may refuse to
provide documents to an agency
because it takes the position that the
agency’s request is overbroad. Some of
these commenters argued that the
contractor has a right to challenge the
scope of a subpoena, document request,
or request for information, and that the
assertion of such rights should not be
construed as interference—regardless of
whether a court ultimately decides in
favor of the contractor. One commenter
suggested that such disputes should be
distinguished from more serious
obstruction such as threatening workers
who speak to enforcement agency
investigators, falsifying or destroying
records, or making misrepresentations
to investigators.
After careful consideration of the
comments received, the Department is
retaining this criterion for serious
violations in the final Guidance but is
limiting its scope. The Department
views interference with investigations
as serious because such behavior
severely hinders enforcement agencies’
ability to conduct investigations and
correct violations of law. The
Department also recognizes, however,
that employers may have good-faith
disputes with agencies about the scope
or propriety of a request for documents
or access to the worksite.
Accordingly, the Department has
narrowed the ‘‘interference’’ criterion
such that interference is defined to
include only the following
circumstances:
(1) A civil judgment was issued
holding the contractor in contempt for
failing to provide information or
physical access to an enforcement
agency in the course of an investigation;
or
(2) It is readily ascertainable from the
Labor Law decision that the
contractor—
(a) Falsified, knowingly made a false
statement in, or destroyed records to
frustrate an investigation under the
Labor Laws;
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(b) Knowingly made false
representations to an investigator; or
(c) Took or threatened to take adverse
actions against workers (for example,
termination, reduction in salary or
benefits, or referral to immigration or
criminal authorities) for cooperating
with or speaking to government
investigators or for otherwise complying
with an agency’s investigation (for
example, threatening workers if they do
not return back wages received as the
result of an investigation).
This revision aims to capture two
primary categories, both of which the
Department considers serious: First,
instances in which a court not only
concludes that the employer unlawfully
withheld documents or access from an
agency, but holds the employer in
contempt for doing so; and second,
instances in which an employer takes
affirmative steps to frustrate an
investigation.
ix. Material Breaches and Violations of
Settlements, Labor Compliance
Agreements, or Orders (Formerly
‘‘Material Breaches and Violations of
Settlements, Agreements, or Orders’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
violation is serious if it involves a
breach of the material terms of any
agreement or settlement, or a violation
of a court or administrative order or
arbitral award. One commenter
expressed concern regarding this
criterion, stating that the Guidance did
not clearly explain how to determine
that a settlement agreement had been
materially breached.
The Department retains this criterion
for serious violations in the Guidance,
with a clarification. The concept of
material breach is well-established in
law. See, e.g., Frank Felix Associates,
Ltd. v. Austin Drugs, Inc., 111 F.3d 284,
289 (2d Cir. 1997) (stating that a
material breach, under New York law, is
one that ‘‘go[es] to the root of the
agreement between the parties’’). The
Department believes that in most cases,
the existence of a material breach will
be clear. For example, if an employer
agrees in a settlement to classify certain
types of workers as employees, but
continues to classify them as
independent contractors, this will
constitute a material breach. The intent
of this provision is not to capture
technical or questionable breaches;
rather, it is to capture those cases in
which an employer agrees, as part of a
settlement, to take certain steps to
remedy Labor Law violations but then
fails to do so. The Department also
clarifies the relevant ‘‘agreements’’
whose material breach will constitute a
serious violation. The term
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‘‘agreements’’ includes settlements and
labor compliance agreements.
c. Table of Examples
The Department has updated the table
of examples to reflect the changes in the
final Guidance.
d. Other Comments on Serious
Violations
The National Women’s Law Center
suggested that the Guidance should
include a separate subcategory of
serious violations that captures ‘‘the
scope and severity of harm caused by a
violation,’’ such as violations that
implicate more than one right under the
Labor Laws, severe monetary losses, or
other types of severe losses.
The Department agrees that the
Guidance should capture the scope and
severity of harm caused by a violation,
but does not believe it is necessary to
create an additional criterion or separate
subcategory of serious violations. The
existing criteria for serious violations
generally seek to capture the scope and
severity of harm, by focusing on, for
example, the degree of monetary harm,
the number of affected workers, and the
extent to which a violation risked or
caused death or serious injury. In
addition, scope and severity of harm are
taken into consideration during the
process by which ALCAs weigh a
contractor’s overall record of Labor Law
compliance. As discussed below, in
analyzing a contractor’s record during
the weighing process, an ALCA does not
need to give equal weight to two
violations that receive the same
classification. Some violations may have
more significant consequences on a
contractor’s workforce than others, and
therefore will be given more weight
during the determination of whether a
contractor has a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance. See Guidance,
section III (B).
Several industry commenters
expressed concern that a contractor
could be found to have committed a
serious violation based on a novel legal
theory asserted by an agency or upheld
for the first time by a court. These
commenters cited, for example, recent
NLRB complaints challenging employee
handbooks and corporate social media
policies and EEOC reasonable cause
determinations challenging employer
background check policies.
The Department declines to adopt a
per se rule under which violations
based on a novel legal theory would not
be deemed serious. Many cases call for
the application of established legal rules
to new circumstances, and the fact that
no identical violation has been
previously prosecuted is not relevant to
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the measure of the violation’s effect on
the contractor’s workers. If a contractor
believes that a violation should carry
less weight because it was based on a
novel legal theory, the contractor should
make such arguments when submitting
mitigating information about the
violation. The Guidance provides that a
recent legal or regulatory change may be
a factor weighing in favor of a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. This may be the case where
‘‘prior agency or court decisions
suggested that a practice was lawful, but
the Labor Law decision finds
otherwise.’’ Guidance, section III
(B)(1)(e).
One labor union commenter urged
that an NLRA ‘‘hallmark violation’’
should be treated as a serious violation,
and that more than one hallmark
violation should be considered
pervasive. Hallmark violations include
certain violations that are particularly
coercive, including ‘‘threats of plant
closure or loss of employment,
discharge or other serious adverse
action against union adherents, and
grants of significant benefits to
employees.’’ Regency Manor Nursing
Home, 275 NLRB 1261, 1262 (N.L.R.B.
1985).
The Department declines to modify
the definitions of serious and pervasive
violations to include a new criterion of
NLRA hallmark violations. Unlike, for
example, OSHA, which clearly
designates citations as ‘‘serious’’ on the
face of the citation, the General Counsel
of the NLRB does not characterize
violations as ‘‘hallmark’’ in a complaint.
Thus, the ALCA would have to make a
determination regarding whether a
violation is a hallmark one, and the
Department does not envision ALCAs
having such a role. Nevertheless, the
Department notes that many hallmark
violations would likely be considered
serious under one of the existing
criteria, such as the criteria on
retaliation and violations that affect at
least 10 workers comprising 25 percent
of a contractor’s workforce.
Similarly, another labor union
commenter suggested that the Guidance
add a criterion addressing corporate
policies that significantly chill
employees’ rights to speak out, organize,
or file complaints. The commenter
specifically suggested that multiple
policies aimed at silencing workers
should be considered serious. The
Department declines to adopt this
suggestion. When a contractor is found
to have maintained such an unlawful,
corporate policy governing employee
conduct, such a policy will likely affect
at least 25 percent of the employer’s
workforce and will be classified as
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serious on that basis. As noted above,
the criterion setting out the 25 percent
threshold is meant to capture violations
to the extent that they affect a sufficient
number of employees. Accordingly, the
Department believes that an additional
category of serious violations that
captures only certain types of corporate
policies is unnecessary.
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2. Repeated Violations
The Order provides that the standard
for repeated violations should
‘‘incorporate existing statutory
standards’’ to the extent such standards
exist. Order, section 4(b)(i)(A). The
Order further provides that, where no
statutory standards exist, the standards
for repeated should take into account
‘‘whether the entity has had one or more
additional violations of the same or a
substantially similar requirement in the
past 3 years.’’ Id. section 4(b)(i)(B)(2).
None of the Labor Laws contains an
explicit statutory definition of the term
‘‘repeated.’’ Accordingly, the Proposed
Guidance defined ‘‘repeated’’ violations
using the ‘‘substantially similar’’
language suggested by the Order. See 80
FR 30587.
The final Guidance generally
maintains the Proposed Guidance’s
definition of ‘‘repeated’’ violations, with
some modifications. First, where the
Proposed Guidance included a general
definition followed by a list of
examples, the final Guidance instead
sets forth a statute-specific, exhaustive
list of repeated violations. This list
closely parallels the examples that were
presented in the Proposed Guidance,
with the exception of some changes
explained below.
The Department has made several
nonsubstantive changes to the definition
for clarity. The Guidance now uniformly
refers to the initial violations that form
the basis for a repeated violation as
‘‘prior’’ violations, instead of
‘‘predicate’’ violations. Where
discussing the relationship between the
prior violation and the repeated
violation itself, the Guidance refers to
the latter as the ‘‘subsequent violation.’’
The Guidance also now refers to the
relevant 3-year period for determining if
a violation is repeated as the ‘‘3-year
look-back period.’’ The Department also
has changed the order of and retitled
some of the subsections within the
definition, and has created a separate
sub-heading for ‘‘citation OSHA
violations.’’ Finally, the Department has
made a few additional changes to the
definition in response to comments, as
discussed below.
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a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The Proposed Guidance stated that
‘‘[f]or violations of the OSH Act,
violations are repeated if they involve
the same or a substantially similar
hazard.’’ 80 FR 30574, 30588.
Employee-advocacy commenters as
well as an industry commenter
submitted comments on this criterion.
These commenters stated that this
definition seemed to classify some
violations as repeated for the purposes
of the Order that would not be
considered ‘‘repeat’’ under the OSH Act.
The reason is that the enforcement
scheme of the OSH Act includes both
OSHA and the OSHA-approved State
Plans. Under that scheme, violations of
State Plans are not considered by
Federal OSHA when classifying a
Federal violation as ‘‘repeat.’’ Similarly,
State Plan agencies typically do not cite
an employer for a repeat violation if the
prior violation occurred outside the
State’s jurisdiction.
The employee advocates supported
application of the ‘‘substantially
similar’’ standard as proposed in the
Guidance, regardless of the variance
from the OSH Act. The industry
commenter argued that ALCAs and
contracting officers would not have the
expertise to determine that two
violations were substantially similar if
the relevant enforcement agency did not
originally designate them as such.
After carefully considering all of the
comments received, the Department has
decided to modify the Guidance
criterion for repeated violations under
the OSH Act and OSHA-approved State
Plans. It was not the Department’s
intention to expand the scope of
repeated violations beyond those
already deemed ‘‘repeat’’ under the OSH
Act and OSHA State Plans. Rather, the
Department’s reference in the Proposed
Guidance to violations that involve the
same or a substantially similar hazard
was solely intended to incorporate the
Federal OSH Act’s standard for repeated
violations. See Potlatch Corp., 7 O.S.H.
Cas. (BNA) 1061, 1063 (O.S.H.R.C.
1979). Therefore, the Guidance now
states that an OSH Act or OSHAapproved State Plan violation that was
enforced through a citation or
equivalent State document (a ‘‘citation
OSHA violation’’) will only be
‘‘repeated’’ under the Order if OSHA or
the relevant State Plan agency originally
designated the citation as repeated,
repeat, or any similar State designation.
While modifying the OSHA definition
in this way, the Department retains the
3-year timeframe limitation discussed in
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the Proposed Guidance. In making
‘‘repeated’’ designations, OSHA’s
current policy is to consider whether
the employer has violated a
substantially similar requirement any
time within the previous 5 years. The
Order, however, indicates that a 3-year
look-back period is appropriate.
Accordingly, when a contractor
discloses a decision involving an OSH
Act ‘‘repeated’’ violation, the ALCA will
need to review the decision to
determine whether the prior violation
occurred in the previous 3 years. This
means that the prior violation must have
become a final order of the OSHRC or
equivalent State agency within the
previous 3 years. In sum, only those
citations that have been designated as
repeated and where the prior violation
occurred in the 3 years preceding the
second citation should be classified as
repeated under the Order.
The final Guidance also deletes a
statement from the Proposed Guidance
that violations of MSPA and the OSH
Act may be substantially similar if they
involve substantially similar hazards.
Upon further consideration, the
Department believes that such an
approach is not easily administrable.
For non-citation OSHA violations,
neither OSHA nor State Plan agencies
make ‘‘repeated’’ designations.
Accordingly, the Guidance clarifies that
ALCAs will classify non-citation
violations as repeated using the same
general criteria that apply to all other
violations. See Guidance, section
III(A)(2)(b).
b. All Other Violations
Under the final Guidance, for all
Labor Law violations other than citation
OSHA violations, a violation is
‘‘repeated’’ if it is
the same as or substantially similar to a prior
violation of the Labor Laws that was the
subject of a separate investigation or
proceeding arising from a separate set of
facts, and became uncontested or adjudicated
within the previous 3 years.
Guidance, section III(A)(2). Comments
related to this definition are discussed
below.
i. Prior Violation Must Have Been
Uncontested or Adjudicated (Formerly
‘‘Type of Violations’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that
the prior violation that forms the basis
for a repeated violation must be a civil
judgment, arbitral award or decision, or
adjudicated or uncontested
administrative merits determination.
Under the Proposed Guidance, this
restriction did not apply to the
subsequent violation. In other words,
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the violation classified as repeated did
not itself need to be adjudicated.
Several employer groups challenged
this distinction. Most of these
commenters argued that the definition
should require both the prior and
subsequent violations to have been
adjudicated for the subsequent one to be
classified as repeated. One commenter
asserted that limiting the prior violation
to adjudicated or uncontested
administrative merits determinations
implicitly recognizes that unadjudicated
determinations are inherently suspect.
Many of these comments echoed those
made by employer groups regarding the
required disclosure of nonfinal
administrative merits determinations, in
which these groups suggested that only
final agency decisions should have to be
disclosed under the Order.
In the final Guidance, the Department
generally retains the proposed
framework, though with some
modifications discussed below. The
purpose of classifying a violation as
repeated is to identify those employers
who fail to modify their conduct after
having committed a previous
substantially similar violation.
Employers who have repeatedly
violated the law are more likely than
other contractors to commit future
similar Labor Law violations during
performance of a Federal contract.
Because an ALCA will give a repeated
violation additional scrutiny, it is
appropriate to create more limited
parameters for the prior violation by
requiring it to have been uncontested or
adjudicated. As the Guidance notes, this
framework is intended to ensure that
violations will only be classified as
repeated when the contractor has had
the opportunity—even if not
exercised—to present facts or arguments
in its defense before an administrative
adjudicative authority concerning the
prior violation.
Moreover, the Department chose to
require the prior violation to be
uncontested or adjudicated because this
formulation is similar to the one used to
designate repeated violations under the
OSH Act. In enforcing the OSH Act,
OSHA requires a prior substantially
similar violation to have become a final
order of the OSHRC before the
occurrence of the subsequent violation.
The subsequent violation itself,
however, need not be a final order of the
OSHRC. The Department has chosen to
model the definition of ‘‘repeated’’
under the Order after the OSH Act
practice.
While the Department declines to
change basic underlying framework, the
final Guidance contains a few minor
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changes in response to the comments
received and for clarity.
First, for clarity, the final Guidance
explains that any Labor Law decision—
not just administrative merits
determinations—must be uncontested or
adjudicated to be a prior violation.
Since civil judgments and arbitral
awards or decisions are inherently
adjudicated proceedings, this change is
nonsubstantive; but it is made to
emphasize that the same basic standard
applies to all Labor Law decisions.
Second, in response to concerns of
employer commenters, the final
Guidance narrows the definitions of
‘‘uncontested’’ and ‘‘adjudicated,’’ as
follows:
An ‘‘uncontested’’ violation is now
defined as a violation that is reflected
in:
(1) A Labor Law decision that the
employer has not contested or
challenged within the time limit
provided in the Labor Law decision or
otherwise required by law; or
(2) A Labor Law decision following
which the employer agrees to at least
some of the relief sought by the agency
in its enforcement action.
These changes are made to ensure that
a violation will not be considered
uncontested unless it is resolved or any
applicable time period to contest it has
expired. Under the Proposed Guidance’s
definition, an administrative merits
determination would have been
considered uncontested unless a timely
appeal of the determination was filed or
pending. This definition, however, did
not account for cases in which a
contractor may intend to dispute an
agency’s determination, but the burden
is on the agency to initiate litigation in
order to continue enforcement, such as
in the case of EEOC reasonable cause
determinations or FLSA enforcement
proceedings brought by WHD. Under
the revised definition, such violations
will not be considered uncontested.
An ‘‘adjudicated’’ violation is now
defined as a violation that is reflected
in:
(1) A civil judgment,
(2) an arbitral award or decision, or
(3) an administrative merits
determination that constitutes a final
agency order by an administrative
adjudicative authority following a
proceeding in which the contractor had
an opportunity to present evidence or
arguments on its behalf.
The Guidance explains that
‘‘administrative adjudicative authority,’’
as used in (3) above, means an
administrative body empowered to hear
adversary proceedings, such as the ARB,
the OSHRC, or the NLRB. ALJs are also
administrative adjudicative authorities;
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58683
however, their decisions will only
constitute adjudicated violations if they
are adopted as final agency orders. The
Guidance notes that this typically will
occur, for example, if the party subject
to an adverse decision by an ALJ does
not file a timely appeal to the agency’s
administrative appellate body, such as
those referenced above. Thus, if an
administrative merits determination is
subject to multiple levels of appellate
review, such as proceedings before the
Department that go before an ALJ and
then the ARB, only a decision following
the final level of appellate review
constitutes an adjudicated
administrative merits determination.
Finally, the Department also modifies
the Guidance to clarify that the prior
violation must be uncontested or
adjudicated before the date of the Labor
Law decision for the subsequent
violation in order for the subsequent
violation to be classified as repeated.
The Guidance includes an example
illustrating this point.
ii. 3-Year Look-Back Period (Formerly
‘‘Timeframe’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that
the prior violation for a repeated
violation must have occurred within the
3-year ‘‘reporting period.’’
As an initial matter, the Department
has recognized that this characterization
did not accurately describe the 3-year
timeframe for considering whether a
violation is repeated. The 3-year
‘‘reporting period’’ (which the Guidance
now refers to as the ‘‘3-year disclosure
period’’) is relevant to the Order’s basic
requirement of which Labor Law
decisions a contractor must disclose at
all—not to the determination of whether
a violation was repeated. This
disclosure time period extends back
from the date of the contractor’s offer.
The Department, however, interprets
section 4(b)(i)(B)(2) of the Order, which
directs the Department to consider
‘‘whether the entity has had one or more
additional violations of the same or a
substantially similar requirement in the
past 3 years,’’ to refer to a distinct lookback period for identifying repeated
violations—wherein the prior violation
must have occurred no earlier than 3
years prior to the date of the subsequent
violation (not the date of the offer). The
Department has included language
clarifying this distinction in the
Guidance.63
63 Along the same lines, the Department notes
that although, as noted above, there will be a phasein of the 3-year disclosure period, there is no such
phase-in for the 3-year look-back period for
classification of repeated violations. Thus, an ALCA
may find that violation was repeated based on the
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Some employee-advocacy groups
argued that a 3-year look-back period is
too short. Two of these groups argued
that the look-back period should be
expanded beyond 3 years, stating that
because agency investigations and
related litigation often take months or
even years, it will be difficult to identify
patterns of repeated violations within
only a 3-year window. These
commenters suggested that in the
preaward phase, the contractor should
be asked if it committed any similar
violations during the previous 5 years,
and in the postaward phase, the lookback period should be expanded to
include all years in which the contractor
held contracts.
The Department declines to modify
the Guidance in response to these
suggestions. The 3-year look-back
period is explicitly set forth in the Order
and reflects the intention of the
President that only violations during
this time period will be considered in
determining whether violations are
repeated. See Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(2). A 5-year period would be
inconsistent with the Order.
In contrast, one industry commenter
suggested that the 3-year look-back
period is too long, and would result in
the consideration of a contractor’s
conduct that may have occurred long
before the beginning of the look-back
period. Even if the prior violation itself
occurred within the 3-year look-back
period, argued the commenter, the
underlying conduct that led to that prior
determination could have taken place
much earlier, especially if the prior
violation has a long litigation history.
As noted earlier in the discussion of
disclosure requirements, the
Department recognizes that there will be
Labor Law decisions that must be
disclosed under the Order where the
underlying conduct occurred outside
the 3-year disclosure period. This is
unavoidable in a system under which
violations need not be disclosed until
there is an administrative merits
determination, civil judgment, or
arbitral award or decision. The same is
true for the separate 3-year look-back
period for repeated violations.
However, the Department
understands the commenter’s concern
that, under the Proposed Guidance, a
violation that is the subject of lengthy
litigation could create a later repeated
violation that the Order clearly did not
intend to classify as such. For example,
OFCCP could issue a show cause notice
occurrence of a prior violation even if the Labor
Law decision related to the prior violation was not
disclosed by the contractor but was instead
identified by the ALCA using government
enforcement databases.
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to a contractor on January 1, 2017. The
contractor could contest the violation,
resulting in an ALJ determination on
January 1, 2018, an ARB determination
on January 1, 2019, a civil judgment by
a district court on January 1, 2020, and
a civil judgment by a court of appeals
on January 1, 2021. If the contractor
commits a substantially similar
violation on December 31, 2023, it
would be less than 3 years after the
court of appeals decision. But it would
be 6 years after the initial OFCCP show
cause notice was rendered—far outside
the 3-year look-back period. The
Department agrees that it would be
contrary to the spirit of the Order to use
the 2021 date to determine whether the
conduct in 2023 is ‘‘repeated.’’
To address this issue, the Department
has modified the Guidance in the
following manner: The final Guidance
explains that for a violation to be
classified as repeated, the prior
violation must have become
uncontested or adjudicated (in other
words, first become adjudicated) no
more than 3 years prior to the date of
the repeated violation (that is, the
violation that is classified as repeated).
The final Guidance explains that the
violation becomes uncontested either on
the date on which any time period to
contest the violation has expired, or on
the date of the employer’s agreement to
at least some of the relief sought by the
agency in its enforcement action (e.g.,
the date a settlement agreement is
signed). A prior violation becomes
adjudicated on the date on which the
violation first becomes an adjudicated
violation. This means that the violation
becomes adjudicated on the date when
the violation first becomes a civil
judgment, arbitral award or decision, or
a final agency order by an
administrative adjudicative authority
following a proceeding in which the
contractor had an opportunity to present
evidence or arguments on its behalf.
Thus, for a violation that is the subject
of successive adjudications such as in
the above example, the dates of
subsequent decisions after the first
adjudication are not relevant.
Accordingly, in the above example—
which is reproduced in the final
Guidance—the relevant date of the prior
violation is January 1, 2019, the date of
the ARB order, because this is the date
on which the violation becomes a final
agency order by the ARB, and therefore
first becomes an adjudicated violation.
It could serve as a prior violation only
for a substantially similar violation
decision that is issued after January 1,
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2019 and prior to January 1, 2022.64 The
dates of the subsequent Federal court
decisions are not relevant.
iii. Separate Investigations or
Proceedings
The Proposed Guidance also stated
that ‘‘[t]he prior violation(s) must be the
subject of one or more separate
investigations or proceedings.’’ 80 FR
30587. One industry commenter
expressed concern that this requirement
could be applied inconsistently in cases
where multiple agencies (e.g., OSHA
and WHD) investigate an employer. The
commenter suggested that if both
agencies conduct a joint investigation,
then no violations would be repeated,
but if the agencies conduct separate
investigations, some of the violations
could be repeated.
The Department agrees that the
language in the Proposed Guidance was
ambiguous and modifies the Guidance
to address this issue. The final Guidance
clarifies that for violation to be
classified as repeated, it must be based
upon a separate set of facts from those
underlying the prior violation. Although
the Department does not foresee a
scenario along the lines of the one
envisioned by the commenter (in part
because violations investigated by
different agencies are less likely to be
substantially similar), the new language
clarifies that this scenario would not
give rise to a repeated violation.
iv. Violation Committed by the
Contractor (Formerly ‘‘Company-Wide
Consideration’’)
Under the Proposed Guidance, the
determination of a repeated violation
takes a company-wide approach; that is,
a prior violation by any establishment of
a multi-establishment company can
render subsequent violations repeated,
provided the other relevant criteria are
satisfied. Several labor unions and
employee-advocacy groups expressed
strong support for this approach. One
employer association expressed
opposition to this approach, arguing
that large companies often have
disparate components that are managed
independently. Finally, three
commenters suggested that the
Department clarify the scope of
‘‘company-wide’’ and ‘‘establishment.’’
The Department retains this provision
in the Guidance and clarifies that
‘‘company-wide’’ includes any
64 This modification of the guidance on repeated
violations does not, however, affect the contractor’s
disclosure requirements. The disclosure
requirements for violations that involve successive
Labor Law decisions are discussed in section
II(B)(4) of the Guidance and the preamble sectionby-section analysis.
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violations committed by the same legal
entity. By using the term
‘‘establishment’’ in the phrase ‘‘multiestablishment company,’’ the Guidance
simply means a physical location where
the contractor operates, such as an
office, factory, or construction worksite.
Thus, for the purposes of determining
whether a violation is repeated, prior
violations that occurred at different
physical locations will be considered as
long as they were committed by the
same legal entity.
This approach is consistent with the
Order, which uses the term ‘‘entity’’ in
its requirement that the Department’s
definition to take into account ‘‘whether
the entity has had one or more
additional violations of the same or a
substantially similar requirement in the
past 3 years.’’ Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(2). This is also consistent with
the manner in which the Federal
agencies administering the two statutory
regimes that currently assess ‘‘repeated’’
violations—the FLSA and the OSH
Act—evaluate repeated violations. In
short, this principle simply affirms that
all violations by a contractor will be
considered in assessing whether the
contractor committed repeated
violations.
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v. Substantially Similar Violations
The Proposed Guidance provided a
definition for how to determine whether
violations are ‘‘substantially similar’’ for
the purposes of classifying a later
violation as ‘‘repeated.’’ The Proposed
Guidance included a general principle
and illustrative examples. It stated that
substantially similar does not mean
‘‘exactly the same’’; rather, two things
may be substantially similar where they
share ‘‘essential elements in common.’’
80 FR 30574, 30587 (internal citation
omitted). It further noted that
‘‘[w]hether a violation is ‘substantially
similar’ to a past violation turns on the
nature of the violation and underlying
obligation itself.’’ Id. The Proposed
Guidance then provided examples of
how this general principle applies in the
context of the various Labor Laws. The
Department specifically sought
comment regarding this definition.
General Comments
Several labor unions and other
employee advocacy groups expressed
general support for the way that the
Proposed Guidance addressed
substantially similar violations. In
contrast, employer groups and
advocates argued that the Department’s
proposed guidance on these violations
was too broad or too vague, particularly
in the context of those Labor Laws that
concern equal employment opportunity
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and nondiscrimination. One commenter
representing industry interests argued
that repeated violations should be
limited to the same type of violation of
the same statute.
In response to concerns that the
guidance on the meaning of
‘‘substantially similar’’ was
insufficiently clear, the final Guidance,
rather than proceeding by way of a
general definition and statute-specific
examples, sets forth a statute-specific,
exhaustive list of violations that are
substantially similar to each other,
similar to the Department’s statutespecific guidance on serious and willful
violations. This list largely tracks the
examples that were presented in the
Proposed Guidance, but some changes
have been made, as noted below. The
Department believes that this approach
will increase clarity and lessen
ambiguity regarding the classification of
repeated violations.
Under the final Guidance, as in the
Proposed Guidance, certain violations
may be substantially similar to each
other even though they arise under
different statutes. While the Department
recognizes that there may be violations
that will be ‘‘repeated’’ under the
Guidance that are different in character
or degree, such violations will often
point to underlying compliance
practices in a company that the Order
seeks to eliminate from the performance
of Federal contracts. An overly narrow
definition will fail to capture many
violations that could help identify such
practices. While any definition of
‘‘substantially similar’’ would likely
draw criticism for both overinclusiveness and under-inclusiveness,
the Department believes that the
definitions in the final Guidance strike
the appropriate balance. The
Department also believes that these
definitions are sufficiently clear for
ALCAs to be able to apply them.
The Department did not receive
specific comments on the definitions of
‘‘substantially similar’’ for violations of
the FLSA, DBA, SCA, Executive Order
13658, and MSPA, or on its proposal to
treat as substantially similar any two
violations involving retaliation, any two
recordkeeping violations, or any two
failures to post required notices. The
Department did receive comments on
the definitions of ‘‘substantially similar’’
for other Labor Laws, as discussed
below.
Family and Medical Leave Act
One advocacy organization
commenter addressed the treatment of
repeated violations of the FMLA. The
individual notice provisions of the
FMLA require that when an employee
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58685
requests leave for a qualifying reason,
the employer must notify the employee
of certain rights and other information.
The commenter argued that violations of
this notice provision should be treated
as substantially similar to other FMLA
violations, such as interference and
discrimination, because the FMLA’s
individual notice provisions relate to a
specific leave request and an
individual’s ability to exercise his or her
FMLA rights.
The Department declines to change
this aspect of the definition of repeated
violations. The general notice and
individual notice requirements are both
included in the same provision of the
FMLA regulations. 29 CFR 825.300.
This provision is separate from the
regulatory provisions governing
interference and discrimination. While
the Department agrees that a violation of
individual notice requirements could
potentially be tied to, or result in,
interference and discrimination, this is
also true for violations of the general
notice provisions. The Department
believes that notice requirements are
sufficiently different from an employer’s
actual failure to provide leave or other
benefits that they should not be
considered substantially similar to those
violations in the context of repeated
violations.
National Labor Relations Act
The Proposed Guidance stated, by
way of example, that any two violations
of section 8(a)(3) of the NLRA would be
substantially similar to each other, but
would not be substantially similar to
violations of section 8(a)(2). The
Department did not provide further
guidance on the circumstances under
which other NLRA violations would be
substantially similar. Consistent with
the Department’s decision to set forth
statute-specific definitions rather than
examples, the final Guidance states that
any two violations of the same
numbered subsection of section 8(a) of
the NLRA, which lists unfair labor
practices by employers, will be
substantially similar. The Department
also notes that any two violations of the
NLRA (or any of the Labor Laws) that
involve retaliation are substantially
similar.
One labor organization commenter
argued that the amendment of an NLRB
complaint should constitute a separate
administrative merits determination for
the purpose of determining whether an
employer has committed a repeated
violation. The commenter noted that
sometimes the NLRB will amend a
complaint rather than issuing a new one
where an employer has committed
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violations relating to an ongoing labor
dispute over a long period of time.
The final Guidance does not
incorporate this suggestion. First, a
pending and contested NLRB complaint
cannot serve as a prior violation for the
purposes of a repeated violation
determination. As discussed above, only
an uncontested or adjudicated Labor
Law decision can constitute a prior
violation. After adjudication or
settlement of an NLRB complaint, the
complaint typically would not be
amended. Additionally, because
complaints can be amended for
numerous reasons other than those
identified by the commenter, the
Department believes that it would be
impractical to require ALCAs to
examine complaints in order to
determine when and why they were
amended. As such, a single NLRB
complaint, regardless of whether it is
amended, will constitute a single
administrative merits determination.
The same commenter also
recommended that the Department treat
violations of section 8(a)(1), which
prohibits employers from interfering
with, restraining, or coercing employees
in the exercise of the rights guaranteed
in section 7 of the NLRA, as
substantially similar to violations of
section 8(a)(3), which generally
prohibits employers from discriminating
in regard to hire or tenure of
employment, or any term or condition
of employment, to encourage or
discourage membership in a labor
organization, for the purposes of
determining whether a violation was
repeated. The Department declines to
adopt this suggestion, as it believes that
it is overbroad in scope and could result
in dissimilar violations being classified
as repeated.
Anti-Discrimination Labor Laws 65
Some employer-group commenters
expressed concern about the application
of the definition to the antidiscrimination laws. Under the
Proposed Guidance, such violations
would be substantially similar if they
involved the same or an overlapping
protected status, even if they did not
involve the same employment practice.
One noted that, for example, under the
definition in the Guidance, if a company
employed a hiring test resulting in a
disparate impact on women, and within
65 The term ‘‘anti-discrimination Labor Laws’’
refers to Title VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973, the ADA, the ADEA, section 6(d) of
the FLSA (known as the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C.
206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of September 24,
1965, the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment
Assistance Act of 1972, and the Vietnam Era
Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974.
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3 years, an individual manager in a
different department engaged in sexual
harassment, the company would be
found to have committed repeated
violations.
In response to these comments, the
Department has made modifications to
narrow the definition of repeated
violations in the discrimination context.
For purposes of the anti-discrimination
Labor Laws, violations are substantially
similar if they involve (1) the same
protected status, and (2) at least one of
the following elements in common: (a)
The same employment practice, or (b)
the same worksite. In nonsubstantive
changes, the Department has removed
the reference to ‘‘overlapping’’ protected
statuses and the list of examples of
protected statuses, but has clarified that
violations are considered to involve the
same protected status as long as the
same status is present in both violations,
even if other protected statuses may be
involved as well. For the purpose of
determining whether violations involve
the same worksite, the same definition
of ‘‘worksite’’ that was used in the
discussion of the 25 percent criterion for
a serious violation applies, except that
any two or more company-wide
violations are considered to involve the
same worksite. The Department believes
that this narrower definition will better
capture violations that are substantially
similar to each other.
Also, a number of employee advocates
argued in their comments that
discrimination on the basis of sex,
gender identity, sexual orientation, and
pregnancy should be considered to be
‘‘the same or overlapping’’ protected
statuses for the purpose of determining
whether a violation was repeated. These
commenters asserted that
discrimination on the basis of these
characteristics typically arises out of
gender-based stereotypes and that it
would be appropriate to treat such
violations as substantially similar for
purposes of the Order.
The Department has incorporated this
suggestion in part. The treatment of
discrimination on the basis of
pregnancy as a type of sex
discrimination is consistent with Title
VII as amended by the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act. See 42 U.S.C.
2000e(k). Additionally, the treatment of
discrimination on the basis of gender
identity (including transgender status)
as a type of sex discrimination is
consistent with the views of the EEOC,
the Department, the Department of
Justice, and two Federal courts of
appeals.66 With regard to discrimination
66 See Macy v. Holder, Appeal No. 0120120821,
2012 WL 1435995 (EEOC 2012), Dep’t of Labor, Ofc.
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on the basis of sexual orientation, some
courts have recognized in the wake of
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins 67 that
discrimination ‘‘because of sex’’
includes discrimination based on sex
stereotypes about sexual attraction and
sexual behavior 68 or about deviations
from ‘‘heterosexually defined gender
norms.’’ 69 In addition, the EEOC has
concluded that Title VII’s prohibition of
discrimination ‘‘because of sex’’
includes sexual orientation
discrimination because discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation
necessarily involves sex-based
considerations.70 The Department has
taken the position that discrimination
on the basis of sex includes, at a
minimum, sex discrimination related to
an individual’s sexual orientation where
the evidence establishes that the
discrimination is based on gender
stereotypes.71 Consistent with recent
regulatory activity,72 the Department
will continue to monitor the developing
law on sexual orientation
discrimination as sex discrimination
under Title VII and will interpret E.O.
11246’s prohibition of sex
discrimination in conformity with Title
VII principles.
In recognition of Title VII’s explicit
incorporation of pregnancy
discrimination as a type of sex
discrimination and the Department’s
previously articulated positions on
gender identity discrimination related to
sexual orientation based on gender
stereotyping, the Department clarifies in
the final Guidance that violations
involving discrimination on the bases of
sex, pregnancy, gender identity
of Fed. Contract Compliance Programs, Final Rule,
Discrimination on the Basis of Sex, 81 FR 39108,
39118–19 (June 15, 2016) (‘‘OFCCP Sex
Discrimination Final Rule’’); Memorandum from
Attorney General Eric Holder to United States
Attorneys and Heads of Department Components
(Dec. 15, 2014), https://www.justice.gov/file/
188671/download; Glenn v. Brumby, 663 F.3d 1312
(11th Cir. 2011); Smith v. City of Salem, 378 F.3d
566, 575 (6th Cir. 2004).
67 490 U.S. 228 (1989).
68 See Videckis v. Pepperdine Univ., No. CV 15–
00298, 2015 WL 8916764, at *5 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 15,
2015).
69 Isaacs v. Felder Servs., No. 2:13cv693–MHT,
2015 WL 6560655, at *4 (M.D. Ala. Oct. 29, 2015)
(internal quotation omitted).
70 Baldwin v. Dep’t of Transp., Appeal No.
0120133080, 2015 WL 4397641, at *5 (EEOC 2015).
For a more comprehensive discussion on the state
of the law on these issues, please see the OFCCP
Sex Discrimination Final Rule cited above; see also
Dep’t of Labor, Ofc. of the Sec’y, Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, Implementation of the
Nondiscrimination and Equal Opportunity
Provisions of the Workforce Innovation and
Opportunity Act, 81 FR 4494, 4507 (Jan. 26, 2016)
(‘‘CRC WIOA NPRM’’).
71 OFCCP Sex Discrimination Final Rule, 81 FR
at 39118; CRC WIOA NRPM, 81 FR at 4508–09.
72 See id.
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(including transgender status), and sex
stereotyping (including discrimination
related to sexual orientation based on
such stereotyping) are considered to
involve discrimination on the basis of
the same protected status for the
purpose of determining whether two
violations are substantially similar.
While the use of the term ‘‘same’’ does
not intend to suggest that all of these
forms of discrimination are identical,
these violations are sufficiently similar
to be classified as substantially similar
violations under the Order.
Finally, one union commenter argued
that any time an employer commits
multiple discrimination violations,
regardless of whether they involve the
same protected status or employment
practice, they should be considered
repeated violations. The Department
declines to adopt this suggestion.
Violations of anti-discrimination
requirements are often fact-intensive
and the Department does not believe it
would be appropriate to treat all such
violations as substantially similar absent
the additional factors described above.
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Alternative Proposal
A few commenters, including unions
and other employee advocates, argued
that the scope of repeated violations
should be expanded to include any time
a contractor has violated any one of the
covered Labor Laws five times in the
last 3 years. The final Guidance does not
adopt this suggestion because it is
inconsistent with the Order’s specific
direction that a determination of a
repeated violation be based on ‘‘the
same or a substantially similar
requirement.’’ However, the Department
notes that multiple violations that are
not substantially similar to each other
may be properly considered in an
evaluation of whether such violations
show sufficient disregard for the Labor
Laws that they constitute pervasive
violations.
3. Willful Violations
The Proposed Guidance set forth
several classification criteria for
determining whether a violation of one
of the Labor Laws is a willful violation
under the Order. 80 FR 30585. Under
the Proposed Guidance, a willful
violation was specifically defined for
five Labor Laws—the OSH Act or an
OSHA-approved State Plan; the FLSA
(including the Equal Pay Act), the
ADEA, Title VII, and the ADA. Under
these statutes, the term ‘‘willful’’ has a
well-established meaning or an
analogous statutory standard exists that
is consistent with the Order. The
Proposed Guidance included a residual
criterion for all other Labor Laws,
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stating that a violation would be willful
if
the findings of the relevant enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel
support a conclusion that the contractor . . .
knew that its conduct was prohibited by any
of the Labor Laws or showed reckless
disregard for, or acted with plain indifference
to, whether its conduct was prohibited by
one or more requirements of the Labor Laws.
Id.
a. OSH Act or OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The Proposed Guidance set forth a
specific definition of a willful violation
for the OSH Act and OSHA-approved
State Plans. It stated that OSH Act and
OSHA-approved State Plan violations
would be willful if the relevant
enforcement agency had designated the
citation as willful or any equivalent
State designation. 80 FR 30585.
As noted above, a few workeradvocate commenters expressed
concern that the Proposed Guidance’s
definitions of serious, repeated, willful,
and pervasive violations did not
sufficiently account for OSH Act
violations that are not enforced through
citations, such as retaliation violations.
As a result of these comments, the
Department has clarified this point of
ambiguity by dividing OSH Act and
OSHA-approved State Plan violations
into two categories: Citation OSHA
violations and non-citation OSHA
violations. For the former, an OSHA or
OSHA-approved State Plan designation
of ‘‘willful’’ (or an equivalent State
designation) controls the classification
of the violation under the Order. For the
latter, a violation is willful if it meets
the residual standard for a willful
violation—knowledge, reckless
disregard, or plain indifference.
In a nonsubstantive change, the final
Guidance has also deleted language
stating that OSH Act and OSHAapproved State Plan citations designated
as willful are willful violations under
the Order only if the designation has not
been subsequently vacated. This
language is unnecessary in light of the
broader statement in the final Guidance
that if a Labor Law decision or portion
thereof that would otherwise cause a
violation to be classified as serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive is
reversed or vacated, then the violation
will not be classified as such under the
Order.
b. Violations of the Minimum Wage,
Overtime, and Child Labor Provisions of
the FLSA
The Proposed Guidance stated that a
violation of the FLSA would be willful
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58687
if an administrative merits
determination sought or assessed civil
monetary penalties for a willful
violation, or there was a civil judgment
or arbitral award or decision finding the
contractor or subcontractor liable for
back wages for greater than 2 years or
affirming the assessment of civil
monetary penalties for a willful
violation. 80 FR 30586. As in the case
of OSH Act violations, these criteria did
not sufficiently account for all
violations of the FLSA because these
criteria apply only to the FLSA’s
provisions on minimum wage, overtime,
and (in the case of civil monetary
penalties) child labor. See 29 U.S.C.
216(e)(1)(A)(ii), 216(e)(2), 216(e)(3)(C),
255. Accordingly, the final Guidance
clarifies that these criteria will only be
used to classify these violations of the
FLSA, while other violations of the
FLSA—such as retaliation, see 29 U.S.C.
215(a)(3)—will be classified using the
residual criterion.
One commenter also expressed
concern that it would be inappropriate
to classify an FLSA violation as willful
due to the assessment or award of more
than 2 years of back wages because there
are occasions when employers agree to
pay back wages for greater than 2 years
even when an FLSA violation is not
willful. The Department declines to
change the Guidance in response to the
above comment. Under the FLSA,
WHD’s standard practice is to use an
investigative period of up to 2 years for
non-willful violations and up to 3 years
for willful violations, and to assess back
wages for the relevant investigative
period. Thus, WHD’s standard practice
is to assess no more than 2 years of back
wages in a form WH–56 unless the
agency makes an investigative finding
that the violation was willful.
As a related matter, however, the
Department has clarified that for civil
judgments and arbitral awards or
decisions under the FLSA’s minimum
wage and overtime provisions, a
violation will only be classified as
willful under the Order if the Labor Law
decision includes a finding that the
violation was willful. This is because in
such litigation, the 2-year limit for nonwillful violations only limits the
recovery to the 2 years prior to the
commencement of the litigation. See 29
U.S.C. 255. It does not affect the
recovery of additional back wages if the
violations continue while the litigation
is pending. If the violations continue
after the commencement of litigation,
back wages can ultimately be awarded
for more than 2 years—for up to 2 years
prior to the commencement of the
litigation, plus any additional period of
time from the date the litigation is
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initiated until final judgment. Thus,
because a non-willful violation of the
FLSA’s minimum wage or overtime
provisions reflected in a civil judgment
or arbitral award or decision may result
in more than 2 years of back wages, the
final Guidance clarifies that whether
such violations are willful under the
Order depends on whether the court or
arbitrator(s) makes a finding of
willfulness—and does not depend on
the number of years of back wages
awarded.
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c. Violations of the ADEA
The Proposed Guidance stated that
violations of the ADEA are willful if the
enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or
arbitral panel assessed or awarded
liquidated damages. One commenter
asserted that an ADEA violation might
be willful even if liquidated damages
are not awarded, and therefore
suggested that the Department apply the
willfulness residual criterion to ADEA
violations in addition to the liquidated
damages criterion. The Department
declines to expand the application of
the residual criterion to cover the
ADEA. As discussed below, in the
discussion of the residual criterion
generally, an expansion of the residual
criterion is unnecessary and would not
further the efficient administration of
the Order.
d. Title VII and the ADA
One commenter suggested that the
statute-specific criteria for willful
violations under Title VII and the ADA
did not sufficiently account for
violations involving retaliation, and
suggested adding the words ‘‘or
retaliatory’’ to describe the types of
violations that could involve punitive
damages. The Department, however,
believes that the language in the
Proposed Guidance sufficiently
accounts for retaliation cases. The
criteria specified in the Guidance for
willful violations under Title VII and
the ADA already applies to their antiretaliation provisions. See 42 U.S.C.
1981a(b)(1) (stating that punitive
damages may be awarded for any
violation of Title VII or the ADA in
which the employer acts with malice or
reckless indifference). As such, no
changes to the Guidance are necessary
to clarify that retaliation violations of
these statutes may be classified as
willful if they meet the listed criteria.
e. Any Other Violations of the Labor
Laws (Formerly ‘‘Other Labor Laws’’)
The Proposed Guidance stated that for
any Labor Laws for which a specific
criterion for willfulness was not listed,
a violation would be willful if
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the findings of the relevant enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel
support a conclusion that the contractor . . .
knew that its conduct was prohibited by any
of the Labor Laws or showed reckless
disregard for, or acted with plain indifference
to, whether its conduct was prohibited by
one or more requirements of the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30586.
Several employee advocates argued
that this residual standard should apply
to all of the Labor Laws, including the
five statutes for which the Guidance
also includes statute-specific criteria
(OSH Act/OSHA-Approved State Plans,
FLSA, ADEA, Title VII, ADA). These
commenters argued that the statutespecific criteria would not necessarily
capture all violations of those statutes in
which the employer engaged in willful
conduct.
The Department declines to broaden
the application of the residual standard
to all of the Labor Laws. The purpose of
listing specific standards for the five
laws that already incorporate a concept
of willfulness (or, in the case of Title VII
and the ADA, the related standard of
malice or reckless indifference) is to
further the efficient administration of
the Order. Moreover, the Department
believes it is inappropriate for ALCAs to
second-guess the decisions of
enforcement agencies, arbitrators, or
courts as to whether or not a violation
was willful. Accordingly, for Labor
Laws with an existing willfulness
framework, violations are only willful
under the Order if the relevant Labor
Law decision explicitly includes such a
finding.73 In contrast, for Labor Laws
that do not have a willfulness
framework, an ALCA may examine the
relevant Labor Law decision to
determine whether it is readily
ascertainable from the decision that the
violation was willful under the residual
criterion.
A number of industry commenters
expressed concern that the Proposed
Guidance’s residual criterion is too
vague, overbroad, and would not be
applied correctly or consistently.
Several of these commenters expressed
particular concern about how prime
contractors would be able to apply this
standard when assessing violations by
subcontractors.
The final Guidance retains the
residual criterion for willful violations.
While the Department agrees that a
determination of knowledge, reckless
disregard, or plain indifference will
73 Some worker-advocacy commenters noted that
the EEOC does not assess punitive or liquidated
damages at the reasonable-cause stage. The
Department recognizes that this means EEOC
reasonable cause determinations will not provide a
basis for finding a violation ‘‘willful.’’
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depend on the facts of individual cases,
it believes that ALCAs will be able to
implement this standard with assistance
of this Guidance and its appendices.
This standard is well-established,
having been applied for many years by
courts and administrative agencies in
the context of the OSH Act, FLSA, and
ADEA. The Department is confident that
it can be applied in the context of other
Labor Laws as well. The Department
also notes that the key language of the
residual criterion comes from the Order
itself, which states that where no
statutory standards exist, the standard
for willfulness should take into account
‘‘whether the entity knew of, showed
reckless disregard for, or acted with
plain indifference to the matter of
whether its conduct was prohibited by
the requirements of the [Labor Laws].’’
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(3). The residual
criterion in the Proposed Guidance
conforms to the Order’s text, and the
Department declines to narrow it
further.
One industry commenter argued that
this definition was too broad and could
in some cases be counterproductive,
such as by penalizing contractors for
having a written policy in place which
could in turn be used as evidence of the
contractor’s knowledge of its legal
requirements. While the Department
recognizes the commenter’s concerns,
an employer’s deviation from a written
policy is plainly evidence that the
employer was aware of its legal
obligations but chose to ignore them.
The Department believes that employers
have sufficient existing incentives to
maintain written policies such that
classifying a violation as willful under
these circumstances will not cause
employers to forgo written policies.
Another industry commenter
expressed concern that one of the
examples of a non-willful VEVRAA
violation in Appendix B of the Proposed
Guidance (now Appendix C in the final
Guidance) described a disparate impact
case, which the commenter believed
could create confusion by suggesting
that a disparate impact case under
certain circumstances could be a willful
violation. The Department agrees that
disparate impact cases under VEVRAA,
absent unusual circumstances, will not
be willful violations under the Order,
and the intent of the example is to
illustrate just that.
The Department believes that the final
FAR rule addresses the industry
commenters’ concerns about application
of the residual willfulness standard by
prime contractors. As noted in section V
of this section-by-section analysis,
below, the final FAR rule clarifies that
subcontractors will make their detailed
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Labor Law disclosures directly to the
Department, and will receive advice
about their record of compliance from
DOL which they may provide to
contractors. Under this structure,
contractors will be able to rely on the
Department’s classification
determinations rather than making the
classification determinations
themselves.
The Department further emphasizes
that a determination of willfulness will
only be made if it is readily
ascertainable from the findings of the
Labor Law decision. ALCAs will not
examine case files or evidentiary
records in order to make assessments of
willfulness. Where the findings of the
Labor Law decision do not include any
facts that indicate that a violation was
willful, the violation will not be
considered willful under the Order.
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f. Table of Examples
The Department has updated the table
of examples to reflect the changes in the
final Guidance.
g. Other Comments on Willful
Violations
Some employer groups also argued
that the definition of willful violations
fails to account for the fact that
employers sometimes must deliberately
commit a violation to obtain review of
an agency’s ruling. They noted that, for
example, employers must violate
section 8(a) of the NLRA by refusing to
bargain with a union in order to obtain
appellate review of the NLRB’s
determination that a group of employees
is an appropriate bargaining unit. Two
of these groups asserted that such
violations are ‘‘technical’’ violations
that should not be considered willful or
even to be violations at all.
The Department declines to adopt a
bright-line rule under which so-called
‘‘technical’’ violations would not be
considered violations or would not be
classified as willful. A contractor’s
belief that it had justifiable reasons for
committing a Labor Law violation is
best considered as a possible mitigating
factor during the weighing process
described in section III(B) of the
Guidance.
Some industry commenters also
suggested that a violation should only
be classified as willful where the
violation has been ‘‘adjudicated.’’
According to these commenters,
agencies will often initially allege that
an employer’s actions are willful or
knowing, even though they may not be.
For example, OSHA might initially
designate a violation as willful in a
citation, only to eventually retreat from
this position. Therefore, these
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commenters suggested, willful
violations should be limited solely to
those administrative merits
determinations made by a neutral factfinder after the employer has been
accorded the opportunity for a hearing.
For the same reasons the Department
has provided in support of its use of
non-adjudicated administrative merits
determinations generally, the
Department declines to limit willful
violations to adjudicated proceedings.
However, as discussed above under
‘‘Effect of reversal or vacatur of basis for
classification,’’ the final Guidance
clarifies that a violation should not be
classified as willful if an agency has
rescinded or vacated the aspect of an
administrative merits determination
upon which a willfulness determination
was based.
4. Pervasive Violations
The Proposed Guidance defined
pervasive violations to be violations that
reflect a basic disregard by the
contractor for the Labor Laws as
demonstrated by a pattern of serious or
willful violations, continuing violations,
or numerous violations. See 80 FR
30588. The Proposed Guidance also
included additional factors and
examples.
In General
Several employer groups expressed
concern about the Proposed Guidance’s
explanation of pervasive violations.
These groups generally argued that the
definition was not sufficiently specific
and would not be applied consistently.
Some of these commenters argued that
the category of pervasive violations
should be eliminated entirely and that
the analyses relevant to pervasive
violations (such as the involvement of
upper management) should instead be
incorporated into the overall assessment
of a contractor’s responsibility. Some
argued that the definition should
instead be based on more ‘‘objective’’
criteria such as numeric thresholds. One
commenter, the Equal Employment
Advisory Council, urged the Department
to amend the definition such that only
a contractor with a ‘‘clear record of
violations that unambiguously
demonstrates a lack of commitment to
compliance responsibilities’’ may be
found to have pervasive violations. In
contrast, employee advocates and civil
rights groups generally supported the
Department’s definition of pervasive
violations. One labor union commenter
suggested that a large employer’s
violations be treated as pervasive if
multiple violations occur at a particular
targeted facility, and that multiple
violations be treated as pervasive if they
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58689
impact at least 25 percent of the
employees in the portion of the
workforce targeted by the employer.
The Department declines to eliminate
the definition of pervasive. The Order
specifically instructs the Department to
define a classification of ‘‘pervasive’’
violations. Moreover, the Department
disagrees that the inquiry into whether
a contractor has pervasive violations is
identical to the determination of
whether that contractor is responsible.
In particular, a contractor with
pervasive violations may nonetheless
ultimately be found responsible,
depending on the existence of
mitigating factors and, potentially, the
adoption of a labor compliance
agreement.
The Department also declines to make
significant modifications to the
definition of pervasive or to adopt
bright-line criteria. In the Department’s
view, this definition necessarily must be
flexible. Notwithstanding the utility of
the definitions of serious, repeated, and
willful violations, the Department
recognizes that violations falling within
these classifications may still vary
significantly in their gravity, impact,
and scope. Thus, it would not be
reasonable to require a finding of
‘‘pervasive’’ violations based on a set
number or combination of these
violations. Similarly, the Department
declines to adopt rigid criteria that
would mandate, for example, that any
company of a certain size with at least
a certain designated number of serious,
repeated, or willful violations would be
deemed to have pervasive violations.
The lack of a bright-line test is not
unique to the definition of pervasive
violations. The FAR provides
contracting officers with significant
flexibility when assessing other
elements of a contractor’s responsibility
and past performance. See FAR 9.104–
1, 42.1501. For example, as a part of the
responsibility determination,
contracting officers must consider a
number of factors, including ‘‘integrity
and business ethics’’ and whether the
contractor has ‘‘the necessary
organization, experience, accounting
and operational controls, and technical
skills, or the ability to obtain them.’’ Id.
9.104–1. Similarly, in past performance
evaluations, contracting officers
consider factors such as whether the
contractor has exhibited ‘‘reasonable
and cooperative behavior and
commitment to customer satisfaction’’
and ‘‘business-like concern for the
interest of the customer.’’ Id. 42.1501(a).
Finally, during the suspension and
debarment process, a suspending and
debarring official has the discretion not
to debar a contractor based on a holistic
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evaluation of multiple factors, such as
the contractor’s cooperation, remedial
measures, and effective internal control
systems, which may demonstrate a
contractor’s responsibility. See id.
9.406–1(a). Accordingly, the Department
does not believe that it is necessary or
appropriate to adopt rigid numerical
criteria to define pervasive. The
Department notes, however, that
violations will not be classified as
pervasive if they are minimal in nature,
given that this category seeks to
encompass those contractors who act
with a basic disregard for their
obligations under the Labor Laws. To
that end, the Department expects that
this classification will be applied
sparingly.
Size of the Contractor
The Order provides that the standards
for pervasive should take into account
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the number of violations of a requirement or
the aggregate number of violations of
requirements in relation to the size of the
entity.
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(4). The
Proposed Guidance stated that whether
a contract is found to have pervasive
violations ‘‘will depend on the size of
the contractor . . ., as well as the nature
of the violations themselves.’’ 80 FR
30574, 30588. The Proposed Guidance
specifically requested comments by
interested parties regarding how best to
assess the number of a contractor’s
violations in light of its size.
One industry commenter requested
clarification on how the size of a
contractor will impact the
determination of whether violations are
pervasive, and on the meaning of the
terms ‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium-sized,’’ and
‘‘large’’ within the meaning of the
examples set out in the Guidance. In
contrast, several employee advocates
cautioned against giving undue weight
to a company’s size when assessing
whether violations are pervasive. These
commenters argued that while smaller
companies with numerous violations
clearly should be considered pervasive
violators, the size of a large company
alone should not excuse its violations of
Labor Laws.
The Department declines to modify
the definition of pervasive either to
eliminate or to further specify criteria
for measuring company size. The
Department does not eliminate the
company-size factor because, as noted
above, the Order explicitly requires the
Department to take this factor into
account in the definition of pervasive.
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(4). This makes
sense because, as the Proposed
Guidance notes, larger companies can
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be expected to have a greater number of
violations overall than smaller
companies. The Department agrees,
however, that an employer’s size does
not automatically excuse any violations.
Rather, the size of the employer will be
one factor among many assessed when
considering whether violations are
pervasive. Likewise, the Department
declines to establish specific criteria for
how company size will affect the
determination of pervasive violations.
As noted above, the violations that
ALCAs will consider and assess will
vary significantly, making the
imposition of bright-line rules for
company size inadvisable. However, the
Department has modified the examples
in the Guidance so that each example
notes the number of employees for the
contractor. These examples are not
intended to serve as minimum
requirements, but simply as illustrations
of circumstances under which
violations may be classified as
pervasive.
Involvement of Higher-Level
Management
The Proposed Guidance also
explained that a violation is more likely
to be pervasive when higher-level
management officials are involved in
the misconduct. This is because such
involvement signals to the workforce
that future violations will be tolerated or
condoned. Involvement of high-level
managers may also dissuade workers
from reporting violations or raising
complaints. The Guidance also noted
that if managers actively avoid learning
about Labor Law violations, this may
also indicate that the violations are
pervasive.
While worker-advocacy groups
supported the inclusion of the higherlevel management factor, some
employer groups asked the Department
to clarify what constitutes higher-level
management and expressed concern that
this criterion would be applied to lowlevel management. For example, one
commenter suggested that
discrimination or harassment by a
‘‘rogue’’ manager should not result in a
determination that the violations are
pervasive if the company had strong
nondiscrimination and anti-harassment
policies in place and takes swift and
appropriate remedial action upon
learning of the manager’s actions.
Another commented that the Guidance
should add that managers need to be
trained only to the extent needed to
perform their managerial duties.
By using the term ‘‘higher-level
management,’’ the Department did not
suggest that the involvement of any
employees with managerial
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responsibilities would be deemed a
pervasive violation. The Department
agrees that a violation is unlikely to be
classified as pervasive where the
manager involved is low-level (such as
a first-line supervisor), acting contrary
to a strong company policy, and the
company responds with appropriate
remedial action, and the Department has
clarified this point in the final
Guidance. The Department further notes
that in the weighing step of the
assessment process (discussed below),
an ALCA will consider a contractor’s
remedial action as an important factor
that may mitigate the existence of a
violation.
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and
Mitigating Factors (Step Two) (Formerly
‘‘Assessing Violations and Considering
Mitigating Factors’’)
As discussed above, an ALCA’s
assessment of and advice regarding a
contractor’s Labor Law violations
involves a three-step process. In the
classification step, the ALCA reviews all
of the contractor’s violations to
determine if any are serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive. In the
weighing step, the ALCA then analyzes
any serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations in light of the
totality of the circumstances, including
any mitigating factors that are present.
In the final advice step, the ALCA
provides written analysis and advice to
the contracting officer regarding the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance, and whether a labor
compliance agreement or other action is
needed.
Based on the comments and
additional deliberations, the Department
modifies the final Guidance to improve
the clarity and organization of the
weighing section. For example, the
Department has changed the reference
in the Proposed Guidance to violations
that ‘‘raise particular concerns’’ to
‘‘factors that weigh against a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance.’’ The
Department has also included further
explanation of the process to clarify that
ALCAs do not make findings that
specific violations are ‘‘violations of
particular concern.’’ Rather, the ALCA
proceeds with a holistic review that
considers the totality of the
circumstances and considers all of the
relevant factors.
A summary of the comments, the
Department’s responses, and any
changes adopted in the final Guidance
are set forth below.
ALCA Capacity and Training
A number of commenters expressed
concern about the capacity of ALCAs to
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complete their duties effectively. One
employer representative argued that
ALCAs will not be equipped to analyze
employer submissions regarding
mitigating factors. This commenter
believed that contractors will likely
attempt to show mitigating
circumstances by submitting evidence
in an effort to re-litigate whether a
violation actually occurred or whether
the amount of damages awarded was
correct. Contractors will also make legal
arguments about ‘‘good faith’’ and
whether remediation was appropriate.
The commenter asserted that ALCAs
may have difficulty sifting through the
legal complexities of these submissions.
As a related matter, some commenters
stressed the importance of adequate
training and support for ALCAs. For
example, several labor unions
highlighted the need for ALCA training,
and suggested such training should
include a role of unions and other
interested parties. A number of
employer representatives argued that
the Federal Government likely did not
have sufficient resources to provide
enough staff and training to prevent
bottlenecks in evaluating contractor
integrity and business ethics.
The Department has considered these
comments and, as a general matter,
believes that they support the
Department’s development of this
Guidance to include specific guidelines
for classifying Labor Law violations and
for evaluating the totality of the
circumstances. The Department’s intent
with this Guidance has been to create a
document that contains appropriate
context and narrative description to
assist ALCAs and other interested
parties with carrying out their
responsibilities under the Order.
In response to these comments, the
Department has also added language to
the Guidance that clarifies the role of
ALCAs in assessing contractors’ records
of compliance. The Guidance clarifies
that in classifying Labor Law decisions,
ALCAs consider ‘‘information that is
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decisions themselves.’’ Guidance,
section III(A). And, while mitigating
circumstances will be considered, the
Department has clarified in the
Guidance that re-litigation of a disclosed
Labor Law decision is not appropriate.
See id. (‘‘ALCAs do not second-guess or
re-litigate enforcement actions or the
decisions of reviewing officials, courts,
and arbitrators.’’). The Department has
also tailored the ‘‘good faith’’ mitigating
factor to situations where ‘‘the findings
in the relevant Labor Law decision’’
support the contractor’s argument, so
that the consideration of good faith does
not become a far-reaching effort to re-
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litigate the decision itself. See id.
section III(B)(1)(f).
Finally, the Department strongly
agrees with the comments on the
importance of adequate training and
support for ALCAs, and the
Department—in coordination with the
Office of Management and Budget—will
provide such training as part of the
implementation of the FAR rule and the
Guidance.
Exercise of Discretion
Numerous employer organizations
argued that the guidelines for weighing
violations of particular concern and
mitigating factors are subjective and
ambiguous, which may lead to
inconsistent determinations between
ALCAs and across agencies. These
groups argued that the Proposed
Guidance gave ALCAs and contracting
officers too much discretion in how to
weigh the various factors and whether
to require negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement.
The Department rejects the argument
that the weighing process will involve
improper subjective decision-making by
ALCAs or contracting officers. These
assessments will necessarily involve
exercising judgment and discretion, but
the exercise of judgment and discretion
are a fundamental part of the preexisting FAR responsibility
determination.74
As discussed above, the FAR provides
contracting officers with significant
flexibility when assessing other
elements of a contractor’s responsibility.
See FAR 9.104–1. Contracting officers
must consider a number of factors, such
as ‘‘a satisfactory performance record,’’
‘‘integrity and business ethics,’’ and
whether the contractor has ‘‘the
necessary organization, experience,
accounting and operational controls,
and technical skills, or the ability to
obtain them.’’ Id. The test for debarment
similarly relies on a holistic evaluation
of multiple factors, such as the
contractor’s cooperation, remedial
measures, and effective internal control
systems. See FAR 9.406–1(a).
The Department does not believe that
the new requirements and processes
that implement the Order require the
exercise of more discretion or
subjectivity than these existing
determinations. To the contrary, the
final FAR rule and the final Guidance
74 See Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico
Garufi v. United States, 238 F.3d 1324, 1334–35
(Fed. Cir. 2001) (‘‘Contracting officers are generally
given wide discretion in making responsibility
determinations and in determining the amount of
information that is required to make a responsibility
determination.’’ (internal quotations marks and
citations omitted)).
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contain detailed guidelines and
examples to assist ALCAs and
contracting officers in their respective
roles.
The Department also notes that the
Order expressly requires the FAR and
the Department to create processes to
ensure government-wide consistency in
the implementation of the Order.
ALCAs will work closely with the
Department during more complicated
determinations, and the Department
will be able to assist ALCAs in
comparing a contractor’s record with
records that have in other cases resulted
in advice that a labor compliance
agreement is needed, or that notification
of the suspending and debarring official
is appropriate. Through its work with
enforcement agencies, the Department
also will provide assistance in analyzing
whether remediation efforts are
sufficient to bring contractors into
compliance with Labor Laws and
whether contractors have implemented
programs or processes that will ensure
future compliance in the course of
performance of Federal contracts. This
level of coordination will ensure that
ALCAs (and through them, contracting
officers), receive guidance and structure.
Concern About Delays in the
Procurement Process
Industry commenters raised various
concerns about burdens associated with
the assessment by ALCAs of a
contractor’s Labor Law violations, citing
potential regulatory bottlenecks and
delays. For example, commenters
opined that an awarding agency’s ALCA
could disagree with another agency’s
ALCA on the impact of a particular
violation on the contractor’s
responsibility—or that an ALCA could
disagree with its own agency’s
contracting officer, delaying one
agency’s award until the differences
could be resolved.
The Department has carefully
considered these comments, but finds
them to take issue largely with the
structure mandated by the Order itself
and not with any specific aspect of the
Department’s Guidance. The plain text
of the Order requires contracting officers
to consider Labor Law violations as part
of the responsibility determination and
requires contracting officers to consult
with ALCAs as a part of this process.
Order, section 2(a)(iii).
The Department also notes that the
FAR Council has structured the
assessment and advice process to limit
the risk of delay. As discussed below,
the final FAR rule maintains the default
3-day period for an ALCA to provide
advice. FAR 22.2004–2(b)(2)(i). It also
retains the requirement that if the
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contracting officer has not received
timely advice, the contracting officer
must proceed with the responsibility
determination ‘‘using available
information and business judgment.’’ Id.
22.2004–2(b)(5)(iii). The Department
believes that this authority granted to
contracting officers will allow
contracting officers to proceed without
delay where necessary.
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1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in
Favor of a Satisfactory Record of Labor
Law Compliance
The Order instructs contracting
officers to afford contractors the
opportunity to disclose any steps taken
to come into compliance with Labor
Laws. Order, section 2(a)(ii). It also
seeks to ensure that ALCAs and
contracting officers give appropriate
consideration to remedial measures and
other mitigating factors when assessing
a contractor’s record. See id. section
4(a)(ii). The Department’s Proposed
Guidance provided a non-exclusive list
of mitigating factors that ALCAs should
consider in the weighing process. 80 FR
30574, 30590–91. It stated that
remediation efforts—actions to correct
the violation and prevent its
recurrence—are typically the most
important mitigating factor. Id. at 30590.
General Comments
A number of unions and employeeadvocacy organizations raised concerns
with the mitigating factors listed in the
Guidance. One commenter stated that
the Guidance should not treat
circumstances such as ‘‘a long period of
compliance’’ or ‘‘a single violation’’ as
mitigating factors. It argued that these
factors may not provide an accurate
assessment of the contractor’s behavior,
as a single violation may be severe and
impactful. The commenter also noted
that the low number of violations may
be due to infrequent inspections by the
enforcement agency during the 3-year
period, rather than conduct that actually
complies with Labor Laws.
Some worker-advocacy organizations
argued that the Guidance should not
take into account the number of
violations relative to the size of the
contractor. These commenters cautioned
that size should not be an excuse for a
large number of major violations. They
further noted that large companies, due
to their greater resources, may actually
be more capable of preventing and
remedying violations than smaller
companies.
Similarly, a number of commenters
discussed whether a contractor’s safetyand-health program should be
considered a mitigating factor. Some
union and employee-advocacy
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organizations argued that only certain,
qualifying safety-and-health programs
should be considered as mitigating
factors. They suggested that the
contractor must show that its program is
being actively and effectively
implemented and meets other
requirements. For example, some
commenters stated that a contractor
with repeated or pervasive OSHA
violations should not be able to point to
its safety-and-health program as a
mitigating factor because the violations
demonstrate that the employer’s safetyand-health programs have not been
adequate.
The Department declines to make any
substantive changes to the guidance on
mitigating factors. In most instances, the
number of violations, the period of
compliance, the violations relative to
size, and the implementation of
compliance programs will be important
factors in weighing the significance of a
contractor’s Labor Law violations. In
response to the commenters’ concerns,
the Department notes that the ALCA
will weigh a contractor’s Labor Law
violations based on the totality of the
circumstances. For example, it is
generally true that a single violation will
not lead to a conclusion that the
contractor has an unsatisfactory record
of Labor Law compliance. However, it is
possible that a single violation may
merit advice that a labor compliance
agreement is needed because of the
violation’s severity and because the
harm has not been remediated.
Similarly, concerns about ‘‘paper’’
compliance programs will also be
addressed through the ALCAs’
consideration of the totality of the
circumstances—which may include the
adequacy of a compliance program put
forth as a mitigating circumstance.
Remediation Efforts
The Proposed Guidance explained
that ALCAs should give greater
mitigating weight to contractors’
remediation efforts when they involve
two components: (1) ‘‘correct[ing] the
violation itself, including by making any
affected workers whole’’ and (2) taking
steps to ensure future compliance so
that violations do not recur. See 80 FR
30574, 30590. The Proposed Guidance
stated that the fact that a contractor has
entered into a labor compliance
agreement should be considered a
mitigating factor. Id.
Several employer groups stated that
the discussion of remediation efforts in
the Proposed Guidance was confusing,
and they expressed concerns about the
extent of their obligations under the
Order. In particular, some objected to
the Proposed Guidance statement that
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‘‘in most cases, the most important
mitigating factors will be the extent to
which the contractor or subcontractor
has remediated the violation and taken
steps to prevent its recurrence.’’ 80 FR
at 30590. In their view, this suggests
that ALCAs—through labor compliance
agreements—could impose remediation
measures that go beyond what is
required to comply with the labor law
at issue. They also argued that the
Proposed Guidance was unclear about
what constitutes appropriate remedial
measures.
One employer representative, the
Equal Employment Advisory Council
(EEAC), urged the Department to clarify
the Proposed Guidance’s reference to
‘‘making any affected workers whole.’’
80 FR at 30590. EEAC suggested that
where an employer has entered into a
settlement agreement with an
enforcement agency for backpay that is
less than the amount initially proposed
in an administrative merits
determination, the compromise amount
of relief should be accepted as a ‘‘make
whole’’ remedy of the violation.
Finally, several employer
representatives objected to the use of
remediation as a mitigating factor when
the employer has challenged the
violation and the matter has not yet
been fully adjudicated—that is, while
the employer is seeking administrative
or judicial review of an administrative
merits determination. The EEAC
asserted that a contractor ‘‘cannot enter
into remediation as described by the
proposal if it chooses to contest the
agency’s finding through administrative
tribunals, in court, or elsewhere.’’ The
EEAC argued that the Guidance should
‘‘recognize that where a violation is
being contested, a contractor may still
demonstrate mitigating factors apply,
although remediation may not be the
most important factor in such cases.’’
After carefully considering all the
comments, the Department modifies the
discussion of remediation in the
Guidance for clarity, but otherwise
declines to make substantive changes.
The Department does not believe that
the Guidance was unclear about what
constitutes a remedial measure. As the
Guidance notes, remedial measures can
include measures taken to correct an
unlawful practice, make affected
employees whole, or otherwise comply
with a contractor’s obligations under the
Labor Laws. See Guidance, section
III(B)(1)(a). The measures taken to
correct an unlawful practice or make
employees whole are necessarily
specific to the Labor Law violation at
issue. For example, where WHD finds
that an employee was misclassified as
an independent contractor and not paid
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a minimum wage or overtime under the
FLSA, remedial measures could include
correcting the practice by appropriately
classifying the employee going forward
(or appropriately classifying all
similarly situated employees going
forward) and making the employee
whole by paying to the employee the
back wages that the Labor Law decision
specifies are owed to the employee.
The Department does not agree that
the Guidance should limit consideration
of preventative measures as
‘‘remediation’’ because those measures
may go beyond the basic legal
requirements under the Labor Laws. The
commenters that suggested such a limit
confuse both the purpose of the Order
and the authority under which it was
promulgated. The purpose of the Order
is not to better enforce the Labor Laws
generally, and the President did not
promulgate the Order under the legal
authority of the specific Labor Law
statutes. Rather, the Order’s purpose is
to increase efficiency and cost savings
in the work performed by parties that
contract with the Federal Government
by ensuring that they understand and
comply with labor laws. See Order,
section 1. And the Order was
promulgated under the President’s
authority under the Procurement Act,
not the Labor Laws. Accordingly,
ALCAs and contracting officers are not
barred from crediting contractors for
implementing future-oriented measures
that go beyond the minimum
specifically required under the Labor
Laws—whether voluntarily, through a
settlement with an enforcement agency,
or through a labor compliance
agreement negotiated at the suggestion
of an ALCA.75
The Guidance recognizes enterprisewide efforts and enhanced settlement
agreements as particularly important
because they reflect a contractor’s
commitment to preventing future Labor
Law violations and may include internal
compliance mechanisms that will catch
(and encourage the correction of)
potential problems at an early stage.
These kinds of preventative measures
are exactly the type of policies and
practices that increase efficiency in
75 The Department has modified the Guidance to
include a separate and more extensive explanation
of labor compliance agreements as a part of the
subsequent section III(C), ‘‘Advice regarding a
contractor’s record of Labor Law compliance.’’
Accordingly, the Department summarizes and
responds to comments regarding labor compliance
agreements below as a part of a parallel section in
this section-by-section analysis. In that section, the
Department responds to commenters’ concern about
whether it is appropriate for a labor compliance
agreement to require preventative measures that
may go beyond minimum compliance with the
Labor Laws.
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Federal contracting by limiting the
likelihood that violations will occur
during the subsequent performance of a
Federal contract. The Department
clarifies in the final Guidance that
ALCAs thus may appropriately consider
such efforts or measures as weighing in
favor of a satisfactory record of Labor
Law compliance.
The Department agrees with the EEAC
that ALCAs should not second-guess the
remediation that has already been
negotiated by enforcement agencies. A
contractor’s prior settlement with an
enforcement agency should generally be
considered to be ‘‘make-whole’’ relief on
behalf of affected workers. Such
settlement agreements reflect the
agency’s decisions about the appropriate
amount of backpay owed and the
specific steps needed to correct the
violations or otherwise make affected
workers whole. Accordingly, ALCAs
will not revisit whether an existing
agreement with an enforcement agency
adequately corrects a violation.
Nonetheless, the existence of a
settlement agreement does not bar an
ALCA from considering that a violation
occurred in the first place. Nor does
remediation carried out because of such
a settlement agreement necessarily have
great weight where there are other
factors present—such as an extensive
pattern of violations, other violations
that were not within the jurisdiction of
the agency negotiating the settlement, or
the existence of new violations
subsequent to the settlement. In such
circumstances, if the settlement
agreement does not include measures to
prevent future violations, then a
contracting officer (in consultation with
an ALCA) may decide that a labor
compliance agreement is warranted in
order to consider the contractor to be
responsible or may find the contractor
nonresponsible. See Guidance, section
III(C).
With regard to the commenters’
concerns about engaging in remediation
during ongoing litigation, the
Department does not believe any change
to the Guidance is necessary. It is not
clear from the EEAC comment why a
contractor could not remediate while
continuing to contest a violation.
Employers often choose to remediate
during ongoing litigation for various
reasons, including to limit backpay
liability.
Finally, the Department rejects the
commenters’ implication that crediting
remediation during ongoing litigation
violates a contractor’s right to due
process. Employers who receive
administrative findings of Labor Law
violations have the right to due process,
including various levels of adjudication
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58693
and review before administrative and
judicial tribunals, depending on the
labor law involved in the violation. The
purpose of the Order is not to
circumvent that adjudicatory and
appellate process. Rather, contracting
officers have a duty to protect the
procurement process by conducting
responsibility determinations (and
ALCAs have a duty to provide advice
regarding Labor Law violations) to
ensure that Federal contractors are
responsible and that they will not
engage in Labor Law violations that
could undermine the quality and
timeliness of Federal contract
performance. Thus, the purpose of
valuing remediation as a mitigating
factor—even during ongoing litigation—
is to give a contractor with a significant
record of non-compliance an
opportunity to take corrective action
and make systemic changes in order to
prevent violations during the
performance of a future Federal
contract.
Worker Participation in Safety-andHealth Programs
Several unions proposed that to
qualify as a mitigating factor, safety-andhealth programs should encourage
active worker participation. One union
commented that these programs must
encourage the reporting of work hazards
and injuries without penalty. Some
commenters also supported the
implementation of joint labormanagement safety-and-health
committees. One industry commenter
recommended that the category of
mitigating factors related to safety-andhealth programs should ‘‘explicitly
include participation in OSHA
Voluntary Protection Programs’’ as well
as include reference to ISO 45001,
which is a voluntary consensus
standard for occupational safety-andhealth management systems currently
under development. The commenter
argued that both of these include
elements similar to the standards
already referenced in the Proposed
Guidance, including employee
involvement and continuous
improvement.
As discussed above, the Department
considers further specific guidance on
the content of safety-and-health
programs to be unnecessary. ALCAs will
have the ability to take additional
information about safety-and-health
programs into consideration as part of
their review of the totality of the
circumstances. In particular, the
Department agrees that OSHA’s
Voluntary Protection Programs and the
ISO 45001 consensus standard are
similar to the programs and standards
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cited in the proposed guidance on
mitigating factors. As such, employers
who participate in such programs or
have adopted safety-and-health
management systems pursuant to
recognized consensus standards are
encouraged to include this information
when they have an opportunity to
provide relevant information, including
regarding mitigating factors.
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Other Compliance Programs
One commenter suggested that other
types of compliance programs—not just
safety-and-health programs or grievance
procedures—should be considered as
mitigating factors. The commenter
recommended retitling this factor or
adding a separate subsection
specifically on compliance programs.
The Department agrees that other
compliance programs should be
included in this category, and notes that
the Proposed Guidance already
references ‘‘other compliance programs’’
in the mitigating factors discussion. To
improve clarity, the Department adopts
the commenter’s recommendation to
retitle this factor. This category is now
entitled ‘‘Safety-and-health programs,
grievance procedures, or other
compliance programs.’’
Good Faith and Reasonable Grounds
One industry commenter, the
Associated General Contractors of
America (AGC), expressed concern that
contractors’ good-faith defenses ‘‘will
not carry considerable weight in the
responsibility determination.’’ AGC
argued that while ALCAs may have the
legal understanding to make informed
judgments about good faith disputes, the
contracting officers who ultimately
make a responsibility determination do
not—and will instead defer to the
agency determination or court
judgment.
The Department believes that it is
important to provide contractors with
an opportunity to explain violations in
cases where the contractor may have
made efforts to ascertain and meet its
legal obligations, but nonetheless have
violated the law because of reliance on
advice of a government official or an
authoritative agency or court decision.
For example, several commenters
proposed that the Guidance should
account for situations where a violation
is due to an agency error. With regard
to the DBA and the SCA, for example,
commenters noted that some violations
are caused by the failure of the
contracting agency to include the
appropriate wage determination
contract language. One commenter
argued that contractors should not have
to disclose these types of violations,
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while the other noted that the Proposed
Guidance is unclear about how the
Department will assess these types of
violations. The Department agrees that it
is important to account for violations
that result from errors beyond the
contractor’s control. Where the
contractor submits information showing
that a violation occurred as the result of
action or inaction by the contracting
agency, such as the failure to include a
required contract clause or wage
determination, this information
supports a conclusion that the
contractor acted in good faith and had
reasonable grounds for its conduct.
While the Department believes that the
language of the Proposed Guidance was
broad enough to incorporate this
concept, the final Guidance includes a
clarification to this effect.
In addition, as discussed above in
section III(A)(3)(e), some employer
groups noted that employers must
violate section 8(a) of the NLRA by
refusing to bargain with a union in order
to obtain appellate review of the NLRB’s
determination that a group of employees
is an appropriate bargaining unit. While
the Department does not view such
violations as excusable or merely
‘‘technical,’’ it does agree that the
contractor’s belief that it had justifiable
reasons for committing a Labor Law
violation should be taken into account
as a possible mitigating factor during the
weighing process.
The Department believes that the
Order and the related new requirements
and processes adequately address AGC’s
concerns about the capacity of
contracting officers to weigh good-faith
arguments. As discussed above, GAO
reports have repeatedly stated that prior
to the Order, contracting officers had the
authority to consider labor violations
during the responsibility determination
process, but were reluctant to do so in
part because of a lack of expertise on the
matter. In response, the Order directed
executive agencies to designate ALCAs
and to coordinate with the Department
so that contracting officers receive
enough support. ALCAs will assist
contracting officers with interpreting
information about good faith and
reasonable grounds as part of ALCAs’
analysis and advice regarding
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance.
Significant Period of Compliance
One employee-advocacy organization
suggested that the Guidance should not
include the ‘‘long period of compliance’’
factor. The organization commented that
this factor may not provide an accurate
assessment of the contractor’s
responsibility because a long period of
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‘‘compliance’’ may be the result of
infrequent inspections by Federal
enforcement agencies during the 3-year
disclosure period. It also commented
that the duration of the ‘‘significant
period of compliance’’ was not clearly
defined.
Although the Department has
declined to eliminate this factor, the
Department has added language to
address the concern that the duration of
‘‘significant period’’ was not defined.
The Department has clarified that this
factor is a stronger mitigating factor
where the contractor has a recent Labor
Law decision that it must disclose, but
the underlying conduct took place
significantly before the 3-year disclosure
period and the contractor has had no
subsequent violations.
Proposals To Expressly Include
Additional Mitigating Factors
The Department also received
comments that the Guidance should
include additional mitigating factors.
Some labor organizations proposed
that a contractor’s participation in a
collective bargaining agreement (CBA)
should be considered a mitigating
factor. This proposal is based on the
view that workers covered by a CBA are
likely to feel more secure reporting
violations and working to get the
violations resolved. In these
circumstances, unionized employers
may have a higher number of disclosed
Labor Law decisions than non-union
employers, particularly in the area of
safety and health.
While the final Guidance does not
explicitly list a CBA as a mitigating
factor, the Department clarifies in
response to this comment that the list of
mitigating factors in the Guidance is
non-exclusive. The FAR rule states that
an ALCA’s analysis and advice must
include whether there are ‘‘any’’
mitigating factors. FAR 22.2004–
2(b)(4)(iii). Thus, to the extent that a
contractor believes that a CBA provision
is relevant to the violation at issue, a
contractor should submit this
information for consideration as a
mitigating factor.
Finally, one industry commenter
stated that the FAR rule and Guidance
sections on mitigating circumstances
should place greater emphasis on a
contractor’s overall commitment to
compliance to Labor Laws (as evidenced
by its policies and practices), and
require ALCAs and contracting officers
to consider such information. The
Department considers any such
modification to be unnecessary. The
Proposed Guidance already recognized
the importance of a contractor’s overall
commitment to compliance by assessing
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various factors such as the number and
severity of violations, the existence of
safety-and-health programs, and
arguments about good faith and
reasonable grounds.
2. Factors That Weigh Against a
Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
The Department received numerous
comments about the Proposed
Guidance’s explanation of violations
that ‘‘raise particular concerns’’ about
contractor integrity and business ethics.
The Proposed Guidance provided a nonexclusive list of certain types of
violations that raise particular concern:
Pervasive violations, violations that
meet two or more of the serious,
repeated, or willful classifications,
violations that are reflected in final
orders, and violations of particular
gravity. Some commenters felt that these
categories were too broad, while others
proposed expanding them further.
Several employer organizations
argued that the Proposed Guidance did
not provide sufficient detail on how
ALCAs and contracting officers are to
assess the various factors. These
commenters said that the categories of
violations that ‘‘raise particular
concern’’ were vague and too expansive,
and as a result ALCAs and contracting
officers would have unchecked
discretion when making assessments.
The Department declines to modify
the Guidance in this respect. The
Department does not agree that the
categories of violations discussed in this
section of the Guidance are too broad or
vague. The categories are specific and
are based on concrete, factual
information—for example, the total
damages and penalties assessed—that
will usually be readily apparent from
the findings in the Labor Law decisions.
However, the Department has
changed the name of this category from
‘‘violations of particular concern’’ to
‘‘factors that weigh against a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance.’’ This
change is not substantive but helps
make clear that ALCAs will not make a
finding as to whether any individual
violation is a ‘‘violation of particular
concern.’’ Rather, ALCAs will assess all
facts and circumstances that weigh for
and against a conclusion that a
contractor has a satisfactory record of
compliance in order to provide helpful
analysis and advice to the contracting
officer.
Pervasive Violations
The Proposed Guidance stated that
pervasive violations should receive
greater weight because they raise
particular concern about a contractor’s
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integrity and business ethics. Several
industry representatives commented
that the Guidance does not provide
sufficient direction on how to weigh
whether pervasive violations would
trigger the requirement for a labor
compliance agreement. One suggested
that quantitative information based on
DOL enforcement data should be used
to make an empirical definition of
pervasiveness, based on a comparison
with other employers in the same
industry and jurisdiction. Other
employer representatives repeated their
view that the pervasive category is
overly broad and vaguely defined,
giving contracting officers and ALCAs
too much discretion in assessing the
record of a contractor with pervasive
violations or deciding whether a labor
compliance agreement is warranted.
The Department declines to modify
the guidance on weighing pervasive
violations. As explained above and in
the previous discussion of the definition
of pervasive, flexibility and discretion
are necessary when assessing the
severity of pervasive violations, given
the range of factors that must be
considered. The Department does not
believe it would be appropriate to set a
finite threshold for the number or types
of violations that indicate a lack of
integrity and business ethics and
therefore suggest that a labor
compliance agreement may be
warranted.
Violations That Meet Two or More of
the Serious, Repeated, or Willful
Classifications
The Proposed Guidance stated that
violations that fall into at least two of
the serious, repeated, or willful
classifications are violations of
particular concern. Some industry
groups questioned this approach. For
example, one employer organization
argued that these classifications are
defined so broadly that many violations
will fall into two of them even though
the violations themselves are not
significant enough to bear on contractor
integrity and business ethics. The
Department retains this criterion as an
example of a factor that weighs against
a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance; and the Department has
added an additional clarification to
section III(A) of the Guidance that a
single violation may satisfy the criteria
for more than one classification. As
explained above, the Department
disagrees that the serious, repeated, and
willful classifications are defined too
broadly.
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Violations That Are Reflected in Final
Orders
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department stated that violations
reflected in final orders should receive
greater weight. Several commenters
supported this proposal. The Service
Employees International Union (SEIU),
however, argued that lodging an appeal
should not prevent a determination
from receiving greater weight if the
contractor’s ‘‘appeal is clearly nonmeritorious or frivolous and was taken
in order to delay compliance.’’ SEIU
further stated that, conversely, if an
appeal of an adverse determination is
‘‘of a close or unsettled point of law,
lesser weight should be given to the
nonfinal violation(s).’’
The Department declines to change
the Guidance in this manner. ALCAs
will not be able to evaluate the legal
merit of or motivation behind a
contractor’s appeal, nor should they
attempt to do so. However, the
Department agrees with SEIU
commenter that whether a violation
involves a ‘‘close or unsettled point of
law’’ may in certain circumstances be
relevant in the assessment process. For
example, as discussed above, the
Guidance provides that a contractor’s
good-faith effort to meet its legal
obligations may be a mitigating factor—
and that this may occur where a new
statute, rule, or standard is first
implemented and the issue presented is
novel.
SEIU’s underlying concern is that
providing extra weight to final decisions
could incentivize contractors to contest
a Labor Law decision that they might
otherwise not have contested—simply
in order to delay it from becoming final
under after a contract has been awarded.
The Department acknowledges that such
an outcome would be problematic and
could lead to unnecessary litigation and
uncertainty, and perhaps a delay in the
correction of a violation or relief to
injured workers. However, the
Department does not believe that this
outcome will be the practical result of
the Guidance.
As an initial matter, if a Labor Law
decision is contested, subsequent
decisions (e.g., on an appeal) will
themselves be Labor Law decisions that
will need to be disclosed under the
Order. See Guidance, section II(B)(4).
However, an uncontested (and therefore
final) decision will no longer be
considered by an ALCA during review
of the contractor’s record, nor by the
contracting officer during the
responsibility determination, after 3
years. And, as the final Guidance notes,
‘‘[w]hile a violation that is not final
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should be given lesser weight, it will
still be considered as relevant to a
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance.’’ Id. section III(B)(2)(e).
This provides a counterweight to the
perceived incentive to contest
violations.
An even more significant
counterweight is the value placed on
mitigating factors, and, in particular,
remediation as a mitigating factor. If a
contractor has remediated the violation,
that factor weighs in favor of a
satisfactory record of compliance. Thus,
while there may be an incentive for
contractors to contest a violation,
contractors have an equally powerful
incentive to stop contesting a violation
and remediate. As the Guidance notes,
‘‘[d]epending on the facts of the case,
even where multiple factors [weighing
against a satisfactory record] are present,
they may be outweighed by mitigating
circumstances.’’ Guidance, section
III(B)(2). Thus, a prospective contractor
with Labor Law violations that is
planning to bid on future contracts may
be best served by considering how to
remediate and resolve violations, not by
contesting them.
The Department also received a
comment from the Equal Employment
Advisory Council (EEAC) that
questioned the manner in which the
Proposed Guidance treated final orders.
The EEAC agreed that final orders
generally should be given more weight,
but argued that this is not appropriate
when the final order only involves
‘‘minor or technical violations.’’
The Department declines to modify
the Guidance in response to this
comment. In general, the question of
whether a violation is ‘‘minor’’ or
‘‘technical’’ is addressed by the
classification of violation as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. If a
violation is not classified as serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive, then it is
not factored into the ultimate analysis
and advice—whether or not it has been
the subject of a final order. Moreover,
even where a violation is classified as
serious, repeated willful, or pervasive
and has also been the subject of a final
order, it will not necessarily result in a
finding that the contractor has an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. As explained above, the
assessment process requires
consideration of the totality of
circumstances, including any mitigating
factors. Thus, while a final order may
provide additional weight against a
finding of a satisfactory record in a
given case, the contractor’s good-faith
arguments and remediation of the
violation may weigh even more heavily
in the other direction. The Department
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believes that these processes for
considering the totality of the
circumstances are sufficient to take into
account any argument that a particular
violation or violations was ‘‘minor’’ or
‘‘technical.’’
Violations for Which Injunctive Relief is
Granted
As explained above in section
III(A)(1)(b) of this section-by-section
analysis, the Department has
determined that the granting of
injunctive relief by a court is better
considered as part of the weighing
process than as a criterion for a serious
violation. This means that the fact that
injunctive relief has been granted is
only relevant during an ALCA’s
assessment process if the violation at
issue is already classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. If
the violation is so classified, then the
fact that injunctive relief was granted as
part of the remedy for the violation is a
factor that will weigh against a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance.
As discussed above, taking injunctive
relief into consideration in this manner
is responsive to concerns that it would
be overinclusive as a criterion for a
serious violation—and it still
appropriately values the fact that courts
rarely grant either preliminary or
permanent injunctions and require a
showing of compelling circumstances,
including irreparable harm to workers
and a threat to the public interest.
Accordingly, where a court grants
injunctive relief to remedy a violation
that is already classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive, the
ALCA should take this into account as
a factor that increases the significance of
that violation to the contractor’s overall
record of Labor Law compliance.
Violations of Particular Gravity
The purpose of the ‘‘particular
gravity’’ factor is to identify examples of
violations that generally have more
severe adverse effects on workers and
more potential to disrupt contractor
performance, and thus should receive
greater weight in determining whether a
labor compliance agreement is needed
or other action is necessary. In the
Proposed Guidance, the Department
listed four examples of violations of
particular gravity: ‘‘violations related to
the death of an employee; violations
involving a termination of employment
for exercising a right protected under
the Labor Laws; violations that
detrimentally impact the working
conditions of all or nearly all of the
workforce at a worksite; and violations
where the amount of back wages,
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penalties, and other damages awarded is
greater than $100,000.’’ 80 FR 30,574,
30,590.
Several industry commenters
criticized this category. In a
representative comment, the EEAC
articulated several of these concerns:
[T]he Department’s category of violations of
‘‘particular gravity’’ is also too broad.
Equating every type of retaliation claim with
violations resulting in the death of an
employee strains credibility. Further,
including in this category any violation
where the amount of back wages, penalties,
and other damages is greater than $100,000
would include an overrepresentative
proportion of routine administrative merits
determinations found by the EEOC . . . .
Finally, the category of violations that
‘‘detrimentally impact the working
conditions of all or nearly all the workforce
at a worksite’’ is unclear as the guidance
provides no direction as to what conduct will
constitute ‘‘detrimental impact’’ of working
conditions.
Other employer groups echoed these
concerns.
While unions and worker-advocacy
groups generally supported the
definition of ‘‘violations of particular
gravity,’’ several suggested that the
Department should modify one of the
examples in its list of violations of
particular gravity. These commenters
proposed broadening the retaliatory
termination example to include
interference with any protected right
and clarifying that it includes retaliatory
constructive-discharge situations.
The Department has considered the
concerns raised by industry comments
and declines to make any substantive
changes to the category of violations of
particular gravity.
First, the Department does not agree
that this factor is too broad because it
includes both violations that involve the
death of an employee and violations
involving retaliatory termination of an
employee. While the Department agrees
that the death of a worker is a tragedy
that cannot be easily compared to other
violations, it would be unreasonable to
suggest that other violations are not of
a particular gravity simply because there
has been no loss of life. Moreover, the
EEAC’s comment misstates the
treatment of retaliation in the proposed
guidance. Retaliation can involve many
types of adverse action. The guidance
specifies only that violations ‘‘involving
a termination of employment for
exercising a right protected under the
Labor Laws’’ receive greater weight. By
this language, the Department did not
intend to suggest (as the EEAC stated)
that ‘‘every type of retaliation claim’’ is
considered per se to be of particular
gravity.
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Second, the Department believes that
the Guidance’s $100,000 threshold is
appropriate, as the amount of damages
in a case provides a practical measure
of the extent losses experienced by
employees. The Department does not
agree with the argument that such a
threshold is inappropriate because it
would include an ‘‘overrepresentative’’
proportion of EEOC determinations. The
Department believes that it is misguided
to focus on the proportion of decisions
that would meet a monetary test of
gravity. Rather, it is appropriate to give
additional weight to those violations
that have a severe harmful effect on
workers. In terms of the economic
impact on the workforce, $100,000 in
lost wages due to discrimination is just
as severe as $100,000 in lost wages due
to a wage-and-hour violation.
Third, the Department considers it
appropriate to give greater weight to
those violations that ‘‘detrimentally
impact the working conditions of all or
nearly all the workforce at a worksite.’’
80 FR 30574, 30590. When unlawful
conduct causes negative impact that is
widespread in scope, additional weight
is warranted.
Finally, in response to employee
groups’ concerns, the Department
believes that it is unnecessary to state
explicitly that a retaliation violation
involving a constructive discharge
should be considered the same as a
retaliation violation involving a
termination. Enforcement agencies are
responsible for finding violations. The
enforcement agencies and adjudicatory
tribunals—not ALCAs—decide whether
a constructive discharge amounts to an
unlawful termination. The Department
also finds it unnecessary to characterize
all violations involving an interference
with protected rights as violations of
particular gravity. The list of violations
of particular gravity is not an exclusive
list, and the Department does not intend
to limit an ALCA’s ability to describe a
violation as one of particular gravity
where the facts of the case merit such
a description.
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor’s
Record of Labor Law Compliance (Step
Three)
In the final Guidance, the Department
creates a new subheading for the
discussion of an ALCA’s advice to
contracting officers and the relationship
of labor compliance agreements to that
process. The core parameters of this
process are defined in the FAR rule. The
Department has modified the
description of the advice process in the
Guidance to conform to the structure in
the rule. The Department received many
comments about this process. Because
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these comments and the reasons for
changes to the proposed FAR rule are
discussed in the preamble to the final
FAR rule, they are not included here.
While the FAR rule governs the
advice process, the Department and its
individual enforcement agencies play an
important role in negotiating labor
compliance agreements and assisting
ALCAs with their duties. The Order
instructs contracting officers to consult
with ALCAs about Labor Law violations
and labor compliance agreements
during the preaward responsibility
determination and also during the
postaward period when considering
whether to take actions such as the
exercise of an option on a contract.
Order, section 2(a)(iii), (b)(ii). The Order
directs ALCAs to provide this advice in
consultation with the Department or
other relevant enforcement agencies. Id.
section 3(d)(ii). As a result, the
Department has expanded its discussion
of labor compliance agreements in the
final Guidance and addresses relevant
comments below.
Summary of the ‘‘Advice and Analysis’’
Component of the Final FAR Rule
The final FAR rule discusses the
written advice and analysis that an
ALCA provides to the contracting officer
for use in the responsibility
determination. FAR 22.2004–2(b)(3).
The rule provides that ALCAs may
make one of several recommendations,
including that a labor compliance
agreement is necessary, the appropriate
timing for negotiations of an agreement,
and whether notification of the agency
suspending and debarring official is
appropriate. Id. Contracting officers
consider advice provided by ALCAs
along with advice provided by other
subject matter experts.
The ALCA’s advice and analysis must
also include the number of Labor Law
violations; their classification as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive; any
mitigating factors or remedial measures;
and any additional information that the
ALCA finds to be relevant. FAR
22.2004–2(b)(4). If the ALCA concludes
that a labor compliance agreement or
other appropriate action is warranted,
then the written analysis must include
a supporting rationale. See id.
Timeframe for ALCA Advice and
Analysis
The FAR Council’s proposed rule set
out a 3-day period for ALCAs to provide
contracting officers with
recommendations about the contractor’s
record of Labor Law compliance. The
Department received many comments
expressing concern that this timeframe
is infeasible and will lead to unfair
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responsibility determinations.
Commenters representing both
employers and employees commented
that in some cases ALCAs will have to
review a large amount of information to
make their recommendations. One
union, in a representative comment,
argued that while 3 days may be enough
in many cases, this timeframe would be
too short when an ALCA’s
recommendation involves weighing
existing labor compliance agreements;
high severity violations; or multiple
willful, pervasive, or repeated
violations.
The proposed rule suggested that
contracting officers would be permitted
to make a responsibility determination
without input from an ALCA if the
ALCA failed to make a recommendation
within the 3-day period. Some employer
organizations speculated that the
contracting officer might delay the
contract award while waiting for the
ALCA recommendation, regardless of
the authority to act independently; or, if
he or she does act independently, the
contracting officer might make a
determination inconsistent with other
contracting officers, contracting
agencies, or ALCAs.
These comments are addressed in the
preamble to the final FAR rule and
therefore are not addressed here. In
brief, the final FAR rule retains the
default 3-day period for an ALCA to
provide advice. See FAR 22.2004–
2(b)(2)(i). It also retains the possibility
for the contracting officer to provide the
ALCA with ‘‘another time period’’ for
submitting the advice. See id. And it
retains the requirement that if the
contracting officer has not received
timely advice, the contracting officer
must proceed with the responsibility
determination using available
information and business judgment. See
id. 22.2004–2(b)(5)(iii).
De Facto Debarment
Members of Congress and industry
advocates also expressed concern that
the short timeframe for ALCA advice
may lead to ‘‘de facto’’ debarment of
contractors that have been subject to a
prior nonresponsibility determination.
‘‘De facto debarment occurs when a
contractor has, for all practical
purposes, been suspended or blacklisted
from working with a government agency
without due process, namely, adequate
notice and a meaningful hearing.’’
Phillips v. Mabus, 894 F.Supp.2d 71, 81
(D.D.C.2012). These commenters
suggested that contracting officers might
try to save time and effort by improperly
following earlier determinations
without conducting their own
assessments. This, the commenters
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suggested, would result in effectively
‘‘blacklisting’’ certain companies from
Federal contracting.
De facto debarment may occur where
a contracting agency effectively avoids
the due process requirements of a
debarment hearing by instead
repeatedly finding a contractor
nonresponsible and denying individual
contracts based on one initial
nonresponsibility determination. See
generally Old Dominion Dairy Prods.,
Inc. v. Sec’y of Def., 631 F.2d 953 (D.C.
Cir. 1980). A single nonresponsibility
determination is insufficient to establish
a de facto debarment. Redondo-Borges
v. U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., 421
F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2005). However,
because an initial nonresponsibility
determination based on a lack of
integrity or business ethics must be
recorded in the Federal Awardee
Performance and Integrity Information
System (FAPIIS), see FAR 9.105–2(b),
and contracting officers must review
FAPIIS during each subsequent
responsibility determination, id. 9.104–
6(b), a risk of de facto debarment is
inherent in the existing Federal
procurement system—and contracting
agencies, OMB, and the Office of
Federal Procurement Policy must
continually guard against it.
The Department disagrees with the
commenters that the Order and the
related structure of the FAR rule present
an unreasonable risk of de facto
debarment. The Department agrees that
it would be inappropriate for an ALCA
to base his or her advice and analysis
solely on a prior analysis of a
contractor’s Labor Law compliance
record. However, the FAR requires
contracting officers—with the assistance
of ALCAs—to make independent
decisions in every case based on the
information provided by contractors
during the respective solicitation
process. See generally FAR 22.2004–2.
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Circumstances Warranting Negotiation
of a Labor Compliance Agreement
The Department received several
comments that the proposed rule and
Proposed Guidance did not clearly
specify when an ALCA and a
contracting officer will require a
contractor to negotiate a labor
compliance agreement. One employer
organization argued that determining
whether an agreement is necessary or
sufficient calls for subjective decisions
by ALCAs. The organization also
expressed concern that labor unions
might use labor compliance agreements
to pressure employers while negotiating
neutrality or collective bargaining
agreements.
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Numerous worker-advocacy
organizations commented that a labor
compliance agreement should be
required as a condition of receiving a
contract, especially if the employer has
‘‘violations of particular concern,’’ as
they are described in the Proposed
Guidance. Several commenters
proposed that a labor compliance
agreement should always be required
when a contractor violates the Labor
Laws during the performance of a
Federal contract, unless the ALCA
determines that the violation is minor,
old, or unlikely to recur after a long
period of time.
The Department has carefully
considered these comments and has
included additional language discussing
when it is appropriate for an ALCA to
recommend that a labor compliance
agreement is warranted. See Guidance,
section III(C)(1). A labor compliance
agreement may be warranted where the
ALCA has concluded that a contractor
has an unsatisfactory record of Labor
Law compliance. Id. section III(C)(1).
This may be the case where the
contractor has serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive Labor Law violations
that are not outweighed by mitigating
factors—but the ALCA identifies a
pattern of conduct or policies that could
be addressed through preventative
actions. Where this is the case, the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
violations demonstrates a risk to the
contracting agency of repeated
violations during contract performance,
but these risks may be mitigated through
the implementation of appropriate
enhanced compliance measures. A labor
compliance agreement also may be
warranted where the contractor
presently has a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance, but there are
also clear risk factors present, and a
labor compliance agreement would
reduce these risk factors and
demonstrate steps to maintain Labor
Law compliance during contract
performance.
A labor compliance agreement is not
needed where a contractor has no Labor
Law violations within the 3-year
disclosure period or has no violations
that meet the definitions of serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive. A labor
compliance agreement may also not be
needed where the contractor does have
violations that meet the definitions of
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive,
but under the totality of the
circumstances the existence of the
violations is outweighed by mitigating
factors or other relevant information.
Finally, there are circumstances in
which a contractor may have an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
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compliance, but a labor compliance
agreement is not warranted—and
instead the agency suspending and
debarring official should be notified.
This is the case where the contractor has
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive Labor Law violations that are
not outweighed by mitigating factors—
and, in addition, there are indications
that a labor compliance agreement
would not be successful in reducing the
risk of future noncompliance. The final
Guidance contains examples that
illustrate when this may be the case.
However, the Department disagrees
with the commenters—both industry
and worker-advocacy groups—that
argued that the final Guidance should
further limit the discretion of
contracting officers and ALCAs.
Contracting officers and ALCAs must
have the ability to review all relevant
facts concerning Labor Law violations
and mitigating factors, and to make
determinations as to when agreements
are appropriate. As discussed above,
ALCAs and contracting officers are
provided with robust parameters for
making this underlying determination—
from the FAR and the Guidance, and
also through consultation with the
enforcement agencies.
Moreover, the Department specifically
declines to adopt the employee advocate
suggestion that a labor compliance
agreement is always warranted where a
contractor has a ‘‘violation of particular
concern.’’ As discussed above in section
III(B) (Weighing Labor Law violations
and mitigating factors) of this sectionby-section analysis, the Department has
clarified that it did not intend for
ALCAs to make specific findings that
violations are ‘‘violations of particular
concern.’’ Rather, the analysis requires a
weighing process, where certain factors
will weigh in favor of an overall
conclusion that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, and others will weigh
against. Thus, it is not appropriate to tie
advice about the need for a labor
compliance agreement to existence of
any one of these factors.
Negotiation of a Labor Compliance
Agreement
The Department notes that some
commenters may have incorrectly
understood that ALCAs or contracting
officers would negotiate labor
compliance agreements directly with
contractors. The final FAR rule and the
final Guidance clarify that it is
enforcement agencies—not ALCAs or
contracting officers—who negotiate
labor compliance agreements. The
Guidance provides additional detail on
the roles and duties of each of these
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actors—ALCAs, contracting officers, and
enforcement agencies—with regard to
determining the need for and
negotiation of labor compliance
agreements.
The ALCA conducts a holistic review
of the circumstances surrounding the
contractor’s Labor Law violations,
including any mitigating factors.
Guidance, sections III(A) (classification
step), III(B) (weighing step). If the ALCA
concludes that a contractor has an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, the ALCA will consider
whether the negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement may be
warranted. After that, the ALCA
produces a written advice and analysis
for the contracting officer. Id. section
III(C) (advice and analysis step).
If the ALCA assessment indicates a
labor compliance agreement is
warranted, the contracting officer
provides written notice to the
contractor. FAR 22.2004–2(b)(7). The
notice includes the name of the
enforcement agency with which the
contractor should confer regarding the
negotiation of the agreement. Id. The
contractor and the enforcement agency
may then initiate negotiations. Any
resulting labor compliance agreement
will be an agreement between that
enforcement agency and the contractor.
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Labor Compliance Agreements as a
Mitigating Factor
In its discussion of remediation as a
mitigating factor, the Proposed
Guidance stated that enhanced
settlement agreements and labor
compliance agreements between a
contractor and an enforcement agency
represent important ways to mitigate the
weight of a Labor Law violation. The
Proposed Guidance noted that entering
into a labor compliance agreement
indicates that the contractor recognizes
the importance that the Federal
Government places on compliance with
the Labor Laws.
Industry commenters criticized how
the Proposed Guidance addressed the
relationship between mitigating factors
and labor compliance agreements.
Several stated that requiring such
agreements raised due process and
fairness concerns. They asserted that a
contractor may feel pressured to
negotiate or sign a labor compliance
agreement and forgo a challenge to a
nonfinal administrative merits
determination in order to receive a
pending contract. Several employer
organizations argued that labor
compliance agreements would unfairly
penalize contractors by subjecting them
to multiple rounds of remedial
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requirements in response to the same
underlying conduct.
The Department declines to change
the Guidance in response to the
criticisms discussed above. The
Department notes that considering labor
compliance agreements in the mitigating
factor analysis is consistent with the
Order and the FAR rule. See Order,
section 2(a)(ii); FAR 22.2004–2(b)(3)–
(4). Labor compliance agreements may
contain remedial measures (such as the
payment of back wages) or enhanced
compliance measures (such as the
implementation of new safety-andhealth programs). When implemented
outside of the context of a labor
compliance agreement, these types of
measures are individually mitigating
factors. It is therefore reasonable to
consider a labor compliance agreement
containing such measures also to be a
mitigating factor.
The Department disagrees that labor
compliance agreements raise due
process concerns. As the Department
has clarified in the final Guidance, in
appropriate circumstances contractors
may enter into labor compliance
agreements while at the same time
continuing to contest an underlying
Labor Law violation. And, if a
contractor and a contracting officer
disagree about whether a labor
compliance agreement is necessary and
the contractor refuses to negotiate an
agreement, the existing procurement
process provides ample opportunity to
contest any resulting nonresponsibility
determination. The contractor can bring
a bid protest and receive a hearing and
judicial review of the agency action.
The Department also disagrees with
the argument that labor compliance
agreements will unfairly penalize
contractors. The purpose of a labor
compliance agreement is not to penalize
a contractor for past violations; it is to
protect the Federal Government’s
interest in economy and efficiency in
the prospective contract at issue. As
discussed above, Federal agencies have
a duty to contract only with responsible
sources, and a track record of Labor Law
violations raises serious questions about
whether a contractor can be trusted to
comply with Labor Laws—or with other
non-labor laws—during the course of
contract performance. Labor compliance
agreements provide contractors that are
otherwise at risk of being found
nonresponsible with an additional
opportunity to take the steps necessary
to assure contracting officers that their
past noncompliance will not be
repeated during contract performance.
Thus, they are properly understood as
an opportunity for contractors, not a
penalty.
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58699
Duration of a Labor Compliance
Agreement
One employer organization
commented that contractors needed
more information about the procedural
aspects of labor compliance agreements.
One question this commenter raised is
how long labor compliance agreements
will last.
The Department declines to specify a
set duration for labor compliance
agreements. In general, the duration of
an agreement will be the subject of
negotiations between the contractor and
the enforcement agency—and the
enforcement agency will take a position
regarding the appropriate length of
agreement based on the facts and
circumstances of the case and that
agency’s current practices in negotiating
enhanced compliance agreements.
However, the extent to which a labor
compliance agreement extends beyond
the expected duration of the contract
will not be taken into consideration in
determining a contractor’s responsibility
or in other decisions related to the
contract at issue.
Elements of a Labor Compliance
Agreement
Several unions and worker groups
proposed that the Guidance should
require that all labor compliance
agreements contain a prescribed list of
elements. Suggestions included (1)
remedies for any labor law violation; (2)
notice and training for workers about
the labor compliance agreement and
instructions for reporting violations; (3)
a plan to prevent future violations; (4)
an agreement that the contractor will
self-report any alleged violations of the
agreement; and (5) enforceable
safeguards to prevent employer
retaliation against employees who lodge
complaints.
The Department does not agree that it
should prescribe the content of labor
compliance agreements. The
enforcement agencies, which will
negotiate labor compliance agreements,
will determine the terms of each labor
compliance agreement on a case-by-case
basis, taking into consideration the
totality of the circumstances.
Remedial Measures To Be Included in
Labor Compliance Agreements
Labor union and worker-advocacy
commenters emphasized that labor
compliance agreements should require
employers to take remedial actions that
would prevent future violations. In
contrast, numerous employer
representatives commented that labor
compliance agreements should not
impose ‘‘enhanced compliance’’
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measures—or remedial measures that go
beyond basic compliance with the
requirements of the labor law that has
been violated. For example, one
employer organization raised a question
about whether an agreement would
apply only to the business unit or
location with the alleged violation—or
would apply company-wide. Other
commenters raised similar concerns that
labor compliance agreements might
impose remedial measures that are
broader than remedies that could be
imposed by courts or enforcement
agencies under the Federal labor laws.
Another employer organization
expressed a related point about what
remedial actions can be expected in
labor compliance agreements:
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While we agree that any contractor
practices that go above and beyond the
requirements of the law may constitute
evidence of remediation or otherwise serve as
a mitigating factor, these provisions should
not be read so as to require remediation
efforts that exceed the law’s requirement
simply to get ‘‘full credit’’ for remediation.
The Department agrees with the
commenters that assert that labor
compliance agreements are not limited
to providing compensation for
individual employees, abating a hazard,
or changing an unlawful policy. Rather,
agreements may (and often should)
contain additional provisions that are
directed at ensuring future compliance
with the law. The Order expressly
requires that the contracting officer,
when making a responsibility
determination, must give a contractor
with a violation the opportunity to
disclose ‘‘any agreements entered into
with an enforcement agency.’’ Order,
section 2(a)(ii). The ALCA then must
advise the contracting officer about the
need for an agreement to implement
remedial measures or steps to ‘‘avoid
further violations.’’ Id.
The requirement that contractors take
actions to avoid future violations is not
new in the Federal contracting process.
Because contracting with the Federal
Government is a privilege and not a
right, contracting agencies can generally
require that contractors meet specific
conditions in order to receive a contract
award. Accordingly, Federal contractors
already have a duty to implement
programs intended to prevent some
labor law violations. For example, FAR
36.513 Accident Prevention requires a
contractor to submit a written safetyand-health plan for identifying and
controlling hazards where work is of a
hazardous nature. Similarly, under
current practice, suspending and
debarring officials routinely negotiate
‘‘administrative agreements’’ that
contain exactly the sort of enhanced
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compliance measures about which the
industry commenters raised concerns.76
By entering into a labor compliance
agreement, a contractor agrees to take
specific actions designed to achieve and
maintain compliance during the
contract period; this is not any different
than administrative agreements.
In addition, as commenters’
references to ‘‘enhanced compliance
agreements’’ indicate, the negotiation of
preventative measures as part of a
settlement is also a traditional aspect of
both criminal and civil law
enforcement—of the Labor Laws and
otherwise. Enforcement agencies such
as OSHA, WHD, and OFCCP currently
negotiate enhanced compliance
agreements, including enterprise-wide
agreements, as part of the settlement of
enforcement actions under their
respective Labor Laws. In sum, the
inclusion of preventative measures in
labor compliance agreements—which
are negotiated with these enforcement
agencies—is a reasonable and wellestablished mechanism for enforcing the
existing law and protecting the integrity
of the Federal contracting process.
Relationship of Labor Compliance
Agreement Terms to the Procurement
Contract
Several unions and worker-advocacy
organizations proposed that the terms of
a labor compliance agreement should be
incorporated into the procurement
contract. One commenter stated that the
terms of labor compliance agreements
should operate as mandatory contract
clauses that are enforceable, whether or
not expressly included in the contract
language. Many worker-advocacy
organizations argued that labor
compliance agreements should provide
for specific penalties, including contract
termination, if the contractor fails to
implement agreed-upon remedial
measures during the contract period.
76 See Office of Management and Budget, M–06–
26, ‘‘Suspension and Debarment, Administrative
Agreements, and Compelling Reason
Determinations’’ (2006), available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/
omb/memoranda/fy2006/m06-26.pdf (‘‘Agencies
sometimes enter into administrative agreements
. . . as an alternative to suspension or
debarment.’’); Interagency Suspension & Debarment
Comm., ‘‘Report by the Interagency Suspension
And Debarment Committee on Federal Agency
Suspension and Debarment Activities for FY 2012
and FY 2013,’’ 10 (2014) (‘‘[T]he use of
administrative agreements increase the
Government’s access to responsible sources and,
thereby, promotes competition in the Federal
marketplace.’’); see also Jennifer S. Zucker and
Joseph Fratarcangeli, ‘‘Administrative Compliance
Agreements: An Effective Tool in the Suspension
and Debarment Process,’’ The Army Lawyer (Feb.
2005), at 19–24 (describing the content of
administrative agreements negotiated between the
Army and contractors).
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Employer groups also suggested that the
Guidance delineate the consequences of
violating a labor compliance agreement.
The Department notes that final FAR
rule does include reference to
consequences for the breach of a labor
compliance agreement. Breach of labor
compliance agreement during the
performance of a contract may justify
the exercise of contract remedies, such
electing not to exercise an option,
terminating the contract, or notifying
the agency suspending and debarring
official. See FAR 22.2004–3(b)(3)(v)(C),
(b)(4)(i)(B)(2)–(4). Additionally, where a
prospective contractor has previously
breached a labor compliance agreement,
this may justify and ALCA’s
recommendation that the contracting
officer could find that the contractor has
an unsatisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics and that the suspending
and debarring official should be
notified. See id. 22.2004–3(b)(3)(v); see
also Guidance, section III(C)(1)(e).
Timing of Negotiation
Certain unions and employee
advocacy organizations argued that if
the contracting officer determines that a
labor compliance agreement is
necessary in order to establish that an
employer can be considered a
responsible contractor, then the
agreement must be fully negotiated prior
to the award of the contract. These
commenters proposed that merely
engaging in good-faith negotiations
should not be considered sufficient to
overcome a record of Labor Law
violations. Rather, they suggested that a
finalized enforceable remedial
agreement should be required in order
to permit a finding of contractor
responsibility. SEIU proposed in the
alternative that a labor compliance
agreement should be executed within 2
months of the contract award and if the
contractor fails to comply, ‘‘payments
due the contractor under the contract
should be withheld until [a labor
compliance agreement] is executed.’’
The Department believes these
comments address issues outside the
scope of the Guidance and directs
commenters to the preamble to the final
FAR rule. However, the Department
notes that, as discussed above, the final
FAR rule provides that a contracting
officer may require the contractor to
commit, prior to award, to negotiate a
labor compliance agreement ‘‘in good
faith within a reasonable period of
time.’’ FAR 22.2004–2(b)(7)(ii). The
contracting officer may also require that
the contractor negotiate and execute an
agreement prior to award. See id.
22.2004–2(b)(7)(iii). The ALCA is also
required, during the performance of a
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contract, to report to the contracting
officer whether the contractor is
continuing to negotiate a labor
compliance agreement or whether the
contractor is adhering to an agreement
that has been established. Id. 22.2004–
3(b)(3)(i). The contracting officer then
uses this information to determine
whether to, among other actions, elect to
exercise an option on the contract. Id.
22.2004–3(b)(4)(i).
Relationship Between Labor
Compliance Agreements and Settlement
Agreements for Violations Under
Litigation
Several industry commenters raised
concerns about the relationship between
labor compliance agreements and
litigation-specific settlements for
violations. One commenter stated that
labor compliance agreements could
overlap with and contradict provisions
of settlement agreements that are
already in place or administrative
agreements reached as part of
suspension and debarment proceedings.
One industry group argued that the
negotiation process for labor compliance
agreements could conflict with the Title
VII conciliation process, citing a recent
Supreme Court decision, Mach Mining,
LLC v. EEOC, 135 S. Ct. 1645 (2015).
Mach Mining addressed a statutory
provision that requires EEOC to
conciliate with employers following a
reasonable cause determination. This
commenter argued that the Order would
remove the determination of good faith
negotiation from Federal courts and
place it in the hands of ALCAs or
contracting officers.
The Department believes that
concerns about labor compliance
agreements conflicting with existing
settlements are unwarranted.
Contractors are encouraged to disclose
information about existing settlements
as a potential mitigating factor in the
weighing process. In determining
whether a labor compliance agreement
is necessary, the ALCA will consider
any preexisting settlement agreement—
and recommend a labor compliance
agreement only where the existing
settlement does not include measures to
prevent future violations.
In addition, the Department notes that
a labor compliance agreement is an
agreement between a contractor and an
enforcement agency. Enforcement
agencies will know if they previously
entered into agreements with the
contractor and can assure that any labor
compliance agreement does not conflict
with prior agreements.
Finally, the Department disagrees
with the commenter’s interpretation of
Mach Mining. Mach Mining does not
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apply here because a labor compliance
agreement is not a conciliation
agreement, nor does it replace the
EEOC’s efforts to conciliate. Negotiation
of a labor compliance agreement is
separate and distinct from the
conciliation process under Title VII.
Public Access to Labor Compliance
Agreements, Recommendations, and
Responsibility Determinations
Union commenters proposed that the
Guidance specify that ALCA advice and
analysis must be included in a public
database, and that contracting officers’
responsibility determinations, along
with the reasons on which they are
based, also must be made accessible to
the public. Several also proposed that a
contracting officer should be required to
justify in writing if he or she makes a
decision not to adopt an ALCA’s
recommendation that a labor
compliance agreement be negotiated,
and that this explanation should be
made available to the public.
Several of these commenters also
proposed that labor compliance
agreements, as well as the contracting
officers’ responsibility determinations
and ALCA recommendations, should be
public documents. They stated that
labor compliance agreements should be
public so that employees and other
commenters can monitor whether
contractors meet their obligations under
the terms of the agreements.
The Department declines to adopt the
public-disclosure proposal. Mechanisms
for public access to information on
government contracts already exist,
including the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), USAspending.gov, and the
Federal Awardee Performance and
Integrity Information System (FAPIIS)—
a government database that tracks
contractor misconduct and performance.
FAPIIS will indicate where a contractor
has entered into a labor compliance
agreement. In addition, the enforcement
agencies that negotiate labor compliance
agreements have the discretion to make
the agreements themselves publicly
available.
However, the Department notes that
the final FAR rule does require the
contracting officer to document in the
contract file how he or she has taken
into account an ALCA’s
recommendation and analysis—
including whether a labor compliance
agreements is warranted—in making the
responsibility determination for the
award. See FAR 22.2004–2(b)(5)(ii). In
addition, the final FAR rule also states
that where a contractor enters into a
labor compliance agreement, the entry
will be noted in FAPIIS by the ALCA
and the fact that a labor compliance
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58701
agreement has been agreed to will be
public information. Id. 22.2004–2(b)(9).
The Department has added reference to
this procedure in section II(C)(3) of the
Guidance.
Other Criticism of Labor Compliance
Agreements
One employer advocate, in a
representative comment, stated that the
use of labor compliance agreements
forces contractors to defend themselves
in multiple forums on the same issues.
Other employer organizations
commented that the use of labor
compliance agreements would deter
businesses from seeking Federal
contracts because they will add another
layer of negotiation and uncertainty.
The Department has carefully
considered these comments but does not
modify the Guidance in response. Labor
compliance agreements will enable
contractors with a significant record of
Labor Law violations, who might not
otherwise be considered responsible, to
obtain government contracts. Thus, as
discussed above, labor compliance
agreements are properly viewed as
expanding opportunity and not
imposing additional burdens. With
regard to the question of competition,
the commenters have not provided any
objective evidence to support their
statement that the use of labor
compliance agreements would deter,
rather than encourage, participation in
Federal contracting. And, the
Department also received comments
from employee representatives stating
that the Order’s requirement that
remedial measures be put in place
through labor compliance agreements
will enhance fair competition. These
commenters argued that law-abiding
contractors are currently deterred from
seeking government business because
they believe they will be underbid by
unscrupulous contractors. The
Department believes that the final FAR
rule’s inclusion of a structure for labor
compliance agreements can only benefit
competition by allowing contractors that
might otherwise be barred from
contracting—either through an
individual nonresponsibility
determination, suspension, or
debarment—a path to responsibility
instead.
IV. Postaward Disclosure and
Assessment of Labor Law Violations
The Order requires contractors that
made initial preaward disclosures of
Labor Law violation information to
update that information semiannually
during performance of the covered
procurement contract. Order, section
2(b). Where new Labor Law violation
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information is disclosed or otherwise
brought to the attention of the
contracting officer, the Order requires
the contracting officer to consider
whether action is necessary—including
agreements requiring appropriate
remedial measures or remedies such as
decisions not to exercise an option on
a contract, contract termination, or
referral to the agency suspending and
debarring official. Id. section 2(b)(ii).
The Proposed Guidance referenced
these provisions of the Order, and
explained that postaward disclosures
should include both (a) any new Labor
Law decisions rendered since the last
disclosure and (b) updates to previously
disclosed information. 80 FR 30574,
30581.
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Disclosure Update Requirements
The Department received a number of
comments discussing the Order’s
postaward disclosure requirements. In
general, employee-advocacy
organizations approved of the
requirements and urged the Department
to strengthen them—particularly with
regard to the consequences of violating
a labor compliance agreement. In
contrast, several industry commenters
expressed concern that the semiannual,
postaward disclosure requirement is
unduly burdensome. These commenters
suggested elimination of the
requirement entirely.
The Department does not amend the
Guidance to eliminate the postaward
disclosure requirement. The final FAR
rule has implemented this requirement
in section 22.2004–3 of the FAR, and
created a contract clause that
incorporates these requirements into
covered contracts, see id. 55.222–59(b).
The Department agrees that this
requirement is appropriate, because the
Order expressly mandates postaward
disclosures. See Order, section 2(b).
The Department also received
multiple comments from industry
groups requesting clarification about the
timing of postaward disclosure and
whether each contract would have its
own disclosure cycle based on the date
of each award. Some of these
commenters asserted that companies
with multiple Federal contracts would
have an onerous reporting burden
because the Order and the proposals
will require such companies to
constantly make disclosures. They
proposed alternative ways to schedule
their disclosure requirements; in
particular, they suggested that the
Department establish a unified, fixeddate disclosure schedule as opposed to
reporting on the anniversary of each
contract award.
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The Department notes that the timing
of postaward disclosures is a question
that is resolved in the FAR rule. In
response to similar comments, the final
FAR rule provides the flexibility
requested by commenters, allowing the
contractor to use any date that it
chooses before the six-month
anniversary date of the award. FAR
22.2004–3(a)(2). The Department has
included this clarified language in the
Guidance.
Postaward Assessment of Labor Law
Violations
Some industry commenters expressed
concern that it would be disruptive to
find a contractor nonresponsible in the
middle of the performance of a contract
based on a violation that is disclosed
postaward. Similarly, other industry
commenters were critical of using
postaward violations as a basis for
terminating a contract that was
otherwise being properly and timely
performed. These commenters argued
that such information should only be
used in connection with a contracting
officer’s consideration of whether to
exercise an option to extend the
contract.
The consideration of appropriate
postaward actions is within the
jurisdiction of the FAR Council, and the
Department has deferred to the
treatment of these issues in the final
FAR rule. Under the final rule, the
ALCA will follow a similar assessment
process for postaward disclosures as for
preaward disclosures. See FAR
22.2004–3(b)(3). The ALCA assesses the
information disclosed and provides
analysis and advice to the contracting
officer regarding, among other
questions, whether violations should be
considered serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive, see id. 22.2004–
3(b)(3)(i); and whether the contractor is
adequately adhering to any labor
compliance agreements, see id.
22.2004–3(b)(3)(v)(C). The contracting
officer may then take no action and
continue the contract, or may exercise
one or more contract remedies under
existing FAR regulations and
procedures. FAR 22.2004–3(b)(4).
The Department believes that the FAR
Council’s rule appropriately implements
the plain language of the Order
requiring postaward consideration of
the specified contract remedies. The
Order expressly includes various
appropriate remedies, including
contract termination. Order, section
2(b)(ii). The Department notes that the
Order and the final rule do not deviate
in any significant way from what the
FAR otherwise requires when a
contracting officer receives information
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during contract performance that
implicates a contractor’s responsibility.
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
The Department has re-organized the
discussions of subcontractor
responsibility that appeared in several
locations of the Proposed Guidance into
a new section V of the final Guidance.
The Department received several
comments about the extent of
subcontracts covered by the Order, the
method of subcontractor disclosure, and
the assessment by prime contractors of
their subcontractors’ responsibility.
These comments are discussed in turn
below.
Covered Subcontracts
The Proposed Guidance described
‘‘covered subcontracts’’ as including
subcontracts for commercial items, but,
as prescribed by the Order, excluding
those for commercially available off-theshelf (COTS) items. As discussed above
in section II(A) of this section-by-section
analysis, one industry commenter
suggested that all commercial item
contracts—and especially commercial
item subcontracts—should be excluded
from the Order’s disclosure
requirements. The commenter asserted
that there is no basis for distinguishing
between contracts for COTS items and
contracts for commercial items.77 In the
alternative, the commenter suggested
that coverage of commercial item
subcontracts be delayed 5 years.
The Department declines to adopt the
commenter’s suggestions. As noted
above, contract coverage is within the
jurisdiction of the FAR Council, and the
final FAR rule maintains the inclusion
of ‘‘commercial item’’ subcontracts as
proposed. See FAR 52.244–6. The final
FAR rule also did not adopt the
commenter’s alternative request that
coverage of commercial item
subcontracts be delayed 5 years.
However, in recognition of the
additional complexity of the prime
contractors’ determination of
subcontractor responsibility, the FAR
Council has delayed implementation of
all of the subcontractor disclosure and
assessment requirements in the Order
for an additional year beyond the
77 Another commenter, Ogletree Deakins, asked a
specific question about the definition of COTS
items. The law firm stated that a construction
company client ‘‘is of the opinion that its
construction materials qualify as COTS items’’ and
‘‘seeks confirmation’’ from the Department that this
opinion is correct. In response, the Department
notes that Order does not require the Department
to provide guidance regarding the definition of
COTS items. The Department, however, interprets
the use of ‘‘commercially available off-the-shelf
items’’ in the Order as subject to the definition of
that term in the FAR. See Order, section 2(a)(iv);
FAR 2.101.
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effective date of the final rule. See FAR
22.2007(b).
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Subcontractor Disclosures
The Proposed Guidance contemplated
that subcontractors would disclose
Labor Law violations to prime
contractors for assessment. See 80 FR
30577. However, the Proposed Guidance
also noted that ‘‘the FAR Council is
considering allowing contractors to
direct their subcontractors to report
violations to the Department, which
would then assess the violations’’
(instead of contractors). Id. n.9.
Various industry commenters raised
concerns about the original
subcontractor disclosure and assessment
provision in the Proposed Guidance. In
a representative form comment, one
commenter stated that the task of
assessing subcontractor responsibility
under the Order would be overly
burdensome for prime contractors, who
may have up to 30 subcontractors for a
multimillion dollar contract. Another
commenter, SAIC, raised a concern with
the structure by which subcontractors
would give violation information to
prime contractors on the grounds that
the subcontractor and the prime may be
competitors on the next contract, and
‘‘competitors should not have access to
sensitive information about one
another.’’
In contrast, another commenter
objected to the structure of the proposed
alternative. In a comment made to the
FAR Council on the proposed FAR rule,
the commenter questioned whether
there might be conflicts of interest if the
Department is given the authority to
assess subcontractor violations. The
commenter suggested that a conflict
could arise because the Department
would often be charged with classifying
and assessing the weight of violations
that may be under active enforcement or
litigation by enforcement agencies
within the Department; presumably the
concern would be that the Department
could tip the scales in its own ongoing
litigation by providing a more negative
assessment of the subcontractor’s record
than it might otherwise do in order to
force the contractor into settling.
After carefully considering these and
other similar comments, the FAR
Council decided to adopt the proposed
alternative structure under which
subcontractors will be able to make
detailed disclosures to the Department
instead of to prime contractors directly.
See FAR 52.222–59(c)(3)(ii). Pursuant to
Order (as amended), the FAR Council
has the express authority to designate
the entity to which subcontractors
submit disclosure information.
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Under the final FAR rule, upon
receiving a subcontractor’s disclosure,
the Department will provide advice that
the subcontractor provides to the
contractor for the contractor’s use in the
determining the subcontractor’s
responsibility. See FAR 52.222–59(c)(4).
Ultimately, however, the Order does not
change the underlying principle in the
FAR that it is the prime contractor (and
not the Department) that has the duty to
make a determination that its
subcontractors are responsible sources.
See id. 9.104–1.
The FAR Council and the Department
have carefully considered the concern
that the structure of the subcontractor
responsibility assessment would create
a conflict of interest, and we have
concluded that the proposed structure is
appropriate. ALCA training will include
material that addresses prevention of
such conflicts of interest. The Guidance
clarifies that in assessing violations, the
Department will apply the same
Guidance language that ALCAs apply in
classifying and weighing violations and
that any Labor Law decisions from an
enforcement agency will be evaluated
objectively and without regard for the
enforcement agency’s litigation
interests. See Guidance, section V(B). As
the FAR Council notes in its response to
this issue, administrative decision
makers enjoy a presumption of honesty
and integrity. See Withrow v. Larkin,
421 U.S. 35, 47 (1975). Moreover, if the
subcontractor disagrees with the
Department about the assessment, it
may provide an explanation of its
disagreement, along with the relevant
information, to the contractor, FAR
52.222–59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(3), and in this
situation the contractor may award the
subcontract notwithstanding the
Department’s negative assessment, id.
52.222–59(c)(5).
In sum, the Department has tracked
the FAR rule in the final Guidance. The
Department believes that the FAR
Council’s modification of the
subcontractor responsibility structure
will address the above-described
concerns that contractors (and
especially small business contractors)
would find it challenging to assess
subcontractors’ violations. This change
will also ensure a greater degree of
expertise and consistency in assessing
subcontractors’ Labor Law violations.
VI. Preassessment
The Proposed Guidance noted that the
Department will be available to consult
with contractors to assist them in
fulfilling their obligations under the
Order, and, specifically, that contractors
would have the opportunity to receive
early guidance before bidding on a
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58703
contract. In this ‘‘preassessment,’’
contractors would receive the
Department’s advice as to ‘‘whether any
of their violations of the labor laws are
potentially problematic, as well as the
opportunity to remedy any problems.’’
80 FR 30575 n.7.
The Department received few
comments specifically addressing
preassessment. However, several
commenters stated that contracting
agencies must provide enough time for
ALCAs to assess the information
disclosed regarding violations,
mitigating circumstances, and remedial
measures. Many commenters stated that
the 3-day timeframe for ALCAs to give
analysis and advice to contracting
officers is insufficient and will cause
delays in decision-making. The
Department believes that the
preassessment process will help avoid
such delays. With regard to
subcontractor preassessment, AGC
stated in its comment that ‘‘preapproving national subcontractors may
be helpful,’’ while noting that there are
disadvantages to limiting the pool of
acceptable subcontractors to those that
have been pre-approved.
After considering these comments, the
Department has decided that there will
be a preassessment process whereby
contractors may voluntarily agree to
have their record of Labor Law
violations assessed by the Department.
The preassessment process does not
limit the pool of contractors in the
manner that AGC suggested could be
disadvantageous. Rather, preassessment
will provide contractors with early
information that their record of Labor
Law compliance is satisfactory—and, if
that is not the case, with information
about how to address any issues before
bidding on a contract. The
preassessment process does not
circumvent or replace the structured
preaward disclosure and assessment
process required by the Order.
The Guidance now clarifies that the
Department’s advice during
preassessment is similar to the analysis
that ALCA’s provide to contracting
officers during the preaward assessment
process—including ‘‘advice regarding
whether any of the disclosed violations
are serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive; and regarding whether a
labor compliance agreement is
warranted.’’ Guidance, section VI. And,
it clarifies that if a contractor whose
record have been assessed by the
Department subsequently submits a bid,
and the contracting officer initiates a
responsibility determination of the
contractor, the contracting officer and
the ALCA may rely on the Department’s
assessment that the contractor has a
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satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance unless additional Labor Law
violations have been disclosed.
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VII. Paycheck Transparency
Section VII of the Guidance assists
agencies in interpreting the paycheck
transparency provisions of the Order
and the FAR rule. The purpose of these
provisions is to increase transparency in
compensation information and
employment status, which will enhance
workers’ awareness of their rights,
promote greater employer compliance
with Labor Laws, and thereby increase
economy and efficiency in government
contracting.
A. Wage Statement Provisions
Section 5(a) of the Order requires
covered contractors, including
subcontractors, to provide ‘‘all
individuals performing work’’ under the
contract for whom the contractor must
maintain wage records under the FLSA,
the DBA, the SCA, or equivalent State
laws with a ‘‘document’’ each pay
period containing ‘‘information
concerning that individual’s hours
worked, overtime hours, pay, and any
additions made to or deductions made
from pay.’’ As the Department noted in
the Proposed Guidance, this means that
a wage statement must be provided to
every worker subject to the FLSA, all
laborers and mechanics subject to the
DBA, and all service employees covered
by the SCA—regardless of the
contractor’s classification of the worker
as an employee or independent
contractor. See 80 FR 30591.
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department interpreted the term ‘‘pay’’
in the Order to mean the total or ‘‘gross
pay’’ that is due the worker for the pay
period. 80 FR 30591. The Proposed
Guidance noted that additions to gross
pay may include bonuses, awards, and
shift differentials, and that deductions
from gross pay may include withholding
for taxes and for employee contributions
to health insurance premiums or
retirement accounts. 80 FR 30591–
30592.
The Order requires that the wage
statement must be issued every pay
period and contain the total number of
hours worked in the pay period and any
overtime hours worked, among other
information. Order, section 5(a). In
those cases where the wage statement is
not provided weekly and is instead
provided bi-weekly or semi-monthly,
the FAR Council’s proposed rule
provided that the hours worked and
overtime hours detailed in the wage
statement be broken down to
correspond to the period for which
overtime is actually calculated and paid
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(which will almost always be weekly).
80 FR 30571.
The Proposed Guidance suggested
that if the contractor regularly provides
documents to workers electronically,
the wage statement may be provided
electronically if the worker can access it
through a computer, device, system, or
network provided or made available by
the contractor. 80 FR 30591. The FAR
Council proposed the requirement that,
if a significant portion of the
contractor’s workforce is not fluent in
English, the contractor must provide the
wage statements in English and the
language(s) in which the significant
portion(s) of the workforce is fluent. 80
FR 30572.
The Department received many
comments regarding the different
aspects of the proposed wage-statement
requirements discussed above.
Employee advocates generally
supported the Order’s wage-statement
provisions.78 Employer organizations,
on the other hand, commented that the
wage-statement provisions are overly
burdensome and in addition made
several specific suggestions and
objections. The Department addresses
these comments below.
1. Rate of Pay
Several unions and employee
advocacy organizations suggested that
contractors should be required to
include in the wage statement: (a) The
worker’s rate of pay, (b) hours and
earnings at the basic rate, and (c) hours
and earnings at the overtime rate. In
their view, these would allow ‘‘a worker
to fully understand the basis for his or
her net pay.’’ They argued that the term
‘‘pay’’ in the Order should be defined to
include both the worker’s regular rate of
pay and the total amount of pay for the
pay period. SEIU noted that several
States, including Alaska, California,
New York, and Hawaii, already require
rate-of-pay information in wage
statements, ‘‘demonstrating the
reasonableness of this requirement.’’
The Midwest Region Foundation for
Fair Contracting and the Foundation for
Fair Contracting of Massachusetts
suggested that the wage statement
should include the ‘‘overtime rate of pay
and hours calculated,’’ reasoning that
the ‘‘rate of pay alone is not sufficient
for a worker to calculate his or her
overtime hours[.]’’ The Center for
American Progress Action Fund
(CAPAF) and SEIU also suggested that
the Guidance ‘‘should make clear that
78 The Department received many comments
generally supporting the paycheck transparency
provisions, including more than 1,700 comments
submitted by the National Women’s Law Center
(NWLC).
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the terms used in the paycheck
transparency provisions have the same
meaning as they do under the FLSA.’’
In response to similar comments, the
FAR Council has included in its final
rule that rate-of-pay is a required
element on the wage statement. See FAR
52.222–60(b)(1)(iii). The Department has
modified the final Guidance
accordingly. The Department believes
that this decision accords with the plain
text of the Order, which states that the
wage statement must contain the
worker’s ‘‘pay.’’ Order, section 5(a). As
the commenters above noted, the term
‘‘pay’’ can and should be defined to
include both ‘‘gross pay’’ and ‘‘rate of
pay.’’
The Department believes that a
worker’s rate of pay is a crucial piece of
information that should appear in the
wage statement, because a worker’s
knowledge of his or her rate of pay
enables the worker to more easily
determine whether all wages due have
been paid. Inclusion of rate of pay in
wage statements will therefore reduce
the time an employer spends resolving
pay disputes because workers will have
available the information on which his
or her pay was determined, and be able
to identify any problems at an earlier
date. By aiding in the early
identification of problems, including
rate of pay in the wage statement will
help to implement the Order’s purpose
of reducing execution delays and
avoiding distractions and complications
that arise from Labor Law
noncompliance during the course of
contract performance. See Order,
section 1. All parties have an interest in
ensuring workers receive their full pay
when it is earned—including
contractors themselves, who benefit
from fair competition, employee
satisfaction, and reduced liability for
damages resulting from unpaid wages.
Also, in most cases, contractors
compute gross pay by multiplying the
regular hours worked by the worker’s
rate of pay and, in overtime workweeks,
by also multiplying the overtime hours
worked by time-and-one-half of the rate
of pay. As contractors cannot compute
the worker’s earnings without the rateof-pay information, workers similarly
cannot easily determine how their
earnings are computed without
inclusion of the rate-of-pay information
in the wage statement.
Moreover, the relevant laws already
require that the employer keep a record
of the rate of pay. As one employeeadvocacy organization pointed out, an
employer must maintain a record of a
non-exempt employee’s rate of pay
under the FLSA. See 29 CFR
516.2(a)(6)(i). A requirement to keep
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rate-of-pay information also applies to
SCA-covered contracts, see 29 CFR
4.6(g)(1)(ii), and to DBA-covered
contracts, see 29 CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i).79 In
addition, a number of States currently
require the worker’s rate of pay to be
included in wage statements.80
Contractors located in one of these
States already are including the rate of
pay in the wage statements that they
provide. Therefore, including this
information in the wage statement helps
to realize the purposes of the Order with
limited burden to contractors.
The rate of pay information on the
wage statement will most often be the
regular hourly rate of pay. If the worker
is not paid by the hour, the rate of pay
information should reflect the basis of
pay by indicating the monetary amount
paid on a per-day, per-week, per-piece,
or other basis. See FAR 52.222–
60(b)(1)(iii). This information is
required to be kept by the employer for
non-exempt employees under the FLSA,
and would allow the worker to
recognize any underpayments. See 29
CFR 516.2(a)(6)(i)–(ii), 778.109.
The Department, however, believes
that it is not essential for the overtime
rate of pay to be included in the wage
statement. For example, in order to
check the accuracy of the wages paid in
weeks when overtime hours are worked,
a worker can generally perform the
following calculation: (1) The rate of
pay multiplied by 40 hours equals
regular earnings; (2) rate of pay
multiplied by 1.5 equals the overtime
rate of pay; (3) overtime rate of pay
multiplied by the overtime hours
worked equal overtime earnings; and (4)
regular earnings plus overtime earnings
equals gross pay. The inclusion of the
overtime rate of pay in the wage
statement would only slightly simplify
this calculation for the worker by
eliminating step two. In most situations,
once the worker knows his or her rate
of pay, the worker can readily determine
what the overtime pay rate should be by
79 In general, for DBA and SCA, the basic hourly
rate listed in the wage determination is considered
the rate of pay that is to be included in the wage
statement. Under the FLSA, the regular hourly rate
of pay is determined by dividing the employee’s
total remuneration (except statutory exclusions) by
total hours worked in the workweek. See 29 CFR
778.109.
80 States that currently require rate of pay
information to be included in wage statements are:
Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York,
North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont,
Washington, and Wisconsin. This list is not the list
of ‘‘Substantially Similar Wage Payment States’’
that the Order requires the Department to identify.
As discussed below, whether a State law is
substantially similar requires consideration of all of
the required elements in a wage statement—not
simply rate of pay.
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simply multiplying the rate of pay by
time and one half (by a factor of 1.5).
In addition, the FLSA, SCA, and DBA
regulations do not require contractors to
keep a record of the overtime pay rate
in their payroll records.81 Similarly,
with some exceptions, State laws
generally do not require that the
overtime rate of pay be included in
wage statements. Therefore, requiring
the overtime rate of pay in the wage
statement would be a new burden on
contractors and, as discussed above,
having the overtime pay-rate
information in the wage statement does
not significantly improve the worker’s
ability to determine whether the correct
wages were paid.
With regard to SEIU’s comment that
the Guidance should make clear that the
terms used in the Order’s paycheck
transparency provision should be given
the same meaning as in the FLSA, the
Department agrees with this comment to
the extent the FLSA provides relevant
meaning and context to the terms in the
Order’s paycheck transparency
provisions. The Department has cited to
the FLSA regulations where applicable.
2. Itemizing Additions to and
Deductions From Wages
Employee advocates urged the
Department to require contractors to
itemize additions to and deductions
from wages in the wage statement. SEIU
stated that there should be ‘‘no lump
sums for additions or deductions.’’ The
AFL–CIO urged the Department to
require contractors to ‘‘itemize the
contributions for fringe benefits and
identify each plan or fund to which
such contributions are being paid.’’
NABTU noted that a number of States
require contractors to itemize in this
manner in the certified payroll records
that are filed with the State. The
Indiana-Illinois-Iowa Foundation for
Fair Contracting (Foundation for Fair
Contracting) suggested that wage
statements required by the Order should
include the hourly fringe benefit rates,
the name and address of each fringe
benefit fund, and the plan sponsor and
administrator of each fringe benefit
plan, if applicable. Foundation for Fair
Contracting noted that the Illinois
81 Of the three Federal statutes referenced in
section 5(a) of the Order, only the FLSA requires
the payment of overtime; however, the FLSA
recordkeeping regulations do not require the
contractor to maintain overtime rates of pay on
payroll records. The FLSA regulations do require a
supplemental record documenting the overtime pay
calculation. See 29 CFR 516.6(a)(2). The DBA and
SCA do not contain an overtime pay provision and,
as a result, the regulations governing these statutes
make no reference to listing overtime rates of pay
on payroll records. See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i) and
5.32(a) for DBA; 29 CFR 4.6(g) and 4.180 for SCA.
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Prevailing Wage Act requires
contractors on public-works projects to
submit certified payrolls that contain
such information.
In response to similar comments, the
FAR Council has included in its final
rule the requirement that additions and
deductions to gross pay must be
itemized in the wage statement. See
FAR 52.222–60(b)(1)(v). Accordingly,
the final Guidance clarifies that
additions and deductions must be
itemized.
The Department agrees that it is
appropriate to require itemization of
additions and deductions. Section 5(a)
of the Order provides that the wage
statement should, among other items,
include ‘‘any additions made to or
deductions made from pay.’’ The Order,
therefore, already contemplates that any
and all additions or deductions be
separately noted in the wage statement;
in other words, the wage statement must
itemize or identify each addition or
deduction, and not merely provide a
lump sum for the total additions and
deductions.
The Department notes that the
relevant FLSA regulations require
covered employers to maintain records
regarding the nature of each type of
addition to or deduction from gross
wages. For instance, besides having to
record the total additions to or
deductions from wages, the FLSA
regulations at 29 CFR 516.2(a)(10) also
require covered employers to maintain
records for non-exempt employees of
the dates, amounts, and nature of the
items which make up the total additions
and deductions. Also, both DBA and
SCA regulations require covered
contractors to maintain a record of
deductions from wages paid. See 29
CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i), 4.6(g)(1)(iv).82 Because
these statutes already require
contractors to maintain a record of any
additions or deductions, requiring
contractors to provide the same
itemized information to workers in the
wage statement will not be overly
burdensome.
The Department did not receive
comments specifically objecting to the
itemization of additions or deductions.
Many States currently require itemized
deductions to be included in wage
statements.83 Contractors working in
82 Optional form WH–347 that is typically used
by contractors and subcontractors on Federal or
federally-aided construction-type contracts and
subcontracts to submit weekly certified payrolls, for
instance, lists deductions from the worker’s gross
pay.
83 States that currently require itemized
deductions include: Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine,
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one of these States are already including
itemized deductions from gross pay in
the wage statements that they provide.
The Department thus believes that it is
reasonable to presume that contractors
who already furnish wage statements
usually provide information identifying
any additions or deductions from gross
pay.
Moreover, including itemized
additions and deductions in the wage
statement allows workers to determine
whether they are paid correctly, identify
any error, and promptly raise any
questions with the contractor as
necessary. As the Department noted in
the Proposed Guidance, ‘‘[p]roviding a
worker with gross pay and all additions
to and deductions from gross pay will
necessarily allow the worker to
understand the net pay received and
how it was calculated.’’ 80 FR 30592.
With regard to suggestions by
employee advocates that the wage
statements should identify the name
and address of each fringe benefit fund,
and the plan sponsor and administrator
of each fringe benefit plan, the
Department believes that listing such
information in the wage statement
would be duplicative. Generally, when
a worker participates in a fringe benefit
fund or plan, he or she must complete
an enrollment form for the fund or plan
to become a registered participant in the
fund or plan. An enrolled or registered
worker is given a document with the
fund or plan contact information
including, but not limited to: The name
of the fund or plan; the fund’s or plan’s
address, contact number, and email
address; and the amount of the worker’s
contributions into the fund or plan. The
worker also receives quarterly earnings
statements or plan usage statements, as
well as a summary of worker
contributions. See 29 CFR 2520.102–2,
.102–3. This information is also
typically available online via the fund’s
or plan’s Web site. Furthermore, the
fund or plan contact information is not
essential in order to understand and
calculate the worker’s earnings on a pay
period basis or to timely detect errors in
their pay; therefore, the Department
does not believe that including this
information in the worker’s wage
statement is necessary to meet the
Order’s requirements and purposes.
Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas,
Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia,
Wisconsin, and Wyoming. This list is not the list
of ‘‘Substantially Similar Wage Payment States’’
that the Order requires the Department to identify.
As discussed below, whether a State law is
substantially similar requires consideration of all of
the required elements in a wage statement—not
simply of itemized additions and deductions.
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Foundation for Fair Contracting also
requested that the hourly fringe-benefit
rate be listed in the wage statement. The
Department does not believe it is
essential to include the hourly fringebenefit rate in the wage statement. The
amount of the fringe benefit required by
the DBA or SCA is typically expressed
as an hourly rate in the wage
determinations issued by the
Department.84 The contractor may pay
this amount as a contribution to a fringe
benefit fund or plan, or in ‘‘cash’’ as an
addition to the worker’s wages. Section
5(a) of the Order requires any additions
made to gross pay to be listed in the
wage statement. The Department
believes that fringe-benefit amounts
paid by the contractor into a fund or
plan (e.g., health insurance or
retirement plan) on behalf of the worker
should not be considered additions to
the worker’s gross pay for purposes of
the Order. Such fringe-benefit
contributions are excludable from the
regular rate for purposes of computing
overtime pay under the FLSA 85 and are
not taxable. Fringe-benefit contributions
paid by the contractor on behalf of the
worker thus do not need to be included
in the wage statement, as such
information has no bearing on
determining whether the worker
received the correct cash wages as
reported in the wage statement.
On the other hand, when the
contractor elects to meet their fringe
benefit obligation under the DBA or
SCA by paying all or part of the stated
hourly amount in ‘‘cash’’ to the worker,
the payments are subject to tax
withholdings, and the wage statement
should list the fringe benefit amounts
paid as an addition to the worker’s
pay.86 Such amounts are part of gross
pay.
3. Information To Be Included in the
Wage Statement
As discussed above, in order to
implement the purposes of the Order’s
wage-statement requirement, the final
FAR rule has interpreted the term ‘‘pay’’
to mean both gross pay and rate of pay.
See FAR 52.222–60(b)(1). And the final
84 The wage determination issued under the DBA
and SCA that is applicable to the contract must be
posted by the contractor at the site of work in a
prominent and accessible place where it can be
easily seen by the workers. See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(1)(i),
4.6(e). Workers therefore have access to fringe
benefit rate information, further negating the
necessity to include the fringe benefit rate amount
in the wage statement.
85 See 29 U.S.C. 207(e)(4); 29 CFR 778.214,
778.215.
86 When the fringe benefit (or a portion thereof)
is paid in cash, that amount is excludable from the
regular rate for purposes of computing overtime
pay. See 29 CFR 4.177(e), 5.32(c)(1).
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rule has clarified that any additions to
or deductions made from gross pay be
itemized or identified in the wage
statement. See id. The final Guidance,
therefore, provides that wage statements
required under the Order must contain
the following information: 1) hours
worked, 2) overtime hours, 3) rate of pay
(whether the regular hourly rate of pay
or the monetary amount paid on a perday, per-week, per-piece, or other basis),
4) gross pay, and 5) an itemization of
each addition to or deduction from gross
pay. See Guidance, section VII(A).87
4. Weekly Accounting of Overtime
Hours Worked
The Department also received
comments from industry commenters
regarding the proposed requirement that
if the wage statement is not provided
weekly and is instead provided biweekly or semi-monthly (because the
pay period is bi-weekly or semimonthly), that the hours worked and
overtime hours contained in the wage
statement would need to be broken
down to correspond to the period for
which overtime is actually calculated
and paid (which will almost always be
weekly). See 80 FR 30571 (proposed
rule); 80 FR 30591 (Proposed Guidance).
Several employer representatives stated
that contractors generally issue wage
statements on a bi-weekly basis, and do
not separately provide the number of
hours worked (regular and overtime
hours) for the first and second
workweeks of the bi-weekly pay period.
These commenters stated that requiring
a weekly accounting of regular hours
worked (i.e., hours worked up to 40
hours) and overtime hours worked in
the wage statement would be costly to
implement and unnecessary.
The final FAR rule continues to
require that ‘‘the hours worked and
overtime hours contained in the wage
statement . . . be broken down to
correspond to the period (which will
almost always be weekly) for which
overtime is calculated and paid.’’ FAR
52.222–60(b)(2). The Department
accordingly declines to change the
Guidance in response to the comments
received.
As the Department discussed in the
Proposed Guidance, transparency in the
relationships between employers and
their workers is critical to workers’
understanding of their legal rights and
to the speedy resolution of workplace
disputes. See 80 FR 30591. The
calculation of overtime pay on a
workweek-by-workweek basis as
87 Nothing prohibits the contractor from
including more information in the wage statement
(e.g., exempt-status notification, overtime-pay rate).
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required by the FLSA has been a
bedrock principle of labor protections
since 1938. 29 U.S.C. 207(a). A wage
statement that is provided bi-weekly or
semi-monthly that does not separately
state the hours worked during the first
workweek from those worked during the
second workweek of the pay period fails
to provide workers with sufficient
information about their pay to be able to
determine if they are being paid
correctly. For example, a worker who
receives a wage statement showing 80
hours worked during a bi-weekly pay
period and all hours paid at the regular
(straight-time) rate may, in fact, have
worked 43 hours the first week and 37
hours the second week. In this case, to
comply with the FLSA, the employer
should have paid the worker at time and
one half of the worker’s regular rate of
pay for the three hours worked after 40
hours in the first workweek. Without
documentation of the weekly hours, it
would be difficult for this worker to
determine whether overtime pay is due.
The FLSA already requires that
employers calculate overtime pay after
40 hours worked per week; and the
implementing regulations under the
FLSA, DBA, and SCA require employers
to maintain payroll records for at least
3 years. Under the FLSA regulations at
29 CFR 516.2(a)(7), for instance, an
employer must maintain a record of a
non-exempt employee’s total hours
worked per week. A requirement to
keep records of hours worked also
applies to SCA-covered contracts, see 29
CFR 4.6(g)(1)(iii), and to DBA-covered
contracts, see 29 CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i).
Moreover, workers covered under DBA
must be paid on a weekly basis
requiring a workweek-by-workweek
accounting of overtime hours worked.
See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(1)(i). Therefore,
including hours worked information in
the wage statement derived on a
workweek basis will not be overly
burdensome.
5. Electronic Wage Statements
With regard to providing wage
statements electronically, one industry
commenter agreed that providing wage
statements electronically should be an
option. One labor union, the United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners
of America (UBCJA), advocated that
workers should be allowed to access
wage statements using the contractor’s
computer network during work hours.
According to UBCJA, merely providing
workers with the Web site address to
access their wage statements on their
own would be insufficient as such an
arrangement would require the worker
to purchase internet connection to
access the information. One employee
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advocate suggested that the contractor
should be allowed to provide wage
statements electronically only with
written permission from the worker and
if written instructions on how to access
the wage statements are provided to the
worker.
The final FAR rule provides that
contractors have the option of providing
wage statements either by paper-format
(e.g., paystubs), or electronically if the
contractor regularly provides documents
electronically and if the worker can
access the document through a
computer, device, system, or network
provided or made available by the
contractor. FAR 52.222–60(e)(2). The
final Guidance accordingly provides the
same. See Guidance, section VII(A). The
Department agrees with UBCJA that
merely providing workers with a Web
site address would be insufficient; the
contractor must provide the worker with
internet or intranet access for purposes
of viewing this information.
The Department, however, believes
that it is not necessary to require
contractors to allow workers such access
during work hours. The Department
assumes that employees will, in most
cases, access wage statements (or other
employer-provided documents, such as
leave statements or tax forms) using the
contractor’s network or system during
the workday—including during the
worker’s rest breaks or meal periods.
However, the Department believes it is
not necessary to specifically prescribe a
requirement regarding the time period
during which a wage statement can be
accessed.
The Department also believes that it is
not necessary to require that workers
give consent before receiving the wage
statement electronically, or to require
that workers be given written
instructions on how to access the wage
statement using the contractor’s
computer, device, system, or network.
As the Proposed Guidance noted, the
employer must already be regularly
providing documents to workers
electronically in order to provide wage
statements in the same manner. See 80
FR 30592. Contractors that already
provide documents electronically
presumably also provide general
instructions regarding accessing
personnel records on their intranet Web
pages; therefore, additional written
instructions specific to accessing the
worker’s wage statement using the
contractor’s computer, device, network,
or system is not necessary. Similarly,
requiring a written consent by the
worker is not necessary because the
workers for such employers should
already be familiar with the process for
receiving documents electronically.
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58707
6. Substantially Similar State Laws
The Order provides that the wagestatement requirement ‘‘shall be deemed
to be fulfilled’’ where a contractor ‘‘is
complying with State or local
requirements that the Secretary of Labor
has determined are substantially similar
to those required’’ by the Order. Order,
section 5(a). If a contractor provides a
worker in one of these ‘‘substantially
similar’’ States with a wage statement
that complies with the requirements of
that State, the contractor would satisfy
the Order’s wage-statement requirement.
In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department stated that two
requirements do not have to be exactly
the same to be ‘‘substantially similar’’;
they must, however, share ‘‘essential
elements in common.’’ 80 FR 30587
(quoting Alameda Mall, L.P. v. Shoe
Show, Inc., 649 F.3d 389, 392 (5th Cir.
2011)). The Proposed Guidance offered
two options for determining whether
State requirements are substantially
similar to the Order’s requirements.
The first proposed option identified
as substantially similar those States and
localities that require wage statements
to have the essential elements of
overtime hours or earnings, total hours,
gross pay, and any additions to or
deductions made from gross pay. As the
Proposed Guidance noted, when
overtime hours or earnings are disclosed
in a wage statement, workers can
identify from the face of the document
whether they have been paid for
overtime hours. Applying this method,
the current list of Substantially Similar
Wage Payment States would be Alaska,
California, Connecticut, the District of
Columbia, Hawaii, New York, and
Oregon. See 80 FR 30592.
The second proposed option would
have allowed wage statements to omit
overtime hours or earnings, as long as
the wage statements included ‘‘rate of
pay,’’ in addition to the essential
elements of total hours, gross pay, and
any additions to or deductions made
from gross pay. The intent of this option
was to allow greater flexibility while
still requiring wage statements to
provide enough information for a
worker to calculate whether he or she
has been paid in full. The Department
noted that one drawback of this option
was that failure to pay overtime would
not be as easily detected when
compared with the first option. The
worker would have to complete a more
difficult calculation to identify an error
in pay. Applying this second method,
the current list of Substantially Similar
Wage Payment States would be Alaska,
California, Connecticut, the District of
Columbia, Hawaii, Massachusetts,
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Minnesota, New York, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont,
Washington, and Wisconsin. See 80 FR
30592.
The Department requested comments
regarding the two options and stated
that it could also consider other
combinations of essential elements or
other ways to determine whether State
or local requirements are substantially
similar. 80 FR 30592.
Numerous employee advocates and
members of Congress strongly supported
the first option. These commenters
observed that employers and workers
benefit when workers can easily
understand their pay by reviewing their
wage statement. These commenters
noted that wage statements also provide
an objective record of compensated
hours, which helps employers to more
easily meet their burden of
demonstrating wages paid for hours
worked. National Employment Law
Project (NELP), the National Women’s
Law Center (NWLC), and the Service
Employees International Union (SEIU)
thus advocated for the first option
because it brings ‘‘greater . . . clarity on
the face of the wage statement,’’ making
it ‘‘easier . . . for an employee to notice
any errors and bring them to the
attention of her employer.’’ A comment
by members of Congress favored the first
option because ‘‘[d]isclosing whether
workers have been paid at the overtime
rate is critical to enabling workers to
discern whether they have been paid
fairly.’’ While recommending the first
option, SEIU and CAPAF further
recommended that the first option be
adopted with the modification that rateof-pay information also be included as
an essential element.
The employee advocates found the
second option—which would have
allowed wage statements to omit
overtime hours or earnings, as long as
the wage statements include the rate of
pay—to lack transparency. The
American Federation of State, County,
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
stated that workers ‘‘should not be
required to apply a mathematical
formula to determine the accuracy of
wage payment.’’ The United Food and
Commercial Workers (UFCW) noted that
omitting overtime hours and earnings
‘‘will impede employees’ ability to
recognize whether employers have
failed to pay workers overtime.’’ The
second option is less transparent,
according to the NWLC, because it
makes ‘‘it more difficult and confusing
for employees to understand their
paychecks.’’ The UBCJA stated that
overtime hours or earnings are vital
pieces of information that should not be
omitted as such information is
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‘‘necessary to protect workers in lowwage industries who are the most likely
to be exploited and the least likely to
have the math skills’’ required to
determine if the wage paid is accurate.
As NELP pointed out, contractors have
workers’ overtime hours and earnings
readily available as they are required to
retain this information under the law; it
would, therefore, not be burdensome to
require such information on wage
statements.
On the other hand, the Aerospace
Industries Association (AIA)
recommended that the second option be
adopted, primarily because it would
result in more substantially similar
States and localities than would the first
option—thereby reducing compliance
burdens and providing greater flexibility
to contractors. Associated Builders and
Contractors (ABC) also believed the
second option ‘‘is more in line with
employers’ practices and is less
burdensome than the first option.’’
Citing the paycheck-transparency
provisions’ alleged ‘‘significant
burdens,’’ the law firm of Ogletree
Deakins encouraged the Department to
adopt both options, and include a
provision allowing contractors ‘‘to
design their own substantially similar
wage statements that will comply’’ with
the Order. The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce (the Chamber) stated that the
Proposed Guidance was not clear
regarding whether complying the
requirement for any one of the
substantially similar States (e.g., the
California) ‘‘means that the contractor
has met the [Order’s] requirement for all
employees or just employees in that
State (i.e., California employees).’’ The
Chamber recommended that contractors
‘‘be deemed to be in compliance with
the wage statement requirements if they
adopt one State’s version nationwide.’’
Finally, the National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM) opposed
implementation of any wage-statement
requirement until the Department has
provided the public an opportunity to
comment on the substantially similar
State and local wage statement laws the
Department ultimately identifies.
After carefully reviewing the
comments received regarding the two
options discussed above, the
Department adopts the first option for
determining whether wage-statement
requirements under State law are
substantially similar. The list of
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States now adopted in the final
Guidance is: 1) Alaska, 2) California, 3)
Connecticut, 4) the District of Columbia,
5) Hawaii, 6) New York, and 7) Oregon.
These States and the District of
Columbia require wage statements to
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include the essential elements of hours
worked, overtime hours, gross pay, and
any itemized additions to and
deductions from gross pay. The list of
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States will be available on the
Department’s Web site at https://
www.dol.gov/
fairpayandsafeworkplaces/. See also
FAR 52.222–60(c) (providing that the
Order’s wage-statement requirement is
fulfilled if the contractor complies with
the wage statement laws of these States
and localities).
The Department agrees with employee
advocates who commented that the
second option—which would allow
wage statements to omit overtime hours
worked, as long as the wage statements
include the rate of pay—is less
transparent and helpful to workers.
Excluding the overtime hours worked
from the wage statement would require
a worker to complete a more difficult
computation in order to determine
whether the correct wages were paid.
Moreover, the Department agrees with
commenters who noted that including
the overtime hours in the wage
statement would not be overly
burdensome as contractors are already
required to keep such information in
their payroll records under the FLSA.
With regard to SEIU’s comment that
the Department should adopt the first
option with the modification that the
rate of pay be a required item in the
wage statement, the Department
declines to do so. As set forth in the
final FAR rule, rate of pay is a required
element of the core wage-statement
obligation under the Order.
Accordingly, covered workers in most
States will receive wage statements that
include rate-of-pay information. Only in
those States and localities deemed
‘‘substantially similar’’ will it be
permissible to provide a wage statement
that does not include rate of pay. The
Department believes that this accords
with the definition of ‘‘substantially
similar,’’ which means only that the
substantially similar laws ‘‘share
essential elements’’ with the Order’s
requirement—not that they be identical.
Moreover, the Department notes that
four of the States included in the first
option (Alaska, California, Hawaii, and
New York) do already require wage
statements to have the rate-of-pay
information.88 Thus, contractors that
have workers in those States will
already need to include the rate of pay
in their wage statements to comply with
88 For Alaska’s wage-statement requirements, see
8 AAC 15.160(h); for California, see Labor Code sec.
226(a); for Hawaii, see HRS sec. 387–6(c); and for
New York, see NY Labor Law, art. 6, sec. 195(3).
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State law—regardless of the
Department’s definition in this
Guidance.
The Department disagrees with
comments by Ogletree Deakins
encouraging the Department to adopt
both options. Adopting both options
would mean effectively adopting the
second option, which the Department
has deemed to be not as transparent.
The Department also declines to allow
contractors ‘‘to design their own
substantially similar wage statements
that will comply’’ with the Order, as
this would likely result in a variety of
wage-statement content, and the
provision would then be difficult to
administer. Moreover, the Order does
not give the Department authority to
allow contractors to design their own
wage statements for purposes of
satisfying the Order’s ‘‘substantially
similar’’ criteria; thus, this specific
suggestion is outside the scope of the
final Guidance.
The Chamber requested clarification
regarding whether complying with a
State requirement (e.g., the California
State requirement) means that the
contractor has met the Federal
requirement for all employees or just
employees in that State. The
Department believes that as long as the
contractor complies with the wagestatement requirements of any of the
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States, the contractor will be in
compliance with the final rule. For
example, if a contractor has workers in
California and Nevada, the contractor
will comply with the final FAR rule if
it provides to workers in both States the
same wage statements as long as the
statements adhere to California State
law.89 In other words, the contractor
would be in compliance with the final
rule if it adopts the wage-statement
requirements of any particular State or
locality in the list of Substantially
Similar Wage Payment States in which
the contractor has workers, and applies
this model for its workers elsewhere.
The Department disagrees with
NAM’s comment opposing
implementation of any wage-statement
requirement until the Department has
specifically identified ‘‘the so-called
‘substantially equivalent’ state and local
laws’’ and provided an opportunity to
comment. This comment may have
conflated (1) the Department’s duty
under section 5(a) of the Order to
identify State and local wage-statement
laws that are ‘‘substantially similar’’ to
89 California is among the States included in the
list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment States,
while Nevada requires minimal information in the
wage statement provided to workers.
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the Order’s wage-statement requirement
with (2) the Department’s duty under
section 2(a) of the Order to identify the
State laws that are ‘‘equivalent’’ to the
14 Federal labor laws and Executive
orders for which violations must be
disclosed.
Finally, the Department received
many substantive comments related to
the two options discussing whether
certain State and local requirements are
substantially similar to the Order’s
wage-statement requirement. The
Department developed this final
Guidance based on a careful review of
the comments received.
7. Request To Delay Effective Date
One employer advocate suggested that
the Department and the FAR Council
allow Federal contractors time to
comply with the wage-statement
provisions. The commenter noted that,
in the short term, contractors will have
to devise manual wage statements to
comply with the Order until automated
systems are able to generate compliant
wage statements. Citing the
Department’s Home Care rule regarding
the application of the FLSA to domestic
service, see 78 FR 60454 (Oct. 1, 2013),
which had an effective date 15 months
after the publication of the final rule,
the commenter recommended that
contractors be provided at least 12 to 15
months within which to comply with
the wage-statement requirement.
The FAR Council Rule provides that
the paycheck transparency requirements
are effective on January 1, 2017. See
FAR 22.2007(d). The Department
believes that this delay provides a
reasonable length of time and is
sufficient for contractors to update their
systems to comply with the wagestatement provision. Further delaying
the effective date of the wage-statement
provision is not warranted. As
discussed above, the Order’s wagestatement requirement is deemed
fulfilled where a contractor complies
with a State law that the Department has
determined to be ‘‘substantially
similar.’’ And, in States with wagestatement laws that are not substantially
similar to the Order’s requirements,
contractors will need only to
supplement the wage statements already
provided pursuant to State law in order
to conform to the Order’s requirements.
Moreover, the Department’s
enforcement experience has shown that
many employers, including Federal
contractors, in the small minority of
States that do not require wage
statements have opted to provide wage
statements to their workers as part of
their general payroll practice. A
contractor in these States may choose
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58709
either to include in the wage statements
all of the information required by the
Order, or follow the wage-statement
requirements of any of the Substantially
Similar Wage Payment States in which
it has employees. Finally, as discussed
above, all of the information required to
be included in the wage statement
consists of items that contractors
already maintain as part of their normal
recordkeeping obligations and general
bookkeeping or payroll practices. The
provisions of the wage-statement
requirement, in large part, require
contractors only to fine-tune the wage
statements they already provide to
workers to include any additional
required information.
8. FLSA Exempt-Status Notification
According to the Order, the wage
statement provided to workers who are
exempt from the overtime pay
provisions of the FLSA ‘‘need not
include a record of hours worked if the
contractor informs the individuals of
their exempt status.’’ Order, section 5(a).
Because such workers do not have to be
paid overtime under the FLSA, hoursworked information need not be
included in the wage statement. See 80
FR 30592. Thus, if the contractor
determines that a worker is exempt from
overtime pay under the FLSA and
intends to not include the worker’s
hours-worked information on the wage
statement provided to the worker,
notification of the worker’s exempt
status must be provided to the worker
first.
The Department suggested in its
Proposed Guidance that in order to
exclude the hours-worked information
in the wage statement, the contractor
would have to provide a written notice
to the worker stating that the worker is
exempt from the FLSA’s overtime pay
requirements; oral notice would not be
not sufficient. 80 FR 30592. The final
FAR rule provides that such notices of
exempt status must be in writing. FAR
52.222–60. The Department further
proposed that if the contractor regularly
provides documents to workers
electronically, the document informing
the worker of his or her exempt status
may also be provided electronically if
the worker can access it through a
computer, device, system, or network
provided or made available by the
contractor. 80 FR 30592. The FAR
Council adopted this proposal regarding
electronic notice in its final rule. See
FAR 52.222–60. Finally, the proposals
suggested that if a significant portion of
the contractor’s workforce is not fluent
in English, the document provided
notifying the worker of exempt status
must also be in the language(s) other
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than English in which the significant
portion(s) of the workforce is
fluent.90 See 80 FR 30592. The FAR
Council adopted this translation
requirement in its final rule. See FAR
52.222–60.
The Department received comments
regarding the following issues related to
FLSA exempt status: Type and
frequency of the notice, differing
interpretations by the courts regarding
exemptions under the FLSA, and
phased-in implementation.
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a. Type and Frequency of the Notice
covered contract, or in the worker’s first
wage statement under the contract. See
52.222–60(b)(3). After carefully
reviewing the comments received, the
Department believes that this
requirement is sufficient. If during
performance of the contract, the
contractor determines that the worker’s
status has changed from non-exempt to
exempt (for example, because of a
change in the worker’s pay, duties, or
both), it must provide notice to the
worker either (a) prior to providing a
wage statement without hours worked
information or (b) in the first wage
statement after the change. See id. The
notice must be in writing; oral notice is
not sufficient. See id. The notice can be
a stand-alone document or be included
in the offer letter, employment contract,
position description, or wage statement
provided to the worker. See id.
The Department does not believe it is
necessary to require a contractor to
include the exempt-status information
on each wage statement. Although it is
permissible to provide notice on each
wage statement, it is also permissible to
provide the notice one time before any
work on the covered contract is
performed or one time upon a change
from non-exempt to exempt status
during the performance of the contract.
If the contractor provides such a onetime notice, there is no need to provide
notice in each wage statement. If the
worker’s status later changes from
exempt to non-exempt, no notice of the
change is required under the Order, but
the contractor must thereafter include
hours worked information on the wage
statements provided to the worker.
One labor union commented that the
contractor should be excused from
recording the overtime hours worked in
the wage statement only if the worker is
correctly classified as exempt from the
FLSA’s overtime pay requirements. The
commenter also recommended that
workers should be informed of their
exempt status on each wage statement.
An employer-advocate requested
clarification on whether the exemptstatus notice should be provided once
(e.g., in a written offer of employment)
or on a recurring basis (e.g., on each
wage statement).
With regard to the labor union’s
comment on the importance of correctly
determining the exempt status of a
worker under the FLSA, the Department
agrees that employers should correctly
classify their workers, but does not
changes the Guidance in the manner
suggested. An employer who claims an
exemption from the FLSA is responsible
for ensuring that the exemption applies.
See Donovan v. Nekton, Inc., 703 F.2d
1148, 1151 (9th Cir. 1983). However, the
fact that an employer provides the
exempt-status notice to a worker does
not mean that the worker is necessarily
classified correctly. The Department
will not consider the notice provided by
the contractor to the worker as
determinative of or even relevant to the
worker’s exempt status under the FLSA.
Therefore, the FAR has clarified that a
contractor may not in its exempt-status
notice to a worker indicate or suggest
that the Department or the courts agree
with the contractor’s determination that
the worker is exempt. See 52.222–
60(b)(3). The Department has modified
the Guidance to reflect this clarification.
With regard to the type of notice to be
provided to the worker and how often
it should be provided, the final FAR
rule requires that contractors provide
notice to workers one time before the
worker performs any work under a
One industry commenter stated that it
would not be prudent to require
employers to report on the exempt or
non-exempt status of workers where
there is disagreement among the courts
on who is and who is not exempt under
the FLSA. The commenter noted that,
for example, while two Circuit Courts
have held that service advisors are
exempt ‘‘salesmen’’ under section
13(b)(10)(A) of the FLSA, the Ninth
Circuit disagreed and found that the
exemption is inapplicable to service
advisors. See, e.g., Navarro v. Encino
Motorcars, LLC, 780 F.3d 1267 (9th Cir.
2015).91
The Department understands that
some court decisions regarding the
exemption status of certain workers
90 Translation requirements are also discussed
below in the context of the independent contractor
notice, in section VII(B)(5) of the section-by-section
analysis.
91 The Supreme Court has since vacated the Ninth
Circuit’s decision and remanded the case for further
proceedings. See https://www.supremecourt.gov/
opinions/15pdf/15–415_mlho.pdf.
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b. Differing Interpretations by the Courts
of an Exemption Under the FLSA
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under the FLSA may not be fully
consistent. The Department, however,
does not find this to be a persuasive
reason to relieve contractors from
providing the exempt-status notice to
employees. Regardless of any
inconsistency in court decisions,
contractors already must make decisions
about whether to classify their
employees as exempt or non-exempt
under the FLSA in order to determine
whether to pay them overtime. Such
determinations are based on the facts of
each particular situation, the statute,
relevant regulations, guidance from the
Department, and advice from counsel.
In addition, in making these
determinations, contractors already
must consider any inconsistent court
decisions.
The Order does not change this status
quo. Under the Order, the contractor
retains the authority and responsibility
to determine whether to claim an
exemption under the FLSA. All that is
required under the Order is notice to the
workers of the status that the employer
has already determined. And such
notice is only required if the employer
wishes to provide workers with a wage
statement that does not contain the
worker’s hours worked.
c. Request To Delay Implementation of
the Exempt-Status Notice
One industry association suggested
that compliance with the exempt-status
notice requirements be postponed until
the Department has finalized its
proposal to update the regulations
defining the ‘‘white collar’’ exemptions
under section 13(a)(1) of the FLSA. See
80 FR 38515 (July 6, 2015); https://www.
dol.gov/whd/overtime/NPRM2015/. The
white-collar exemptions define which
executive, administrative, and
professional employees are exempt from
the FLSA’s minimum wage and
overtime pay protections. See 29 CFR
part 541.
The Department believes that such a
delay is unnecessary. The Department
published its final rule updating the
white-collar exemption regulations on
May 23, 2016, see 81 FR 32391, and all
employers covered by the FLSA will
continue to make determinations of
FLSA exempt status both before and
after the update to the regulations
becomes effective on December 1, 2016,
see id. The Order does not affect this
continuing obligation. The only new
obligation under the Order is to provide
notice to employees of the
determination that the contractor has
already made—and only if the
contractor wishes to provide employees
with a wage statement without a record
of hours worked. Because contractors
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will need to make exempt-status
determinations regardless of any
requirements under the Order, the
Department finds the argument that the
Order’s requirements be delayed for this
reason to be unwarranted. 92
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B. Independent Contractor Notice
Section 5(b) of the Order states that if
a contractor treats an individual
performing work under a covered
contract as an independent contractor,
then the contractor must provide ‘‘a
document informing the individual of
this [independent contractor] status.’’
Order, section 5(b). Contractors have to
incorporate this same provision into
covered subcontracts. See FAR 52.222–
60(f).
The proposed FAR Council rule
specified that the notice informing the
individual of his or her independent
contractor status must be provided
before the individual performs any work
on the contract. 80 FR 30572. As the
Department noted in the Proposed
Guidance, the notice must be in writing
and provided separately from any
independent contractor agreement
entered into between the contractor and
the individual. See 80 FR 30593. The
Proposed Guidance also noted that if the
contractor regularly provides documents
to its workers electronically, the notice
may also be provided electronically if
the worker can access it via a computer,
device, system, or network provided or
made available by the contractor. Id.
The Proposed Guidance further stated
that the provision of the notice to a
worker informing the worker that he or
she is an independent contractor does
not mean that the worker is correctly
classified as an independent contractor
under the applicable laws. 80 FR 30593.
The determination of whether a worker
is an independent contractor under a
particular law remains governed by that
law’s definition of ‘‘employee’’ and the
law’s standards for determining which
workers are independent contractors
and not employees. See id.
The Department received comments
from several unions and other employee
advocates that were supportive of the
Order’s independent contractor notice
provisions. In contrast, several industry
advocates commented that aspects of
the independent contractor notice
requirement need to be clarified. The
Department has organized the
comments in the corresponding sections
below.
92 As discussed in section VII(A)(7) of the
Guidance, the final FAR rule delays the effective
date of the Order’s paycheck transparency
provisions generally until January 1, 2017.
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1. Clarifying the Information in the
Notice
The Department received comments
requesting clarification of the
information that should be included in
the independent contractor notice.
Several employee advocates
recommended that the document also
notify the worker that, as an
independent contractor, he or she is not
entitled to overtime pay under the
FLSA, is not covered by worker’s
compensation or unemployment
insurance, and is responsible for the
payment of relevant employment taxes.
One employee advocate
recommended that the notice include a
statement notifying the worker that the
contractor’s designation of a worker as
an independent contractor does not
mean that the worker is correctly
classified as an independent contractor
under the applicable law. Several
commenters suggested that the notice
also include information regarding
which agency to contact if the worker
has questions about being designated as
an independent contractor or needs
other types of assistance. One labor
union also recommended that the
Department establish a toll-free hotline
that provides more information on
misclassification of employees as
independent contractors or tools to
challenge the independent contractor
classification.
One industry commenter suggested
that the FAR Council or the Department
publish a model independent contractor
notice with recommended language.
Another industry commenter requested
more detailed guidance on what the
independent contractor notice should
include.
As discussed above, section 5(b) of
the Order requires that the worker be
informed in writing by the contractor if
the worker is to be classified as an
independent contractor and not an
employee. Thus, the final FAR rule
clarifies that the notice must be in
writing and provided separately from
any independent contractor agreement
entered into between the contractor and
the individual. See FAR 52.222–
60(d)(1)).
The Order, however, does not require
the provision of the additional
information suggested by commenters.
The Department believes that notifying
the worker of his or her status as an
independent contractor satisfies the
Order’s requirement. Providing such
notice enables workers to evaluate their
status as independent contractors and
raise any concerns. The objective is to
minimize disruptions to contract
performance and resolve pay issues
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58711
early and efficiently. If the worker has
questions or concerns regarding the
particular determination, then he or she
can raise such questions with the
contractor and/or contact the
appropriate government agency for more
information or assistance.
As stated above, the fact that a
contractor has provided a worker with
notice that he or she is an independent
contractor does not mean that the
worker is correctly classified as an
independent contractor. A contractor
may not in its notice to a worker
indicate or suggest that any enforcement
agency or court agrees with the
contractor’s determination that the
worker is an independent contractor.
See FAR 52.222–60(d)(1). The
Department will not consider the notice
when determining whether a worker is
an independent contractor or employee
under the laws that it enforces.
With regard to comments
recommending that the Department
establish a hotline that provides
information on issues involving
misclassification of employees as
independent contractors, the relevant
agencies within the Department already
have toll-free helplines that workers and
contractors can access to obtain this
type of information and for general
assistance. Members of the public, for
example, can call the Wage and Hour
Division’s toll-free helpline at 1(866)
4US–WAGE (487–9243), the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration at 1(800) 321–OSHA
(6742), the Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs at 1(800) 397–
6251. The National Labor Relations
Board can be reached at 1(866) 667–
NLRB, and the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission can be
reached at 1(800) 669–4000. Moreover,
the enforcement agencies’ respective
Web sites contain helpful information
regarding employee misclassification.
With regard to comments requesting a
sample independent contractor notice,
the Department does not believe it is
necessary to create a template notice.
The Department expects that any notice
will explicitly inform the worker that
the contractor has made a decision to
classify the workers as an independent
contractor.
2. Independent Contractor
Determination
Several industry commenters
suggested that the Department clarify
which statute should provide the basis
for determining independent-contractor
status for purposes of the Order’s
requirement. These commenters noted
that the Proposed Guidance stated that
the determination of whether a worker
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is an independent contractor or
employee under a particular law
remains governed by that law’s
definition of ‘‘employee.’’ See 80 FR
30593. The commenters stated that they
are uncertain as to what definition
should be used in determining whether
a worker is an employee or independent
contractor.
The Department does not believe that
it is necessary or appropriate to pick one
specific definition of ‘‘employee’’ for the
Order’s independent-contractor notice
requirement. Employers already make a
determination of whether a worker is an
employee (or an independent
contractor) whenever they hire a
worker. The Order does not affect this
responsibility; it only requires the
contractor to provide the worker with
notice of the determination that the
contractor has made. If the contractor
has determined that the worker is an
independent contractor, then the
employer must provide the notice.
3. Frequency of the Independent
Contractor Notice
The Department received comments
regarding the number of times an
individual who is classified as an
independent contractor and engaged to
perform work on several covered
contracts should receive notice of his or
her independent contractor status. Two
industry commenters, for example,
noted that an independent contractor
who provides services on multiple
covered contracts on an intermittent
basis could receive dozens of identical
notices, resulting in redundancy and
inefficiencies. Other industry
commenters believed that providing
multiple notices for the same work
performed on different covered
contracts is burdensome and
unnecessary. Two industry commenters
suggested that an independent
contractor agreement between the
relevant parties should satisfy the
Order’s independent contractor notice
requirement.
The final FAR rule provides that the
notice informing the individual of his or
her independent contractor status must
be provided at the time that an
independent contractor relationship is
established with the individual or
before he or she performs any work
under the contract. FAR 52.222–
60(d)(1). The FAR Council has also
clarified in its final rule that contractors
must provide the independent
contractor notice to the worker for each
covered contract on which the
individual is engaged to perform work
as an independent contractor. See id.
The Guidance reflects this clarification.
The Department agrees that there may
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be circumstances where a worker who
performs work on more than one
covered contract would receive more
than one independent contractor notice.
The Department, however, believes that
because the determination of
independent contractor status is based
on the circumstances of each particular
case, it is reasonable to require that the
notice be provided on a contract-bycontract basis even where the worker is
engaged to perform the same type of
work. It is certainly possible that the
facts may change on any of the covered
contracts such that the work performed
requires a different status
determination. Moreover, if the
contractor determines that a worker’s
status while performing work on a
covered contract changes from
employee to independent contractor
(because the nature of the relationship
between the worker and contractor
changes), the contractor must provide
the worker with notice of independent
contractor status before the worker
performs any work under the contract as
an independent contractor. See id. If a
contractor provides a worker on a
covered contract with an independent
contractor notice and later determines
that the worker’s status under that
contract has changed to that of an
employee, no notice of the change is
required under the Order.
4. Workers Employed by Staffing
Agencies
The Department received several
comments regarding contractors that use
temporary workers employed by staffing
agencies and whether these contractors
must provide such workers with a
document notifying them that they are
independent contractors. NAM believed
that in such cases, ‘‘temporary workers
are neither independent contractors nor
employees of the contractor.’’ Several
industry commenters suggested that the
final Guidance clarify that contractors
would not be required to provide notice
of independent contractor status to
temporary workers who are employees
of a staffing agency or similar entity, but
not of the contractor. Some of these
commenters also recommended that the
independent contractor status notice be
given only to those workers to whom
the contractor provides an IRS Form
1099.
In situations where contractors use
temporary workers employed by staffing
agencies to perform work on Federal
contracts, the contract with the staffing
agency may be a covered subcontract
under the Order. Section 5 of the Order
requires that the independent contractor
status notice requirement be
incorporated into subcontracts of
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$500,000 or more. See Order, section
5(a). If the contract with the staffing
agency is a covered subcontract, and the
staffing agency treats the workers as
employees, then no notices would be
required. If the contract with the staffing
agency is a covered subcontract, and the
staffing agency treats the workers as
independent contractors, then the
staffing agency (not the contractor) is
required to provide the workers with
notice of their independent contractor
status.93
The Department disagrees with
comments suggesting that the contractor
should provide independent contractor
notices only to those workers to whom
the contractor already provides an IRS
Form 1099. Employers use a Form
1099–MISC to report, among other
items, ‘‘payments made in the course of
a trade or business to a person who is
not an employee or to an
unincorporated business.’’ 94 The Order
does not limit the requirement to
provide the independent contractor
notice to workers who receive a Form
1099–MISC. To the extent the contractor
has classified an individual as an
independent contractor for Federal
employment tax purposes and provides
the individual a Form 1099–MISC, the
contractor must provide the individual
with the independent-contractor status
notice. The Department, however,
declines to interpret the Order as
limiting the universe of workers who
should receive an independent
contractor notice to only those workers
to whom the contractor already provides
a Form 1099.
5. Translation Requirements
The FAR Council’s proposed
regulations required that if a significant
portion of the contractor’s workforce is
not fluent in English, the document
notifying a worker of the contractor’s
determination that the worker is an
independent contractor, and the wage
statements to be provided to the worker,
must also be in the language(s) other
than English in which the significant
portion of the workforce is ‘‘more
93 When using a staffing agency, a contractor
should consider whether it jointly employs the
workers under applicable laws. The Department
recently issued guidance under the FLSA and
MSPA for determining joint employment. See ‘‘Joint
employment under the Fair Labor Standards Act
and the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker
Protection Act,’’ https://www.dol.gov/whd/flsa/
Joint_Employment_AI.pdf.
94 See ‘‘Form 1099–MISC & Independent
Contractors,’’ https://www.irs.gov/Help-&Resources/Tools-&-FAQs/FAQs-for-Individuals/
Frequently-Asked-Tax-Questions-&-Answers/SmallBusiness,-Self-Employed,-Other-Business/Form1099–MISC-&-Independent-Contractors/Form-1099–
MISC-&-Independent-Contractors (last visited July
22, 2016).
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familiar.’’ 80 FR 30572. The FAR
Council’s final rule provides a
translation requirement. FAR 52.222–
60(e)(1).
The Department received comments
requesting clarification regarding what
would constitute a ‘‘significant portion’’
of the workforce sufficient to trigger the
translation requirement. One industry
commenter stated that the final
Guidance should set a specific
threshold. Another stated that the
translation requirement is unnecessary
and should be removed. One labor
union commenter recommended that
the term ‘‘significant portion’’ of the
workforce be defined as 10 percent or
more of the workforce under the
covered contract.
One industry commenter, AGC,
posited a situation where there are
various foreign languages spoken in the
workplace. AGC requested clarification
regarding whether the contractor would
be required to provide the wage
statement and the independent
contractor notice to workers in every
language that is spoken by workers not
fluent in English. AGC suggested that
the wage-statement translation
requirement be revised such that the
contractor need only provide the wage
statement in English and ‘‘in each other
language in which a significant portion
of the workforce is fluent.’’
With regard to translating the
independent contractor notice, AGC
recommended that this requirement
apply only when the company is aware
that the worker is not fluent in English.
Another industry commenter also stated
that it would not be sensible to require
contractors to provide notice in Spanish
to an independent contractor who only
speaks English simply because a
significant portion of the contractor’s
workforce is fluent in Spanish. AGC
further advocated that, instead of
including the complete translation in
each wage statement or independent
contractor notice for each worker,
contractors should be allowed to
provide only a Web site address where
the translations are posted.
After carefully reviewing the
comments, the Department declines to
provide a specific threshold interpreting
what would constitute a ‘‘significant
portion’’ of the workforce sufficient to
trigger the translation requirement. The
Department notes that this requirement
is similar to regulatory requirements
implementing two of the Labor Laws,
the FMLA, 29 CFR 825.300(a)(4), and
MSPA, 29 CFR 500.78. The term
‘‘significant portion’’ has not been
defined under these regulations, and the
lack of a definition or bright-line test
has not prevented employers from
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Jkt 238001
complying with the requirement. For
these reasons, the term is not defined in
the final Guidance.
The Department agrees with AGC’s
suggestion about workplaces where
multiple languages are spoken. Where a
significant portion of the workforce is
not fluent in English, the Department
believes that the contractor should
provide independent-contractor notices
to workers in each language in which a
significant portion of the workforce is
fluent. However, the Department does
not agree with AGC’s suggestion that it
will be sufficient in all cases to provide
a Web site address where the translated
notice would be posted. Where workers
are not fluent in English, providing a
link to a Web site for the translation
would be ineffective at providing the
required notice.
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-in of
Requirements
The effective date of the FAR
Council’s final rule is October 25, 2016.
The Department received various
comments related to the effective date of
the Order’s requirements. These
commenters expressed two general
concerns: First, about the burden of the
disclosure requirements and the need
for time to implement the necessary
systems to track Labor Law violations;
and second, about fairness related to the
consideration of Labor Law violations
that occurred before the effective date of
the FAR rule. As discussed below, the
FAR Council is phasing in the effective
date of the disclosure requirements to
address these concerns. The Department
has created a separate section of the
Guidance, section VIII, that contains a
summary of the relevant provisions.
Phase-in of Disclosure Requirements
Multiple industry commenters
expressed concern that contractors
would not have time to be prepared for
the implementation of the FAR rule
unless the effective date of the rule is
delayed. One commenter specifically
expressed concern that existing
contractor staff are not equipped to
gather and report all violations. Another
expressed concern specifically about the
difficulty for prime contractors of
making responsibility determinations
for their subcontractors, and requested
that subcontractor disclosure
requirements be phased in over the
course of 5 years.
In response to these concerns, the
FAR Council has staggered the phase in
of the Order’s core disclosure
requirements. From the October 25,
2016 effective date to April 24, 2017, the
Order’s prime-contractor disclosure
requirements will apply only to
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58713
solicitations with an estimated value of
$50 million or more, and resultant
contracts. FAR 22.2007(a) and (c)(1).
After April 24, 2017, the primecontractor disclosure requirements will
apply to all solicitations greater than
$500,000—which is the amount
specified in the Order—and resultant
contracts. Id. 22.2007(a) and (c)(2);
Order, section 2(a). This also applies to
the commercial items equivalent for
prime contractors, at FAR 52.212–3(s).
The subcontractor disclosure
requirements are further staggered; they
are not effective for the first year of
operation of the FAR rule implementing
the Order. While the rule overall is
effective on October 25, 2016, the
subcontractor disclosure requirements
are not effective until October 25, 2017.
See FAR 22.2007(b). This phasing in of
the requirements is discussed in the
new ‘‘Effective date and phase-in of
requirements’’ section of the Guidance.
‘‘Retroactivity’’ of Disclosure
Requirement
With regard to the concern about
fairness of disclosing violations prior to
the effective date of the FAR rule, a
number of commenters expressed
concern that the 3-year disclosure
period will require contractors to
‘‘retroactively’’ disclose Labor Law
violations during the rule’s first years of
operation. For example, the HR Policy
Association argued that it is
‘‘fundamentally unfair’’ to require
contractors to disclose violations Labor
Law decisions that were rendered prior
to the effective date of the Order and
that any disclosure ‘‘should be only
prospective in nature.’’ The Section of
Public Contract Law of the American
Bar Association (PCL Section)
recommended that the disclosure
requirement be phased-in and that only
decisions after the disclosure
requirement’s effective date be
disclosed. According to the PCL
Section, a phase-in of the 3-year
disclosure period would allow
‘‘contractors the opportunity to put
systems in place’’ and would give ‘‘the
federal procurement process time to
adapt[.]’’
The Department agrees that the
requirement to look back 3 years when
disclosing Labor Law decisions should
be phased-in, and the FAR Council’s
final rule provides for such a phase-in.
See FAR 55.222–57(c)(1)–(2), 55.222–
58(b). This 3-year disclosure period is
being phased in so that contractors will
not disclose any decisions that were
rendered against them prior to October
25, 2015. In the language of the FAR,
disclosures of Labor Law violations
must be made for decisions rendered
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during ‘‘the period beginning on
October 25, 2015 to the date of the offer,
or for 3 years preceding the date of the
offer, whichever period is shorter.’’ Id.
55.222–57(c)(1)–(2), 55.222–58(b). Thus,
full implementation of the 3-year
disclosure period will not be reached
until October 25, 2018. As a result of
this phase-in, contractors will not
disclose Labor Law decisions that were
rendered against them more than 1 year
prior to the effective date of the FAR
rule.95
Phased Implementation of Equivalent
State Laws
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The Order directs the Department to
define the State laws that are equivalent
to the 14 identified Federal labor laws
and Executive orders. Order, section
2(a)(i)(O). Contractors are required to
disclose violations of these equivalent
State laws, in addition to the 14 Federal
laws and orders. See id. In the Proposed
Guidance, the Department proposed that
OSHA-approved State Plans should be
considered equivalent State laws for
purposes of the Order, and stated that
the Department would identify
additional equivalent State laws in a
second guidance to be published in the
Federal Register at a later date. See 80
FR 30574, 30579.
Several commenters expressed
concern with this proposed phased
implementation and argued that the
Guidance is incomplete without
identification of all equivalent State
laws. A number of them argued that
without knowing all of the equivalent
State laws, employers are unable to
estimate the costs associated with
implementing the Order, including the
disclosure requirements. One
commenter asserted that by failing to
identify equivalent State laws, the
Proposed Guidance ignored the costs of
tracking and disclosing violations of
potentially hundreds of additional laws
and the potential costs of entering into
labor compliance agreements with
respect to those additional laws. Some
industry commenters called for a delay
of the implementation of the Order’s
requirements until guidance identifying
the equivalent State laws is issued.
NAM requested that the second
guidance not be issued at all because the
requirement will be ‘‘unworkable.’’
Several employee advocates, in contrast,
95 As discussed above, the date on which the
Labor Law decision was rendered—not the date of
the underlying conduct—controls whether a
decision must be disclosed. Therefore, even with
the phase in of the disclosure requirements, a
contractor may still need to disclose Labor Law
decisions for which the underlying conduct
occurred more than 1 year prior to the effective date
of the FAR rule.
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encouraged the Department to issue the
second guidance ‘‘swiftly’’ before the
end of 2015.
The Department has considered these
comments and declines to modify the
Guidance as suggested. The final
Guidance reiterates that the Department
will identify the equivalent State laws
in addition to OSHA-approved State
plans in a second guidance published in
the Federal Register at a later date. The
Department notes that the future
guidance and accompanying FAR
rulemaking on equivalent State laws
will themselves be subject to notice and
comment, and the rulemaking will
address any additional economic
burden resulting from the addition of
equivalent State laws to the list of laws
for which violations must be disclosed.
While the Department believes that
contractors may incur some limited
costs when adjusting compliance
tracking systems to track violations of
any newly-identified State laws, the
Department believes such costs will be
de minimis. In contrast, delaying
implementation of the entirety of the
Order’s disclosure requirements until
the subsequent rulemaking would have
negative consequences on economy and
efficiency of Federal contracting by
allowing contractors who have
unsatisfactory records of compliance
with the 14 Federal labor laws
identified in the Order, and OSHAapproved State Plans, to secure new
contracts in the interim.
Paycheck Transparency Provisions
The final FAR rule implementing the
paycheck transparency provisions
specifies that contracting officers will be
required to insert the paycheck
transparency contract clause into
covered contracts beginning on January
1, 2017. FAR 22.2007(d). This delayed
effective date is included in the final
Guidance.
IX. Other Comments
A. Public Availability of Disclosures and
Assessment Information
Concerns about the accuracy of the
information that contractors will
disclose were the basis of a number of
requests from commenters that the
information disclosed be made publicly
available. Many unions and workeradvocacy groups suggested that the
information disclosed by contractors
pursuant to the Order’s requirements be
made available in a database or Web
page that is accessible to the public and
easy to use. Commenters argued that
making this information public will
help ensure that the contractors disclose
their entire legal record and interested
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parties are able to spot incomplete or
inaccurate disclosures.96 For some of
these commenters, public disclosure
requirements are essential to effective
third-party involvement, which in their
view is the most effective means to
capture contractor misrepresentations or
ongoing violations. Several commenters
stated that making information publicly
available is key in ensuring
transparency in the process. A group of
labor and employment lawyers stated
that
[r]esponsible contractors should welcome
greater transparency and accountability
because it will ensure that they do not face
unfair competition from companies that cut
corners by cheating their workers or ignoring
important health-and-safety obligations.97
In contrast, industry commenters
believed that the disclosure
requirements are already too public.
They suggested that protections be put
in place to protect confidential and
proprietary information in disclosures
made by contractors pursuant to the
Order’s requirements. Several also
suggested that any information
disclosed by contractors and made
publicly available should be redacted to
remove any personally identifiable
information. A few commenters were
concerned that the release of
information disclosed by contractors
would have a negative effect on a
contractor’s business and reputation,
especially if there are errors in the data
presented, and as such, these
commenters requested that the
Department or the FAR establish a
means of correcting information made
publicly available.
The Department believes that the final
FAR rule provides a reasonable balance
between these two opposing views. The
final FAR rule distinguishes between
the required Labor Law decision
disclosures and the optional additional
relevant information that a contractor
can submit to demonstrate its
responsibility. The required initial
representation and disclosure of limited
information about each Labor Law
96 Similarly, some of these commenters expressed
concern that OSHA’s public database of violations
does not include, or does not include enough
information about, violations of section 11(c) of the
OSH Act. The Department notes that OSHA’s
database does include information about certain
11(c) cases, and it does include information from
some OSHA-approved State Plans about their
retaliation cases.
97 One commenter recommended that a list of the
companies undergoing responsibility reviews be
published and updated by the Department. Another
commenter proposed that each contracting agency
track and annually report to the Department
specific information regarding its contractors’
compliance with the Labor Laws. However, these
recommendations are beyond the Department’s
authority under the Order.
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decision is information that will be
publicly available in the Federal
Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System (FAPIIS). FAR
22.2004–2(b)(1)(i); id. 52.222–57(f).
Similarly, where a contractor enters into
a labor compliance agreement, the entry
will be noted in FAPIIS by the ALCA
and the fact that a labor compliance
agreement has been agreed to will be
public information. Id. 22.2004–2(b)(9).
The optional additional information that
a contractor provides, however, will
only be made public if the contractor
determines that it wants the information
to be made public. Id. 22.2004–
2(b)(1)(ii). The Department believes that
this strikes an appropriate balance; it
allows access to Labor Law decision
information so that the public can assist
in assuring full disclosure, while
protecting more sensitive information
about internal business practices.
With regard to the comments about
personally-identifiable information and
other confidential information, the
Department adds that information
disclosed by contractors pursuant to the
Order will—like any other information
submitted during the procurement
process—be subject to the protections of
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
and the Privacy Act. The Department
does not believe that the information
submitted should be made any more or
less publicly available than other
information already disclosed by
contractors as part of the contracting
process and responsibility
determinations. Although the Order’s
disclosure requirements may be new,
the disclosed information fits into an
existing process for making
responsibility determinations, and the
public availability of information
disclosed pursuant to the Order should
be the same as the public availability of
information that already must be
disclosed—which includes information
about violations of other laws,
organizational capacity, financing, and
other potentially sensitive or
confidential information.
B. Participation of Third-Parties
Many employee advocacy groups
urged the Department to provide more
specific guidance about the
participation of interested third-parties
in the processes required by the Order.
Several of these commenters suggested
that the Department provide further
specificity about how third-parties
should submit information about a
contractor’s Labor Law violations to
ALCAs for consideration when
assessing a contractor’s record. The
commenters identified parties that
might provide information as: The
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general public, worker representatives,
community groups, labor-management
cooperative committees, other
contractors, worker advocate groups,
and others. One commenter, NABTU,
warned that competitors should not be
considered ‘‘stakeholders’’ in this
process, ‘‘to avoid contractors using the
responsibility determination process to
undercut one another.’’
The Department agrees that the
participation of interested third-parties
is an important element of the effective
implementation of the Order. The Order
contemplates that information regarding
Labor Law violations will be ‘‘obtained
through other sources.’’ Order, section
2(b)(ii). The Department interprets this
term to include any other relevant
source—including employees, worker
representatives, community groups, and
the public. The Department finds no
reason to exclude competitors from this
process. Under longstanding Federal
procurement rules, ‘‘[c]ontracting
officers are ‘generally given wide
discretion’ in making responsibility
determinations and in determining the
amount of information that is required
to make a responsibility determination.’’
Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico
Garufi v. United States, 238 F.3d 1324,
1334–35 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (quotations
marks and citations omitted). The
Department does not believe that the
Order intended to limit the sources of
information that contracting officers
may consider—either during the
preaward or postaward process.
If an interested third party has
information about relevant Labor Law
decisions that it believes has not been
properly disclosed by a contractor, the
interested party is encouraged to
provide that information to the relevant
ALCA. The Department will maintain a
list of ALCAs, including the
Department’s ALCA, and their contact
information on its Web site at https://
www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces.
Relevant third-party information can
further inform ALCAs and help them
perform duties such as encouraging
prospective contractors with serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
violations to work with enforcement
agencies to address compliance
problems; providing input to past
performance evaluations; and notifying
agency suspending and debarring
officials when appropriate. However,
the Department notes, the amount of
information given out to the public
about ongoing procurements is limited
and controlled, see Procurement
Integrity Act, 41 U.S.C. Chapter 21, and
therefore contracting officers cannot
contact third parties during an ongoing
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58715
procurement to solicit information
about a prospective contractor.
Numerous worker-advocacy
organizations also suggested that ALCAs
and contracting officers should be
required to consult with worker
representatives during negotiation of a
labor compliance agreement. These
commenters observed that employees
have direct knowledge of working
conditions, and therefore that they and
their representatives can provide useful
input about what remedial measures
would be most effective and should be
included in a labor compliance
agreement. One worker advocacy
organization proposed that labor
compliance agreements should contain
a process for contracting officers to
receive third-party complaints about
grievances and Labor Law violations,
monitoring arrangements, or labor
compliance agreements. Several labor
organizations commented that
employees and their representatives
should be able to report compliance
problems to the ALCA or the
Department with protections against
retaliation.
The Department declines to modify
the Guidance to specifically require the
involvement of worker representatives
in the negotiation of labor compliance
agreements. As stated above, the FAR
rule contemplates that enforcement
agencies—not ALCAs or contracting
officers—will negotiate labor
compliance agreements with
contractors. Therefore, the enforcement
agencies will decide, based on their
policies and procedures, if they will
consult with or otherwise involve third
parties during negotiations of labor
compliance agreements.
The same is true of methods for third
parties to submit information about
adherence to a labor compliance
agreement. As discussed above in
section III(C) of this section-by-section
analysis, enforcement agencies will
determine the terms of each labor
compliance agreement on a case-by-case
basis, taking into consideration the
totality of the circumstances. Many
enhanced compliance agreements and
suspension-and-debarment
administrative agreements contain
auditing, monitoring, and whistleblower
protection mechanisms that are
intended to encourage employees and
others to provide information about
adherence to the agreement.
Enforcement agencies may include these
types of mechanisms in labor
compliance agreements, and may
provide information about adherence to
agreements to the relevant ALCAs. The
final FAR rule requires an ALCA to
consult with the Department as needed
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when verifying whether the contractor
is meeting the terms of the agreement,
see FAR 22.2004–3(b), through which
any information that enforcement
agencies have received from third
parties may be provided to the ALCA.
Conversely, if the ALCA has received
information from third parties, he or she
may provide that information to the
relevant enforcement agency.
C. Anti-Retaliation and Whistleblower
Protections for Reporting Information
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Several employee-advocacy
organizations expressed concerns that
contractor employees who report Labor
Law violations to ALCAs may be subject
to retaliation and suggested that workers
of contractors receive notice about antiretaliation and whistleblower
protections. The Northern California
Basic Crafts Alliance further requested
that a notice of Federal whistleblower
protections be included in all
documents that public officials are
required to complete under the Order
and its accompanying regulations. This
commenter also suggested that
government workers tasked with
carrying out the Order be provided such
notice.
The Department appreciates the
serious concern raised by these
commenters, but declines to make any
changes to the Guidance. The Order
does not provide for additional
protections for whistleblowers. The
Department notes, however, that Federal
law already provides whistleblower
protections to contractor employees
who report fraud or other violations of
the law related to Federal contracts. See,
e.g., 31 U.S.C. 3730(h) (the False Claims
Act), 10 U.S.C. 2409 (protecting
Department of Defense and NASA
whistleblowers from retaliation).
Whistleblower protection for contractor
employees is also covered in FAR
subpart 3.9. With regard to government
employees, the Notification and Federal
Employee Antidiscrimination and
Retaliation Act of 2002 (known as the
No Fear Act) requires that agencies
provide annual notice to Federal
employees, former Federal employees,
and applicants for Federal employment
of the rights and protections available
under Federal antidiscrimination and
whistleblower protection laws.
C. Summary of the Order’s Requirements
and Interaction With Existing
Requirements
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
A. Covered Contracts
B. Labor Law Decisions
1. Defining ‘‘Administrative Merits
Determination’’
2. Defining ‘‘Civil Judgment’’
3. Defining ‘‘Arbitral Award or Decision’’
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising
From the Same Underlying Violation
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
1. Initial Representation
2. Required Disclosures
3. Opportunity To Provide Additional
Relevant Information, Including
Mitigating Factors
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
1. Serious Violations
2. Repeated Violations
3. Willful Violations
4. Pervasive Violations
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and
Mitigating Factors
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor
of a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
2. Factors That Weigh Against a
Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor’s Record
of Labor Law Compliance
1. ALCA Recommendation
2. ALCA Analysis
IV. Postaward Disclosure Updates and
Assessment of Labor Law Violations
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
VI. Preassessment
VII. Paycheck Transparency
A. Wage Statement
B. Independent Contractor Notice
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of
Requirements
Appendix A: Serious Violations
Appendix B: Repeated Violations
Appendix C: Willful Violations
Appendix D: Pervasive Violations
Appendix E: Assessing Violations of the
Labor Laws
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Department of Labor (the
Department) issues this guidance
document (the Guidance) to assist the
Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council
(FAR Council) and Federal agencies in
the implementation of Executive Order
13673, Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces
(the Order), 79 FR 45309, as amended.98
Among other important directives, the
Order provides new instructions to
Federal agency contracting officers to
consider a Federal contractor’s
compliance with 14 identified Federal
labor laws and Executive orders and
equivalent State laws (collectively,
‘‘Labor Laws’’) as a part of the
Introduction
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
A. Statutory Requirements for Contracting
With Responsible Sources
B. Legal Authority
98 Executive Order 13673 was amended by
Executive Order 13683, December 11, 2014 (79 FR
75041, December 16, 2014) and Executive Order l
l (FR ll, [DATE]). This document provides
guidance for the Order as amended.
Guidance for Executive Order 13673,
‘‘Fair Pay Safe Workplaces’’
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determination of contractor
responsibility that Federal contracting
officers must undertake before awarding
a contract.
The Order directed the FAR Council
to issue regulations as necessary to
implement the new requirements and
processes. The Order also created
detailed implementation roles for the
Department, the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), and the General
Services Administration (GSA). These
agencies are implementing the Order in
stages, on a prioritized basis.
The Order gives the Department
several specific implementation and
coordination duties. The Order directs
the Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) to
develop guidance to define various
relevant terms, identify the State laws
that are equivalent to those Federal laws
covered by the Order, and specify which
State wage-statement requirements are
substantially similar to the Order’s
wage-statement requirement. The Order
also directs the Secretary to develop
processes for coordination between the
Department and newly-designated
agency labor compliance advisors
(ALCA) and processes by which
contracting officers and ALCAs may
give appropriate consideration to
determinations and agreements made by
Federal enforcement agencies.
This Guidance satisfies most of the
Department’s responsibilities for issuing
guidance, and the Department will
publish at a later date a second guidance
that satisfies its remaining
responsibilities. The second guidance
will be, as this Guidance was, submitted
for notice and comment, published in
the Federal Register, and accompanied
by a proposed amendment to the FAR
rule. The Department will likewise
submit for notice and comment and
publish any future updates to the
Guidance that will have a significant
effect beyond the operating procedures
of the Department or that will have a
significant cost or administrative impact
on contractors or offerors. The
Department will coordinate with the
FAR Council in determining whether
updates will have a significant cost or
administrative impact.
This Guidance contains the following
sections. Section I discusses the reasons
for the Order and summarizes its
requirements. Section II provides
guidance about the Order’s preaward
disclosure requirements and defines the
types of information that prime
contractors and subcontractors must
disclose under the Order. The Guidance
defines ‘‘administrative merits
determinations,’’ ‘‘civil judgments,’’ and
‘‘arbitral awards or decisions’’
(collectively, ‘‘Labor Law decisions’’).
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Section III explains how ALCAs
should assess Labor Law violations and
provide advice and analysis to
contracting officers during the preaward
process. The first part of section III deals
with how ALCAs should classify
violations, and it defines the
classification terms ‘‘serious,’’
‘‘repeated,’’ ‘‘willful,’’ and ‘‘pervasive’’
for purposes of the Order. The second
part of section III explains how ALCAs
should weigh a contractor’s violations,
including any potential mitigating
factors and factors that weigh against a
recommendation that the contractor has
a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. The third part explains the
process in the FAR rule for the ALCA
to provide advice and analysis to the
contracting officer about a contractor’s
record of Labor Law compliance,
including whether negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement is warranted.
Section IV provides guidance on the
disclosure and assessment process
during the postaward period. Section V
summarizes the process under the Order
for determining subcontractor
responsibility. Section VI sets out the
Department’s preassessment process to
help contractors come into compliance
before the contractor bids on a
solicitation. Section VII provides
guidance on the Order’s paycheck
transparency provisions. Section VIII
discusses the effective date and phasein of the Order’s requirements,
including the phase-in of the Order’s
requirement for disclosure of violations
of equivalent State laws.
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I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
The Order states that the Federal
Government will promote economy and
efficiency in procurement by
contracting with responsible sources
that comply with labor laws. See Order,
section 1. The Order seeks to increase
efficiency and cost savings in the work
performed by parties that contract with
the Federal Government by ensuring
that they understand and comply with
labor laws. See id.
Beyond their human costs, labor law
violations create risks to the timely,
predictable, and satisfactory delivery of
goods and services to the Federal
Government, and Federal agencies risk
poor performance by awarding contracts
to companies with histories of labor law
violations. Poor workplace conditions
lead to lower productivity and
creativity, increased workplace
disruptions, and increased workforce
turnover. For contracting agencies, this
means receipt of lower quality products
and services and increased risk of
project delays and cost overruns.
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Contracting agencies can reduce
execution delays and avoid other
complications by contracting with
contractors with track records of labor
law compliance—and by helping to
bring contractors with past violations
into compliance. Contractors that
consistently adhere to labor laws are
more likely to have workplace practices
that enhance productivity and to deliver
goods and services to the Federal
Government in a timely, predictable,
and satisfactory fashion.
Moreover, contractors who invest in
their workers’ safety and maintain a fair
and equitable workplace should not
have to compete with contractors who
offer lower bids—based on savings from
skirting labor laws—and then ultimately
deliver poor performance to taxpayers.
By contracting with employers who are
in compliance with labor laws, the
Federal Government can ensure that
taxpayers’ money supports jobs in
which workers have safe workplaces,
receive the family leave to which they
are entitled, get paid the wages they
have earned, and do not face unlawful
workplace discrimination.
A. Statutory Requirements for
Contracting With Responsible Sources
By statute, contracting agencies are
required to award contracts to
responsible sources only. See 10 U.S.C.
2305(b); 41 U.S.C. 3702(b), 3703. A
‘‘responsible source’’ means a
prospective contractor that, among other
things, ‘‘has a satisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics.’’ 41 U.S.C.
113(4). Part 9 of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) implements this
statutory ‘‘responsibility’’ requirement.
The FAR states that ‘‘[p]urchases shall
be made from, and contracts shall be
awarded to, responsible prospective
contractors only.’’ FAR 9.103(a).99 In
accordance with the statutory definition
of ‘‘responsible source,’’ the FAR states
that ‘‘[t]o be determined responsible, a
prospective contractor must . . . [h]ave
a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics . . . .’’ FAR 9.104–1(d).
Thus, for every procurement contract,
an agency contracting officer must
consider whether a contractor has a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics and then make an
affirmative determination of
responsibility—that the awardee is a
responsible source.
B. Legal Authority
The President issued the Order
pursuant to his authority under ‘‘the
99 The FAR can be found at title 48 of the Code
of Federal Regulations. Citations in this Guidance
to the FAR use format FAR [section] instead of 48
CFR [section].
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58717
Constitution and the laws of the United
States,’’ expressly including the Federal
Property and Administrative Services
Act (the Procurement Act), 40 U.S.C.
101 et seq. The Procurement Act
authorizes the President to ‘‘prescribe
policies and directives that the
President considers necessary to carry
out’’ the statutory purposes of ensuring
‘‘economical and efficient’’ government
procurement and administration of
government property. 40 U.S.C. 101,
121(a). The Order establishes that the
President considers the requirements
included in the Order to be necessary to
economy and efficiency in Federal
contracting. See Order, section 1.
The Order directs the Secretary to
define certain terms used in the Order
and to develop guidance ‘‘to assist
agencies’’ in implementing the Order’s
requirements. Order, sections 2(a)(i),
4(b). The Guidance does not bind
private parties or agency officials.
Rather, the Order directs the FAR
Council to issue the regulations
necessary to implement the new
requirements and processes. It is the
Order and the FAR Council regulations
that bind prospective contractors,
subcontractors, contracting officers, and
other agency officials—not the
Guidance. The Guidance is not a
regulation, and it does not amend or
supersede the Order or the FAR. Where
the Guidance uses mandatory language
such as ‘‘shall,’’ ‘‘must,’’ ‘‘required,’’ or
‘‘requirement,’’ it does so only to
describe the Department’s interpretation
of the regulatory requirements in the
FAR.
C. Summary of the Order’s
Requirements and Interaction With
Existing Requirements
The Order builds on the pre-existing
procurement system by instructing
Federal agency contracting officers to
consider a contractor’s Labor Law
violations, if any, as a factor in
determining if the contractor has a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics and may therefore be
found to be a responsible source eligible
for a contract award. See Order, section
2(a)(ii) and (iii). The Order’s
requirements are implemented through
Part 22 of the FAR, which requires
Federal agencies to include certain
contract clauses in covered contracts.
To facilitate the responsibility
determination, the Order provides that,
for all covered procurement contracts
(defined below in section II(A)), each
agency must require that the contractor
make an initial representation regarding
whether there have been any Labor Law
decisions rendered against the
contractor within the preceding 3-year
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period for violations of the 14 identified
Labor Laws. See Order, section 2(a)(i);
Guidance, section II (Preaward
disclosure requirements).
The 14 Federal labor laws or
Executive orders identified in the Order
are:
• The Fair Labor Standards Act
(FLSA);
• the Occupational Safety and Health
Act of 1970 (OSH Act);
• the Migrant and Seasonal
Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(MSPA);
• the National Labor Relations Act
(NLRA);
• 40 U.S.C. chapter 31, subchapter IV,
also known as the Davis-Bacon Act
(DBA);
• 41 U.S.C. chapter 67, also known as
the Service Contract Act (SCA);
• Executive Order 11246 of
September 24, 1965 (Equal Employment
Opportunity);
• section 503 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973;
• the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972
and the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974;
• the Family and Medical Leave Act
(FMLA);
• title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964 (Title VII);
• the Americans with Disabilities Act
of 1990 (ADA);
• the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA); and
• Executive Order 13658 of February
12, 2014 (Establishing a Minimum Wage
for Contractors).
Prior to an award, as a part of the
responsibility determination,
contractors with Labor Law decisions to
disclose must make an additional
disclosure of information about each
violation. See FAR 22.2004–1(a). In
addition, contracting officers must
provide contractors with an opportunity
to disclose any steps taken to correct
any disclosed violations or improve
compliance with the Labor Laws,
including any agreements entered into
with an enforcement agency. See Order,
section 2(a)(ii); Guidance, section
II(C)(3). Contracting officers, in
consultation with the relevant ALCA,
then must consider the information in
determining if a contractor is a
responsible source with a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics.
See Order, section 2(a)(iii); Guidance,
section III (Preaward assessment and
advice). ALCAs provide advice and
analysis to the contracting officer about
the contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance, including in some cases a
recommendation that the contractor
needs to enter into an agreement to
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implement appropriate remedial
measures or other actions to avoid
further violations (a labor compliance
agreement) or a recommendation that
the agency suspending and debarring
official should be notified. See FAR
22.2004–2(b).
Similar requirements apply to
subcontractors. See Order, section
2(a)(iv); FAR 52.222–59(c); Guidance,
section V (Subcontractor responsibility).
Contractors are bound by the contract
clause in their Federal award to require
subcontractors on covered subcontracts
to disclose any Labor Law decisions
rendered against the subcontractor
within the preceding 3-year period. See
FAR 52.222–59(c)(3). A subcontractor
with Labor Law decisions to disclose is
required to make this disclosure to the
Department, which provides the
subcontractor with advice regarding its
record of Labor Law compliance. See
FAR 52.222–59(c)(3)(ii), (c)(4)(ii)(C);
[Amended Order]. The subcontractor
then must provide the Department’s
advice to the contractor, which will use
that advice in determining whether the
subcontractor is a responsible source.
See FAR 52.222–59(c)(4)(ii)(C). The
contractor will (in most cases, before
awarding the subcontract) consider the
advice from the Department in
determining whether the subcontractor
is a responsible source that has a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. See id. 52.222–59(c)(2).
The Order’s disclosure requirement
continues after an award is made.
Semiannually during the performance of
the contract, contractors must update
the information provided about their
own Labor Law violations and obtain
the required information for covered
subcontracts. See Order, section 2(b)(i);
Guidance, section VI (Postaward
disclosure updates and assessment of
Labor Law violations). If a contractor
discloses information regarding Labor
Law violations during contract
performance, or similar information is
obtained through other sources, the
contracting officer, in consultation with
the ALCA, considers whether action is
necessary. See Order, section 2(b)(ii).
Such action may include requiring the
contractor to enter into a labor
compliance agreement, declining to
exercise an option on a contract,
terminating the contract in accordance
with relevant FAR provisions, or
referring the contractor to the agency
suspending and debarring official. See
id. If information regarding Labor Law
decisions rendered against a contractor’s
subcontractor is brought to the attention
of the contractor, then the contractor
shall similarly consider whether action
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is necessary with respect to the
subcontractor. See id. section 2(b)(iii).
The Order requires each contracting
agency to designate a senior agency
official to be an ALCA to provide
consistent guidance to contracting
officers. See Order, section 3. In
consultation with the Department and
other agencies responsible for enforcing
the Labor Laws, ALCAs help contracting
officers to: Review information
regarding Labor Law decisions disclosed
by contractors; assess whether disclosed
violations are serious, repeated, willful,
or pervasive; review the contractor’s
remediation of the violation and any
other mitigating factors; and determine
if the violations identified warrant
remedial measures, such as a labor
compliance agreement. See id. section
3(d); FAR 22.2004–1(c)(3).
The Order also contains two paycheck
transparency requirements. See Order,
section 5; Guidance, section VII
(Paycheck transparency). First, the
Order requires contractors to provide all
individuals performing work under the
contract for whom they are required to
maintain wage records under the FLSA,
DBA, SCA, or equivalent State laws
with a wage statement that contains
information concerning that
individual’s hours worked, overtime
hours, pay, and any additions made to
or deductions made from pay. See
Order, section 5(a). The Order instructs
that the wage statement for individuals
who are exempt from the overtime
compensation requirements of the FLSA
need not include a record of hours
worked if the contractor informs the
individuals of their exempt status. See
id. Contractors can satisfy the Order’s
wage-statement requirement by
providing a wage statement that
complies with an applicable State or
local wage-statement requirement that
the Secretary has determined is
substantially similar to the Order’s
wage-statement requirement. See id.
Second, the Order provides that if a
contractor is treating an individual
performing work under a covered
contract as an independent contractor,
and not an employee, the contractor
must provide a document informing the
individual of this status. See id. section
5(b). The Order and the implementing
FAR contract clause require contractors
to incorporate these same two paycheck
transparency requirements into covered
subcontracts. See id. sections 5(a)–(b);
FAR 52.222–60.100
100 The Order further requires contracting
agencies to ensure that for all contracts where the
estimated value of the supplies acquired and
services required exceeds $1 million, provisions in
solicitations and clauses in contracts shall provide
that contractors agree that the decision to arbitrate
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Finally, the Order requires that, in
developing the Guidance and proposing
to amend the FAR, the Secretary and the
FAR Council minimize, to the extent
practicable, the burden of complying
with the Order for Federal contractors
and subcontractors and in particular for
small entities, including small
businesses and small nonprofit
organizations. See Order, section 4(e).
The intent of the Order is to minimize
additional compliance burdens and to
increase economy and efficiency in
Federal contracting by helping more
contractors and subcontractors come
into compliance with workplace
protections, not by denying them
contracts. Toward that end, the Order
provides that ALCAs and the
Department will be available for
consultation with contractors regarding
the Order’s requirements, see Order,
sections 2(a)(vi), 2(b)(iii), 3(c), and that
contracting officers (and contractors for
their subcontractors) will take into
account any remedial actions and other
mitigating factors when making a
responsibility determination.
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II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
This section of the Guidance
discusses who must disclose Labor
Laws decisions during the preaward
period, what types of Labor Law
decisions must be disclosed, and what
particular categories of information
must be disclosed for each decision.
This section of the Guidance also
defines the meaning of the different
types of Labor Law decisions:
‘‘administrative merits determination,’’
‘‘civil judgment,’’ and ‘‘arbitral award or
decision.’’
During the preaward process, the
Order requires contracting agencies to
include provisions in solicitations for
all covered procurement contracts
(defined below) that will require
prospective contractors to disclose
certain information about Labor Law
violations. See Order, section 2(a). The
solicitation provisions require all
prospective contractors bidding on
covered contracts to make an initial
representation regarding whether there
have been any Labor Law decisions
rendered against them within the
preceding 3 years. See FAR 22.2004–
claims arising under Title VII or any tort related to
or arising out of sexual assault or harassment may
only be made with the voluntary consent of
employees or independent contractors after such
disputes arise, subject to certain exceptions. See
Order, section 6. Contracting agencies must require
contractors to incorporate this same requirement
into subcontracts where the estimated value of the
supplies acquired and services required exceeds $1
million, subject to certain exceptions. See id. This
Guidance does not address this arbitration
requirement.
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1(a) and 22.2007(a); FAR 52.222–57;
FAR 52.212–3(s) (commercial items).
Later, only a subset of these prospective
contractors—those for whom a
responsibility determination is being
performed—must make a more detailed
disclosure about each Labor Law
decision. See id. 22.2004–1(a). These
disclosure requirements are phased in
during the first year of the Order’s
effect. Section VIII below contains a
description of the phases of
implementation.
The Order and the final FAR rule also
contain requirements for postaward
disclosure, see Order, section 2(b); FAR
22.2004–1(a), and for disclosure by
subcontractors, see Order, section
2(a)(iv); FAR 22.2004–1(b) and 52.222–
58. These requirements are discussed
below in sections IV and V,
respectively.
A. Covered Contracts
The Order applies to contracting
activities by executive agencies. See
Order, section 1. The term ‘‘executive
agency’’ is defined under the FAR as
‘‘an executive department, a military
department, or any independent
establishment within the meaning of 5
U.S.C. 101, 102, and 104(1),
respectively, and any wholly owned
Government corporation within the
meaning of 31 U.S.C. 9101.’’ FAR 2.101.
This Guidance generally uses the term
‘‘contracting agencies’’ to refer to
executive agencies that are engaged in
contracting.
The Order requires prime contractors
to make disclosures for procurement
contracts with contracting agencies for
goods and services, including
construction, only where the estimated
value of the supplies acquired and
services required exceeds
$500,000.101 See Order, section 2(a)(i).
For purposes of this Guidance, these
contracts are referred to as ‘‘covered
procurement contracts.’’ As used in this
Guidance, the term ‘‘contract’’ has the
same meaning as it has under the FAR.
See FAR 2.101. Thus, the term
‘‘contract’’ means a procurement
contract and does not include grants
and cooperative agreements (which are
not subject to the Order’s requirements).
The Order and the FAR rule also
apply to certain subcontracts. The
definition of covered subcontracts and
the specific disclosure rules associated
with subcontractors are discussed in
detail in section V of this Guidance.
This Guidance uses the term ‘‘covered
contracts’’ to include both covered
101 See FAR 1.108(c) (explaining computation of
dollar thresholds under the FAR).
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procurement contracts and covered
subcontracts.
The Order’s disclosure requirements
apply to contracts and subcontracts for
commercial items that otherwise satisfy
the Order’s criteria. See FAR 52.212–
3(s); 52.244–6. The coverage for
commercially available off-the-shelf
(COTS) items is more limited: Contracts
for COTS items are covered
procurement contracts if they otherwise
satisfy the Order’s criteria, but
subcontracts for COTS items are not
covered by the Order and therefore are
not covered subcontracts. See id. FAR
22–2004–1(b) (exempting only
subcontracts for COTS items).
In this Guidance, references to
‘‘contractors’’ include entities that hold
covered procurement contracts as well
as prospective contractors, or ‘‘offerors,’’
meaning any entity that bids for a
covered procurement contract.
Similarly, references to
‘‘subcontractors’’ include entities that
hold covered subcontracts as well as
prospective subcontractors, or
‘‘offerors,’’ meaning any entity that bids
for a covered subcontract. The term
‘‘entity’’ is properly understood to
include both organizations and
individuals that apply for and receive
covered contracts.
B. Labor Law Decisions
The Order creates disclosure
requirements for contractors and
subcontractors performing or bidding on
covered contracts. Under the Order,
contractors and subcontractors must
disclose Labor Law decisions that have
been ‘‘rendered against [them] within
the preceding 3-year period.’’ See Order,
sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A).
The 3-Year Disclosure Period
The FAR provides for a phase-in of
the 3-year disclosure period prior to
October 25, 2018. Accordingly, the
contract clauses require disclosure of
Labor Law decisions rendered against
the offeror ‘‘during the period beginning
on October 25, 2015 to the date of the
offer, or for three years preceding the
date of the offer, whichever period is
shorter.’’ FAR 52.222–57(c) (covering
contractor disclosures); 52.222–58(b)
(covering subcontractor disclosures).
The phase-in is also discussed below in
section VIII of this Guidance.
The ‘‘preceding 3-year period’’ refers
to the 3 years preceding the date of the
offer (i.e., the contract bid or proposal).
Contractors and subcontractors must
disclose Labor Law decisions rendered
during this 3-year disclosure period
even if the underlying conduct that
violated the Labor Laws occurred more
than 3 years prior to the date of the
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disclosure. For example, if an employer
failed to pay overtime due to workers in
2014, and the Department’s Wage and
Hour Division (WHD) makes a
determination in 2016 that the employer
violated the FLSA, then the employer
must disclose the FLSA determination
when bidding on a contract in 2018,
even though the conduct underlying the
violation occurred more than 3 years
prior to the date of the employer’s bid.
Additionally, contractors and
subcontractors must disclose Labor Law
decisions whether or not the underlying
conduct occurred in the performance of
work on a covered contract.
Accordingly, a contractor or
subcontractor must disclose a Labor
Law decision even if it was not
performing or bidding on a covered
contract at the time. For example, if the
Department’s Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA)
determines that an employer violated a
safety standard and the employer later
(within 3 years of the determination)
bids for the first time on a covered
contract, the employer must disclose the
OSHA citation even though it was not
a contractor or bidding on a covered
contract at the time when it received the
determination.
Covered Labor Laws and Equivalent
State Laws
Labor Law decisions that must be
disclosed include those issued for
violations of the 14 Federal laws and
Executive orders specified in the Order.
These laws are listed in section 2 of the
Order and the list is included above in
section I(C) of this Guidance. In
addition, contractors and subcontractors
must disclose violations of State laws
that the Department identifies as
equivalent to those 14 Federal laws. See
Order, section 2(a)(i)(O).
The Department has determined that
OSHA-approved State Plans are
equivalent State laws for the purposes of
the Order. The OSH Act permits certain
States to administer OSHA-approved
State occupational safety-and-health
plans in lieu of Federal enforcement of
the OSH Act. Section 18 of the OSH Act
encourages States to develop and
operate their own job safety-and-health
programs, and OSHA approves and
monitors State Plans and provides up to
50 percent of an approved plan’s
operating costs. OSHA-approved State
Plans are described and listed in 29 CFR
part 1952, and further information about
such plans can be found at https://
www.osha.gov/dcsp/osp/.
Labor Law decisions finding violations
under an OSHA-approved State Plan are
therefore subject to the Order’s
disclosure requirements.
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In future guidance, the Department
will identify additional equivalent State
laws. Until this subsequent guidance
and a subsequent FAR amendment are
published, contractors and
subcontractors are not required to
disclose violations of State laws other
than the OSHA-approved State Plans.
1. Defining ‘‘Administrative Merits
Determination’’
Enforcement agencies issue notices,
findings, and other documents when
they determine that any of the Labor
Laws have been violated. For purposes
of this Guidance, ‘‘enforcement agency’’
means any agency that administers the
Federal Labor Laws: The Department
and its agencies—OSHA, WHD, and the
Office of Federal Contract Compliance
Programs (OFCCP); and the
Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission (OSHRC).102 Enforcement
agencies also include the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) and the National Labor
Relations Board (NLRB). ‘‘Enforcement
agency’’ does not include a Federal
agency that, in its capacity as a
contracting agency, undertakes an
investigation of a violation of the
Federal Labor Laws.103 For purposes of
this Guidance, ‘‘enforcement agency’’
also includes a State agency designated
to administer an OSHA-approved State
Plan, but only to the extent that the
State agency is acting in its capacity as
administrator of such plan. And once
the Department’s second guidance (to be
published at a later date) identifying the
State laws that are equivalent to the
Federal Labor Laws is finalized, and a
corresponding FAR amendment is
published, ‘‘enforcement agency’’ will
also include any State agency that
enforces those identified equivalent
State laws.
For purposes of the Order, the term
‘‘administrative merits determination’’
means any of the following notices or
findings—whether final or subject to
appeal or further review—issued by an
enforcement agency following an
investigation that indicates that the
contractor or subcontractor violated any
provision of the Labor Laws:
(a) From the Department’s Wage and
Hour Division:
• A WH–56 ‘‘Summary of Unpaid
Wages’’ form;
102 OSHRC is an independent Federal agency that
provides administrative trial and appellate review
in contests of OSH Act citations or penalties.
103 For example, contracting agencies may
investigate violations of the DBA relating to
contracts that they administer, but that does not
make them enforcement agencies for purposes of
the Order.
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• a letter indicating that an
investigation disclosed a violation of the
FLSA or a violation of the FMLA, SCA,
DBA, or Executive Order 13658;
• a WH–103 ‘‘Employment of Minors
Contrary to The Fair Labor Standards
Act’’ notice;
• a letter, notice, or other document
assessing civil monetary penalties;
• a letter that recites violations
concerning the payment of
subminimum wages to workers with
disabilities under section 14(c) of the
FLSA or revokes a certificate that
authorized the payment of subminimum
wages;
• a WH–561 ‘‘Citation and
Notification of Penalty’’ for violations
under the OSH Act’s field sanitation or
temporary labor camp standards;
• an order of reference filed with an
administrative law judge.
(b) from the Department’s
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration or any State agency
designated to administer an OSHAapproved State Plan:
• A citation;
• an imminent danger notice;
• a notice of failure to abate; or
• any State equivalent;
(c) from the Department’s Office of
Federal Contract Compliance Programs:
• A show cause notice for failure to
comply with the requirements of
Executive Order 11246, section 503 of
the Rehabilitation Act, the Vietnam Era
Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act
of 1972, or the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974;
(d) from the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission:
• A letter of determination that
reasonable cause exists to believe that
an unlawful employment practice has
occurred or is occurring;
(e) from the National Labor Relations
Board:
• A complaint issued by any Regional
Director;
(f) a complaint filed by or on behalf
of an enforcement agency with a Federal
or State court, an administrative law
judge or other administrative judge
alleging that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of
the Labor Laws; or
(g) any order or finding from any
administrative law judge or other
administrative judge, the Department’s
Administrative Review Board, the
Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission or State equivalent, or the
National Labor Relations Board that the
contractor or subcontractor violated any
provision of the Labor Laws.
The above definition provides seven
categories of documents, notices, and
findings from enforcement agencies that
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constitute the administrative merits
determinations that must be disclosed
under the Order. The list is an
exhaustive one, meaning that if a
document does not fall within one of
categories (a) through (g) above, the
Department does not consider it to be an
‘‘administrative merits determination’’
for purposes of the Order.
In addition, the Department will
publish at a later date a second
proposed guidance that identifies an
eighth category of administrative merits
determinations: The documents,
notices, and findings issued by State
enforcement agencies when they find
violations of the State laws equivalent to
the Federal Labor Laws.
Categories (a) through (e) in the
definition list types of administrative
merits determinations that are issued by
specific enforcement agencies.
Categories (f) and (g) describe types of
administrative merits determinations
that are common to multiple
enforcement agencies. Category (f) is
necessary because it is possible that an
enforcement agency will not have
issued a notice or finding following its
investigation that falls within categories
(a) through (e) prior to filing a complaint
in court.
Administrative merits determinations
are issued following an investigation by
the relevant enforcement agency.
Administrative merits determinations
are not limited to notices and findings
issued following adversarial or
adjudicative proceedings such as a
hearing, nor are they limited to notices
and findings that are final and
unappealable. Thus, an administrative
merits determination still must be
disclosed under the Order even if the
contractor is challenging it or can still
challenge it. The Department recognizes
that contractors may dispute an
administrative merits determination. As
set forth below, when contractors
disclose administrative merits
determinations, they may also submit
any additional information that they
believe may be helpful in assessing the
violations at issue (including the fact
that the determination has been
challenged). Additionally, contractors
have the opportunity to provide
information regarding any mitigating
factors. This information will be
carefully considered. See below section
III(B).
Certain ‘‘complaints’’ issued by
enforcement agencies are included in
the definition of ‘‘administrative merits
determination.’’ The complaints issued
by enforcement agencies included in the
definition are not akin to complaints
filed by private parties to initiate
lawsuits in Federal or State courts. Each
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complaint included in the definition
represents a finding by an enforcement
agency following a full investigation
that a Labor Law was violated; in
contrast, a complaint filed by a private
party in a Federal or State court
represents allegations made by that
plaintiff and not any enforcement
agency. Employee complaints made to
enforcement agencies (such as a
complaint for failure to pay overtime
wages filed with WHD or a charge of
discrimination filed with the EEOC) are
not administrative merits
determinations.
2. Defining ‘‘Civil Judgment’’
For purposes of the Order, the term
‘‘civil judgment’’ means any judgment
or order entered by any Federal or State
court in which the court determined
that the contractor violated any
provision of the Labor Laws, or enjoined
or restrained the contractor from
violating any provision of the Labor
Laws. Civil judgment includes a
judgment or order that is not final or is
subject to appeal.
A civil judgment could be the result
of an action filed in court by or on
behalf of an enforcement agency or, for
those Labor Laws that establish a private
right of action, by a private party or
parties. The judgment or order in which
the court determined that a violation
occurred may be the result of a jury
trial, a bench trial, or a motion for
judgment as a matter of law, such as a
summary judgment motion. Even a
decision granting partial summary
judgment may be a civil judgment if, for
example, the decision finds a violation
of the Labor Laws but leaves resolution
of the amount of damages for later in the
proceedings. Likewise, a preliminary
injunction (but not a temporary
restraining order) can be a civil
judgment if the order enjoins or
restrains a violation of the Labor Laws.
Civil judgments include consent
judgments and default judgments to the
extent that there is a determination in
the judgment that any of the Labor Laws
have been violated, or the judgment
enjoins or restrains the contractor from
violating any provision of the Labor
Laws. A private settlement where the
lawsuit is dismissed by the court
without any judgment being entered is
not a civil judgment. An accepted offer
of judgment pursuant to the Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 68 is also not a
civil judgment for the purposes of the
Order.
Civil judgments do not include
judgments or orders issued by an
administrative law judge or other
administrative tribunals, such as those
identified in the definition of
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58721
administrative merits determination.
Such judgments and orders may be
administrative merits determinations. If,
however, a Federal or State court issues
a judgment or order affirming an
administrative merits determination,
then the court’s decision is a civil
judgment.
Civil judgments include a judgment or
order finding that a contractor violated
any of the Labor Laws even if the order
or decision is subject to further review
in the same proceeding, is not final, can
be appealed, or has been appealed. As
set forth below, when contractors
disclose civil judgments, they may also
submit any additional information that
they believe may be helpful in assessing
the violations at issue—including the
fact that the civil judgment has been
appealed. Additionally, contractors
have the opportunity to provide
information regarding any mitigating
factors.
3. Defining ‘‘Arbitral Award or
Decision’’
For purposes of the Order, the term
‘‘arbitral award or decision’’ means any
award or order by an arbitrator or
arbitral panel in which the arbitrator or
arbitral panel determined that the
contractor violated any provision of the
Labor Laws, or enjoined or restrained
the contractor from violating any
provision of the Labor Laws. Arbitral
award or decision includes an arbitral
award or decision regardless of whether
it is issued by one arbitrator or a panel
of arbitrators and even if the arbitral
proceedings were private or
confidential.
Arbitral award or decision also
includes an arbitral award or decision
finding that a contractor violated any of
the Labor Laws even if the award or
decision is subject to further review in
the same proceeding, is not final, or is
subject to being confirmed, modified, or
vacated by a court. As set forth below,
when contractors disclose arbitral
awards or decisions, they may also
submit any additional information that
they believe may be helpful in assessing
the violations at issue (including the
fact that they have sought to have the
award or decision vacated or modified).
Additionally, contractors have the
opportunity to provide information
regarding any mitigating factors.
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions
Arising From the Same Underlying
Violation
If a contractor appeals or challenges a
Labor Law decision, there may be
successive decisions that arise from the
same underlying violation. For example,
if a contractor receives an OSHA
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citation and appeals that citation, it may
receive an order from an administrative
law judge (ALJ) upholding or vacating
that citation. Similarly, if a contractor
receives an adverse decision from the
Department’s Administrative Review
Board (ARB) and challenges the
decision in Federal court, it may receive
a court judgment concerning that
decision.
Whether successive Labor Law
decisions must be disclosed depends on
the nature of the most recent decision at
the time of disclosure. Where the most
recent Labor Law decision finds no
violation—or otherwise reverses or
vacates all prior findings of a
violation—then the contractor does not
need to disclose any of the decisions.
Where the most recent decision has
reinstated an initial finding of a
violation, however, then the latest
decision reinstating the finding must be
disclosed. Thus, in the first example
above, if the ALJ reverses the OSHA
citation, the contractor need not
disclose either the initial citation or the
ALJ’s order. But if the violation is later
reinstated by the full OSHRC or by a
Federal court of appeals, the contractor
must disclose the OSHRC or appellate
court decision.
Where the most recent Labor Law
decision upholds or affirms any finding
of violation, the contractor should
disclose only the Labor Law decision
that is the most recent at the time of
disclosure. Thus, in the second example
above, if the Federal court affirms the
ARB’s decision, or modifies it but does
not vacate it in its entirety, the
contractor should disclose the more
recent court order and need not disclose
the original ARB decision.
Where the most recent Labor Law
decision does not affirm or vacate the
violation, but instead remands it for
further proceedings, the underlying
violation must still be disclosed. For
example, an ALJ may grant a pre-trial
motion for summary decision upholding
an OSHA citation, and then OSHRC
may reverse the ALJ decision and
remand it because the OSHRC believes
that a full trial was necessary to
determine whether to uphold the
citation. In that case, the OSHRC has not
completely reversed or vacated the
original OSHA citation, so the
contractor still must disclose the
original OSHA citation.
Similarly, if the contractor appeals or
challenges only part of a Labor Law
decision, the contractor should continue
to disclose the original Labor Law
decision even if a successive Labor Law
decision has been issued. For example,
if, within the preceding 3-year period, a
district court finds a contractor liable for
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Title VII and FLSA violations, and the
contractor appeals only the Title VII
judgment to the court of appeals, it must
continue to disclose the district court
decision (containing the finding of an
FLSA violation) even if a subsequent
court of appeals decision vacates the
Title VII violation.
If the contractor disclosed a Labor
Law decision before being awarded a
covered contract, and a successive
decision arising from the same
underlying violation is rendered during
the performance of the contract and
affirms that the contractor committed
the violation, the successive decision is
a Labor Law decision within the
meaning of this Guidance. Therefore,
the contractor must disclose the most
recent decision when it updates its
disclosures during performance of the
contract. See FAR 22.2004–3(a).
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
The following sections provide
guidance on the information that must
be disclosed during the preaward stage
of the contracting process. Section
22.2004 of the FAR sets forth the
specific requirements for what must be
disclosed at each stage, and how such
information is to be reported. The
process by which subcontractors make
disclosures is discussed in section V(A)
below.
1. Initial Representation
When a contractor bids on a
solicitation for a covered procurement
contract, it must disclose whether any
Labor Law decisions have been
rendered against it ‘‘during the period
beginning on October 25, 2015 to the
date of the offer, or for three years
preceding the date of the offer,
whichever period is shorter.’’ FAR
52.222–57(c). At this stage, the
contractor must represent to the best of
its knowledge and belief whether it has
or has not had such a decision rendered
against it, without providing further
information. See FAR 52.222–57(c).
2. Required Disclosures
If a contractor reaches the stage in the
process at which a responsibility
determination is initiated, and that
contractor responded affirmatively at
the initial representation stage, the
contracting officer will require
additional information about that
contractor’s Labor Law violation(s). See
FAR 52.222–57(d)(1).104 For each
104 In addition to the information that the Order
instructs the contracting officer to request,
contracting officers also have a general duty to
obtain such additional information as may be
necessary to be satisfied that a prospective
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administrative merits determination,
civil judgment, or arbitral award or
decision that must be disclosed, the
contractor must provide:
• The Labor Law that was violated;
• the case number, inspection
number, charge number, docket number,
or other unique identification number;
• the date that the determination,
judgment, award, or decision was
rendered; and
• the name of the court, arbitrator(s),
agency, board, or commission that
rendered it.
See FAR 52.222–57(d)(1)(i). The
contractor must disclose this
information in the System for Award
Management (SAM) unless an exception
from SAM registration applies. See FAR
22.2004–2(b)(1)(i), (iii).
With regard to the second element of
information listed above, the contractor
should provide the inspection number
for OSH Act citations, the case number
for NLRB proceedings, the charge
number for EEOC proceedings, the
investigation or case number for WHD
investigations, the case number for
investigations by OFCCP, the case
number for determinations by
administrative tribunals, and the case
number for court proceedings.
3. Opportunity To Provide Additional
Relevant Information, Including
Mitigating Factors
The contractor may also provide
additional information that it believes
will demonstrate its responsibility. See
FAR 52.222–57(d)(1)(iii). The contractor
must disclose this additional
information in SAM unless an exception
from SAM registration applies. See id.
22.2004–2(b)(1)(i) and (iii), 52.222–
57(d)(1)(iv). The additional information
may include mitigating factors and
remedial measures, such as information
about steps taken to correct the
violations at issue, the negotiation or
execution of a settlement agreement or
labor compliance agreement, or other
steps taken to achieve compliance with
the Labor Laws. See id. 22.2004–
2(b)(1)(ii). The contractor may also
provide any other information that they
believe may be relevant, including that
it is challenging or appealing an adverse
Labor Law decision. The information
that the contractor submits will be
carefully considered during an ALCA’s
assessment of the contractor’s record of
compliance.
The additional relevant information
provided by the contractor will not be
made public unless the contractor
determines that it wants the information
contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. See FAR 9.105–1(a).
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to be made public. Id. 22.2004–
2(b)(1)(ii). However, where a contractor
enters into a labor compliance
agreement, the entry will be noted in the
Federal Awardee Performance and
Integrity Information System (FAPIIS),
available at www.fapiis.gov/, by the
ALCA and the fact that a labor
compliance agreement has been agreed
to will be public information. Id.
22.2004–2(b)(9).
Mitigating circumstances are
discussed in more depth below in
section III(B)(1) and labor compliance
agreements are discussed in section
III(C).
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4. Preaward Updates to Representations
Contractors have a duty to provide an
update to the contracting officer prior to
the date of an award if the contractor’s
initial representation is no longer
accurate. In some procurements, a
period of time may pass between the
date of the contractor’s offer on the
contract and the date of the award. If,
during this time, a new Labor Law
decision is rendered or the contractor
otherwise learns that its representation
is no longer accurate, the contractor
must notify the contracting officer of an
update to its representation. See FAR
52.222–57(e). This means that if the
contractor made an initial
representation that it had no Labor Law
decisions to disclose, and since the time
of the offer a new decision is rendered,
the contractor must notify the
contracting officer. The reverse is also
true: If, for example, an offeror made an
initial representation that it has a Labor
Law decision to disclose, and since the
time of the offer that Labor Law decision
has been vacated by the enforcement
agency or a court, the contractor must
notify the contracting officer.
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
For every procurement contract, the
agency’s contracting officer must
consider whether a contractor has a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics and then make an
affirmative determination of
responsibility before making the award.
The contracting officer considers
relevant responsibility-related
information from a number of sources,
including members of the procurement
team who are subject-area experts. In
determining whether the contractor’s
history of Labor Law compliance
reflects a satisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics, the contracting
officer considers the analysis and advice
provided by the ALCA, using this
section of the Guidance, as required by
the Order and the implementing FAR
rule. As discussed in section V(A)
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below, contractors will make the same
determination for each of their
subcontractors performing a covered
subcontract, considering analysis and
advice provided by the Department
regarding any Labor Law decisions
disclosed by the subcontractor.
This section of the Guidance explains
the three-step process by which ALCAs
assess a contractor’s record of Labor
Law compliance and provide preaward
advice to contracting officers. Section
III(A) explains the first step: Classifying
the Labor Law violations. At this stage,
an ALCA reviews all of the contractor’s
violations to determine if any are
‘‘serious,’’ ‘‘repeated,’’ ‘‘willful,’’ or
‘‘pervasive.’’ Section III(B) discusses the
second step: Weighing the Labor Law
violations. At this point, the ALCA
analyzes any serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive violations in light of
the totality of the circumstances,
including any mitigating factors that are
present. Section III(C) discusses the
third step: The ALCA provides advice to
the contracting officer regarding the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance and whether a labor
compliance agreement or other action is
warranted.
In the first step of the assessment
process, the ‘‘classification’’ step, an
ALCA reviews each of the contractor’s
Labor Law violations to determine
which, if any, are serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive. Section III(A)
of the Guidance defines these four
terms. All violations of Federal laws are
a serious matter; but, for purposes of the
Order, certain Labor Law violations are
classified as serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive. As explained below,
the classification of a violation as
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive does not automatically result
in a finding that a contractor lacks
integrity and business ethics. Rather,
this subset of all Labor Law violations
represents those that may bear on an
assessment of a contractor’s integrity
and business ethics; violations that fall
outside this subset are less likely to
have a significant impact. Thus,
although the Order requires contractors
to disclose all Labor Law decisions from
the relevant time period, only those
decisions involving violations classified
as serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive are considered as part of the
weighing step and factor into the
ALCA’s written analysis and advice.
In the second step of the assessment
process, the ‘‘weighing’’ step, the ALCA
analyzes the contractor’s serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
violations of Labor Laws in light of the
totality of the circumstances, including,
among other factors, the severity of the
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violation(s), the size of the contractor,
and any mitigating factors. During the
assessment process, the ALCA considers
whether the contractor has a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance—in
other words, whether the contractor’s
history of Labor Law compliance and
any adoption by the contractor of
preventative compliance measures
indicate that the contracting officer
could find the contractor to have a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics despite the violations.
The contractor’s timely remediation of
violations of Labor Laws is generally the
most important factor weighing in favor
of a conclusion that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. The ALCA also considers
factors that weigh against a conclusion
that the contractor has a satisfactory
record. For example, as explained more
fully below, pervasive violations and
violations of particular gravity, among
others, may support such a conclusion.
See Section III(B).
In the third step of the assessment
process, the ALCA provides written
advice and analysis to the contracting
officer regarding the contractor’s record
of Labor Law compliance. The ALCA
recommends whether the contractor’s
record supports a finding of a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. In cases where the
ALCA concludes that a contractor has
an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, the ALCA will recommend
the negotiation of a labor compliance
agreement or other appropriate action
such as notification of the agency
suspending and debarring official. If the
ALCA concludes that a labor
compliance agreement is warranted, the
ALCA will recommend whether the
agreement should be negotiated before
or after the award. The written analysis
supporting the advice describes the
ALCA’s classification and weighing of
the contractor’s Labor Law violations
and includes the rationale for the
recommendation. See Section III(C).
While the ALCA provides written
analysis and advice, the contracting
officer has the ultimate responsibility
and discretion to determine whether the
contractor has a satisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics and is a
responsible source. See FAR 22.2004–
2(b)(4).
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
In the first step of the preaward
assessment and advice process, the
ALCA reviews all of the contractor’s
violations to determine if any should be
classified as ‘‘serious,’’ ‘‘repeated,’’
‘‘willful,’’ and/or ‘‘pervasive.’’ As part of
this process, the ALCA monitors SAM
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and FAPIIS for new and updated
contractor disclosures of Labor Law
decision information. See FAR 22.2004–
1(c)(5). See also section II(C)(2), above,
for a discussion of the information the
contractor must disclose.
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Criteria for Classifying Violations
The Order directs the Department to
assist agencies in determining whether
administrative merits determinations,
arbitral awards or decisions, or civil
judgments (i.e., Labor Law decisions)
were issued for serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive violations of the
Labor Laws. Order, section 4(b)(i). It
specifies that the definitions of these
terms should ‘‘incorporate existing
statutory standards for assessing
whether a violation is serious, repeated,
or willful’’ where they are available. Id.
The Order also provides some
guidelines for developing standards
where none are provided by statute. See
id.
The sections below list criteria under
which violations of the Labor Laws are
considered serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive. These criteria include, for
example, whether an agency applied a
particular designation (e.g., ‘‘repeated’’
under the OSH Act) to a violation,
whether particular thresholds were met
(e.g., $10,000 in back wages), or whether
other specific facts are present (e.g.,
whether punitive damages were
awarded). A single violation may satisfy
the criteria for more than one
classification; for example a single
violation may be both serious and
repeated. Multiple violations may
together be classified as pervasive.
ALCAs classify violations based on
information that is readily ascertainable
from the Labor Law decisions
themselves. ALCAs do not second-guess
or re-litigate enforcement actions or the
decisions of reviewing officials, courts,
and arbitrators. While ALCAs and
contracting officers may seek additional
information from the enforcement
agencies to provide context, they
generally rely on the information
contained in the Labor Law decisions to
determine whether violations are
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive under the definitions
provided in this Guidance.
Effect of Reversal or Vacatur of Basis for
Classification
If a Labor Law decision or portion
thereof that would otherwise cause a
violation to be classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive has
been reversed or vacated, the violation
should not be classified as such under
the Order. For example, if an OSH Act
violation was originally designated by
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OSHA as ‘‘serious’’ but is later redesignated as ‘‘other-than-serious,’’ the
violation should not be classified as a
serious violation under the Order.
Likewise, if a prior Labor Law decision
that would otherwise cause a
subsequent violation to be classified as
a repeated violation is reversed or
vacated, the subsequent violation
should not be classified as a repeated
violation.
1. Serious Violations
Of the Federal Labor Laws, only the
OSH Act provides a statutory standard
for what constitutes a ‘‘serious’’
violation, and this standard also applies
to OSHA-approved State Plans. The
other Federal Labor Laws do not have
statutory standards for what constitutes
a serious violation. According to the
Order, where no statutory standards
exist, the Department’s Guidance for
‘‘serious’’ violations must take into
account
the number of employees affected, the degree
of risk posed or actual harm done by the
violation to the health, safety, or well-being
of a worker, the amount of damages incurred
or fines or penalties assessed with regard to
the violation, and other considerations as the
Secretary finds appropriate.
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(1).
Accordingly, a violation is ‘‘serious’’
for purposes of the Order under the
following circumstances:
a. For OSH Act or OSHA-approved
State Plan violations that are enforced
through citations or equivalent State
documents, a violation is serious if a
citation, or equivalent State document,
was designated as serious or an
equivalent State designation.
b. For all other violations of the Labor
Laws, a violation is serious if it is
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decision that the violation involved
any one of the following:
i. The violation affected at least 10
workers, and the affected workers made
up 25 percent or more of the
contractor’s workforce at the worksite or
25 percent or more of the contractor’s
workforce overall;
ii. Fines and penalties of at least
$5,000 or back wages of at least $10,000
were due;
iii. The contractor’s conduct caused or
contributed to the death or serious
injury of one or more workers;
iv. The contractor employed a minor
who was too young to be legally
employed or in violation of a Hazardous
Occupations Order;
v. The contractor was issued a notice
of failure to abate an OSH Act or OSHAapproved State Plan violation; or the
contractor was issued an imminent
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danger notice or an equivalent State
notice under the OSH Act or an OSHAapproved State Plan.
vi. The contractor retaliated against
one or more workers for exercising any
right protected by any of the Labor
Laws;
vii. The contractor engaged in a
pattern or practice of discrimination or
systemic discrimination;
viii. The contractor interfered with
the enforcement agency’s investigation;
or
ix. The contractor breached the
material terms of any agreement or
settlement entered into with an
enforcement agency, or violated any
court order, any administrative order by
an enforcement agency, or any arbitral
award.
This definition is an exhaustive list of
the classification criteria for use in
designating Labor Law violations as
serious under the Order. Further
guidance for applying these criteria is
included below:
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations and Equivalent State
Documents
Section 17(k) of the OSH Act, 29
U.S.C. 666(k), defines a violation as
serious, in relevant part, ‘‘if there is a
substantial probability that [the hazard
created by the violation could result in]
death or serious physical harm . . .
unless the employer did not, and could
not with the exercise of reasonable
diligence know’’ of the existence of the
violation. This standard is used by
enforcement agencies to classify OSH
Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan
violations that are enforced through
citations or equivalent State documents.
In light of this clear statutory definition
and the Order’s directive to incorporate
statutory standards where they exist,
OSH Act violations that are enforced
through citations are considered serious
under the Order if—and only if—the
relevant enforcement agency designated
the citation or equivalent State
document as such.105
The OSH Act also includes
prohibitions that are not enforced
through citations or equivalent State
documents. Under the classification
process in the Order, such violations are
considered ‘‘serious’’ if they meet any of
the other criteria for serious violations
listed below in subsections (b)(i)
through (b)(ix) and listed above in
category (b). For example, the OSH Act
105 The relevant enforcement agency will either
be OSHA, a State Plan agency, or WHD, which
enforces violations of the OSH Act’s field sanitation
and temporary labor camp standards in States that
do not have a State Plan.
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prohibits retaliating against workers for
exercising any right under the Act. 29
U.S.C. 660(c). OSH Act retaliation
violations are enforced through
complaints in Federal court, not through
citations; and OSHA does not make any
designation for them (serious or
otherwise). As with retaliation under
any of the Labor Laws, such a violation
should be classified as ‘‘serious,’’ even
though OSHA has not designated it as
‘‘serious.’’ See Section III(A)(1)(b)(vi).
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b. Other Violations of the Labor Laws
For violations of the Labor Laws other
than OSH Act or OSHA-Approved State
Plan violations that are enforced
through citations and equivalent State
documents, violations are serious if they
meet any one of the following criteria:
i. Violation Affects at Least 10 Workers
Comprising at Least 25 Percent of the
Contractor’s Workforce at the Worksite
or Overall
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to consider the number of employees
affected, a violation is serious if it
affected at least 10 workers who
together made up 25 percent or more of
the contractor’s workforce at the
worksite or 25 percent or more of the
contractor’s workforce overall.
For purposes of this 25 percent
threshold, ‘‘workforce’’ means all
individuals on the contractor’s payroll
at the time of the violation, whether
full-time or part-time. It does not
include workers of another entity,
unless the underlying violation of the
Labor Laws includes a finding that the
contractor is a joint employer of the
workers that the other entity employs at
the worksite. For example, assuming no
joint employer relationships exist, if a
contractor employs 40 workers at a
worksite, then a violation is serious if it
affects at least 10 of the contractor’s
workers at the site, even if other
companies also employ an additional 40
workers at the same site.
For purposes of this 25 percent
threshold, ‘‘worksite’’ means the
physical location or group of locations
where the workers affected by the
violations work and where the
contractor conducts its business. For
example, if the contractor conducts its
business at a single building, or a single
office within an office building, that
building or office will be the worksite.
However, if the contractor conducts
business activities in several offices in
one building, or in several buildings in
one campus or industrial park, the
worksite consists of all of the offices or
buildings in which the business is
conducted. On the other hand, if a
contractor has two office buildings in
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different parts of the same city, or in
different cities, then those office
buildings are considered to be separate
worksites. For violations that affect
workers with no fixed worksite, such as
construction workers, transportation
workers, workers who perform services
at various customers’ locations, and
workers who regularly telework, the
worksite is the site to which they are
assigned as their home base, from which
their work is assigned, or to which they
report.
For purposes of this 25 percent
threshold, ‘‘affected workers’’ means the
workers who were individually
impacted by the violation. For example,
affected workers include workers who
were not paid wages due; were denied
leave or benefits; were denied a job, a
promotion, or other benefits due to
discrimination; or were harmed by an
unlawful policy.
ii. Fines, Penalties, and Back Wages
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to take into account ‘‘the amount of
damages incurred or fines or penalties
assessed,’’ a violation is serious if
$5,000 or more in fines and penalties, or
$10,000 or more in back wages, were
due.
‘‘Fines and penalties’’ are monetary
penalties imposed by a government
agency. They do not include back
wages, compensatory damages,
liquidated damages, or punitive
damages. For purposes of determining
whether the $10,000 back wages
threshold is met, compensatory
damages, liquidated damages under the
FLSA,106 and statutory damages under
MSPA should be included as back
wages.
The threshold amounts for back
wages, fines, and penalties are measured
by the amount ‘‘due.’’ This will usually
be the amount originally assessed by an
enforcement agency or found due by a
court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel.
However, if the original amount is later
reduced by an enforcement agency,
arbitrator, arbitral panel, or court, the
reduced amount is used. For example, if
the Department files a civil complaint in
an FLSA case seeking $15,000 in back
wages but a court awards only $8,000,
then the violation will not be serious
under this criterion because the $8,000
figure falls below the $10,000 threshold
for back wages. Similarly, if an
administrative merits determination
106 Liquidated damages under the FLSA are
included in the calculation of back wages because
they are compensatory in nature, intended to serve
as a substitute for ‘‘damages too obscure and
difficult of proof for estimate other than by
liquidated damages.’’ Overnight Motor Transp. Co.
v. Missel, 316 U.S. 572, 583–84 (1942).
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58725
assesses $6,000 in civil monetary
penalties against a contractor but later
the enforcement agency and contractor
reach a settlement for the reduced
amount of $4,000, then the underlying
violation is not serious because the
settlement amount fell below the $5,000
threshold for fines and penalties. In
contrast, if, for example, the contractor
files for bankruptcy and cannot pay the
full amount, or simply refuses to pay
such that the full penalty is never
collected, the original assessed amount
is the amount that matters for
classifying the violation under this
criterion.
When considering whether these
thresholds are met, the total fines and
penalties or the total back wages
resulting from the Labor Law violation
should be considered. Thus, for
example, where a wage-and-hour
violation affected multiple workers, the
back wages due to each worker involved
in the claim must be added together to
see if the cumulative amount meets the
$10,000 back-wage threshold. Similarly,
in cases where multiple provisions of a
Labor Law have been violated, the fines,
penalties, and back wages due should
not be parsed and separately attributed
to each provision violated. For example,
if the Department’s FLSA investigation
discloses violations of the FLSA’s
minimum wage and overtime provisions
and back wages are due for both
violations, the total back wages due
determines whether the $10,000
threshold is met. Likewise, if an
investigation discloses six violations of
the same MSPA provision or violations
of six different MSPA provisions and
each violation results in civil monetary
penalties of $1,000, the MSPA violation
is serious because the penalties total
$6,000.
This criterion only applies if the
Labor Law decision includes an amount
of back wages or fines or penalties.
Thus, for example, if an enforcement
agency issues an administrative merits
determination that does not include an
amount of fines or penalties assessed or
of back wages due, then an ALCA
cannot classify the violation as serious
using this criterion until the amount has
been determined. For example, if the
EEOC files a complaint in Federal court
seeking back wages but does not specify
the amount, then this criterion cannot
be the basis for classifying the violation
as serious, though the violation could be
serious under one of the other listed
criteria.
iii. Any Violations That Cause or
Contribute to Death or Serious Injury
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to consider ‘‘the degree of risk posed or
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actual harm done by the violation to
health, safety, or well-being of a
worker,’’ any violation of the Labor
Laws that causes or contributes to the
death or serious injury of one or more
workers is serious under the Order. For
the purpose of this classification
criterion, ‘‘serious injury’’ means an
injury that requires the care of a medical
professional beyond first-aid treatment
or results in more than five days of
missed work.
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iv. Employment of Minors Who Are Too
Young To Be Legally Employed or in
Violation of a Hazardous Occupations
Order
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to consider ‘‘the degree of risk posed or
actual harm done by the violation to
health, safety, or well-being of a
worker,’’ any violation of the FLSA’s
child labor provisions where the minor
is too young to be legally employed or
is employed in violation of any of the
Secretary’s Hazardous Occupations
Orders is a serious violation. Such
violations do not include situations
where minors are permitted to perform
the work at issue but have performed
the work outside the hours permitted by
law. Rather, it refers to minors who, by
virtue of their age, are legally prohibited
from being employed or are not
permitted to be employed to perform the
work at all. Thus, serious violations
include, for example: The employment
of any minor under the age of 18 to
perform a hazardous non-agricultural
job, any minor under the age of 16 to
perform a hazardous farm job, or any
minor under the age of 14 to perform
non-farm work where he or she does not
meet a statutory exception otherwise
permitting the work. This reflects the
particularly serious dangers that can
result from the prohibited employment
of underage minors. Conversely, it is not
a serious violation for the purposes of
the Order where the contractor has
employed a 14 or 15 year-old minor in
excess of 3 hours outside school hours
on a school day, in a non-hazardous,
non-agricultural job in which the child
is otherwise permitted to work—even
though the work violates the FLSA’s
child labor provisions.
v. Notices of Failure To Abate and
Imminent Danger Notices
Under the OSH Act and OSHAapproved State Plans, enforcement
agencies may issue notices of failure to
abate and imminent danger notices.
Notices of failure to abate are issued
when an employer has failed to remedy
a violative condition despite having
received a citation, unless that citation
is being contested. See 29 CFR 1903.18.
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A notice of failure to abate a violation
is a serious violation because failing to
correct a hazard after receiving formal
notification of the need to do so
represents a serious disregard of the
law.
Imminent danger notices are issued
when ‘‘a danger exists which could
reasonably be expected to cause death
or serious physical harm immediately or
before the imminence of such danger
can be eliminated through the
enforcement procedures otherwise
provided by [the OSH Act].’’ 29 U.S.C.
662(a). Because such notices are issued
only for violations that imminently
threaten to cause death or serious
physical harm, imminent danger notices
are by definition issued only for serious
violations of the OSH Act, and thus
constitute serious violations under the
Order.
vi. Retaliation
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to consider ‘‘the degree of risk posed or
actual harm done by the violation to
health, safety, or well-being of a
worker,’’ a violation involving
retaliation is a serious violation. For
these purposes, retaliation means that
the contractor has engaged in an adverse
employment action against one or more
workers for exercising any right
protected by the Labor Laws. An
adverse employment action means
conduct that may dissuade a reasonable
worker from engaging in protected
activity under the Labor Laws, such as
a discharge, refusal to hire, suspension,
demotion, unlawful harassment, or
threats.107
Examples of retaliation include, but
are not limited to, disciplining workers
for attempting to organize a union; firing
or demoting workers who take leave
under the FMLA; and threatening
workers with adverse consequences—
such as termination or referral to
immigration or criminal authorities—for
reporting potential violations of Labor
Laws, testifying in enforcement matters,
or otherwise exercising any right
protected by the Labor Laws. These are
serious violations because they both
reflect a disregard by the contractor for
its obligations under the Labor Laws
and undermine the effectiveness of the
Labor Laws by making workers reluctant
to exercise their rights for fear of
retaliation.
107 See Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White,
548 U.S. 53, 68 (2006) (holding that for purposes
of Title VII, retaliation requires that ‘‘a reasonable
employee would have found the challenged action
materially adverse, which in this context means it
well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker
from making or supporting a charge of
discrimination’’) (internal citations omitted).
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vii. Pattern or Practice of Discrimination
or Systemic Discrimination
Consistent with the Order’s directive
to consider ‘‘the degree of risk posed or
actual harm done by the violation to
health, safety, or well-being of a
worker,’’ a violation is serious if the
contractor engaged in a pattern or
practice of discrimination or systemic
discrimination. This criterion is
generally expected to apply to violations
of Executive Order 11246, section 503 of
the Rehabilitation Act, VEVRAA, Title
VII, section 6(d) of the FLSA (the Equal
Pay Act), the ADA, and the ADEA.
A pattern or practice of
discrimination involves intentional
discrimination against a protected group
of applicants or employees that reflects
the employer’s standard operating
procedure, the regular rather than the
unusual practice,108 and not
discrimination that occurs in an isolated
fashion.
Systemic discrimination involves a
pattern or practice, policy, or class case
where the discrimination has a broad
impact on an industry, profession,
company, or geographic area. Examples
include policies and practices that
effectuate discriminatory hiring barriers;
restrictions on access to higher level
jobs in violation of any applicable antidiscrimination law; unlawful preemployment inquiries regarding
disabilities; and discriminatory
placement or assignments that are made
to comply with customer preferences.
Systemic discrimination also includes
policies and practices that are seemingly
neutral but may cause a disparate
impact on protected groups. Examples
include pre-employment tests used for
selection purposes; height, weight or
lifting requirements or restrictions;
compensation practices and policies;
and performance evaluation policies
and practices. Systemic discrimination
cases may be, but need not be, the
subject of class action litigation.
viii. Interference With Investigations
Labor Law violations in which the
contractor engaged in interference with
the enforcement agency’s investigation
also are serious under the Order.
Interference can take a number of forms,
but for purposes of this criterion it is
limited to violations involving the
following circumstances:
(1) A civil judgment was issued
holding the contractor in contempt for
failing to provide information or
physical access to an enforcement
agency in the course of an investigation;
or
108 See Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters v. United States,
431 U.S. 324, 336 (1977).
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(2) It is readily ascertainable from the
Labor Law decision that the
contractor—
(a) Falsified, knowingly made a false
statement in, or destroyed records to
frustrate an investigation under the
Labor Laws;
(b) Knowingly made false
representations to an investigator; or
(c) Took or threatened to take adverse
actions against workers (for example,
termination, reduction in salary or
benefits, or referral to immigration or
criminal authorities) for cooperating
with or speaking to government
investigators or for otherwise complying
with an agency’s investigation (for
example, threatening workers if they do
not return back wages received as the
result of an investigation).
Like retaliation, interference with
investigations is intentional conduct
that frustrates the enforcement of the
Labor Laws and therefore is a serious
violation.
ix. Material Breaches and Violations of
Settlements, Labor Compliance
Agreements, or Orders
Labor Law violations involving a
breach of the material terms of any
settlement, labor compliance agreement,
court or administrative order, or arbitral
award are serious violations under the
Order. Such violations are serious
because contractors are expected to
comply with orders by a court or
administrative agency and to adhere to
the terms of any agreements or
settlements into which it enters. A
contractor’s failure to do so may
indicate that it will similarly disregard
its contractual obligations to, or
agreements with, a contracting agency,
which could result in delays, increased
costs, and other adverse consequences.
A contractor will not, however, be
found to have committed a serious
violation if the agreement, settlement,
award, or order in question has been
stayed, reversed, or vacated.
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c. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected
examples of serious violations, see
Appendix A.
2. Repeated Violations
The Order provides that the standard
for repeated should ‘‘incorporate
existing statutory standards’’ to the
extent such standards exist. Order,
section 4(b)(i)(A). It further provides
that, where no statutory standards exist,
the standards for repeated should take
into account ‘‘whether the entity has
had one or more additional violations of
the same or a substantially similar
requirement in the past 3 years.’’ Id.
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section 4(b)(i)(B)(2). None of the Labor
Laws contains an explicit statutory
definition of the term ‘‘repeated.’’
Accordingly, a violation is ‘‘repeated’’
under the Order if:
a. For a violation of the OSH Act or
an OSHA-approved State Plan that was
enforced through a citation or an
equivalent State document, the citation
at issue was designated as ‘‘repeated,’’
‘‘repeat,’’ or any equivalent State
designation and the prior violation that
formed the basis for the repeated
violation became a final order of the
OSHRC or equivalent State agency no
more than 3 years before the repeated
violation;
b. For all other Labor Law violations,
the contractor has committed a violation
that is the same as or substantially
similar to a prior violation of the Labor
Laws that was the subject of a separate
investigation or proceeding arising from
a separate set of facts, and became
uncontested or adjudicated within the
previous 3 years. The following is an
exhaustive list of violations that are
substantially similar to each other for
these purposes:
1. For the FLSA:
i. Any two violations of the FLSA’s
child labor provisions; or
ii. Any two violations of the FLSA’s
provision requiring break time for
nursing mothers.
2. For the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and
Executive Order 13658:
i. Any two violations of these statutes’
minimum wage, subminimum wage,
overtime, or prevailing wages
provisions, even if they arise under
different statutes.
3. For the FMLA:
i. Any two violations of the FMLA’s
notice requirements; or
ii. Any two violations of the FMLA
other than its notice requirements.
4. For the MSPA:
i. Any two violations of the MSPA’s
requirements pertaining to wages,
supplies, and working arrangements;
ii. Any two violations of the MSPA’s
requirements related to health and
safety;
iii. Any two violations of the MSPA’s
disclosure and recordkeeping
requirements; or
iv. Any two violations related to the
MSPA’s registration requirements.
5. For the NLRA:
i. Any two violations of the same
numbered subsection of section 8(a) of
the NLRA.
6. For Title VII, section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the ADA, the
ADEA, section 6(d) of the FLSA (known
as the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. 206(d)),
Executive Order 11246 of September 24,
1965, the Vietnam Era Veterans’
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58727
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972,
and the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974:
i. Any two violations, even if they
arise under different statutes, if both
violations involve:
1. the same protected status, and
2. at least one of the following
elements in common:
a. the same employment practice, or,
b. the same worksite.
7. For all of the Labor Laws, including
those listed above, even if the violations
arise under different statutes:
i. Any two violations involving
retaliation;
ii. Any two failures to keep records
required under the Labor Laws; or
iii. Any two failures to post notices
required under the Labor Laws.
Further guidance for applying these
criteria is included below:
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The terms ‘‘repeated’’ and ‘‘repeat’’
have well-established meanings under
the OSH Act with regard to violations
that are enforced through citations.
Such violations are ‘‘repeated’’ ‘‘if, at
the time of the alleged repeated
violation, there was [an Occupational
Safety and Health Review Commission]
final order against the same employer
for a substantially similar violation.’’
Potlatch Corp., 7 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA)
1061 (O.S.H.R.C. 1979). This term is
generally defined similarly under
OSHA-approved State Plans.109
As such, under the OSH Act or an
OSHA-approved State Plan, if a citation
or equivalent State document designates
a violation as ‘‘repeated,’’ ‘‘repeat,’’ or
any equivalent State designation, the
violation will be repeated for purposes
of the Order provided that the prior
violation became a final order of OSHRC
or the equivalent State agency within 3
years of the repeated violation. Even
though, under current OSHA policy,
repeated violations take into account a
5-year period, the 3-year timeframe
conforms to the Order’s direction that
the standards for repeated violations
should take into account ‘‘whether the
entity has had one or more additional
violations of the same or a substantially
similar requirement in the past 3 years.’’
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(2).
b. All Other Violations
For all Labor Law violations other
than OSH Act and OSHA-approved
State Plan violations enforced through
109 See generally ‘‘What Constitutes ‘Repeated’ or
‘Willful’ Violation for Purposes of State
Occupational Safety and Health Acts,’’ 17 A.L.R.6th
715 (originally published in 2006).
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citations or equivalent State documents,
a violation is repeated if it is the same
as, or substantially similar to, a prior
violation of the Labor Laws by the
contractor that was the subject of a
separate investigation or proceeding
arising from a separate set of facts, and
became uncontested or adjudicated
within the previous 3 years. These terms
are explained in greater detail below.
i. Prior Violation Must Have Been
Uncontested or Adjudicated
For a violation to be classified as
‘‘repeated,’’ a prior violation must be
either uncontested or adjudicated. Only
the prior violation need be uncontested
or adjudicated when determining
whether a violation is repeated. The
subsequent violation—the one to be
classified as ‘‘repeated’’—does not need
to have been uncontested or
adjudicated. These terms are explained
below.
An uncontested violation is a
violation that is reflected in:
(2) A Labor Law decision that the
contractor has not contested or
challenged within the time limit
provided in the Labor Law decision or
otherwise required by law; or
(3) A Labor Law decision following
which the contractor agrees to at least
some of the relief sought by the agency
in its enforcement action.
An adjudicated violation is one that is
reflected in:
(1) a civil judgment;
(2) an arbitral award or decision; or
(3) an administrative merits
determination that constitutes a final
agency order by an administrative
adjudicative authority following a
proceeding in which the contractor had
an opportunity to present evidence or
arguments on its behalf.
As used in the above definition of an
adjudicated violation, ‘‘administrative
adjudicative authority’’ means an
administrative body empowered to hear
adversary proceedings, such as the ARB,
the OSHRC, or the NLRB. ALJs are also
administrative adjudicative authorities;
however, their decisions will only
constitute adjudicated violations if they
are adopted as final agency orders. This
typically will occur, for example, if the
party subject to an adverse decision by
an ALJ does not file a timely appeal to
the agency’s administrative appellate
body, such as those referenced above.
For an ALCA to classify a subsequent
violation as ‘‘repeated,’’ the prior
violation must be uncontested or
adjudicated before the date of the Labor
Law decision for the subsequent
violation.
An example illustrating the above
principles follows:
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When WHD sends a contractor a letter
finding that the contractor violated the
DBA, if the contractor wishes to contest
the violation, it must request a hearing
in writing within 30 days. 29 CFR
5.11(b)(2). If the contractor timely
requests a hearing, then the matter may
proceed to a hearing before an ALJ, id.
5.11(b)(3), and, if necessary, the
contractor may appeal to the ARB, id.
6.34. While these proceedings are
pending, WHD’s letter, by itself, cannot
be a prior violation because it is neither
uncontested nor adjudicated. Thus, if
the contractor, during the pendency of
those proceedings, receives a second
letter from WHD finding that the
contractor committed a substantially
similar violation, the second violation
would not be classified as repeated.
However, once the ARB renders its
decision, representing a final order of
the Department of Labor, the first
violation is considered adjudicated. If,
after the ARB decision, the contractor
receives a second letter about a second
substantially similar violation, that
second violation would be classified as
a repeated violation under the Order,
regardless of whether the second
violation is uncontested or adjudicated.
The first letter may also become
‘‘uncontested’’ if the contractor agrees in
a settlement to pay some or all of the
back wages due. Thus, if the contractor
agrees to such a settlement at any time
after receiving the first letter, and the
contractor subsequently receives a
second letter from WHD finding that the
contractor committed a second,
substantially similar violation, then the
second violation would be classified as
repeated, regardless of whether the
second violation is uncontested or
adjudicated.
This framework is intended to ensure
that violations will only be classified as
repeated when the contractor has had
the opportunity—even if not
exercised—to present facts or arguments
in its defense before an adjudicative
authority concerning the prior violation.
ii. 3-Year Look-Back Period
For a violation to be classified as
‘‘repeated,’’ the prior violation must
have become uncontested or
adjudicated no more than 3 years prior
to the date of the repeated violation—
the 3-year look-back period. The ‘‘date’’
of the repeated violation is the date of
the relevant civil judgment, arbitral
award or decision, or administrative
merits determination (e.g. Labor Law
decision) is issued.110 For example, if
110 This
means that the 3-year timeframe for
determining whether a violation is repeated (the 3year look-back period) is different from the 3-year
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the contractor’s offer is dated March 1,
2019, then the contractor must disclose
all Labor Law decisions within the 3year disclosure period prior to the date
of the offer, between March 1, 2016, and
March 1, 2019. However, if one of the
contractor’s disclosed decisions is dated
June 8, 2018, then the 3-year look-back
period for determining whether that
violation identified in the decision
should be classified as repeated extends
back to June 8, 2015.
The relevant date for determining
whether a prior violation falls within
the 3-year look-back period is the date
that the prior violation becomes
uncontested or adjudicated. A prior
violation becomes uncontested either on
the date on which any time period to
contest the violation has expired, or on
the date of the contractor’s agreement to
at least some of the relief sought by the
agency in its enforcement action (e.g.,
the date a settlement agreement is
signed), whichever is applicable. A
prior violation becomes adjudicated on
the date on which the violation first
becomes a civil judgment, arbitral award
or decision, or a final agency order by
an administrative adjudicative authority
following a proceeding in which the
contractor had an opportunity to present
evidence or arguments on its behalf.
Thus, for a violation that is the subject
of successive adjudications, the dates of
subsequent appellate decisions are not
relevant.
For example, if OFCCP issues a show
cause notice to a contractor on January
1, 2017, and the contractor contests the
violation, resulting in an ALJ
determination on January 1, 2018, an
ARB determination on January 1, 2019,
a civil judgment by a district court on
January 1, 2020, and a civil judgment by
a court of appeals on January 1, 2021,
then the relevant date of the prior
violation would be the January 1, 2019
date of the ARB order. This date is the
relevant date because this is the date on
which the violation becomes a final
agency order by the ARB, and therefore
first becomes an adjudicated violation—
even though it is later adjudicated again
in the civil judgments of the district
court and court of appeals. That ARB
order could therefore serve as a prior
violation for any subsequent
substantially similar violation for which
a Labor Law decision is issued after
January 1, 2019 and prior to January 1,
2022.
timeframe within which all Labor Law decisions
must be disclosed under the Order (the 3-year
disclosure period), which is the 3 years prior to the
date of the contractor’s offer.
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iii. Separate Investigations or
Proceedings
The prior violation must be the
subject of a separate investigation or
proceeding arising from a separate set of
facts. Thus, for example, if one
investigation discloses that a contractor
violated the FLSA and the OSH Act, or
committed multiple violations of any
one of the Labor Laws, such violations
would not be ‘‘repeated’’ simply
because of the other violations found in
the same investigation.
iv. Prior Violation Must Be Committed
by the Same Legal Entity
The prior violation must have been
committed by the contractor, considered
on a company-wide basis. Thus, a prior
violation by any establishment of a
multi-establishment company can
render subsequent violations repeated,
provided the other relevant criteria are
satisfied, as long as the violation was
committed by the same legal entity.111
As discussed below, the relative size of
the contractor as compared to the
number of violations may be a
mitigating factor.
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v. Substantially Similar Violations
The prior violation must be the same
as or substantially similar to the
violation designated as repeated.
Substantially similar does not mean
‘‘exactly the same.’’ United States v.
Washam, 312 F.3d 926, 930–31 (8th Cir.
2002). Rather, two things may be
substantially similar where they share
‘‘‘essential elements in common.’’’
Alameda Mall, L.P. v. Shoe Show, Inc.,
649 F.3d 389, 392–93 (5th Cir. 2011)
(quoting the dictionary definition of the
term).
Whether violations fall under the
same Labor Law is not necessarily
determinative of whether the
requirements underlying those
violations are substantially similar.
Rather, as set forth in greater details
below, whether a violation is
substantially similar to a past violation
turns on the nature of the violation and
underlying obligation itself. The
following definitions outline when,
under the Order, a violation will be
substantially similar to a prior violation
(with the exception of OSH Act and
OSHA State Plan violations enforced
through a citation, which are addressed
above):
111 However,
as noted below, as to the antidiscrimination Labor Laws specifically, whether a
violation was committed at the same worksite as a
prior violation is one factor that can affect whether
the two violations are substantially similar to each
other.
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FLSA
Any two violations of the FLSA’s
child labor provisions are substantially
similar to each other. This reflects the
treatment of such violations as
‘‘repeated’’ for purposes of civil
monetary penalties in 29 CFR 579.2.
Additionally, any two violations of the
FLSA’s provision requiring break time
for nursing mothers are substantially
similar to each other.
FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order
13658
Any violations of the minimum wage,
subminimum wage, overtime, or
prevailing wage requirements of the
FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order
13658 are substantially similar to each
other, even if the violations arise under
different statutes.112
FMLA
Any two FMLA violations are
substantially similar to each other under
the Order, with the exception of
violations of the notice requirements.
Thus, denial of leave, retaliation,
discrimination, failure to reinstate an
employee to the same or an equivalent
position, and failure to maintain group
health insurance are all substantially
similar, given that each violation
involves either denying FMLA leave or
penalizing an employee who takes
leave. Conversely, any two instances of
failure to provide notice—such as
failure to provide general notice via a
poster or a failure to notify individual
employees regarding their eligibility
status, rights, and responsibilities—are
substantially similar to each other, but
not to other violations of the FMLA.
58729
Violations of the statute’s disclosure and
recordkeeping requirements are also
substantially similar to each other.
Finally, multiple violations related to
the MSPA’s registration requirements
are substantially similar to each other.
NLRA
For NLRA violations, any two
violations of the same numbered
subsection of section 8(a) of the NLRA,
29 U.S.C. 158(a), are substantially
similar. For example, any two violations
of section 8(a)(3), which prohibits
employers from discriminating against
employees for engaging in or refusing to
engage in union activities, are
substantially similar. Likewise, any two
violations of section 8(a)(2), which
prohibits employers from dominating or
assisting labor unions through financial
support or otherwise, are substantially
similar to each other.
MSPA
For violations of the MSPA, multiple
violations of the statute’s requirements
pertaining to wages, supplies, and
working arrangements (including, for
example, failure to pay wages when
due, prohibitions against requiring
workers to purchase goods or services
solely from particular contractors,
employers, or associations, and
violating the terms of any working
arrangements) are substantially similar
to each other for purposes of the Order.
Likewise, violations of any of the
MSPA’s requirements related to health
and safety, including both housing and
transportation health and safety, are
substantially similar to each other.
The Anti-Discrimination Labor Laws
For purposes of the antidiscrimination Labor Laws,113
violations are substantially similar if
they involve both of the following
elements, even if they arise under
different statutes:
(1) the same protected status, and
(2) at least one of the following
elements in common:
a. the same employment practice, e.g.,
hiring, firing, harassment,
compensation, or,
b. the same worksite.
With regard to the first element,
violations are considered to involve the
‘‘same’’ protected status as long as the
same status is present in both violations,
even if other protected statuses may be
involved as well. For example, if the
first violation involves discrimination
on the basis of national origin and the
second violation involves
discrimination on the basis of national
origin and race, the violations are
substantially similar because they
involve the same protected status,
namely, discrimination on the basis of
national origin. Additionally, in this
context, violations involving
discrimination on the bases of sex,
pregnancy, gender identity (including
transgender status), and sex stereotyping
are considered to involve the ‘‘same’’
protected status for the purpose of
determining whether violations are
substantially similar under the Order.
For the purpose of determining
whether violations involve the same
112 This treatment is consistent with the FLSA’s
regulations, which treat any two minimum wage or
overtime violations as ‘‘repeated.’’ See 29 CFR
578.3(b). This regulatory provision recognizes that
two failures to pay wages mandated by law are
substantially similar, even if they involve different
specific obligations.
113 Title VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973, the ADA, the ADEA, section 6(d) of the
FLSA (known as the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C.
206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of September 24,
1965, the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment
Assistance Act of 1972, and the Vietnam Era
Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974.
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worksite, the definition of ‘‘worksite’’
set forth in the discussion of the 25
percent criterion for a serious violation
should be used, see Section
III(A)(1)(b)(i), except that any two
company-wide violations are also
considered to involve the same
worksite.
All of the Labor Laws
For all of the Labor Laws, including
those referenced above, any two
violations involving retaliation are
substantially similar. Likewise, any two
failures to keep records required under
the Labor Laws are substantially similar.
And, any two failures to post notices
required under the Labor Laws are
substantially similar.
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c. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected
examples of repeated violations, see
Appendix B.
3. Willful Violations
The Order provides that the standard
for what constitutes a ‘‘willful’’
violation should ‘‘incorporate existing
statutory standards’’ to the extent such
standards exist. Order, section
4(b)(i)(A). The Order further provides
that, where no statutory standards exist,
the standard for willful should take into
account ‘‘whether the entity knew of,
showed reckless disregard for, or acted
with plain indifference to the matter of
whether its conduct was prohibited by
the requirements of the [Labor Laws].’’
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(3).
Accordingly, a violation is ‘‘willful’’
under the Order if:
a. For purposes of OSH Act or OSHAapproved State Plan violations that are
enforced through citations or equivalent
State documents, the citation or
equivalent State document was
designated as willful or any equivalent
State designation (e.g., ‘‘knowing’’);
b. For purposes of the minimum
wage, overtime, and child labor
provisions of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 206–
207, 212, the administrative merits
determination sought or assessed back
wages for greater than 2 years or sought
or assessed civil monetary penalties for
a willful violation, or there was a civil
judgment or arbitral award or decision
finding that the contractor’s violation
was willful;
c. For purposes of the ADEA, the
enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or
arbitral panel assessed or awarded
liquidated damages;
d. For purposes of Title VII or the
ADA, the enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or
awarded punitive damages for a
violation where the contractor engaged
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in a discriminatory practice with malice
or reckless indifference to the federally
protected rights of an aggrieved
individual; or
e. For purposes of any other violations
of the Labor Laws, it is readily
ascertainable from the findings of the
relevant enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel that the
contractor knew that its conduct was
prohibited by any of the Labor Laws or
showed reckless disregard for, or acted
with plain indifference to, whether its
conduct was prohibited by one or more
requirements of the Labor Laws.
In the above definition, the
Department incorporates existing
standards, statutory or otherwise, from
the Labor Laws that are indicative of
willfulness as defined under the Order.
Further guidance for applying these
criteria is included below:
a. OSH Act or OSHA-Approved State
Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The term ‘‘willful’’ has a wellestablished meaning under the OSH Act
that is consistent with the standard
provided in the Order. Under the OSH
Act, a violation that is enforced through
a citation or equivalent State document
will be designated as willful where an
employer has demonstrated either an
intentional disregard for the
requirements of the OSH Act or a plain
indifference to its requirements. See
A.E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Sec’y of Labor,
295 F.3d 1341, 1351–52 (D.C. Cir. 2002).
For example, if an employer knows that
specific steps must be taken to address
a hazard, but substitutes its own
judgment for the requirements of the
legal standard, the violation will be
designated as willful. OSHA-approved
State Plans generally use this term in a
similar way.114 As such, as noted above,
under the OSH Act or an OSHAapproved State Plan, if a citation or
equivalent State document designates a
violation as ‘‘willful’’ or an equivalent
State designation (e.g., ‘‘knowing’’), the
violation will be willful for purposes of
the Order.
b. Violations of the Minimum Wage,
Overtime, and Child Labor Provisions of
the FLSA
The term ‘‘willful’’ has a wellestablished meaning under the FLSA
that is consistent with the standard
provided in the Order. Under the
minimum wage, overtime, and child
labor provisions of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C.
114 See generally Randy Sutton, ‘‘What
Constitutes ‘Repeated’ or ‘Willful’ Violation for
Purposes of State Occupational Safety and Health
Acts,’’ 17 A.L.R.6th 715 (originally published in
2006).
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206–207, 212, a violation is willful
where the employer knew that its
conduct was prohibited by the FLSA or
showed reckless disregard for the
FLSA’s requirements. See 29 CFR
578.3(c)(1), 579.2; McLaughlin v.
Richland Shoe Co., 486 U.S. 128, 133
(1988). For example, an employer that
requires workers to ‘‘clock out’’ after 40
hours in a workweek and then continue
working ‘‘off the clock’’ or pays workers
for 40 hours by check and then pays
them in cash at a straight-time rate for
hours worked over 40 commits a willful
violation of the FLSA’s overtime
requirements. These actions show
knowledge of the FLSA’s requirements
to pay time-and-a-half for hours worked
over 40 and an attempt to evade that
requirement by concealing records of
the workers’ actual hours worked.
Under the minimum wage and
overtime provisions of the FLSA, willful
violations are grounds for
administrative assessments of back
wages for greater than 2 years, and for
the assessment of civil monetary
penalties. See 29 U.S.C. 216(e)(2); cf. 29
U.S.C. 255(a). Additionally, under the
FLSA’s child labor provisions, willful
violations are also grounds for increased
civil monetary penalties. See 29 U.S.C.
216(e)(1)(A)(ii); 29 CFR 579.5(c).
Accordingly, administrative
assessments of back wages for greater
than 2 years and assessments of civil
monetary penalties for willful violations
are understood to reflect a finding of
willfulness and therefore will be
considered indicative of willfulness
under the Order.115 Courts and
arbitrators must also make findings of
willfulness in order to extend the statute
of limitations beyond 2 years under the
FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime
provisions, or to affirm assessments of
civil monetary penalties of the FLSA’s
minimum wage, overtime, or child labor
provisions. See 29 U.S.C.
216(e)(1)(A)(ii), 216(e)(2), 216(e)(3)(C),
255(a). Thus, any civil judgment or
arbitral award or decision finding that
the contractor committed a willful FLSA
violation will be classified as a willful
violation under the Order.
c. Violations of the ADEA
The term ‘‘willful’’ also has a wellestablished meaning under the ADEA
that is consistent with the standard
provided in the Order. Under the ADEA,
115 Civil monetary penalties may be assessed
under the FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime
provisions for violations that are either repeated or
willful, and civil monetary penalties may be
assessed for child labor violations even in the
absence of a repeated or willful violation. Only civil
monetary penalties involving willful violations will
constitute willful violations under the Order.
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a violation is willful when the employer
knew or showed reckless disregard for
the matter of whether its conduct was
prohibited by the ADEA. See Trans
World Airlines v. Thurston, 469 U.S.
111, 126 (1985). Willful violations are
required for liquidated damages to be
assessed or awarded under the ADEA.
See 29 U.S.C. 626(b). Accordingly, any
violation of the ADEA in which the
enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or
arbitral panel assessed or awarded
liquidated damages is understood to
reflect a finding of willfulness and
therefore will be considered indicative
of a willful violation under the Order.
d. Title VII and the ADA
Violations of Title VII or the ADA are
‘‘willful’’ under the Order if the
enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or
arbitral panel assessed or awarded
punitive damages for a violation where
the contractor engaged in a
discriminatory practice with malice or
reckless indifference to the federally
protected rights of an aggrieved
individual. Punitive damages are
appropriate in cases under Title VII or
the ADA where the employer engaged in
intentional discrimination with ‘‘malice
or reckless indifference to the federally
protected rights of an aggrieved
individual.’’ 42 U.S.C. 1981a(b)(1). This
standard is analogous to the standard for
willful violations in the Order. An
employer acts with malice or reckless
indifference if a managerial agent of the
employer, acting within the scope of
employment, makes a decision that was
in the face of a perceived risk of
violating Federal law, and the employer
cannot prove that the manager’s action
was contrary to the employer’s good
faith efforts to comply with Federal law.
See Kolstad v. American Dental Ass’n,
527 U.S. 526, 536, 545 (1999). For
example, if a manager received a
complaint of sexual harassment but
failed to report it or investigate it—and
the employer’s anti-harassment policy
was ineffective in protecting the
employees’ rights or the employer did
not engage in good faith efforts to
educate its managerial staff about sexual
harassment—then the violation would
warrant punitive damages and qualify as
‘‘willful’’ under the Order. See, e.g.,
EEOC v. Mgmt. Hospitality of Racine,
Inc., 666 F.3d 422, 438–39 (7th Cir.
2012).
e. Any Other Violations of the Labor
Laws
For any violations of Labor Laws
other than violations discussed above in
subsections (a) through (d), a violation
is willful for purposes of the Order if it
is readily ascertainable from the
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findings of the relevant enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral
panel that the contractor knew that its
conduct was prohibited by the Labor
Laws or showed reckless disregard for,
or acted with plain indifference to,
whether its conduct was prohibited by
Labor Laws.116
A contractor need not act with malice
for a violation to be classified as willful;
rather, the focus is on whether it is
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decision that, based on all of the
facts and circumstances discussed in the
findings, the contractor acted with
knowledge of or reckless disregard for
its legal requirements. The Labor Law
decision need not include the specific
words ‘‘knowledge,’’ ‘‘reckless
disregard,’’ or ‘‘plain indifference’’;
however, it must be readily
ascertainable from the factual findings
or legal conclusions contained in the
decision that the violation meets one of
these conditions, as described further
below.
Knowledge
The first circumstance where
willfulness will be found is where it is
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decision that the contractor knew
that its conduct was prohibited by law,
yet engaged in the conduct anyway.
Knowledge can be inferred from the
factual findings or legal conclusions
contained in the Labor Law decision.
Thus, willfulness will typically be
found where it is readily ascertainable
from the Labor Law decision that a
contractor was previously advised by
responsible government officials that its
conduct was not lawful, but engaged in
the conduct anyway. Repeated
violations may also be willful to the
extent that the prior proceeding
demonstrates that the contractor was
put on notice of its legal obligations,
only to later commit the same or a
substantially similar violation. If it is
readily ascertainable from the Labor
Law decision that a contractor has a
written policy or manual that describes
a legal requirement, and then knowingly
violates that requirement, the violation
is also likely to be willful.
For example, if it is readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law
decision that a contractor was warned
by an official from the Department that
the housing it was providing to migrant
agricultural workers did not comply
with required safety and health
standards, and that the contractor then
failed to make the required repairs or
corrections, such findings demonstrate
116 Nothing in this guidance is intended to affect
the terminology or operation of FAR part 22.4.
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58731
that the contractor engaged in a willful
violation of MSPA. Likewise, if the
Labor Law decision indicates that a
contractor’s employee handbook states
that it provides unpaid leave to
employees with serious health
conditions as required by the FMLA, but
the contractor refuses to grant FMLA
leave or erects unnecessary hurdles to
employees requesting such leave, that
violation would also likely be willful.
Certain acts, by their nature, are willful,
such as conduct that demonstrates an
attempt to evade statutory
responsibilities, including the
falsification of records, fraud or
intentional misrepresentation in the
application for a required certificate,
payment of wages ‘‘off the books,’’ or
‘‘kickbacks’’ of wages from workers back
to the contractor.
Reckless Disregard or Plain Indifference
The second type of willful violation is
where it is readily ascertainable from
the Labor Law decision that a contractor
acted with reckless disregard or plain
indifference toward the Labor Laws’
requirements. These terms refer to
circumstances where a contractor failed
to make sufficient efforts to learn or
understand whether it was complying
with the law. Although merely
inadvertent or negligent conduct would
not meet this standard, ignorance of the
law is not a defense to a willful
violation. The adequacy of a contractor’s
inquiry is evaluated in light of all of the
facts and circumstances, including the
complexity of the legal issue and the
sophistication of the contractor. In other
words, the more obvious the violation,
and the longer the contractor has been
in business, the more likely it will be
that a violation will be found willful.
Reckless disregard or plain indifference
may also be shown where a contractor
was aware of plainly obvious violations
and failed to take an appropriate action.
For example, an employer who employs
a 13-year-old child in an obviously
dangerous occupation, such as operating
a forklift, is acting in reckless disregard
for the law even if it cannot be shown
that the employer actually knew that
doing so was in violation of one of the
Secretary’s Hazardous Occupation
Orders related to child labor. Reckless
disregard or plain indifference will also
be found if a contractor acted with
purposeful lack of attention to its legal
requirements, such as if managementlevel officials are made aware of a
health or safety requirement but make
little or no effort to communicate that
requirement to lower-level supervisors
and employees.
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f. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected
examples of willful violations, see
Appendix C.
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4. Pervasive Violations
The Order provides that, where no
statutory standards exist, the standard
for pervasive violations should take into
account ‘‘the number of violations of a
requirement or the aggregate number of
violations of requirements in relation to
the size of the entity.’’ Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(4). No statutory standards for
‘‘pervasive’’ exist under the Labor Laws.
Violations are ‘‘pervasive’’ if they
reflect a basic disregard by the
contractor for the Labor Laws as
demonstrated by a pattern of serious
and/or willful violations, continuing
violations, or numerous violations.
Violations must be multiple to be
pervasive, although having multiple
violations does not necessarily mean the
violations are pervasive. The number of
violations necessarily depends on the
size of the contractor, because larger
employers, by virtue of their size, are
more likely to have multiple violations.
To be pervasive, the violations need not
be of the same or similar requirements
of the Labor Laws. Pervasive violations
may exist where the contractor commits
multiple violations of the same Labor
Law, regardless of their similarity, or
violations of more than one of the Labor
Laws. This classification is intended to
identify those contractors whose
numerous violations of Labor Laws
indicate that they may view sanctions
for their violations as merely part of the
‘‘cost of doing business,’’ an attitude
that is inconsistent with the level of
responsibility required by the FAR.
Pervasive violations differ from
repeated violations in a number of ways.
First, unlike repeated violations,
pervasive violations need not be
substantially similar, or even similar at
all, as long as each violation involves
one of the Labor Laws. Additionally,
pervasive violations, unlike repeated
violations, may arise in the same
proceeding or investigation. For
example, a small tools manufacturer
with about 50 employees in a single
location that does not have a process for
identifying and eliminating serious
safety-and-health hazards may be cited
multiple times for serious violations
under the OSH Act—once for improper
storage of hazardous materials, once for
failure to provide employees with
protective equipment, once for
inadequate safeguards on heavy
machinery, once for lack of fall
protection, once for insufficient
ventilation, once for unsafe noise
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exposure, and once for inadequate
emergency exits. While these violations
are sufficiently different that they would
not be designated as repeated violations
by OSHA and would therefore not be
repeated violations under the Order,
such a high number of serious
workplace safety violations relative to
the size of a small company with only
a single location would likely
demonstrate a basic disregard by the
company for workers’ safety and health,
particularly if the company lacked a
process for identifying and eliminating
serious safety-and-health hazards. As
such, these violations would likely be
considered pervasive.
In addition, violations across multiple
Labor Laws—especially when they are
serious, repeated, or willful—are an
indication of pervasive violations that
warrant careful examination by the
ALCA. For example, a medium-sized
company with about 1,000 employees
that provides janitorial services at
Federal facilities may be found to have
violated the SCA for failure to pay
workers their required wages, Title VII
for discrimination in hiring on the basis
of national origin, the NLRA for
demoting workers who are seeking to
organize a union, and the FMLA for
denying workers unpaid leave for
serious health conditions. While these
violations are substantively different
from each other, a medium-sized
company that violates so many Labor
Laws is demonstrating a basic disregard
for its legal obligations to its workers
and is likely committing pervasive
violations.
Whereas a repeated violation may be
found anytime a contractor commits two
or more substantially similar violations,
there is no specific numeric threshold
for pervasive violations. The number of
violations that will result in a
classification of pervasive will depend
on the size of the contractor, as well as
the nature and severity of the violations
themselves.
A series of repeated violations may,
however, become pervasive, particularly
if it demonstrates that a contractor,
despite knowledge of its violations, fails
to make efforts to change its practices
and continues to violate the law. For
example, if WHD issued several
administrative merits determinations
over the course of 3 years finding that
a contractor illegally employed
underage workers, and despite receiving
these notices, the contractor failed to
make efforts to change its child labor
practices and continued to violate the
FLSA’s child labor provisions, the series
of violations would likely be considered
pervasive.
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For smaller companies, a smaller
number of violations may be sufficient
for a finding of pervasiveness, while for
large companies, pervasive violations
will typically require either a greater
number of violations or violations
affecting a significant number or
percentage of a company’s workforce.
For example, if OFCCP finds that a large
contractor with 50,000 employees that
provides food services at Federal
agencies nationwide used preemployment screening tests for most
jobs at the company’s facilities that
resulted in Hispanic workers being
hired at a significantly lower rate than
non-Hispanic workers over a 5-year
period, and in addition, WHD finds that
the company failed to comply with the
SCA’s requirements to pay its workers
prevailing wages at many of its
locations, such violations would likely
be pervasive, notwithstanding the large
size of the contractor, because the
contractor’s numerous serious violations
spanned most of its locations and
affected many of its workers. In contrast,
had the company only engaged in these
prohibited practices with respect to
some of its hiring at only one a few of
its locations, such violations might not
necessarily be considered pervasive.
Similarly, if a large company with
5,000 employees that provides uniform
services to Federal agencies in several
States is cited 10 times for serious
OSHA violations affecting most of its
inspected locations over the span of a
year, and a number of the citations
involve the failure to abate extremely
dangerous conditions—and as a result
the company is placed on OSHA’s
Severe Violator Enforcement Program—
such violations would likely be
pervasive because the sheer number of
violations over such a short period of
time is evidence that the company is
ignoring persistent threats to workers’
safety, fails to treat safety as a serious
problem, and is acting in disregard of its
legal obligations. In contrast, if the
violations affected only a few of the
company’s facilities, or if the company
had acted quickly to abate any
violations, the violations might not
necessarily be considered pervasive.
An additional relevant factor in
determining whether violations are
pervasive is the involvement of higherlevel management officials. When Labor
Laws are violated with either the
explicit or implicit approval of higherlevel management, such approval
signals that future violations will be
tolerated or condoned, and may
dissuade workers from reporting
violations or raising complaints. Thus,
to the extent that higher-level
management officials were involved in
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violations themselves (such as
discrimination in hiring by an
executive, or a decision by an executive
to cut back on required safety
procedures that led to violations of the
OSH Act) or knew of violations and
failed to take appropriate actions (such
as ignoring reports or complaints by
workers), the violations are more likely
to be deemed pervasive. By using the
term ‘‘higher-level management,’’ the
Department agrees that a violation is
unlikely to be pervasive for this reason
where the manager involved is a lowlevel manager (such as a first-line
supervisor) acting contrary to a strong
company policy, and the company
responds with appropriate remedial
action.
For example, if the vice president of
a construction company directs a
foreman not to hire Native American
workers, and as a result the company is
later found to have committed
numerous Title VII violations against
job applicants, such violations are likely
to be pervasive. Likewise, if the chief
safety officer at a chemical plant fields
complaints from many workers about
several unsafe working conditions but
then fails to take action to remedy the
unsafe conditions, such violations are
also likely to be pervasive because the
known dangerous working conditions
were disregarded by a high-level
company official despite being reported
by many workers at the plant. Such
behavior reflects a basic disregard for
worker health and safety.
For a table containing additional
examples of pervasive violations, see
Appendix D.
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B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and
Mitigating Factors
As discussed above, an ALCA’s
assessment of a contractor’s Labor Law
violations involves a three-step process:
(1) Classifying violations to determine
whether any are serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive; (2) weighing
any serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations in light of the
totality of the circumstances, including
any mitigating factors that the contractor
has identified; and then (3) providing
the contracting officer with written
analysis and advice regarding the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance. In analyzing a contractor’s
record during the weighing process, an
ALCA does not need to give equal
weight to two violations that receive the
same classification. Some violations
may have more significant
consequences on a contractor’s
workforce or more potential to disrupt
contractor performance than others.
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In the weighing process, the ALCA
considers many factors as a part of an
analysis of whether the contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance—in other words, whether
the contractor’s history of Labor Law
compliance and any adoption by the
contractor of preventative compliance
measures indicate that the contracting
officer could find the contractor to have
a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. In considering the
totality of the circumstances, the ALCA
considers information about a
contractor’s violations obtained from
enforcement agencies, as well as
potentially mitigating information about
those violations that a contractor has
provided for review. In addition,
although ALCAs review contractors’
disclosed decisions, ALCAs will also
consider Labor Law decisions that
should have been disclosed by
contractors under the Order, but were
not. Such undisclosed decisions may be
brought to the attention of an ALCA by
the contracting officer, workers or their
representatives, an enforcement agency,
or any other source.
The weighing process is not
mechanistic, and this Guidance cannot
account for all of the possible
circumstances or facts related to a
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance. However, there are certain
factors that in many cases will help
inform an ALCA’s analysis and advice.
These factors, when present, will weigh
for or against a conclusion that a
contractor has a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance. See Appendix E.
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in
Favor of a Satisfactory Record of Labor
Law Compliance
Mitigating factors weigh in favor of a
conclusion that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. The list of factors below
includes ones that an ALCA may be able
to identify with information obtained
from enforcement agencies. It also
includes factors that an ALCA will not
be able to identify unless the contractor
provides the relevant information when
given the opportunity to do so by the
contracting officer. To ensure that all
mitigating factors are considered by the
ALCA, the contractor should avail itself
of the opportunity to provide all the
information it believes demonstrates a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance.
Generally, the most important
mitigating factor will be the extent to
which the contractor has remediated the
violation(s) and taken steps that will
prevent recurrence in the future. Other
mitigating factors include where the
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58733
contractor has only a single disclosed
violation; where the number of
violations is low relative to the size of
the contractor; where the contractor has
implemented a safety-and-health
management program, a collectivelybargained grievance procedure, or other
compliance program; where a violation
resulted from a recent legal or regulatory
change; where the findings in the
relevant Labor Law decision support the
contractor’s defense that it acted in good
faith or had reasonable grounds for
believing that it was not violating the
law; and where the contractor has
maintained a long period of compliance
following any violations.
None of these mitigating factors are
necessarily determinative. Nor is this an
exhaustive list. In some cases,
depending on the circumstances, several
mitigating factors may need to be
present in order for an ALCA to
conclude that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. In other cases, the presence
of only one of these factors may be
sufficient to support such a conclusion.
a. Remedial Measures
As noted above, the extent to which
a contractor has remediated a Labor Law
violation will typically be the most
important factor that can mitigate the
effect of a violation. Remedial measures
can include measures taken to correct
an unlawful practice, make affected
employees whole, or otherwise comply
with a contractor’s obligations under the
Labor Laws. Remedial measures also
may include the implementation of new
procedures and practices, or other
actions, in order to promote future
compliance. Contractors may take
remedial measures voluntarily, through
a settlement agreement with an
enforcement agency or private parties,
or pursuant to a court order. Remedial
measures may also be taken as a result
of labor compliance agreements, which
are discussed in section III(C) below.
Where a contractor institutes remedial
measures, this may indicate that a
contractor has recognized the need to
address a violation and has taken steps
to bring itself into compliance with the
law. The timeliness with which a
contractor agrees to, initiates, or
completes the implementation of
remedial measures may be relevant to
the weight that an ALCA gives to this
factor. Similarly, failure to remediate a
violation may demonstrate disregard for
legal obligations, which in turn may
raise concerns about a contractor’s
commitment or ability to comply with
the law during future contract
performance.
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b. Only One Violation
While a contracting officer is not
precluded from making a determination
of nonresponsibility based on a single
violation in the circumstances where
merited, the Order provides that, in
most cases, a single violation of a Labor
Law may not necessarily give rise to a
determination of lack of responsibility,
depending on the nature of the
violation. Order, section 4(a)(i). Thus,
when considering mitigating factors, an
ALCA may generally consider the
existence of only a single violation
during the 3-year disclosure period as
weighing in favor of a conclusion that
the contractor has a satisfactory record
of Labor Law compliance.
c. Low Number of Violations Relative to
Size
Larger contractors, by virtue of their
size, are more likely to have multiple
violations than smaller ones. When
assessing contractors with multiple
violations, the size of the contractor is
considered.
d. Safety-and-Health Programs,
Grievance Procedures, or Other
Compliance Programs
Contractors can help to assure future
compliance by implementing a safetyand-health management program such
as OSHA’s 1989 Safety and Health
Program Management guidelines or any
updates to those guidelines,117
grievance procedures (including
collectively-bargained ones), monitoring
arrangements negotiated as part of either
a settlement agreement or labor
compliance agreement, or other similar
compliance programs. Such programs
and procedures can foster a corporate
culture in which workers are
encouraged to raise legitimate concerns
about Labor Law violations without the
fear of repercussions; as a result, they
may also prompt workers to report
violations that would, under other
circumstances, go unreported.
Therefore, implementation or prior
existence of such a program is a
mitigating factor.
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e. Recent Legal or Regulatory Change
To the extent that the Labor Law
violations can be traced to a recent legal
or regulatory change, this may be a
mitigating factor. This may be a case
117 In addition, there are two voluntary industry
consensus standards that, if implemented, should
be considered as mitigating factors for violations
involving workplace safety and health: The ANSI/
AIHA Z10—2005 Occupational Safety and Health
Management Systems (ANSI/AIHA, 2005), and the
OHSAS 18001—2007 Occupational Health and
Safety Management Systems (OHSAS Project
Group, 2007).
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where a new agency or court
interpretation of an existing statute is
applied retroactively and a contractor’s
pre-change conduct is found to be a
violation. For example, where prior
agency or court decisions suggested that
a practice was lawful, but the Labor Law
decision finds otherwise, this may be a
mitigating factor.
f. Good Faith and Reasonable Grounds
It may be a mitigating factor where the
findings in the relevant Labor Law
decision support the contractor’s
defense that it had reasonable grounds
for believing that it was not violating the
law. For example, if a contractor acts in
reliance on advice from a responsible
official from the relevant enforcement
agency, or an authoritative
administrative or judicial ruling on a
similar case, such reliance will typically
demonstrate good faith and reasonable
grounds. This mitigating factor also
applies where a violation otherwise
resulted from the conduct of a
government official. For example, a
DBA violation may be mitigated where
the contracting agency failed to include
the relevant contract clause and wage
determination in a contract.
g. Significant Period of Compliance
Following Violations
If, following one or more violations
within the 3-year disclosure period, the
contractor maintains a steady period of
compliance with the Labor Laws, such
compliance may mitigate the existence
of prior violations (e.g., violations were
reported from 21⁄2 years ago and there
have been none since). This is a stronger
mitigating factor where the contractor
has a recent Labor Law decision that it
must disclose, but the underlying
conduct took place significantly before
the 3-year disclosure period and the
contractor has had no subsequent
violations.
2. Factors That Weigh Against a
Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
There are also factors that weigh
against a conclusion that a contractor
has a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. The list of factors below is
not exhaustive. Nor are any of these
factors necessarily determinative. An
ALCA reviews these factors as part of an
evaluation of the totality of the
circumstances. In some cases, several
factors may need to be present in order
for an ALCA to conclude that a
contractor has an unsatisfactory record
of Labor Law compliance. Depending on
the facts of the case, even where
multiple factors are present, they may
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be outweighed by mitigating
circumstances.
a. Pervasive Violations
As described in section III(A)(4)
above, pervasive violations are
violations that demonstrate a basic
disregard for the Labor Laws. Such
disregard of legal obligations creates a
heightened danger that the contractor
may, in turn, disregard its contractual
obligations as well. Additionally, such
contractors are more likely to violate the
Labor Laws in the future, and those
violations—and any enforcement
proceedings or litigation that may
ensue—may imperil their ability to meet
their obligations under a contract.
Accordingly, where an ALCA has
classified violations as pervasive (in the
classification step described above in
section III(A)), this weighs strongly
against a satisfactory record of Labor
Law compliance.
b. Violations That Meet Two or More of
the Categories Discussed Above
(Serious, Repeated, and Willful)
A violation that falls into two or more
of the categories is also, as a general
matter, more likely to be probative of
the contractor’s disregard for legal
obligations and unsatisfactory working
conditions than a violation that falls
into only one of those categories.
Accordingly, where an ALCA has
classified a violation as both repeated
and willful, for example, the violation
will tend to weigh more strongly against
a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance than a similar violation that
is repeated or willful, but not both.
c. Violations of Particular Gravity
In analyzing a contractor’s record, an
ALCA does not need to give equal
weight to two violations that have
received the same classification. Labor
Law violations of particular gravity
include, but are not limited to,
violations related to the death of an
employee; violations involving a
termination of employment for
exercising a right protected under the
Labor Laws; violations that
detrimentally impact the working
conditions of all or nearly all of the
workforce at a worksite; and violations
where the amount of back wages,
penalties, and other damages awarded is
greater than $100,000.
d. Violations for Which Injunctive Relief
Is Granted
Both preliminary and permanent
injunctions are rarely granted by courts
and require a showing of compelling
circumstances, including irreparable
harm to workers and a threat to the
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public interest. Accordingly, where a
court grants injunctive relief to remedy
a violation that is already classified as
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive, the ALCA should take this
into account as a factor that increases
the significance of that violation to the
contractor’s overall record of Labor Law
compliance.
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e. Violations That Are Reflected in Final
Orders
To the extent that the judgment,
determination, or order finding a Labor
Law violation is final (because appeals
and opportunities for further review
have been exhausted or were not
pursued), the violation should be given
greater weight than a similar violation
that is not yet final. While a violation
that is not final should be given lesser
weight, it will still be considered as
relevant to a contractor’s record of Labor
Law compliance.
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor’s
Record of Labor Law Compliance
As discussed above, an ALCA’s
assessment of a contractor’s Labor Law
violations involves a three-step process:
(1) Classifying violations to determine
whether any are serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive; (2) weighing
any serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations in light of the
totality of the circumstances, including
any mitigating factors that the contractor
has identified; and then (3) providing
the contracting officer with written
analysis and advice regarding the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance.
The ALCA determines what advice
and analysis to give to the contracting
officer through the classification and
weighing steps. In providing advice, the
ALCA carefully considers the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance and makes a
recommendation regarding whether it
could support a finding, by the
contracting officer, that the contractor
has a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. See FAR 22.2004–
2(b)(3)–(4). As a part of this analysis, the
ALCA considers whether a labor
compliance agreement is warranted to
ensure the contractor’s compliance with
the Labor Laws during future contract
performance—and, if so, the timing of
the negotiations. Id.
Labor compliance agreements are
negotiated by the contractor and the
relevant enforcement agency/agencies.
These agreements may include
enhanced remedial measures intended
to prevent future violations and increase
compliance with Labor Laws. Examples
of enhanced remedial measures include,
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but are not limited to, specific changes
in the contractor’s business policies and
operations, adoption of a safety-andhealth management system, assessment
by outside consultants, internal
compliance audits or external
compliance monitoring, and enterprisewide applicability of remedial
measures. A contractor may enter into a
labor compliance agreement while at the
same time continuing to contest an
underlying Labor Law violation.
A labor compliance agreement is
warranted where the contractor has
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive Labor Law violations that are
not outweighed by mitigating factors
and the ALCA identifies conduct or
policies that could be addressed through
preventative actions. Where this is the
case, the contractor’s history of Labor
Law violations demonstrates a risk to
the contracting agency of violations
during contract performance, but these
risks may be mitigated through the
implementation of appropriate
enhanced compliance measures. A labor
compliance agreement also may be
warranted where the contractor
presently has a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance, but there are
also clear risk factors present, and a
labor compliance agreement would
reduce these risk factors and
demonstrate steps to maintain Labor
Law compliance during contract
performance.
When an ALCA recommends a labor
compliance agreement, the ALCA has
three options regarding the timing of
negotiations: (1) The contractor must
commit, after award, to negotiate an
agreement; (2) the contractor must
commit, before award, to negotiate an
agreement; or (3) the contractor must
enter into an agreement before award.
FAR 22.2004–2(b)(3)(ii)–(iv).
1. ALCA Recommendation
The ALCA’s advice to the contracting
officer must include one of the
following recommendations: The
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance—
(i) Supports a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics;
(ii) Supports a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics,
but the prospective contractor needs to
commit, after award, to negotiating a
labor compliance agreement or another
acceptable remedial action;
(iii) Could support a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics,
only if the prospective contractor
commits, prior to award, to negotiating
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58735
a labor compliance agreement or
another acceptable remedial action;
(iv) Could support a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics,
only if the prospective contractor enters,
prior to award, into a labor compliance
agreement; or
(v) Does not support a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics,
and the agency suspending and
debarring official should be notified in
accordance with agency procedures.
FAR 22.2004–2(b)(3). Additional
guidance regarding each
recommendation is provided below.
a. Satisfactory Record
A contractor has a satisfactory record
of Labor Law compliance where it has
no Labor Law violations within the 3year disclosure period or has no
violations that meet the definitions of
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive. Under these circumstances
an ALCA may recommend that the
contractor’s record supports a finding,
by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. This recommendation
may also be appropriate where the
contractor does have violations that
meet the definitions of serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive, but
under the totality of the circumstances
the existence of the violations is
outweighed by mitigating factors or
other relevant information.
b. Commitment After Award
An ALCA may recommend that a
contractor needs to commit, after the
award, to a labor compliance agreement
where the contractor presently has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, but there are also clear risk
factors present, and a labor compliance
agreement is warranted to reduce these
risk factors and demonstrate steps to
maintain Labor Law compliance during
contract performance. This may be the
case, for example, where the contractor
has serious, repeated, and/or willful
violations that have not been fully
remediated, and the ALCA has concerns
that the problems related to these
violations could affect future contract
performance. This may also be the case
where the ALCA is concerned that the
contractor has not fully addressed
managerial issues that could result in
violations that would impact
performance of the contract. Another
example is where one or more of the
contractor’s violations are presently in
litigation and may result in final orders
against the contractor in the future. This
recommendation is not appropriate
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where the contractor’s violations are
already pervasive.
c. Commitment Before Award
An ALCA may recommend that a
contractor needs to commit, prior to the
award, to a labor compliance agreement
where the contractor’s labor violation
history demonstrates an unsatisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics
unless further action is taken before the
award. This recommendation may be
appropriate, for example, where the
contractor has previously failed to
respond or provide adequate
justification for not responding when
notified of the need for a labor
compliance agreement. It may also be
appropriate where the contractor has
not been previously advised of the need
for a labor compliance agreement, but
the labor violation history demonstrates
an immediate need for a commitment to
negotiate—for example, where the
contractor has pervasive violations, or,
in certain circumstances, multiple
violations of particular gravity.
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d. Enter Into Agreement Before Award
An ALCA may also recommend that
a contractor must negotiate and enter
into a labor compliance agreement prior
to the award. As with the
recommendation described in section
(c) above, this recommendation is
appropriate where the contractor’s labor
violation history demonstrates an
unsatisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics unless further action is
taken before the award. Depending on
the conduct of the contractor and
severity of violations, the same
circumstances described in section (c)
may justify an increased level of
concern about future contract
performance. In these circumstances,
the ALCA may conclude that a
commitment alone prior to the award is
not sufficient and that the agreement
must be fully negotiated and signed
before the award can take place.
e. Notification to Agency Suspending
and Debarring Official
Although in many cases, a labor
compliance agreement is warranted to
address a contractor’s unsatisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance, there
are circumstances in which negotiation
of a labor compliance agreement may
not be warranted. In these
circumstances, an ALCA should
recommend that the contractor’s record
does not support a finding of a
satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics and that the agency
suspending and debarring official
should be notified. This may be the
case, for example, where an agreement
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cannot be reasonably expected to
improve future compliance. This may
also be the case where the contractor
has shown a basic disregard for Labor
Law, such as by previously failing to
enter into a labor compliance agreement
after being given a reasonable time to do
so. Another example is where the
contractor has breached an existing
labor compliance agreement. One more
example is where the contractor has
previously entered into a labor
compliance agreement and subsequently
commits pervasive violations or
multiple violations of particular gravity.
2. ALCA Analysis
The ALCA’s recommendation must be
accompanied by a written analysis. See
FAR 22.2004–2(b)(4). The written
analysis must include the number of
Labor Law violations; their
classification as serious, repeated,
willful and/or pervasive; any mitigating
factors or remedial measures; and any
additional information that the ALCA
finds to be relevant. See id.
If the ALCA concludes that a labor
compliance agreement is warranted,
then the written analysis must include
a supporting rationale for the
recommendation and the name of the
enforcement agency or agencies that
would execute the agreement. See FAR
22.2004–2(b)(4)(v), (4)(viii). The
rationale should include the ALCA’s
explanation for any recommendation
regarding when the contractor must
negotiate a labor compliance agreement,
i.e., before or after award. See id.
22.2004–2(b)(4)(v). The ALCA’s
explanation also should include a
rationale for any recommendation that
the contractor must enter into a labor
compliance agreement before award.
See id.
If the ALCA recommends that the
contractor’s record of Labor Law
compliance does not support a finding
of a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics, the ALCA’s analysis
must include: The rationale for the
finding, whether the ALCA supports
notification to the suspending and
debarring official, and whether the
ALCA intends to make such
notification. FAR 22.2004–2(b)(4)(vi)–
(vii).
In response to the ALCA’s analysis
and advice, the contracting officer takes
appropriate action, as described in the
FAR rule. See FAR 22.2004–2(b)(5)
(listing appropriate actions and
procedures). If the ALCA’s assessment
indicates that a labor compliance
agreement is warranted, the contracting
officer provides written notification to
the contractor prior to the award about
the contractor’s obligations. See id.
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22.2004–2(b)(7). When the ALCA learns
that the contractor has entered into a
labor compliance agreement, the ALCA
must make a notation in FAPIIS. Id.
22.2004–1(c)(6).
IV. Postaward Disclosure Updates and
Assessment of Labor Law Violations
After receiving a contract award,
contractors must continue to disclose
any new Labor Law decisions or
updates to previously disclosed
decisions. See Order, section 2(b); FAR
22.2004–3(a), 52.222–59. The contactor
must make the disclosures in the SAM
database at www.sam.gov. FAR 22.2004–
3(a)(1). These disclosures must be made
semiannually. Id.
During performance of the contract,
the ALCA has the duty to monitor Labor
Law decision information. The ALCA
has the duty to monitor SAM and
FAPIIS to review any new or updated
contractor disclosures. FAR 22.2004–
3(b)(1). Where a contractor previously
agreed to enter into a labor compliance
agreement, the ALCA also has the duty
to verify whether the contractor is
making progress toward reaching an
agreement, or has entered into and is
meeting the terms of the agreement. See
id. The ALCA also may consider Labor
Law decision information received from
sources other than the procurement
databases. Id.
If the ALCA has received information
indicating that further consideration or
action may be warranted, then the
ALCA shall notify the contracting
officer in accordance with agency
procedures. FAR 22.2004–3(b)(1). When
this happens, the contracting officer
must afford the contractor the
opportunity to provide any additional
information that the contractor may
wish to provide for consideration—
including remedial measures or other
mitigating factors related to newlydisclosed decisions, or an explanation
for any delay in entering into a labor
compliance agreement. Id. 22.2004–
3(b)(2).
A. Semiannual Disclosure Updates
If there are new Labor Law decisions
or updates to previously disclosed Labor
Law decisions, the contractor is
required to disclose this information
during performance of the contract. See
FAR 22.2004–3(a); 52.222–59(b)
(contract clause). Section II(A) above
describes the covered contracts for
which the initial preaward disclosure is
required. See also FAR 22.2004–1(a).
Contractors must make these
postaward disclosures semiannually in
the SAM database. FAR 22.2004–3(a)(1).
The contractor has flexibility in
establishing the date for the semiannual
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update. The contractor may use the sixmonth anniversary date of contract
award, or the contractor may choose a
different date before that six-month
anniversary date. Id. 22.2004–3(a)(2). In
either case, the contractor must
continue to update it semiannually. Id.
The types of Labor Law decisions that
must be disclosed during the postaward
period are the same as during the
preaward period: Administrative merits
determinations, civil judgments, and
arbitral awards or decisions. See FAR
52.222–59(a) (defining ‘‘labor law
decision’’). The definition of each of
these Labor Law decisions is the same
as applies preaward. See id. See section
II(B) above for the detailed definitions.
Postaward updates should include (a)
any new Labor Law decisions rendered
since the last disclosure and (b) updates
to previously disclosed information. As
noted above in section II(B)(4) of this
Guidance, contractors must report new
Labor Law decisions even if they arise
from a previously-disclosed Labor Law
violation. For example, if a contractor
initially disclosed a Federal district
court judgment finding that it violated
the FLSA, it must disclose as part of the
periodic updates any subsequent
Federal court of appeals decision
affirming that judgment. In a postaward
disclosure, contractors may also submit
updated information reflecting the fact
that a previously disclosed Labor Law
decision has been vacated, reversed, or
otherwise modified.
In any postaward update, contractors
must disclose the same information
about any individual Labor Law
decision that must be disclosed
preaward: (a) The Labor Law that was
violated; (b) the case number, inspection
number, charge number, docket number,
or other unique identification number;
(c) the date the Labor Law decision was
rendered; and (d) the name of the court,
arbitrator(s), agency, board, or
commission that rendered the decision.
See FAR 52.222–59(b)(1). And, as with
preaward disclosures, the contractor is
encouraged to submit such additional
information as the contractor deems
necessary, including mitigating
circumstances and remedial measures.
See id. 52.222–59(b)(3).
B. ALCA Assessment and Advice
Once the contractor has been given an
opportunity to provide additional
information, the ALCA follows the same
classification, weighing, and advice
processes that the ALCA follows in the
preaward period, which are described in
section III above. The ALCA provides
written analysis and advice to the
contracting officer regarding appropriate
actions for the contracting officer’s
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Jkt 238001
consideration. This postaward analysis
and advice is similar to the preaward
process discussed above in section
III(C). The postaward analysis and
advice should include:
(i) Whether any violations should be
considered serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive;
(ii) The number and nature of violations
(depending on the nature of the labor law
violation, in most cases, a single labor law
violation may not necessarily warrant
action);
(iii) Whether there are any mitigating
factors;
(iv) Whether the contractor has initiated
and implemented, in a timely manner—
i. Its own remedial measures; or
ii. Other remedial measures entered into
through agreement with, or as a result of, the
actions or orders of an enforcement agency,
court, or arbitrator;
(v) Whether a labor compliance agreement
or other remedial measure is —
(A) Warranted and the enforcement agency
or agencies that would execute such
agreement with the contractor;
(B) Under negotiation between the
contractor and the enforcement agency;
(C) Established, and whether it is being
adhered to; or
(D) Not being negotiated or has not been
established, even though the contractor was
notified that one had been recommended,
and the contractor’s rationale for not doing
so.
(vi) Whether the absence of a labor
compliance agreement or other remedial
measure, or noncompliance with a labor
compliance agreement, demonstrates a
pattern of conduct or practice that reflects
disregard for the recommendation of an
enforcement agency.
(vii) Whether the labor law violation(s)
merit consideration by the agency
suspending and debarring official and
whether the ALCA will make such a referral;
and
(viii) Any such additional information that
the ALCA finds to be relevant.
FAR 22.2004–3(b)(3). In determining
whether a labor compliance agreement
is warranted or whether the Labor Law
decisions merit consideration by the
agency suspending and debarring
official, the ALCA should consider the
guidance provided above in section
III(C).
In response to new information about
Labor Law violations, the contracting
officer may take no action and continue
the contract, or may exercise a contract
remedy as appropriate. See FAR
22.2004–3(b)(4) (listing appropriate
actions and procedures).
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
In addition to contracts between
contractors and contracting agencies,
the Order also applies to certain
subcontracts with an estimated value
that exceeds $500,000. FAR 52.222–
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58737
59(c). The subcontracts to which the
Order applies are described as ‘‘covered
subcontracts’’ in this Guidance. As
noted above, covered subcontracts
include subcontracts for commercial
items, but do not include subcontracts
for commercially available off-the-shelf
(COTS) items. See id. 52.222–59(c)(1)(i)
(excluding COTS contracts); 2.101
(defining COTS items).
Prime contractors working on
contracts covered by the Order are
required to consider prospective
subcontractors’ records of Labor Law
compliance when making responsibility
determinations for prospective
subcontractors. FAR 52.222–59(c). This
requirement applies to subcontractors at
all tiers. Id. 52.222–59(g).
A. Preaward Subcontractor Disclosures
Prospective subcontractors for a
covered subcontract must (like prime
contractors on a covered procurement
contract) make an initial representation
to the contractor about compliance with
Labor Laws, followed by a more detailed
disclosure. See FAR 52.222–59(c)(3).
See also section II(C)(1), above,
describing contractor disclosures. The
prospective subcontractor must make
the detailed disclosure to the
Department, id. 52.222–59(c)(3)(ii), by
following the procedure at the
‘‘Subcontractor Disclosures’’ tab at
www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces.
The Department, in turn, provides
advice to the subcontractor that the
subcontractor then provides to the
contractor to use in the responsibility
determination.
1. Initial Representation
In the initial representation to the
contractor, prospective subcontractors
must represent whether there have been
any Labor Law decisions rendered
against the subcontractor in the period
beginning on October 25, 2015 to the
date of the subcontractor’s offer, or for
three years preceding the date of the
subcontractor’s offer, whichever period
is shorter. FAR 52.222–59(c)(3)(i).
2. Detailed Disclosure to the Department
Prospective subcontractors must make
a more detailed disclosure to the
Department. FAR 52.222–59(c)(3)(ii).
Subcontractors must disclose the same
detailed information that prime
contractors themselves must disclose on
a covered procurement contract. See id.;
see also Guidance, section II(C)(1)
(describing contractor disclosures).
Subcontractors must disclose all
covered Labor Law decisions, and
subcontractors also may provide
additional information to the
Department that the subcontractor
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believes will demonstrate its
responsibility. Id. 52.222–59(c)(3)(iii).
This may include information on
mitigating circumstances and remedial
measures, such as information about
steps taken to correct the violations at
issue, the negotiation or execution of a
settlement agreement or labor
compliance agreement, or other steps
taken to achieve compliance with the
Labor Laws.
3. Providing the Department’s Advice to
the Contractor
When a prospective subcontractor
submits Labor Law violation and other
information to the Department, the
Department provides the subcontractor
with advice regarding its record of Labor
Law compliance. FAR 52.222–
59(c)(4)(ii)(C). The subcontractor then
must provide the Department’s advice to
the contractor for the contractor’s use in
determining whether the subcontractor
is a responsible source. Id.
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B. Preaward Department of Labor
Advice to the Subcontractor
After receiving a subcontractor’s
detailed disclosures, the Department
provides advice to the subcontractor
about its record of Labor Law
compliance. The advice may include (1)
that the subcontractor has no serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive
violations; (2) that the subcontractor has
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
violations but that a labor compliance
agreement is not warranted because, for
example, the contractor has initiated
and implemented its own remedial
measures; (3) that the subcontractor has
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
violations and a labor compliance
agreement is warranted; (4) that a labor
compliance agreement is warranted and
the subcontractor has not entered into
such an agreement in a reasonable
period of time; (5) that the subcontractor
is not complying with a labor
compliance agreement into which it
previously entered; or (6) that the
subcontractor is complying with a labor
compliance agreement into which it
previously entered. See FAR 52.222–
59(c)(4)(ii)(C).
In assessing subcontractor Labor Law
compliance, the Department applies the
same guidance on classification and
weighing of Labor Law violations
included above in sections III(A) and
III(B) of this Guidance. In carrying out
the assessment, Department officials
and ALCAs may receive information
from an enforcement agency about the
subcontractor’s compliance record. This
information will be evaluated
objectively and without regard for the
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enforcement agency’s litigation
interests.
C. Preaward Determination of
Subcontractor Responsibility
The prime contractor (not the
Department) has the duty to make a
determination that its subcontractors are
responsible sources. See FAR 9.104–
4(a). When assessing a prospective
subcontractor’s responsibility, the
contractor may find that the prospective
subcontractor has a satisfactory record
of integrity and business ethics with
regard to compliance with Labor Laws
under certain specified conditions.
These conditions are:
1. The Subcontractor Has No Covered
Labor Law Decisions To Disclose
The contractor may find the
subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has
represented that it has no covered Labor
Law decisions to disclose. See FAR
52.222–59(c)(4)(i).
2. The Department Advises That the
Subcontractor Has No Serious,
Repeated, Willful, or Pervasive
Violations
The contractor may find the
subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has
received advice from the Department
that none of the subcontractor’s
violations are serious, repeated, willful,
or pervasive; and the subcontractor has
provided notice of this advice to the
contractor. See FAR 52.222–
59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(1).
3. The Department Advises That the
Subcontractor Has Taken Sufficient
Action To Remediate Violations
The contractor may find the
subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has
received advice from the Department
that it has violations that are serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive; but the
Department also advises that the
subcontractor has taken sufficient action
to remediate its violations, such as
through its own remedial measures, by
entering into a labor compliance
agreement, or by agreeing to enter into
such an agreement; and the
subcontractor has provided notice of
this advice to the contractor. See FAR
52.222–59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(2).
4. The Department Has Failed To
Provide Timely Advice
If the Department does not provide
advice to the subcontractor within 3
business days of the subcontractor’s
detailed disclosure of Labor Law
decision information, and the
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Department did not previously advise
the subcontractor that it needed to enter
into a labor compliance agreement, then
the contractor may proceed with making
a responsibility determination using
available information and business
judgment. See FAR 52.222–59(c)(6).
5. The Subcontractor Contests Negative
Advice From the Department
Where the subcontractor contests
negative advice from the Department,
the contractor may still find the
subcontractor has a satisfactory record
under certain conditions. If the
subcontractor disagrees with negative
advice from the Department, then the
subcontractor must provide the
contractor with (i) information about all
the Labor Law violations that have been
determined by the Department to be
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive; (ii) such additional
information that the subcontractor
deems necessary to demonstrate its
responsibility, including mitigating
factors, remedial measures such as
subcontractor actions taken to address
the Labor Law violations, labor
compliance agreements, and other steps
taken to achieve compliance with labor
laws; (iii) a description of the
Department’s advice or proposed labor
compliance agreement; and (iv) an
explanation of the basis for the
subcontractor’s disagreement with the
Department. See FAR 52.222–
59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(3). If the contractor
determines that the subcontractor is
responsible on the basis of this
representation, or if the contractor
determines that due to a compelling
reason the contractor must proceed with
the subcontract award, then the
contractor must notify the contracting
officer of the decision and provide the
name of the subcontractor and the basis
for the decision (e.g., urgent and
compelling circumstances). See id.
52.222–59(c)(5).
D. Semiannual Subcontractor Updates
Subcontractors must update their
Labor Law decision disclosures after a
subcontract award in the same manner
that prime contractors must do for a
prime contract award. See FAR
22.2004–1(b); 22.2004–4. Subcontractors
must determine, semiannually, whether
the Labor Law disclosures that the
subcontractor previously provided to
the Department are current and
complete. Id. 52.222–59(d)(1). If the
information is current and complete, no
action is required. Id. If the information
is not current and complete,
subcontractors must provide revised
information to the Department and then
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make a new representation to the
contractor. Id. 52.222–59(d)(1).
If a subcontractor discloses new
information about Labor Law decisions
to the Department, the subcontractor
must provide to the contractor any new
advice from the Department. See FAR
52.222–59(d)(1). In addition, the
subcontractor must disclose to the
contractor if, during the course of
performance of the contract, the
Department notifies the subcontractor
that it has not entered into a labor
compliance agreement in a reasonable
period or is not meeting the terms of a
labor compliance agreement. Id. 52.222–
59(d)(2).
When a subcontractor discloses new
Department advice or new information
about Labor Law decisions, the
contractor must determine whether
action is necessary. See FAR 52.222–
59(d)(3). If the contractor decides to
continue the subcontract
notwithstanding negative Department
advice, the contractor must notify the
contracting officer of the decision and
provide the name of the subcontractor
and the basis for the decision (e.g.,
urgent and compelling circumstances).
Id. 52.222–59(d)(4).
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VI. Preassessment
Prior to bidding on a contract,
prospective contractors and
subcontractors are encouraged to
voluntarily contact the Department to
request an assessment of their record of
Labor Law compliance. The Department
will assess whether any of the
prospective contractor’s violations are
serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive; and whether a labor
compliance agreement may be
warranted. If a contractor that has been
assessed by the Department
subsequently submits a bid, and the
contracting officer initiates a
responsibility determination for the
contractor, the contracting officer and
the ALCA may rely on the Department’s
assessment that the contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance unless additional Labor Law
decisions have been disclosed.
Contact information and additional
guidance regarding the preassessment
program can be found at https://
www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces.
VII. Paycheck Transparency
Transparency in the relationships
between employers and their workers is
critical to workers’ understanding of
their legal rights and to the resolution of
workplace disputes. When workers lack
information about how their pay is
calculated and their status as employees
or independent contractors, workers are
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less aware of their rights and employers
are less likely to comply with labor
laws. Providing workers with
information about how their pay is
calculated each pay period will enable
workers to raise any concerns about pay
more quickly, and will encourage
proactive efforts by employers to resolve
such concerns. Similarly, providing
workers who are classified as
independent contractors with notice of
their status will enable them to better
understand their legal rights, evaluate
their status as independent contractors,
and raise any concerns during the
course of the working relationship as
opposed to after it ends (which will
increase the likelihood that the
employer and the worker will be able to
resolve any concerns more quickly and
effectively).
The Order seeks to improve paycheck
transparency for covered workers on
Federal contracts by instructing
contracting officers to insert the contract
clause at FAR 52.222–60. See Order,
section 5; FAR 22.2007(d). This clause
requires contractors to provide wage
statements and notice of any
independent contractor relationship to
their covered workers, and this clause’s
requirements flow down and apply to
covered workers of subcontractors
regardless of tier. See Order, section 5;
FAR 52.222–60.
A. Wage Statement
The Order requires contracting
agencies to ensure that, for covered
procurement contracts, provisions in
solicitations and clauses in contracts
require contractors to provide most
workers under the contract with a
‘‘document’’ each pay period with
‘‘information concerning that
individual’s hours worked, overtime
hours, pay, and any additions made to
or deductions made from pay.’’ Order,
section 5(a). Contracting agencies also
must ensure that contractors
‘‘incorporate this same requirement’’
into covered subcontracts at all tiers. Id.
The Order requires that the wage
statement be provided to ‘‘all
individuals performing work’’ for whom
the contractor or subcontractor is
required to maintain wage records
under the FLSA, the DBA, or the SCA.
Order, section 5(a).118 This means that
a wage statement must be provided to
118 The Order also requires the provision of a
wage-statement document to all workers for whom
records must be retained under any State laws
‘‘equivalent’’ to the FLSA, DBA, or SCA. See Order,
section 5(a). As noted above in section II(B), this
Guidance does not include a list of State laws
equivalent to the FLSA, the DBA, and the SCA. The
list of equivalent State laws will be included in
future guidance issued by the Department.
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58739
every worker subject to any of those
laws regardless of the classification of
the worker as an employee or
independent contractor.
The Order states that the wage
statement provided to workers each pay
period must be a ‘‘document.’’ Order,
section 5(a). If the contractor or
subcontractor regularly provides
documents to its workers by electronic
means, the wage statement may be
provided electronically if the worker
can access it through a computer,
device, system, or network provided or
made available by the contractor. FAR
52.222–60.
The Order further provides that the
wage statement must be issued every
pay period and contain the total number
of hours worked in the pay period and
the number of those hours that were
overtime hours. Order, section 5(a). The
FAR requires that if the wage statement
is not provided weekly and is instead
provided bi-weekly or semi-monthly
(because the pay period is bi-weekly or
semi-monthly), then the hours worked
and overtime hours contained in the
wage statement must be broken down to
correspond to the period (which will
almost always be weekly) for which
overtime is calculated and paid. See
FAR 52.222–60. If the hours worked and
overtime hours are aggregated in the
wage statement for the entire pay period
as opposed to being broken down by
week, the worker may not be able to
understand and evaluate how the
overtime hours were calculated. For
example, if the pay period is bi-weekly
and the worker is entitled to overtime
pay for hours worked over 40 in a week,
then the wage statement must provide
the hours worked and any overtime
hours for the first week and the hours
worked and any overtime hours for the
second week.
The FAR requires that the wage
statement contain the worker’s rate of
pay, which provides workers with vital
information about how their gross pay is
calculated. See FAR 52.222–60. The rate
of pay will most often be the worker’s
regular hourly rate of pay. If the worker
is not paid by the hour, the rate of pay
information should reflect the basis of
pay by indicating the monetary amount
paid on a per day, per week, per piece,
or other basis. The FAR also requires
that the wage statement contain the
gross pay and itemize or identify each
addition to or deduction from gross pay.
Id. Additions to pay may include
bonuses, awards, and shift differentials.
Deductions from pay include
deductions required by law (such as
withholding for taxes), voluntary
deductions by the worker (such as
contributions to health insurance
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premiums or retirement accounts), and
all other deductions or reductions made
from gross pay regardless of the reason.
Itemizing the additions to and
deductions from gross pay means that
each addition and deduction must be
separately listed and the specific
amount added or deducted must be
identified (lump sums are insufficient).
Providing a worker with the gross pay
and itemized additions to and
deductions from gross pay allows the
worker to understand the net pay
received and how it was calculated.
In sum, the FAR requires that wage
statements contain the following
information: (1) Hours worked, (2)
overtime hours, (3) rate of pay, (4) gross
pay, and (5) an itemization of each
addition to and deduction from gross
pay. FAR 52.222–60.119
As specified in the FAR, if a
significant portion of the contractor’s or
subcontractor’s workforce is not fluent
in English, the wage statement must also
be in the language(s) other than English
in which the significant portion(s) of the
workforce is fluent. FAR 52.222–60.
The wage statement provided to
workers who are exempt from overtime
pay under the FLSA ‘‘need not include
a record of hours worked if the
contractor informs the individuals of
their exempt status.’’ Order, section
5(a).120 To sufficiently inform a worker
of exempt status so that the wage
statement need not include hours
worked, the contractor or subcontractor
must provide written notice to the
worker stating that the worker is exempt
from the FLSA’s overtime compensation
requirements; oral notice is not
sufficient. See FAR 52.222–60. The
notice can be a stand-alone document or
can be included in the offer letter,
employment contract, or position
description, or wage statement—as long
as the document is provided to the
worker. See id.121 The notice must be
provided either before the worker starts
119 Nothing prohibits the inclusion of more
information in the wage statement (e.g., exempt
status notification, overtime pay rate). Neither the
Order nor the FAR preempts State laws or local
ordinances that require more information to be
included in the wage statement.
120 Generally, non-exempt workers are entitled to
overtime under the FLSA when they work over 40
hours in a week. See 29 U.S.C. 207(a). However,
certain workers (such as nurses, firefighters, and
police officers) may instead be entitled to overtime
under terms other than the 40-hour workweek. See,
e.g., 29 U.S.C. 207(j), (k). Such workers are not
exempt from the FLSA’s overtime requirements;
wage statements provided to them must contain a
record of hours worked.
121 As specified in the FAR, if a significant
portion of the contractor’s workforce is not fluent
in English, the document notifying the worker of
exempt status must also be in the language(s) other
than English in which the significant portion(s) of
the workforce is fluent. See FAR 52.222–60(e)(1).
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Jkt 238001
work on the contract or in the worker’s
first wage statement under the contract.
See id. If during contract performance,
the contractor or subcontractor
determines that the worker’s status has
changed from non-exempt to exempt, it
must provide notice to the worker prior
to providing a wage statement without
hours worked information or in the first
wage statement after the change. See id.
If the contractor or subcontractor
regularly provides documents to its
workers by electronic means, the
document may be provided
electronically if the worker can access it
through a computer, device, system, or
network provided or made available by
the contractor or subcontractor. Id.
The Department and courts determine
whether a worker is exempt from the
FLSA’s overtime requirement. The fact
that a contractor or subcontractor has
provided a worker with notice that he
or she is exempt does not mean that the
worker is correctly classified. The
Department will not consider the notice
when determining whether a worker is
exempt. A contractor or subcontractor
may not in its exempt-status notice to a
worker indicate or suggest that the
Department or the courts agree with the
determination that the worker is
exempt. FAR 52.222–60.
The wage-statement requirements
‘‘shall be deemed to be fulfilled’’ where
a contractor ‘‘is complying with State or
local requirements that the Secretary of
Labor has determined are substantially
similar to those required’’ by the Order.
Order, section 5(a). The Secretary has
determined that the following States
and localities have ‘‘substantially
similar’’ wage-statement requirements
as the Order: Alaska, California,
Connecticut, the District of Columbia,
Hawaii, New York, and Oregon. The
wage-statement requirements of these
States and the District of Columbia are
substantially similar because they
require employers to provide wage
statements that include at least the
worker’s overtime hours or overtime
earnings, total hours, gross pay, and any
additions or deductions from gross pay.
Providing a worker in one of the
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States with a wage statement that
complies with the requirements of that
State or locality satisfies the Order’s
wage-statement requirement. See FAR
52.222–60. In addition, a contractor
satisfies the Order’s wage-statement
requirement by adopting the wagestatement requirements of any particular
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
State in which the contractor has
workers and providing a wage statement
that complies with the requirements of
that State or locality to all of its workers.
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The Department maintains on its Web
site (https://www.dol.gov/
fairpayandsafeworkplaces) a list of the
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States. The Secretary recognizes that
States and localities may change their
wage-statement laws so that their
requirements may or may not be
substantially similar to the Order’s
wage-statement requirement. When the
Secretary determines that a State or
locality must be added to or removed
from the list of Substantially Similar
Wage Payment States, notice of such
changes will be published on the Web
site. The Department may also issue All
Agency Memoranda or similar direction
to contracting agencies and the public to
communicate updates to the list of the
Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States.
B. Independent Contractor Notice
The Order requires contractors who
treat individuals performing work for
them (on covered procurement
contracts) as independent contractors to
provide each such worker with a
document informing him or her of this
independent contractor status. See
Order, section 5(b). Contracting agencies
must require that contractors
incorporate this same requirement into
covered subcontracts. See FAR 52.222–
60.
The FAR requires contractors and
subcontractors to provide the notice
informing the worker of status as an
independent contractor to each
individual worker treated as an
independent contractor. See FAR
52.222–60. The notice must be a
‘‘document’’; oral notice of independent
contractor status is not sufficient.122 Id.
The document must be separate from
any independent contractor agreement
entered into with the individual. Id. If
the contractor regularly provides
documents to its workers by electronic
means, the document may be provided
electronically if the worker can access it
through a computer, device, system, or
network provided or made available by
the contractor. See id. 52.222–60.
The notice must be provided at the
time that an independent contractor
relationship is established with the
worker or before he or she performs any
work under the contract. See FAR
52.222–60. The notice must be provided
each time a worker begins work on a
different covered contract, regardless of
122 As specified in the FAR, if a significant
portion of the contractor’s or subcontractor’s
workforce is not fluent in English, the document
notifying the worker of independent contractor
status must also be in the language(s) other than
English with which the significant portion(s) of the
workforce is fluent. See FAR 52.222–60(e)(1).
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whether the worker already performs
the same type of work on another
covered contract. See id. If the
contractor or subcontractor determines
during performance of a covered
contract that a worker’s status has
changed from employee to independent
contractor, it must provide the worker
with notice of independent contractor
status before the worker performs any
work under the contract as an
independent contractor. See id.
Enforcement agencies and courts
determine whether a worker is an
independent contractor under
applicable laws. A contractor may not in
its notice to a worker indicate or suggest
that any enforcement agency or court
agrees with the contractor’s
determination that the worker is an
independent contractor. See FAR
52.222–60. The fact that a contractor has
provided a worker with notice that he
or she is an independent contractor does
not mean that the worker is correctly
classified as an independent contractor.
For example, the Department would not
consider the notice when determining
whether a worker is an independent
contractor or employee during an
investigation regarding the contractor’s
compliance with the FLSA. The
determination of whether a worker is an
independent contractor under a
particular law remains governed by that
law’s definition of ‘‘employee’’ and that
law’s standards for determining which
workers are independent contractors
and not employees.
and paycheck-transparency
requirements are implemented through
solicitation provisions and contract
clauses in covered contracts. See FAR
22.2007. This means that contractors
and subcontractors performing on
contracts awarded prior to the effective
date of the rule (or of specific
requirements) will not be required to
make the disclosures or to provide
workers with wage statements and
independent contractor notices—even
after the effective date of the rule. In
other words, the Order’s requirements
are not retroactive. Rather, these
requirements only become effective
when the solicitation provisions are
included in a new solicitation and the
contract clauses are included in a new
contract.
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of
Requirements
C. Subcontractor Disclosure
The FAR rule is effective October 25,
2016. However, several of the
requirements are not immediately
applicable and are being phased in over
the course of the following year. This
phase in of the requirements is intended
to allow the Government, contractors,
subcontractors, and, particularly, small
business contractors and subcontractors
to prepare for and adapt to the
requirements.
A. General Effect of Solicitation
Provisions and Contract Clauses
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The Order’s prime-contractor
disclosure, subcontractor disclosure,
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B. Contractor Disclosure
From October 25, 2016 to April 24,
2017, the Order’s prime-contractor
disclosure requirements will apply only
to solicitations from contracting
agencies with an estimated value of $50
million or more, and resultant contracts.
FAR 22.2007(a) and (c)(1). After April
24, 2017, the requirements will apply to
solicitations greater than $500,000—
which is the amount specified in the
Order—and resultant contracts. Id.
22.2007(a) and (c)(2); Order, section
2(a). This also applies to the commercial
items equivalent for prime contractors,
at FAR 52.212–3(s).
The subcontractor disclosure
provisions described in section V of this
Guidance are not effective for the first
year of operation of the FAR rule
implementing the Order. Thus, while
the rule overall is effective on October
25, 2016, the subcontractor disclosure
provisions are not effective until
October 25, 2017. See FAR 22.2007(b)–
(c), 52.222–59(c)(1). During this first
year before the effective date,
prospective subcontractors are
encouraged to voluntarily contact the
Department to request an assessment of
their record of Labor Law compliance.
See above section VI (Preassessment).
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58741
D. Phase-In of 3-Year Disclosure Period
The general rule under the Order is
that contractors and subcontractors
must disclose Labor Law decisions that
were rendered against them within the
3-year period prior to the date of the
disclosure. See Sections II(B) and
V(A)(1). This 3-year disclosure period is
being phased in during the first years of
the implementation of the Order, so that
no contractor or subcontractor need
disclose any Labor Law decisions that
were rendered against them prior to
October 25, 2015. As the FAR states,
contractors and subcontractors must
make disclosures for Labor Law
decisions rendered against them during
the period beginning on October 25,
2015 to the date of the offer, or for 3
years preceding the date of the offer,
whichever period is shorter. See FAR
52.222–57(c)(1)–(2); 52.222–58(b). Thus,
full implementation of the 3-year
disclosure period will be reached as of
October 25, 2018.
E. Equivalent State Laws
The Order requires disclosure of
violations of the 14 Federal statutes and
Executive orders, and also of violations
of equivalent State laws defined in
guidance issued by the Department.
Order, section 2(a)(i)(O). As noted
above, in section II(B) of this Guidance,
the Department has determined that
OSHA-approved State Plans are the only
equivalent State laws for the purpose of
the Order at this time.
In future guidance, published in the
Federal Register, the Department will
identify additional equivalent State
laws. Until this subsequent guidance
and a subsequent FAR amendment are
published, contractors and
subcontractors are not required by Order
to disclose violations of State laws other
than the OSHA-approved State Plans.
F. Paycheck Transparency Provisions
The paycheck transparency
provisions described in section VII of
this Guidance are not effective until
January 1, 2017. See FAR 22.2007(d).
Signed this 10th day of August, 2016.
Christopher P. Lu,
Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Labor.
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Guidance for Executive Order 13673, "Fair Pay Safe Workplaces"
Appendix A: Serious Violations
All violations of Federal labor laws are a serious matter, but in the context of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay
and Safe Workplaces, the Department of Labor has identified certain violations as "serious," "repeated,"
"willful," and "pervasive." This subset of all Labor Law violations represents the violations that are most
concerning and bear on the assessment of a contractor's integrity and business ethics. The Department has
purposely excluded from consideration violations that could be characterized as inadvertent or minimally
impactful. Ultimately, each contractor's disclosed violations of Labor Laws will be assessed on a case-by-case
basis in light of the totality of the circumstances, including the severity of the violation or violations, the size of
the contractor, and any mitigating factors. In most cases, even for violations subject to disclosure and
consideration under the Order, a single violation of one of the Labor Laws will not give rise to a determination
of lack of responsibility.
The chart below includes a non-exhaustive list of examples of Labor Law violations that may be found to be
"serious" under the Department's Guidance for Executive Order 13673. These are examples only: they are
not minimum requirements, nor are they exclusive of other violations under each Labor Law that may be
serious. The chart does not include violations of "equivalent State laws," which are also covered by the Order,
but (with the exception of OSHA State Plans, which are addressed in the current Guidance} will be addressed
in future guidance. Where the chart indicates that a violation is serious for more than one reason, this means
that either of the reasons listed is an independent ground for finding that the violation is serious, as defined in
the Guidance.
Summary of Definition of "Serious Violation"
The full definition of a "serious violation" is set forth in section III(A}(l} of the Department of Labor's
Guidance. When assessing violations, Agency Labor Compliance Advisors (ALCAs} should refer to the full
definition in the Guidance.
In summary, the Guidance provides that a violation of one of the Labor Laws is serious under the following
circumstances:
a. For OSH Act or OSHA-approved State Plan violations that are enforced through citations or equivalent
State documents, a violation is serious if a citation, or equivalent State document, was designated as
serious or an equivalent State designation.
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b. For all other violations of the Labor Laws, a violation is serious if it is readily ascertainable from the
Labor Law decision that the violation involved any one of the following:
i.
The violation affected at least 10 workers, and the affected workers made up 25 percent or
more of the contractor's workforce at the worksite or 25 percent or more of the
contractor's workforce overall;
ii.
Fines and penalties of at least $5,000 or back wages of at least $10,000 were due;
iii.
The contractor's conduct caused or contributed to the death or serious injury of one or
more workers;
iv.
The contractor employed a minor who was too young to be legally employed or in violation
of a Hazardous Occupations Order;
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
ix.
58743
The contractor was issued a notice of failure to abate an OSH Act or OSHA-approved State
Plan violation; or the contractor was issued an imminent danger notice or an equivalent
State notice under the OSH Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan.
The contractor retaliated against one or more workers for exercising any right protected by
any of the labor laws;
The contractor engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination or systemic discrimination;
The contractor interfered with the enforcement agency's investigation; or
The contractor breached the material terms of any agreement or settlement entered into
with an enforcement agency, or violated any court order, any administrative order by an
enforcement agency, or any arbitral award.
When assessing labor law violations, ALCAs will review all of the above criteria to determine whether a
violation is serious. The examples below are intended to illustrate how these criteria may arise in different
contexts, but a violation will be serious if it meets ID!Y of the above criteria.
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ALCAs will classify violations based on information that is readily ascertainable from the labor law decisions
themselves. They do not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the decisions of reviewing
officials, courts, and arbitrators. While ALCAs and contracting officers may seek additional information from
the enforcement agencies to provide context, they generally rely on the information contained in the Labor
law decisions to determine whether violations are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive under the
definitions provided in this Guidance.
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Labor Laws
Fair Labor
Standards Act
(FLSA)
Examples of Serious Violations
The Wage and Hour Division of DOL {WHD) found that a contractor violated the minimum wage
and overtime provisions of the FLSA. It issued the contractor a Form WH-56 "Summary of Unpaid
Wages," and also assessed civil monetary penalties. The back wages due totaled $75,000, and the
civil monetary penalties assessed totaled $6,000.
This is a serious violation for two reasons. First, a violation of ru!l! of the Labor Laws, except OSH
Act and OSHA-approved State Plan violations enforced through citations or equivalent State
documents ("citation OSHA violations"), is serious if fines and penalties of at least $5,000 were due.
Second, a violation of ru!)! of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA violations, is serious if back
wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, if the back wages due totaled less than $10,000
and the civil monetary penalties assessed had totaled less than $5,000, the violation would not be
a serious violation, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
WHD finds that a meat processor employed 10 workers under the age of 18 to operate powerdriven meat processing machines, such as slicers, saws, and choppers. One ofthese workers died
in an accident involving one of the machines.
This is a serious violation for two reasons. First, a violation of FLSA's child labor provisions is
serious if the contractor employed a minor too young to be legally employed or in violation of a
Hazardous Occupations Order. The employment of minors in the above-described occupation is
prohibited under Hazardous Occupation Order No. 10. Second, a violation of ru!)! of the Labor
Laws, except citation OSHA violations, is serious if the contractor's conduct causes or contributes to
the death or serious injury of one or more workers. Conversely, the employment of, for example, a
14 or 15 year-old minor in excess of 3 hours outside school hours on a school day in a nonhazardous, non-agricultural job in which the child is otherwise permitted to work would not be a
serious violation, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
Occupational
Safety and Health
(OSH) Act
OSHA issued a citation for failing to protect against fall hazards on a construction worksite. The
citation was designated as "serious."
This is a serious violation because all citations or equivalent State documents designated by
OSHA or an OSHA-approved State Plan as serious or an equivalent State designation are serious
under the Order. Conversely, if the citation had been designated as "other-than-serious," it would
not be a serious violation under the Order.
A few months after OSHA issued the above citation, it inspects the worksite again and finds that
the contractor failed to remedy the fall hazards as required. Accordingly, OSHA issues a notice of
failure to abate and assesses additional penalties.
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This is a serious violation because a notice of failure to abate a violation under the OSH Act or an
OSHA-approved State Plan is classified as a serious violation under the Order.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
58745
Examples of Serious Violations
Migrant and
Seasonal
Agricultural
Worker
Protection Act
(MSPA)
WHD issued a letter indicating that an investigation had disclosed a violation of MSPA that
contributed to the serious injury of a worker.
National Labor
Relations Act
(NLRA)
The General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued a complaint alleging
that a contractor fired the employee who was the lead union adherent during the union's
organizational campaign in retaliation for the employee's participation in the organizational
campaign.
This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if it caused or contributed to the death or serious injury of one or more
workers. Conversely, if WHD found that the investigation had disclosed that 3 of the 50 MSPA
workers at a job site did not receive their wages when due, and those wages totaled $1,000 and
the civil monetary penalties totaled $500, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of
the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious where the contractor retaliated against one or more workers for exercising any
right protected by any of the Labor Laws. Conversely, if the NLRB's complaint had instead alleged
that the contractor had, for example, denied a single employee a collectively-bargained benefit (for
example, a vacation to which the employee was entitled based on her seniority), the violation
would not be serious, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
Davis-Bacon Act
(DBA)
WHD issued a letter indicating that a contractor violated the DBA, and that back wages were
due in the amount of $12,000. The contractor had previously been investigated by WHD and, to
resolve that investigation, had entered into a written agreement to pay the affected workers
prevailing wages as required by the DBA.
This is a serious violation for two reasons. First, a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except
citation OSHA violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Second, a violation
of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA violations, is serious if the contractor breached the
material terms of any agreement or settlement entered into with an enforcement agency.
Conversely, if WHO issued a letter indicating that a contractor owed several workers a total of
$8,000, and the contractor's conduct did not constitute a breach of a prior agreement or meet any
of the other criteria for seriousness listed above, the violation would not be serious.
Service Contract
Act (SCA)
An AU issued an order finding that a food service company violated the SCA by failing to provide
the required amount of health and welfare benefits to 35 of its 100 workers at a particular
location. The order included a finding that the contractor interfered with WHO's investigation by
threatening to fire workers who spoke to WHD investigators.
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This is a serious violation for two reasons. First, a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except
citation OSHA violations, is serious if it affected at least 10 workers, and the affected workers made
up 25 percent or more of the contractor's workforce at the worksite or 25 percent or more of the
contractor's workforce overall. Second, a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious where the contractor interfered with the enforcement agency's investigation.
Under the Guidance, interference includes, among other actions, threatening to fire workers who
speak to government investigators. Conversely, if the AU's order had indicated that the contractor
owed back wages to only 10 of the 100 SCA-covered workers at the location, and did not contain a
finding of interference, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of the other criteria
for seriousness listed above are met.
58746
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Executive Order
11246 (Equal
Employment
Opportunity)
Examples of Serious Violations
OFCCP issued a show cause notice indicating that an investigation had disclosed that a
contractor had systemically discriminated against African-American and Hispanic job seekers in
violation of EO 11246. OFCCP had determined that back wages were due to job applicants in an
amount upwards of $100,000. The contractor subsequently settled the case with OFCCP for a total
of $75,000 in back wages.
This is a serious violation for two reasons. First, a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except
citation OSHA violations, is serious if the contractor engaged in a pattern or practice of
discrimination or systemic discrimination. Second, a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except
citation OSHA violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, if
OFCCP issued a show cause notice indicating that the investigation disclosed that the contractor
had discriminated against only a few such job seekers, and the amount of back wages due was only
$9,000, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness
listed above are met.
Section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act
The ARB affirmed an AU order directing a contractor to change a practice of medical screenings
that discriminated against job applicants with disabilities-and were not job-related or consistent
with business necessity-in violation of section 503.
This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if the contractor engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination or systemic
discrimination. Conversely, if the ARB had found that the contractor's practice of medical
screenings was generally not discriminatory, but that the contractor had discriminated against two
specific disabled job applicants in another fashion, the violation would not be serious, assuming
that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
Vietnam Era
Veterans'
Readjustment
Assistance Act
(VEVRAA)
Family and
Medical Leave Act
(FMLA)
OFCCP issued a show cause notice indicating that an investigation had disclosed that a
contractor had discriminated against a protected veteran job applicant, and that back wages were
due to the job applicant in an amount upwards of $10,000.
This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, if OFCCP had
determined that the job applicant was due only $5,000 in back wages, the violation would not be
serious, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
WHD issued a Form WH-56 indicating that a contractor had violated the FMLA and, as a result,
owed $12,000 in back wages.
This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, had WHO determined
that the contractor owed only $8,000 in back wages, the violation would not be serious, assuming
that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of
1964
The EEOC filed a complaint in Federal court after an investigation found that the contractor
engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination under Title VII.
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This is a serious violation because a violation of~ of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if the contractor engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination or systemic
discrimination. Conversely, had the EEOC's complaint alleged that the contractor discriminated
against only a single individual, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of the other
criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Americans with
Disabilities Act of
1990 (ADA)
58747
Examples of Serious Violations
In a private action under the ADA brought in Federal district court, the court issued a judgment
in favor of the plaintiff, relying in part on adverse inferences against the defendant because the
defendant had destroyed relevant records in an attempt to undermine an EEOC investigation of
the violations.
This is a serious violation because a violation of ID!l! of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if the contractor interfered with the enforcement agency's investigation.
Under the Guidance, interference includes, among other actions, the destruction of records to
frustrate an investigation under the Labor Laws. Conversely, if the contractor had not interfered in
this fashion, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of the other criteria for
seriousness listed above are met.
Age
Discrimination in
Employment Act
of 1967 (ADEA)
In a private action brought in Federal district court, the factfinder found that the contractor
unlawfully discriminated against the plaintiff on the basis of age when it discharged the plaintiff.
The court awarded back wages of $50,000 to the plaintiff.
This is a serious violation because a violation of ID!l! of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, had the court
awarded only $8,000 in back wages, the violation would not be serious, assuming that none of the
other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
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WHD issued an investigative findings letter indicating that an investigation disclosed a violation
of Executive Order 13658 and finding that a total of $15,000 in back wages are due.
This is a serious violation because a violation of ID!l! of the Labor Laws, except citation OSHA
violations, is serious if back wages of at least $10,000 were due. Conversely, had WHO's
investigative findings letter indicated that only $1,500 in back wages were due, the violation would
not be serious, assuming that none of the other criteria for seriousness listed above are met.
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Executive Order
13658 (Minimum
Wage for
Contractors)
58748
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, "Fair Pay Safe Workplaces"
Appendix B: Repeated Violations
All violations of Federal labor laws are a serious matter, but in the context of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay
and Safe Workplaces, the Department of Labor has identified certain violations as "serious," "repeated,"
"willful," and "pervasive." This subset of all Labor Law violations represents the violations that are most
concerning and bear on the assessment of a contractor's integrity and business ethics. The Department has
purposely excluded from consideration violations that could be characterized as inadvertent or minimally
impactful. Ultimately, each contractor's disclosed violations of Labor Laws will be assessed on a case-by-case
basis in light of the totality of the circumstances, including the severity of the violation or violations, the size of
the contractor, and any mitigating factors. In most cases, even for violations subject to disclosure and
consideration under the Order, a single violation of one of the Labor Laws will not give rise to a determination
of lack of responsibility.
The chart below includes a non-exhaustive list of examples of Labor Law violations that may be found to be
"repeated" under the Department's Guidance for Executive Order 13673. These are examples only: they are
not minimum requirements, nor are they exclusive of other violations under each Labor Law that may be
repeated. The chart does not include violations of "equivalent State laws," which are also covered by the
Order, but (with the exception of OSHA State Plans, which are addressed in the current Guidance) will be
addressed in future guidance.
Summary of Definition of "Repeated Violation"
The full definition of a "repeated violation" is set forth in section III{A)(2) ofthe Department of Labor's
Guidance. When assessing violations, Agency Labor Compliance Advisors (ALCAs) should refer to the full
definition in the Guidance.
In summary, a violation is "repeated" under the Order if:
a.
For a violation of the OSH Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan that was enforced through a citation
or an equivalent State document, the citation at issue was designated as "repeated," "repeat," or
any equivalent State designation and the prior violation that formed the basis for the repeated
violation became a final order of the OSHRC or equivalent State agency no more than 3 years
before the repeated violation;
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b. For all other Labor Law violations, the contractor has committed a violation that is the same as or
substantially similar to a prior violation of the Labor Laws that was the subject of a separate
investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts, and became uncontested or
adjudicated within the previous 3 years. The following is an exhaustive list of violations that are
substantially similar to each other for these purposes:
1. For the FLSA:
i. Any two violations of the FLSA's child labor provisions.
ii. Any two violations of the FLSA's provision requiring break time for nursing mothers.
2. For the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order 13658:
i. Any two violations of these statutes' minimum wage, subminimum wage, overtime,
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
58749
Summary of Definition of "Repeated Violation"
or prevailing wages provisions, even ifthey arise under different statutes.
For the FMLA:
i. Any two violations of the FMLA's notice requirements.
ii. Any two violations of the FM LA other than its notice requirements.
For the MSPA:
i. Any two violations of the MSPA's requirements pertaining to wages, supplies, and
working arrangements.
ii. Any two violations of the MSPA's requirements related to health and safety.
iii. Any two violations of the MSPA's disclosure and record keeping requirements.
iv. Any two violations related to the MSPA's registration requirements.
For the NLRA:
i. Any two violations of the same numbered subsection of section 8(a) of the NLRA.
For Title VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the ADA, the ADEA, section 6(d)
of the FLSA (known as the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. 206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of
September 24, 1965, the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972, and
the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974:
i. Any two violations, even if they arise under different statutes, if both violations
involve:
1. the same protected status, and
2. at least one of the following elements in common:
a. the same employment practice, or,
b. the same worksite.
For all ofthe Labor Laws, including those listed above, even ifthe violations arise under
different statutes:
i. Any two violations involving retaliation;
ii. Any two failures to keep records required under the Labor Laws; or
iii. Any two failures to post notices required under the Labor Laws.
The Guidance provides further detail on the meaning of "uncontested or adjudicated," how the 3-year lookback period is calculated, what constitutes a "substantially similar" violation, and other aspects of the
definition.
When assessing Labor Law violations, ALCAs will review the full definition to determine whether a violation
is repeated. The examples below are intended to illustrate how the definition may be applied in different
contexts, but a violation can be deemed repeated as long as it meets the criteria set forth in the Guidance.
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ALCAs will classify violations based on information that is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decisions
themselves. They do not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the decisions of reviewing
officials, courts, and arbitrators. While ALCAs and contracting officers may seek additional information from
the enforcement agencies to provide context, they generally rely on the information contained in the Labor
Law decisions to determine whether violations are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive under the
definitions provided in this Guidance.
58750
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Fair Labor
Standards Act
(FLSA)
Examples of Repeated Violations
The Wage and Hour Division (WHD) found that a software company violated overtime
provisions of the FLSA after misclassifying employees at one facility as independent contractors.
The company did not dispute the violation and agreed to pay back wages by signing a Form WH56. A year later, the Secretary filed a complaint in Federal court stating that an investigation of a
different facility of the same company disclosed violations of the FLSA minimum wage provision.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became uncontested within the previous three years. The prior violation was uncontested
because the company agreed to at least some of the relief sought by WHO in the enforcement
action. Even though the first violation involved overtime and the second involved minimum wage,
the violations are substantially similar because any two violations of the minimum wage,
subminimum wage, overtime, or prevailing wage provisions of the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive
Order 13658 are substantially similar. Conversely, had one of the two violations instead involved,
for example, the company's failure to follow the FLSA's requirements to provide break time for
nursing mothers, the violations would not be substantially similar and the second violation
therefore would not be repeated.
Occupational
Safety and Health
(OSH) Act
OSHA issued a citation to a contractor for failing to provide fall protection on a residential
construction site. The citation was later affirmed by the Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission (OSHRC). Two years after OSHRC's affirmance of the citation, OSHA issued a second
citation against the same contractor for failing to provide fall protection at a commercial
construction site, and designated that citation as a "repeat" violation under the OSH Act.
The second violation is a repeated violation because OSHA designated it as a "repeat" violation
and the prior violation became a final order of the OSHRC or equivalent State agency no more than
three years before the repeated violation. Conversely, if the second citation was not designated as
"repeat" by OSHA, or if it occurred more than three years after the first violation became a final
order of the OSHRC, it would not be a repeated violation under the Order.
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A district court issued an order enjoining a farm labor contractor's practice of requiring workers
to purchase goods or services solely from a particular company, in violation of MSPA. Three years
later, WHD assessed civil monetary penalties after finding that the farm labor contractor failed to
pay MSPA-covered workers their wages when due.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a civil judgment. The violations are substantially similar because, under
MSPA, multiple violations of the statute's requirements pertaining to wages, supplies, and working
arrangements are substantially similar. {Likewise, under MSPA, any two violations of any of
MSPA's requirements related to health and safety are substantially similar to each other. The same
is true for any two violations of the statute's disclosure and recordkeeping requirements, or any
two violations related to its registration requirements.) Conversely, had the contractor, for
example, committed one MSPA violation for requiring workers to purchase goods or services solely
from a particular company, and a second MSPA violation for failure to comply with MSPA's
transportation safety standards, the violations would not be substantially similar and the second
violation therefore would not be repeated.
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Migrant and
Seasonal
Agricultural
Worker
Protection Act
(MSPA)
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
National Labor
Relations Act
(NLRA)
58751
Examples of Repeated Violations
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued a decision finding that a contractor violated
section 8(a)(3), which prohibits employers from discriminating against employees for engaging in
or refusing to engage in union activities, by discharging employees who led a union organizational
campaign. Two years later, a Regional Director issued a complaint under section 8(a)(3) against
the same contractor at a different location for discharging two union representatives at a plant
after they organized a one-day strike to protest low wages.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a final agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority-the
NLRB-following a proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present evidence or
argument on its behalf The violations are substantially similar because both involved the same
numbered subsection of section B(a) of the NLRA, section B(a}{3}. Conversely, had one of the two
violations been a violation of section 8{a}{2}, which prohibits an employer from dominating or
interfering with the formation or administration of a labor union through financial support or
otherwise-for example, had the contractor offered assistance to one union but not to another
during an organizational campaign-the two violations would not be substantially similar and the
second violation would therefore not be repeated.
Davis-Bacon Act
(DBA)
A Federal district court granted a preliminary injunction enjoining a contractor from further
violations of the overtime provisions of the FLSA. Six months later, WHD sent the contractor a
letter finding that the contractor violated the DBA by failing to pay workers at a different worksite
their prevailing wages.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a civil judgment. Even though the contractor violated two different
Labor Laws, the violations are substantially similar because any two violations of the minimum
wage, subminimum wage, overtime, or prevailing wage provisions of the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and
Executive Order 13658 are substantially similar. Conversely, had the first violation instead
involved, for example, the contractor's failure to provide a reasonable accommodation to an
employee with a disability under the ADA, the two violations would not be substantially similar and
the second violation would therefore not be repeated.
58752
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Service Contract
Act (SCA)
Examples of Repeated Violations
The Department's Administrative Review Board (ARB) issued an order finding that a contractor
failed to pay workers covered by Executive Order 13658 the minimum wage of $10.10 per hour.
Ten months later, WHD issued a letter indicating that an investigation disclosed a violation of the
SCA because the contractor failed to pay service workers their required amount of fringe benefits.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a final agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority-the
ARB-following a proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present evidence or
argument on its behalf Even though the contractor violated two different Labor Laws, the
violations are substantially similar because any two violations of the minimum wage, subminimum
wage, overtime, or prevailing wage provisions of the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order 13658
are substantially similar. Conversely, if the first violation was the subject of a determination by
WHO that was pending review by the ARB, the second violation would not be a repeated violation
because the first violation would not be adjudicated or uncontested.
Executive Order
11246 (Equal
Employment
Opportunity)
An arbitrator found that a contractor created a hostile work environment for African-American
workers in violation of Title VII. Two years later, OFCCP issued a show cause notice finding that the
same contractor failed to comply with the nondiscrimination requirements of Executive Order
11246 by failing to hire qualified Asian workers. Both violations occurred at the same worksite.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set offacts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in an arbitral award. The violations are substantially similar because
violations of Title VII, section 503, the ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order 11246,
and VEVRAA are substantially similar when they involve the same protected status and either the
same employment practice or the same worksite. In this case, both violations involved
discrimination on the basis of race, and both occurred at the same worksite. Conversely, if the first
violation had instead involved discrimination on the basis of gender, or if the violations did not
involve the same worksite or the same employment practice, the two violations would not be
substantially similar and the second violation would therefore not be repeated.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act
58753
Examples of Repeated Violations
A Federal district court granted a private plaintiff summary judgment in a claim against a
contractor under the ADA because the contractor refused to hire a disabled worker who used a
wheelchair. A year later, an AU directed the same contractor to change a practice of medical
screenings that discriminated against job applicants with disabilities in violation of section 503 of
the Rehabilitation Act.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years . The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a civil judgment. These violations are substantially similar because
violations of Title VII, section 503, the ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order 11246,
and VEVRAA are substantially similar when they involve the same protected status and either the
same employment practice or the same worksite. In this case, both violations involved the same
protected status-disability-and the same employment practice-hiring. Conversely, if the first
violation had instead involved the contractor's failure to provide a reasonable accommodation of
an employee's religious beliefs under Title VII, or if the violations did not involve the same worksite
or the same employment practice, the two violations would not be substantially similar and the
second violation would therefore not be repeated.
Vietnam Era
Veterans'
Readjustment
Assistance Act
(VEVRAA)
The ARB issued an order finding that the contractor violated VEVRAA by discriminating against
protected veterans on a company-wide basis during the hiring process. Two years later, in a
separate compliance evaluation, OFCCP issued a show cause notice indicating that the same
contractor failed, on a company-wide basis, to promote employees who were protected veterans
to higher-level positions.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a final agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority-the
ARB-following a proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present evidence or
argument on its behalf These violations are substantially similar because violations of Title VII,
section 503, the ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order 11246, and VEVRAA are
substantially similar when they involve the same protected status and either the same employment
practice or the same worksite. In this case, both violations involved discrimination on the basis of
the same protected status-protected veterans' status-and the same worksite, because any two
company-wide violations are considered to involve the same worksite. Conversely, if the first
violation had instead involved discrimination on the basis of race under Executive Order 11246, or if
the violations did not involve the same worksite or the same employment practice, the two
violations would not be substantially similar and the second violation would therefore not be
repeated.
58754
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Labor Laws
Examples of Repeated Violations
Family and
Medical Leave Act
(FMLA)
A court found that a contractor had failed to reinstate an employee to the same or an
equivalent position after the employee took FMLA leave. Two years later, the Wage and Hour
Division, after an investigation, filed suit against the employer challenging the employer's denial of
another employee's request for FMLA leave.
The second violation is repeated because it is substantially similar to a prior violation that was
the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts and
became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated because it
was reflected in a civil judgment. The violations are substantially similar because any two
violations of the FMLA other than its notice requirements are substantially similar to each other.
Conversely, had the first violation involved the contractor's failure to provide notice to employees
of their FMLA rights and the second involved either denial of leave or failure to reinstate an
employee, the two violations would not be substantially similar and the second violation would
therefore not be repeated.
Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of
1964
OFCCP issued a show cause notice finding that the contractor violated Executive Order 11246 by
systemically paying women at one of its locations less than similarly situated men. The contractor
did not contest the show cause notice and agreed to remedy the pay disparities. Four months
later, the EEOC issued a letter of determination that reasonable cause existed to believe that the
same contractor had paid transgender individuals less than non-transgender individuals at another
one of its locations.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became uncontested within the previous three years. The prior violation was uncontested
because the company agreed to at least some of the relief sought by OFCCP in the enforcement
action. These violations are substantially similar because violations of Title VII, section 503, the
ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order 11246, and VEVRAA are substantially similar
when they involve the same protected status and either the same employment practice or the same
worksite. Both violations involved the same protected status-discrimination on the basis of
gender-because violations involving discrimination on the bases of sex, pregnancy, gender
identity (including transgender status), and sex stereotyping are considered to involve the "same"
protected status for the purpose of determining whether violations are substantially similar under
the Order. The two violations also both involved the same employment practice-pay
discrimination. Conversely, if the contractor had challenged the first notice before an AU and if the
proceeding was still pending at the time of the second violation, the second violation would not be
a repeated violation because the first violation would not be adjudicated or uncontested.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Examples of Repeated Violations
Americans with
Disabilities Act of
1990 (ADA)
58755
The ARB affirmed an AU order under section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act directing the
contractor to grant reasonable accommodations to employees with visual impairments. Two years
later, a Federal district court granted a private plaintiff summary judgment in her ADA claim
against the same contractor alleging constructive discharge and the failure to provide a reasonable
accommodation for employees with hearing impairments.
The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in a final agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority-the
ARB-following a proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present evidence or
argument on its behalf These violations are substantially similar because violations of Title VII,
section 503, the ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order 11246, and VEVRAA are
substantially similar when they involve the same protected status and either the same employment
practice or the same worksite. In this case, both violations involved the same protected statusdiscrimination on the basis of a disability-and the same employment practice-failure to make a
reasonable accommodation. Conversely, had one of the two violations involved, for example, the
contractor's failure to promote disabled employees, and the violations did not occur at the same
worksite, the two violations would not be substantially similar and the second violation would
therefore not be repeated.
Age
Discrimination in
Employment Act
of 1967 (ADEA)
An arbitrator found that a contractor violated the ADEA by constructively discharging several
employees over the age of 60. Seven months later, in an ADEA private action brought in Federal
district court, the court found that the contractor, at the same worksite as the prior violation,
unlawfully discriminated against the plaintiff on the basis of age when it failed to hire him.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became adjudicated within the previous three years. The prior violation was adjudicated
because it was reflected in an arbitral award or decision. These violations are substantially similar
because violations of Title VII, section 503, the ADA, the ADEA, the Equal Pay Act, Executive Order
11246, and VEVRAA are substantially similar when they involve the same protected status and
either the same employment practice or the same worksite. In this case, both violations involved
the same protected status-age-and the same worksite. Conversely, if the two violations
occurred at different worksites, they would not be substantially similar and the second violation
would therefore not be repeated.
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Labor Laws
Executive Order
13658 (Minimum
Wage for
Contractors)
Examples of Repeated Violations
WHD sent a letter to a Federal construction contractor finding that the contractor committed
violations of the DBA by failing to pay prevailing wages to its employees. As per 29 CFR 5.11, the
letter specified that if the contractor desires a hearing in which to contest these findings, it must
respond in writing in a letter postmarked within 30 days. The contractor did not provide any
response. A year later, WHD issued an Investigative Findings Letter stating that an investigation
disclosed that the same company violated Executive Order 13658 by failing to pay its workers the
required minimum wage for Federal contractors.
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The second violation is a repeated violation because it is substantially similar to a prior violation
that was the subject of a separate investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts
and became uncontested within the previous three years. The prior violation was uncontested
because the contractor did not contest or challenge the violation within the time frame provided in
the letter or otherwise required by law. Even though the contractor violated two different Labor
Laws, the violations are substantially similar because any two violations of the minimum wage,
subminimum wage, overtime, or prevailing wage provisions of the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive
Order 13658 are substantially similar. Conversely, had the first violation involved, for example, the
employment of minors contrary to the FLSA's child labor provisions, the two violations would not be
substantially similar and the second violation would therefore not be repeated.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
58757
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, "Fair Pay Safe Workplaces"
Appendix C: Willful Violations
All violations of Federal labor laws are a serious matter, but in the context of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay
and Safe Workplaces, the Department of Labor has identified certain violations as "serious," "repeated,"
"willful," and "pervasive." This subset of all Labor Law violations represents the violations that are most
concerning and bear on the assessment of a contractor's integrity and business ethics. The Department has
purposely excluded from consideration violations that could be characterized as inadvertent or minimally
impactful. Ultimately, each contractor's disclosed violations of Labor Laws will be assessed on a case-by-case
basis in light of the totality of the circumstances, including the severity of the violation or violations, the size of
the contractor, and any mitigating factors. In most cases, even for violations subject to disclosure and
consideration under the Order, a single violation of one of the Labor Laws will not give rise to a determination
of lack of responsibility.
The chart below includes a non-exhaustive list of examples of Labor Law violations that may be found to be
"willful" under the Department's Guidance for Executive Order 13673. These are examples only: they are not
minimum requirements, nor are they exclusive of other violations under each Labor Law that may be willful.
The chart does not include violations of "equivalent State laws," which are also covered by the Order, but
(with the exception of OSHA State Plans, which are addressed in the current Guidance) will be addressed in
future guidance.
Summary of Definition of "Willful Violation"
The full definition of a "willful violation" is set forth in section III(A)(3) ofthe Department of Labor's Guidance.
When assessing violations, Agency Labor Compliance Advisors (ALCAs) should refer to the full definition in the
Guidance.
In summary, the Guidance provides that a violation of one of the Labor Laws is willful if:
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a. For purposes of OSH Act or OSHA-approved State Plan violations that are enforced through citations or
equivalent State documents, the citation or equivalent State document at issue was designated as
willful or any equivalent State designation (e.g., "knowing");
b. For purposes of the minimum wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards
Act, 29 U.S.C. 206-207, 212, the administrative merits determination sought or assessed back wages
for greater than 2 years or sought or assessed civil monetary penalties for a willful violation, or there
was a civil judgment or arbitral award or decision finding that the contractor's violation was willful;
c. For purposes of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the enforcement agency, court, arbitrator,
or arbitral panel assessed or awarded liquidated damages;
d. For purposes of Title VII or the Americans with Disabilities Act, the enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded punitive damages for a violation where the contractor
engaged in a discriminatory practice with malice or reckless indifference to the federally protected
rights of an aggrieved individual; or
e. For purposes of any other violations of the Labor Laws, it is readily ascertainable from the findings of
the relevant enforcement agency, court, arbitrator or arbitral panel that the contractor knew that its
conduct was prohibited by any of the Labor Laws or showed reckless disregard for, or acted with plain
58758
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
indifference to, whether its conduct was prohibited by one or more requirements ofthe Labor Laws.
When assessing Labor Law violations, ALCAs will review all of the above criteria to determine whether a
violation is willful. The examples below are intended to illustrate how these criteria may arise in different
contexts, but a violation will be willful if it meets !!.J:!Y of the above criteria.
ALCAs will classify violations based on information that is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decisions
themselves. They do not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the decisions of reviewing
officials, courts, and arbitrators. While ALCAs and contracting officers may seek additional information from
the enforcement agencies to provide context, they generally rely on the information contained in the Labor
Law decisions to determine whether violations are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive under the
definitions provided in this Guidance.
Labor Laws
Fair Labor
Standards Act
(FLSA)
Examples of Willful Violations
In a private lawsuit under the FLSA, a Federal district court issued an order requiring payment of
back wages after finding that a contractor willfully violated the FLSA overtime regulations by
paying workers for 40 hours by check and then paying them in cash at a straight-time rate for
hours worked over 40.
This is a willful violation because violations of the minimum wage, overtime, and child labor
provisions of the FLSA that are reflected in civil judgments or arbitral awards or decisions are willful
under the Order if the civil judgment or arbitral award or decision included a finding that the
contractor's violation was willful. Conversely, if the court had not found the violation to be willful,
the violation would not be willful under the Order.
WHD finds that a contractor employed a 13-year-old child to operate a forklift. In recognition of
the contractor's reckless disregard for its obligations under child labor laws, WHD assesses the
contractor civil monetary penalties for the violation.
Occupational
Safety and Health
(OSH) Act
This is a willful violation because violations of the minimum wage, overtime, and child labor
provisions of the FLSA are also willful if civil monetary penalties were assessed on the grounds that
the violation was willful under the FLSA. Conversely, if, for example, WHD had found that a
contractor had inadvertently allowed a 15-year-old, who was about to turn 16 years old, to work as
a file clerk during school hours, and WHD did not assess any civil monetary penalties for a willful
violation, the violation would not be willful under the Order.
The Indiana Commissioner of Labor issued a Safety Order finding that a refinery committed a
"knowing" violation of the Indiana Occupational Safety and Health Act (an OSHA State Plan) by
failing to properly train truck drivers in a propane loading system, which resulted in an explosion.
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This is a willful violation because all citations designated as willful by OSHA-or equivalent State
documents designated similarly (e.g., as "knowing") by an OSHA State Plan-are willful under the
Order. Conversely, had the Safety Order not designated the violation as willful or some other
equivalent State designation, the violation would not be willful under the Order.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
58759
Examples of Willful Violations
Migrant and
Seasonal
Agricultural
Worker
Protection Act
(MSPA)
An AU issued an order finding that the contractor was warned by an official from WHD that the
housing the contractor was providing to migrant agricultural workers did not comply with required
safety-and-health standards and that the contractor then failed to make the required repairs or
corrections.
National Labor
Relations Act
(NLRA)
The NLRB issued a decision finding that a unionized roofing contractor set up a non-union alter
ego corporation to avoid paying its employees the wages and benefits provided in its contract with
the union.
This is a willful violation because the contractor knew, based on the warning of the WHD official,
that its conduct was prohibited by law, yet continued to engage in the prohibited conduct.
Conversely, if, for example, the AU's findings indicated that the contractor did not receive any
warning from WHD and, after making a reasonable inquiry into its legal obligations, believed in
good faith that its housing was fully in compliance with the relevant standards, the violation would
not be willful under the Order.
This is a willful violation because the NLRB's finding that the contractor formed the alter ego
corporation shows that the employer was aware of its requirements under the NLRA, yet engaged
in the prohibited conduct anyway. Conversely, had the contractor, for example, inadvertently
failed to pay its workers the benefits specified in its contract because a human resources specialist
had incorrectly calculated the workers' seniority, the violation would not be willful.
Davis-Bacon Act
(DBA)
An AU order affirming a violation of the DBA included a finding that the contractor manipulated
payroll documents to make it appear as if it had paid workers the required prevailing wages.
This is a willful violation because the contractor knew that its conduct was prohibited by the
DBA. The AU's finding that documents were falsified indicates that the contractor knew that it was
required to pay the workers prevailing wages, yet paid them less anyway. Conversely, had the
contractor, for example, failed to pay certain workers prevailing wages because of a good-faith
misunderstanding about the workers' proper classification for the purpose of DBA wage
determinations, the violation would not be willful.
Service Contract
Act (SCA)
The DOL's Administrative Review Board (ARB) affirmed WHO's determination that a contractor
violated the SCA. The order included a finding that the contractor documented the wages as paid,
but required the workers to kick back a portion of their wages to the contractor.
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This is a willful violation because the contractor knew that its conduct was prohibited by the SCA.
The finding that the contractor required the workers to kick back wages paid indicates that the
contractor knew that it was required to pay the workers prevailing wages, yet paid them less
anyway as a result of the kickbacks. Conversely, had the ARB found, for example, that employees
were not paid their required SCA wages because the contractor's payroll system, due to a systems
error, failed to include the most up-to-date SCA wage determinations, the violation would not be
willful.
58760
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Executive Order
11246 (Equal
Employment
Opportunity)
Examples of Willful Violations
An AU decision found that a contractor's vice president knew that Federal law prohibits
discrimination on the basis of gender, but had a policy of not promoting women to managerial
positions.
This is a willful violation because the contractor knew that its discrimination was prohibited by
law, but engaged in the conduct anyway. Conversely, had the contractor used a neutral procedure
for selecting employees for promotion and validated this procedure in accordance with OFCCP
regulations, but the procedure was ultimately determined by the AU to be discriminatory on the
basis of gender because the contractor did not fully comply with validation requirements, the
violation would not be willful.
Section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act
An ARB decision found that a contractor refused to hire any individuals with physical disabilities,
and that in doing so, the contractor made no attempt whatsoever to determine whether any of
these individuals' disabilities would affect their abilities to do the jobs for which they applied.
This is a willful violation because the contractor made no effort whatsoever to learn or
understand whether it was complying with the law, showing that the contractor acted in reckless
disregard for its obligations under section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act. Conversely, had the ARB
found that the contractor made good-faith efforts to determine whether the applicants' disabilities
affected their abilities to do the jobs for which they applied, but submitted insufficient evidence to
support its claim that accommodations would impose an undue burden, the violation would not be
willful.
Vietnam Era
Veterans'
Readjustment
Assistance Act
(VEVRAA)
An AU decision finding initial assignment and pay discrimination in violation of VEVRAA found
that each time a veteran covered by VEVRAA's protections applied for a job with a contractor, the
contractor only placed the veteran in one of its lowest paying custodial jobs without any regard for
the veteran's qualifications or the job for which the veteran applied. The decision included a
factual finding that the contractor was aware of VEVRAA's prohibition against discriminating
against covered veterans, but did so anyway.
This is a willful violation because the contractor knew that its conduct was prohibited by
VEVRAA, yet channeled the veterans into the custodial jobs anyway. Conversely, had the
contractor used a neutral procedure for selecting employees that the contractor claimed was jobrelated and consistent with business necessity, but the procedure was ultimately determined by the
AU to be discriminatory against covered veterans, the violation would not be willful.
Family and
Medical Leave Act
(FMLA)
After suit in Federal district court by a private litigant, the court issued a decision that included
findings that the contractor's employee handbook provided for unpaid leave to employees with
serious health conditions as required by the FMLA, but that the contractor in practice erected
unnecessary hurdles to employees requesting such leave.
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This is a willful violation because the contractor knew of its requirements under the FMLA, yet
violated these requirements. Conversely, had the court's decision instead found that the
contractor's actions were based on a good-faith misunderstanding of the FMLA's provisions
concerning medical certification, the violation would not be willful.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Labor Laws
Examples of Willful Violations
Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of
1964
58761
After a Federal district court trial finding the contractor liable for sexual harassment, the
factfinder assessed punitive damages after finding that the contractor engaged in a discriminatory
practice with malice or reckless indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved
individual. The decision included findings that the employer's anti-harassment policy was
ineffective and a manager, after receiving a complaint of sexual harassment, failed to report it or
investigate it.
This is a willful violation because Title VII violations are willful under the Order if the enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded punitive damages for a violation
where the contractor engaged in a discriminatory practice with malice or reckless indifference to
the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual. Conversely, had the district court not
awarded any punitive damages, the violation would not be willful.
Americans with
Disabilities Act of
1990 (ADA)
After a trial in Federal court, the factfinder assessed punitive damages after finding that the
contractor engaged in an ADA-prohibited discriminatory practice with malice or reckless
indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual, and the contractor could
not demonstrate good faith.
This is a willful violation because ADA violations are willful under the Order if the enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded punitive damages for a violation
where the contractor engaged in a discriminatory practice with malice or reckless indifference to
the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual. Conversely, had the factfinder not
assessed punitive damages, the violation would not be willful.
Age
Discrimination in
Employment Act
of 1967 (ADEA)
Executive Order
13658 (Minimum
Wage for
Contractors)
An arbitral award included liquidated damages for a willful violation of the ADEA.
This is a willful violation because ADEA violations are willful under the Order if the enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded liquidated damages. Conversely,
had the arbitrator not awarded any liquidated damages, the violation would not be willful.
An AU order affirming a violation of Executive Order 13658 included a finding that the
employer, an experienced and sophisticated government contractor, made no effort whatsoever
to determine what its minimum wage obligations were or whether its workers were employees or
independent contractors, but instead chose to pay them a flat rate that fell well short of the
requirements of Executive Order 13658.
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This is a willful violation because the contractor made no effort whatsoever to learn or
understand whether it was complying with the law, showing that that the contractor was acting in
reckless disregard or plain indifference of its requirements under Executive Order 13658.
Conversely, if the employer in question was a small business and a new Federal contractor and the
employer, after reading the regulations implementing Executive Order 13658, mistakenly
concluded in good faith that it was not covered by these minimum wage requirements, the
violation would not be willful.
58762
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, "Fair Pay Safe Workplaces"
Appendix D: Pervasive Violations
All violations of Federal labor laws are a serious matter, but in the context of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay
and Safe Workplaces, the Department of Labor has identified certain violations as "serious," "repeated,"
"willful," and "pervasive." This subset of all Labor Law violations represents the violations that are most
concerning and bear on the assessment of a contractor's integrity and business ethics. The Department has
purposely excluded from consideration violations that could be characterized as inadvertent or minimally
impactful. Ultimately, each contractor's disclosed violations of Labor Laws will be assessed on a case-by-case
basis in light of the totality of the circumstances, including the severity of the violation or violations, the size of
the contractor, and any mitigating factors. In most cases, even for violations subject to disclosure and
consideration under the Order, a single violation of one of the Labor Laws will not give rise to a determination
of lack of responsibility.
The chart below includes a non-exhaustive list of examples of Labor Law violations that may be found to be
"pervasive" under the Department's Guidance for Executive Order 13673. These are examples only: they are
not minimum requirements, nor are they exclusive of other violations under each Labor Law that may be
pervasive. The chart does not include violations of "equivalent State laws," which are also covered by the
Order, but (with the exception of OSHA State Plans, which are addressed in the current Guidance) will be
addressed in future guidance.
Summary of Definition of "Pervasive Violation"
The full definition of a "pervasive violation" is set forth in section III{A)(4) ofthe Department of Labor's
Guidance. When assessing violations, Agency Labor Compliance Advisors (ALCAs) should refer to the full
definition in the Guidance.
In summary, the Guidance provides that violations of the Labor Laws are "pervasive" if they reflect a basic
disregard by the contractor for the Labor Laws as demonstrated by a pattern of serious and/or willful
violations, continuing violations, or numerous violations. Violations must be multiple to be pervasive,
although having multiple violations does not necessarily mean the violations are pervasive. The number of
violations necessarily depends on the size of the contractor, because larger employers, by virtue of their size,
are more likely to have multiple violations. To be pervasive, the violations need not be of the same or similar
requirements of the Labor Laws. Pervasive violations may exist where the contractor commits multiple
violations of the same Labor Law, regardless of their similarity, or violations of more than one of the Labor
Laws. This classification is intended to identify those contractors whose numerous violations of Labor Laws
indicate that they may view sanctions for their violations as merely part of the "cost of doing business," an
attitude that is inconsistent with the level of responsibility required by the FAR.
When assessing Labor Law violations, ALCAs will review the full definition to determine whether a violation
is pervasive. The examples below are intended to illustrate how the definition may be applied in different
contexts, but a violation can be deemed pervasive as long as it meets the criteria set forth in the Guidance.
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ALCAs will classify violations based on information that is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decisions
themselves. They do not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the decisions of reviewing
officials, courts, and arbitrators. While ALCAs and contracting officers may seek additional information from
the enforcement agencies to provide context, they generally rely on the information contained in the Labor
Law decisions to determine whether violations are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive under the
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
58763
definitions provided in this Guidance.
Examples of Pervasive Violations (not specific to any particular statute)
A medium-sized company with about 1,000 employees that provides janitorial services at Federal facilities was
found to have violated the SCA for failure to pay workers their required wages, Title VII for discrimination in hiring on the
basis of national origin, the NLRA for demoting workers who are seeking to organize a union, and the FMLA for denying
workers unpaid leave for serious health conditions.
These violations are pervasive because while the violations are substantively different from each other, a mediumsized employer that violates so many Labor Laws is demonstrating a basic disregard for its legal obligations to its workers
and is committing pervasive violations.
A 100-employee IT consulting company was found to have violated EO 11246 for systematically failing to promote
women to managerial positions, the FLSA for failing to pay workers overtime after misclassifying them as independent
contractors, and the ADEA for constructively discharging employees who were age 60 or over.
These violations are pervasive because while substantively different from each other, a small employer that violates
Labor Laws to this degree is demonstrating a basic disregard for its legal obligations to its workers and is committing
pervasive violations.
The Wage and Hour Division issued several Form WH-103 "Employment of Minors Contrary to The Fair Labor
Standards Act" notices finding that a clothing manufacturer that provides custom-made uniforms for Federal employees
employed numerous underage workers in violation of the child labor provisions of the FLSA. Despite receiving these
notices, the contractor failed to make efforts to change its practices and continued to violate the FLSA's child labor
provisions repeatedly.
These violations are pervasive because they are a series of repeated violations in which the contractor, despite
knowledge of its violations and several repeated notices from WHO, failed to make efforts to change its practices and
continued to violate the law repeatedly.
OSHA cited a small tools manufacturer with about 50 employees in a single location multiple times for a variety of
serious violations in the same investigation -once for improper storage of hazardous materials, once for failure to
provide employees with protective equipment, once for inadequate safeguards on heavy machinery, once for lack of fall
protection, once for insufficient ventilation, once for unsafe noise exposure, and once for inadequate emergency exits.
The manufacturer does not have a process for identifying and eliminating serious safety-and-health hazards.
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These violations are pervasive because such a high number of serious workplace safety-and-health violations relative
to the size of a small company with only a single location and the lack of an effective process to identify and eliminate
serious violations (hazards) in its workplace constitute basic disregard by the contractor for worker safety and health.
Even though these violations would not be designated as repeated violations by OSHA and would therefore not be
repeated violations under the Order, they would be considered pervasive.
58764
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Examples of Pervasive Violations (not specific to any particular statute)
An AU at OSHRC found that although the chief safety officer at a chemical plant fielded complaints from workers
about several unsafe working conditions, he failed to take action to remedy the unsafe conditions, resulting in numerous
willful OSH Act violations.
These violations are pervasive because the dangerous working conditions were willfully sanctioned by a high-level
company official and were evident throughout the chemical plant. When Labor Laws are violated with either the explicit
or implicit approval of higher-level management, such approval signals that future violations will be tolerated or
condoned, and may dissuade workers from reporting violations or raising complaints. Such violations also indicate that
the company does not voluntarily eliminate hazards, but instead views penalties for such violations as "the cost of doing
business," rather than as indicative of significant threats to its workers' health and safety that must be addressed. Thus,
to the extent that higher-level management officials were involved in violations themselves, or knew of violations and
failed to have an effective process to identify and correct serious violations in their workplace, the violations are more
likely to be deemed pervasive.
A large company with 5,000 employees that provides uniform services to Federal agencies in several States is cited
10 times for serious OSHA violations over the span of a year. The violations affect most of its inspected locations, and a
number of the citations are for high gravity serious failures to abate dangerous conditions that OSHA had cited
previously. As a result, the company is placed on OSHA's Severe Violator Enforcement Program.
These violations are pervasive, notwithstanding the large size of the contractor, because the sheer number of high
gravity serious violations over such a short period of time is evidence that the company is ignoring persistent threats to
workers' safety, fails to treat safety as a serious problem, and is acting in disregard of its legal obligations. In contrast, if
the violations affected only a few of the company's facilities, or if the company had acted quickly to abate any violations,
the violations might not necessarily be considered pervasive.
A Federal district court decision in a class-action lawsuit included a finding that the vice president of a construction
company directed a foreman not to hire Native American workers, and as a result, the company is found to have
committed numerous Title VII violations against job applicants.
These violations are pervasive because a high-level company official actively participated in the discriminatory
conduct, resulting in numerous violations. Even though these violations would not be "repeated" because they arose
during the same proceeding, they would be considered pervasive. While violations must be multiple to be pervasive, a
single liability determination in a class proceeding may be considered "multiple" violations for a determination of
pervasiveness.
While a union was conducting an organizational campaign at a large manufacturer, the contractor held several
captive-audience speeches for all of its workers at each of its factories for an extended period of time, threatening the
workers with disciplinary measures if they voted to join the union in violation of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).
In addition, the Wage and Hour Division finds that the company failed to pay overtime to its workers at the vast majority
of its locations in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
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These violations are pervasive, notwithstanding the large size of the contractor, because the contractor committed
multiple serious violations affecting significant numbers of its workers. Conversely, if the contractor made its threatening
remarks to only a few of its workers, or if the overtime violations only existed at a few of the contractor's locations, the
violations might not necessarily be considered pervasive.
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
58765
Examples of Pervasive Violations (not specific to any particular statute)
The Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs finds, through enterprise-wide
enforcement, that a large contractor with 50,000 employees that provides food services at Federal agencies nationwide
used pre-employment screening tests for most jobs at the company's facilities that resulted in Hispanic workers being
hired at a significantly lower rate than non-Hispanic workers over a 5-year period. In addition, the Wage and Hour
Division finds that the company failed to comply with the Service Contract Act's requirements to pay its workers
prevailing wages at many of its locations.
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These violations are likely pervasive, notwithstanding the large size of the contractor, because the contractor's
numerous serious violations spanned most of its locations and affected many of its workers. Conversely, had the
company engaged in these prohibited practices at only a few of its locations, such violations might not necessarily be
considered pervasive.
58766
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Guidance for Executive Order 13673, "Fair Pay Safe Workplaces"
Appendix E: Assessing Violations of the Labor Laws
When preparing an assessment of a contractor's Labor Law violations, an Agency Labor Compliance Officer
(ALCA) follows a three-step process to assess a contractor's record of Labor Law compliance and provide
advice to contracting officers. In the first step, classifying the Labor Law violations, an ALCA reviews all of the
contractor's violations to determine if any are "serious," "repeated," "willful," and/or "pervasive."
Appendices A through D provide summary definitions and examples of Labor Law violations that are "serious,"
"repeated," "willful," and "pervasive."
In the second step an ALCA weighs the Labor Law violations to determine whether the contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance-in other words, whether the contractor's history of Labor Law
compliance and any adoption by the contractor of preventative compliance measures indicate that the
contracting officer could find the contractor to have a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics. To
do so, the ALCA analyzes any serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive violations in light of the totality of the
circumstances, including any mitigating factors. The contractor's timely remediation of violations of Labor
Laws is generally the most important factor weighing in favor of a conclusion that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. The ALCA will also consider factors that weigh against a
conclusion that the contractor has a satisfactory record. For example, pervasive violations and violations of
particular gravity, among others, may support such an outcome.
In the third step of the assessment process, the ALCA provides written advice and analysis to the contracting
officer regarding the contractor's record of Labor Law compliance. The ALCA recommends whether the
contractor's record supports a finding of a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics. In cases where
the ALCA concludes that a contractor has an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, the ALCA will
recommend the negotiation of a labor compliance agreement or other appropriate action such as notification
of the agency suspending and debarring official. If the ALCA concludes that a labor compliance agreement is
warranted, the ALCA will recommend whether the agreement should be negotiated before or after the award.
The written analysis supporting the advice describes the ALCA's classification and weighing of the contractor's
Labor Law violations and includes the rationale for the recommendation.
Mitigating Factors that Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law Compliance
Various factors may mitigate the existence of a contractor's Labor Law violations. The Department respects
the fact that most employers endeavor to comply with the Labor Laws. The Department values highly
contractors' good-faith efforts to comply, and it encourages them to report these efforts, including workplace
policies that foster compliance. The following are the most common factors that will mitigate the existence of
one or more violations in the context of a responsibility determination. This is not an exhaustive list. None of
these mitigating factors, standing alone, is necessarily determinative. Contractors are encouraged to report
any information they believe demonstrates a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.
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Remediation of the violation(s), including Labor Compliance Agreements: Typically the most
important factor that can mitigate the existence of a violation, remediation is an indication that a
contractor has assumed responsibility for a violation and has taken steps to bring itself into compliance
with the law going forward. In most cases, for remediation to be considered mitigating, it should
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58767
Mitigating Factors that Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law Compliance
•
•
•
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•
involve two components:
o Correction of the violation: The remediation should correct the violation itself, including by
making any affected workers whole. For example, this could involve abating a dangerous
hazard, paying workers their back wages owed, or reinstating a wrongfully discharged
employee.
o Efforts to prevent similar violations in the future: Particular consideration will be given where
the contractor has implemented remediation on an enterprise-wide level or has entered into an
enhanced settlement agreement with the relevant enforcement agency or agencies that goes
beyond what is minimally required under the law to address appropriate remedial or
compliance measures.
One specific type of remediation is a Labor Compliance Agreement, which is an agreement entered into
between an enforcement agency and a contractor to address appropriate remedial measures,
compliance assistance, steps to resolve issues to increase compliance with labor laws, or other related
matters. A Labor Compliance Agreement is an important mitigating factor because it indicates that the
contractor recognizes the importance that the Federal Government places on compliance with the
Labor Laws.
Only one violation: While a contracting officer is not precluded from making a determination of
non responsibility based on a single violation in the circumstances where merited, in most cases a single
violation of a Labor Law will not give rise to a lack of responsibility, depending on the nature of the
violation.
Low number of violations relative to size: Larger employers, by virtue of their size, are more likely to
have multiple violations than smaller ones. When assessing contractors with multiple violations, a
contracting officer and Labor Compliance Advisor should consider the size of the contractor.
Safety and health programs, grievance procedures, or other compliance programs: Contractors can
help to assure future compliance by implementing a safety-and-health management program such as
OSHA's 1989 Safety and Health Program Management guidelines or any updates to those guidelines,
grievance procedures (including collectively-bargained ones), monitoring arrangements negotiated as
part of either a settlement agreement or labor compliance agreement, or other similar compliance
programs. Such programs and procedures can foster a corporate culture in which workers are
encouraged to raise legitimate concerns about Labor Law violations without the fear of repercussions;
as a result, they may also prompt workers to report violations that would, under other circumstances,
go unreported. Therefore, implementation or prior existence of such a program is a mitigating factor.
Recent legal or regulatory change: To the extent that the Labor Law violations can be traced to a
recent legal or regulatory change, that may be a mitigating factor. This may be case where a new
interpretation of an existing statute is applied retroactively and a contractor's pre-change conduct is
found to be a violation. For example, where prior agency or court decisions suggested that a practice
was lawful, but the Labor Law decision finds otherwise, this may be a mitigating factor.
Good faith and reasonable grounds: It may be a mitigating factor where the findings in the relevant
Labor Law decision support the contractor's defense that it had reasonable grounds for believing that it
was not violating the law. For example, if a contractor acts in reliance on advice from a responsible
official from the relevant enforcement agency, or an administrative or authoritative judicial ruling, such
reliance will typically demonstrate good faith and reasonable grounds. This mitigating factor also
applies where a violation otherwise resulted from the conduct of a government official. For example, a
DBA violation may be mitigated where the contracting agency failed to include the relevant contract
58768
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Mitigating Factors that Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law Compliance
•
clause and wage determination in a contract.
Significant period of compliance following violations: If, following one or more violations within the
three-year reporting period, the contractor maintains a steady period of compliance with the Labor
Laws, such compliance may mitigate the existence of prior violations (e.g., violations were reported
from 2~ years ago and there have been none since). This is a stronger mitigating factor where the
contractor has a recent Labor Law decision that it must disclose, but the underlying conduct took place
significantly prior to the 3-year disclosure period and the contractor has had no subsequent violations.
Factors that Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law Compliance
The following types of violations present factors that weigh against a conclusion that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. The list offactors below is not exhaustive. Nor are any ofthese
factors necessarily determinative. An ALCA reviews these factors as part of an evaluation of the totality of the
circumstances. In some cases, several factors may need to be present in order for an ALCA to conclude that a
contractor has an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. Depending on the facts of the case, even
where multiple factors are present, they may be outweighed by mitigating circumstances.
•
•
•
•
ER25AU16.027
Factors that Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law Compliance
exhausted or were not pursued), the violation should be given greater weight. Likewise, where a
violation has not resulted in a final judgment, determination, or order, it should be given lesser weight.
[FR Doc. 2016–19678 Filed 8–24–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–HL–P
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•
Pervasive violations. Pervasive violations, by definition, demonstrate a basic disregard for the Labor
Laws. Such disregard of legal obligations creates a heightened danger that the contractor may, in turn,
disregard its contractual obligations as well. Additionally, such contractors are more likely to violate
the Labor Laws in the future, and those violations- and any enforcement proceedings or litigation that
may ensue- may imperil their ability to meet their obligations under a contract. The fact that a
contractor shows such disregard for the Labor Laws weighs strongly against a satisfactory record of
Labor Law Compliance.
Violations that are serious AND repeated, serious AND willful, or willful AND repeated. A violation
that falls into two or more these categories, as a general matter, is more likely to be probative of the
contractor's disregard for legal obligations and working conditions than a violation that falls into only
one of those categories.
Violations of particular gravity. Two violations in the same classification will not necessarily receive
equal weight. Labor Law violations that are of particular gravity and should be given greater weight
include (but are not limited to):
o Violations related to the death of an employee;
o Violations involving a termination of employment for exercising a right protected under the
Labor Laws;
o Violations that detrimentally impact the working conditions of all or nearly all of the workforce
at a worksite; and
o Violations where the amount of back wages, penalties, and other damages awarded is greater
than $100,000.
Violations for which a court has granted injunctive relief. Where a court has granted injunctive relief
to remedy a violation that is classified as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive, the violation should be
given greater weight.
Violations that are reflected in final orders. To the extent that the judgment, determination, or order
finding a Labor Law violation is final (because appeals and opportunities for further review have been
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 165 (Thursday, August 25, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 58653-58768]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-19678]
[[Page 58653]]
Vol. 81
Thursday,
No. 165
August 25, 2016
Part III
Department of Labor
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Office of the Secretary
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48 CFR Parts 22 and 52
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, ``Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces'';
Final Guidance
Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 165 / Thursday, August 25, 2016 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 58654]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
48 CFR Parts 22 and 52
ZRIN 1290-ZA02
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, ``Fair Pay and Safe
Workplaces''
AGENCY: Department of Labor.
ACTION: Final guidance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Labor (the Department) is publishing final
guidance (the Guidance) to assist the Federal Acquisition Regulatory
Council (the FAR Council) and Federal contracting agencies in the
implementation of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces.
Executive Order 13673 (the Order) contains new requirements designed to
increase efficiency and cost savings in the Federal contracting
process. By law, Federal agencies already must contract only with
``responsible'' sources. Among other directives, the Order provides
explicit new instructions for Federal contracting officers to consider
a contractor's compliance with certain Federal and State labor laws as
a part of the determination of contractor ``responsibility'' that
contracting officers presently must undertake before awarding a Federal
contract. In addition, the Order directs the FAR Council to propose the
rules and regulations necessary to carry out the Order and the
Department to develop guidance to help implement the new requirements.
In this final Guidance, the Department provides detailed definitions
for various terms used in the Order and the FAR rule to categorize and
classify labor law violations, and the Department provides a summary of
the processes through which contracting agencies will assess a
contractor's overall record of labor law compliance and carry out their
other duties under the Order.
DATES: This final Guidance is being published simultaneously with the
FAR Council's final rule. The final FAR rule is published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register and is effective on October 25,
2016. Contractors and Federal agencies may use this Guidance beginning
August 25, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Swirsky, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Policy, U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-2312, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210; telephone: (202) 693-
5959 (this is not a toll-free number). Copies of this final Guidance
may be obtained in alternative formats (large print, Braille, audio
tape or disc), upon request, by calling (202) 693-5959 (this is not a
toll-free number). TTY/TDD callers may dial toll-free [1-877-889-5627]
to obtain information or request materials in alternative formats.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Department publishes this final Guidance
to assist in the implementation of Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay and
Safe Workplaces, dated July 31, 2014 (79 FR 45309, Aug. 5, 2014).
Executive Order 13673 was amended by Executive Order 13683, December
11, 2014 (79 FR 75041, Dec. 16, 2014) to correct a statutory citation.
The Order was further amended by Executive Order to modify the handling
of subcontractor disclosures and clarify the requirements for public
disclosure of documents.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. GAO Studies of Federal Procurement
B. State and Local Responsible-Contracting Policies
II. Summary of the Executive Order
III. Overview of the Final Guidance
IV. Summary of Comments Received
V. Discussion of General Comments
A. Comments Requesting Changes to the Order or the Proposed FAR
Rule
B. Comments About Costs and Burdens of the Order
C. Comments About Alternatives and the Need for the Order
D. Comments About the Legal Authority for the Order
Section-By-Section Analysis
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements (Formerly ``Disclosure
Requirements'')
A. Covered Contracts (Formerly ``Who Must Make Disclosures Under
the Order'')
B. Labor Law Decisions (Formerly ``What Triggers the Disclosure
Obligations'')
1. Defining ``Administrative Merits Determination''
2. Defining ``Civil Judgment''
3. Defining ``Arbitral Award or Decision''
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising From the Same
Underlying Violation
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed (Formerly ``What
Information Must Be Disclosed'')
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice (Formerly ``Weighing Violations
of the Labor Laws'')
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
1. Serious Violations
2. Repeated Violations
3. Willful Violations
4. Pervasive Violations
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and Mitigating Factors
(Formerly ``Assessing Violations and Considering Mitigating
Factors'')
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory
Record of Labor Law Compliance
2. Factors That Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor's Record of Labor Law
Compliance
IV. Postaward Disclosure and Assessment of Labor Law Violations
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
VI. Preassessment
VII. Paycheck Transparency
A. Wage Statement Provisions
1. Rate of Pay
2. Itemizing Additions To and Deductions From Wages
3. Information To Be Included in the Wage Statement
4. Weekly Accounting of Overtime Hours Worked
5. Electronic Wage Statements
6. Substantially Similar State Laws
7. Request to Delay Effective Date
8. FLSA Exempt-Status Notification
B. Independent Contractor Notice
1. Clarifying the Information in the Notice
2. Independent Contractor Determination
3. Frequency of the Independent Contractor Notice
4. Workers Employed by Staffing Agencies
5. Translation Requirements
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of Requirements
IX. Other Comments
A. Public Availability of Disclosures and Assessment Information
B. Participation of Third-Parties
C. Anti-retaliation and Whistleblower Protections for Reporting
Information
I. Background
Spending on Federal contracts has almost doubled since 2000, and it
has substantially increased as a percentage of total Federal
spending.\1\ This increase has spurred new attention by Congress and
the current administration to address inefficiencies and gaps in
oversight of Federal contractors and subcontractors, including through
investment in new information-technology systems and guidance for the
Federal contracting officers who do the critical day-to-day work of
managing billions of dollars in contracts. Executive Order 13673, Fair
Pay and Safe Workplaces (the Order), is one of several of such
initiatives intended to provide new information, tools, and guidance
for contracting officers to better serve in their roles as gatekeepers
for and stewards of Federal agency resources.
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\1\ In 2000, total spending on Federal contracts was $276.9
billion; by 2012, that number had increased to $518.4 billion. See
Cong. Budget Office, ``Federal Contracts and the Contracted
Workforce,'' Letter from Director Douglas Elmendorff 1, 4 (Mar. 11,
2015), Table 1, available at https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/114th-congress-2015-2016/reports/49931-FederalContracts.pdf.
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The Order reinforces current Federal procurement procedures.
Existing law requires Federal agencies to contract
[[Page 58655]]
only with ``responsible'' sources.\2\ To implement this responsibility
requirement, an agency contracting officer must make an affirmative
determination of a contractor's responsibility before the contracting
officer makes any contract award.\3\ Under existing law, a contractor
must have ``a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics'' to
be a responsible source.\4\ To strengthen this requirement, the Order
now instructs contracting officers to consider whether a contractor has
a history of certain labor law violations within the last three years
as a factor in determining if the contractor has such a satisfactory
record.\5\
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\2\ 10 U.S.C. 2305(b); 41 U.S.C. 3703. This requirement dates to
1884. See Act of July 5, 1884, ch. 217, 23 Stat. 107, 109. The
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) contains a similar requirement.
See FAR 9.103(a). The FAR can be found at title 48 of the Code of
Federal Regulations. Citations in this Guidance to the FAR use
format FAR [section] instead of 48 CFR [section].
\3\ FAR 9.103(b). Agency ``contracting officers'' are the only
Federal officials who can enter into and sign contracts on behalf of
the Government. Id. 1.601. Contracting officers have authority to
enter into, administer, or terminate contracts and make related
determinations and findings. Id. 1.602-1(a). They also have the
responsibility to ensure that all requirements of law, Executive
orders, regulations, and all other applicable procedures, including
clearances and approvals, have been met. Id. 1.602-1(b).
\4\ 41 U.S.C. 113(4); FAR 9.104-1(d).
\5\ See Order, sections 2(a)(ii) and (iii).
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Numerous violations of applicable laws in the course of business
operations should raise questions about a contractor's integrity and
business ethics. Even the most limited definition of ``business
ethics'' requires a business to obey the law.\6\ Despite this fact,
multiple studies conducted over the last two decades suggest that
consideration of contractor labor law violations during the Federal
procurement process has been the exception rather than the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Milton Friedman, ``The Social Responsibility of Business
is to Increase Its Profits,'' New York Times Magazine (Sept. 13,
1970); see also Rob Atkinson, ``Growing Greener Grass: Looking from
Legal Ethics to Business Ethics, and Back,'' 1 U. St. Thomas L.J.
951, 969 (2004) (``A great deal of business ethics focuses on
precisely this issue: What norms, beyond the minima of obeying the
law and making a profit, govern what business managers should
do?''). While court cases addressing the relationship between labor
violations and ``integrity and business ethics'' are not common, the
Comptroller General has, on occasion, concluded that the violation
of various labor-related laws can support a finding of lack of
integrity and business ethics. See, e.g., ALM, Inc., B-225679 et.
al, 87-1 CPD ] 493, at 1-2 (Comp. Gen. May 8, 1987) (discussing
alleged violations of the Service Contract Act (SCA) in the context
of FAR 9.104-1(d)); Gen. Painting Co., B-219449, 85-2 CPD ] 530 at 4
(Comp. Gen. Nov. 8, 1985) (discussing failure to fulfill minimum
wage requirements as a potential basis for nonresponsibility under
FAR section 9.104-1(d)); Wash. Moving & Storage Co., B-175845, 1973
WL 8012, at 2 (Comp. Gen. Mar. 9, 1973) (upholding NASA's debarment
of contractor for failure to comply with labor laws).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. GAO Studies of Federal Procurement
In the mid-1990s, the congressional General Accounting Office
(GAO), now known as the Government Accountability Office, issued two
reports finding that Federal contracts worth billions of dollars had
been awarded to companies that had violated the National Labor
Relations Act (NLRA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Act (the
OSH Act).\7\ The GAO observed that contracting agencies already had the
authority to consider these violations when awarding Federal contracts
under the existing regulations, but were not doing so because they
lacked adequate information about contractors' noncompliance.\8\
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\7\ See U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/HEHS-96-8, ``Worker
Protection: Federal Contractors and Violations of Labor Law,''
Report to Senator Paul Simon (1995) (documenting awards to companies
that had violated the NLRA), available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/230/221816.pdf; U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/HEHS-96-157,
``Occupational Safety and Health: Violations of Safety and Health
Regulations by Federal Contractors,'' Report to Congressional
Requesters (1996) (documenting awards to companies that had violated
safety-and-health regulations), available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/230/223113.pdf.
\8\ See U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/T-HEHS-98-212,
``Federal Contractors: Historical Perspective on Noncompliance With
Labor and Worker Safety Laws,'' Statement of Cornelia Blanchette
before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Committee
on Education and the Workforce, House of Representatives, 2 (July
14, 1998) (drawing conclusions from the 1995 and 1996 GAO reports
cited above in note 8), available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/110/107539.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over a decade later, with contracting expenditures escalating, the
GAO again found a similar pattern. Looking at the companies that had
the largest wage violations and workplace health-and-safety penalties
from fiscal years 2005 to 2009, the GAO found that a surprisingly high
percentage of those companies subsequently received Federal
contracts.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO-10-1033,
``Federal Contracting: Assessments and Citations of Federal Labor
Law Violations by Selected Federal Contractors,'' Report to
Congressional Requesters 7-8 (2010), available at https://www.gao.gov/new.items/d101033.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A 2013 report by the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
(HELP) Committee corroborated these findings. That report reviewed
violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and other laws
enforced by the Department's Wage and Hour Division (WHD) and
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) between 2007 and
2012 and found that some 49 Federal contractors were responsible for
1,776 separate violations of these laws and paid $196 million in
penalties and back wage assessments.\10\ In 2012, those same companies
were awarded $81 billion in Federal contracts.\11\ Looking at the 100
largest wage and OSHA violations, the Committee found that 35 Federal
contractors had violated both wage and safety-and-health laws.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Majority Staff of Senate Committee on Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions, ``Acting Responsibly? Federal Contractors
Frequently Put Workers' Lives and Livelihoods at Risk,'' 1 (2013)
(hereinafter HELP Committee Report), available at https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Labor%20Law%20Violations%20by%20Contractors%20Report.pdf.
\11\ Id.
\12\ Id. at 18.
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As the GAO had done 15 years earlier, the HELP Committee Report
noted that contracting officers had the legal authority to consider
labor law violations during the procurement process, but were not doing
so. The Committee noted that contracting officers generally do not seek
information regarding responsibility matters outside of the limited
databases they are required by law to review.\13\ And, even if they did
have access to such information, the report found, contracting officers
would be reluctant to act on it because of a lack of guidance regarding
when labor law violations add up to an unsatisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Id. at 25.
\14\ Id. at 27-28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. State and Local Responsible-Contracting Policies
During the decades in which the GAO and HELP Committee studies of
Federal procurement were conducted, many State and local governments
responded to similar challenges by incorporating labor standards into
contracting policies.\15\ Preaward screening for labor
[[Page 58656]]
law violations became standard practice in some State and local
jurisdictions in the form of pre-qualification programs.\16\ These
programs have ``come to be viewed in the public contracting field as a
best practice and a key management strategy.'' \17\ In North Carolina,
for example, contractors must be prequalified to bid on projects for
the State's Department of Transportation. As part of this
prequalification, contractors have to disclose whether they have
received any final or nonfinal repeat or willful OSHA violations within
the past 2 years, and they must include copies of those violations with
the prequalification application.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See Paul K. Sonn & Tsedeye Gebreselassie, The Road to
Responsible Contracting: Lessons from States and Cities for Ensuring
That Federal Contracting Delivers Good Jobs and Quality Services, 31
Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 459, 464-87 (2010) (listing examples). In
addition, responsible-contractor policies have been increasingly
employed by private actors. As one safety consultant for a Fortune
500 company noted, ``[i]n the long term, carefully selected
contractors are amazingly superior to those chosen based on cost or
supposed productivity. The front-end investment for careful
selection delivers an ROI far beyond the cost to go through the
`dating-engagement-marriage' process.'' Mike Williamsen, ``Choosing
Great Contractors for Your Needs,'' Indus. Hygiene News (July/Aug.
2012), available at https://www.rimbach.com/cgi-bin/Article/IHN/Number.idc?Number=559. These sorts of long-term benefits also make
responsible-contractor policies attractive to large pension funds,
the largest of which, CALPERS, has had a responsible-contractor
policy in place for almost 20 years. See California Public
Employees' Retirement System, ``Statement of Investment Policy for
Responsible Contractor Program,'' 7, 16 (2015), available at https://www.calpers.ca.gov/docs/policy-responsible-contractor-2015.pdf.
\16\ Daniel D. McMillan, Erich R. Luschei, ``Prequalification of
Contractors by State and Local Agencies: Legal Standards and
Procedural Traps,'' Constr. Law., Spring 2007, at 21, 22 (``Public
owners in numerous states now view prequalification as a useful, if
not essential, element to ensure successful completion of
construction projects.'').
\17\ Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 15 at 477.
\18\ North Carolina Dep't of Transp., Subcontractor
Prequalification Form, 14 (2014), available at https://connect.ncdot.gov/business/Prequal/Documents/Subcontractor%20Prequalification%20Form.pdf. The States of
California, Massachusetts, and Connecticut have similar programs
applicable to a broad array of public works. See Sonn &
Gebreselassie, supra note 15 at 474-76. Other examples include the
Illinois Department of Transportation; the City of Los Angeles; the
Los Angeles Unified School District; the Santa Clara County, CA,
Valley Transportation Authority; and the statute authorizing the
construction of the Atlanta Beltline. Id. at 476 (discussing
policies of the Illinois Department of Transportation and the City
of Los Angeles); McMillan et al., supra note 16 at 22 (discussing
the Los Angeles Unified School District program); P'ship for Working
Families, ``Policy & Tools: Responsible Contracting,'' https://www.forworkingfamilies.org/page/policy-tools-responsible-contracting
(last visited July 11, 2016) (discussing for the Santa Clara and
Atlanta examples); see also 44 Ill. Admin. Code 650.240 (2006)
(implementing prequalification for the Illinois Department of
Transportation).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Research tracking the results of these State and local efforts and
of other similar Federal programs has suggested that responsible-
contracting policies--including those policies that require payment of
prevailing wages--can have a positive effect on contract performance,
at limited cost and without negatively affecting competition. One
recent study analyzed State and Federal highway-construction contracts
in Colorado between 2000 and 2011 and found no statistically
significant difference in the cost of the State projects, despite the
additional prevailing-wage regulations on the federally financed
projects.\19\ The study found that the Federal regulations were ``not
associated with reduced bid competition, an important determinant of
project cost.'' \20\ Similarly, a study of local prevailing wage
regulations in California in 2012 showed that the regulations ``[did]
not decrease the number of bidders nor alter the bidding behavior of
contractors relative to the . . . value of the project.'' \21\ And a
recent study of the use of local responsible-contractor policies across
the State of Ohio showed no statistically discernible impact on school
construction bid costs.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Kevin Duncan, ``The Effect of Federal Davis-Bacon and
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Regulations on Highway Maintenance
Costs,'' 68 ILR Review 212 (2015).
\20\ Id.
\21\ Jaewhan Kim et al., ``The Effect of Prevailing Wage
Regulations on Contractor Bid Participation and Behavior,'' 54
Indus. Relations 874 (2012).
\22\ C. Jeffrey Waddoups & David C. May, ``Do Responsible
Contractor Policies Increase Construction Bid Costs?,'' 53 Indus.
Relations, 273 (2014). Similarly, studies of local living-wage
policies have shown ``only a modest impact on costs, if any.'' See
Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 15 at 480. A study of Baltimore's
1994 living-wage policy, for example, found a contract cost increase
of just 1.2 percent, lower than the rate of inflation. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These studies have shown that strengthening procurement labor
standards and contractor labor-law compliance policies can play an
important role in appropriately managing competition in procurement.
When correctly managed, competition between contractors can increase
accountability and the quality of services provided.\23\ However, where
compliance with legal norms is weak, price competition alone may
instead result in an increase in unlawful behavior and poor contract
performance.\24\ State and local responsible-contracting policies have
shown that contracting agencies can improve the quality of competition
by encouraging bids from more responsible contractors that might
otherwise abstain from bidding out of concern about not being able to
compete with less scrupulous corner-cutting companies.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See Kate Manuel, Cong. Research Serv., R40516,
``Competition in Federal Contracting: An Overview of the Legal
Requirements,'' 2-3 (2011) (discussing benefits and costs associated
with competition in Federal contracting).
\24\ See, e.g., Melissa S. Baucus & Janet P. Near, ``Can Illegal
Corporate Behavior Be Predicted? An Event History Analysis,'' 34
Acad. Mgmt. J., 9, 31 (1991) (``If a firm's major competitors in an
industry are performing well, in part as a result of illegal
activities, it becomes difficult for managers to choose only legal
actions, and they may regard illegal actions as a standard industry
practice.'').
\25\ See Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 16 at 477, 480; see
also Maryland Dep't of Legislative Servs., ``Impact of the Maryland
Living Wage,'' 10 (2008), available at https://dlslibrary.state.md.us/publications/OPA/I/IMLW_2008.pdf (finding
that the average number of bidders for service contracts increased
from 3.7 bidders to 4.7 bidders after Maryland's living-wage law
took effect).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, studies of State and local initiatives have shown that--by
properly managing competition--responsible-contractor policies can
deliver better quality without significant cost increases for
government agencies that employ them.
The Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces Order applies lessons learned from
these developments in State and local contracting policy, and, by doing
so, addresses the longstanding deficiencies highlighted in the GAO
reports.
II. Summary of the Executive Order
Executive Order 13673 (the Order) was signed by President Barack
Obama on July 31, 2014. The Order contains three discrete parts, each
designed to help executive departments and agencies identify and work
with contractors who will comply with labor laws while performing
Federal contracts.
The first part of the Order directs agency contracting officers to
consider contractors' records of labor law violations as the agencies
make certain contracting decisions. To assure that contracting officers
have sufficient information, the Order requires contractors to disclose
their recent labor law violations to contracting officers.
Specifically, the Order requires contractors to disclose violations of
14 Federal labor laws and Executive orders and equivalent State laws
(collectively, ``Labor Laws''). The Order instructs contracting
officers to review a contractor's Labor Law violations to assess the
contractor's record of Labor Law compliance during the preaward
``responsibility'' determination and when making postaward decisions
such as whether to exercise contract options. The Order also creates a
new position--Agency Labor Compliance Advisors (ALCA)--to assist
contracting officers.
The first part of the Order also contains parallel requirements
that apply to certain subcontractors working on covered contracts. The
Order, as amended, and the final FAR rule require these covered
subcontractors to disclose their Labor Law violations to the
Department, which provides advice regarding subcontractors' records of
Labor Law compliance. Contractors then consider this advice from the
Department when determining whether their subcontractors are
responsible sources.
The second part of the Order creates new paycheck-transparency
protections for workers on Federal contracts. This part, section 5 of
the Order, contains two separate requirements. It requires contracting
agencies to ensure that certain workers on covered Federal
[[Page 58657]]
contracts and subcontracts receive a wage statement that that contains
information concerning that individual's hours worked, overtime hours,
pay, and any additions made to or deductions made from pay. It also
instructs covered contractors and subcontractors to inform individuals
in writing if the individual is being treated as an independent
contractor, and not an employee.
The third part of the Order limits the use of pre-dispute
arbitration clauses in employment agreements on covered Federal
contracts.
The Order creates detailed implementation roles for the FAR
Council, the Department, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and
the General Services Administration (GSA). The FAR Council has the
rulemaking responsibility to amend the Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) to implement the Order. Section 7 of the Order provides that the
FAR Council will ``propose such rules and regulations and issue orders
as are deemed necessary and appropriate to carry out this order.''
The Order instructs the Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) to,
among other duties, develop guidance that defines certain terms in the
Order. The Order directs the Secretary to define the categories of
Labor Law violations that contractors must disclose (administrative
merits determinations, civil judgments, and arbitral awards or
decisions); identify the State laws that are equivalent to the 14
Federal labor laws for which violations must be disclosed; define the
terms (serious, repeated, willful, and pervasive) that will be used to
assess disclosed violations; consult with ALCAs as they carry out their
responsibilities under the Order; and specify which State wage-
statement laws are substantially similar to the Order's wage-statement
requirement.
The Order also directs the Secretary to develop processes for
regular interagency meetings, develop processes by which contracting
officers and ALCAs may give appropriate consideration to determinations
and agreements made by the Department and other enforcement agencies,
develop processes by which contractors may enter into agreements with
the Department or other enforcement agencies, and review and improve
the Department's data collection systems.
The final Guidance document that follows this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION contains a more detailed summary of the Order.
III. Overview of the Final Guidance
Consistent with its obligations under the Order, the Department
issued its Proposed Guidance on May 28, 2015, on the same date that the
FAR Council issued its proposed rule to implement the Order. See 80 FR
30548 (proposed FAR rule); 80 FR 30574 (Proposed Guidance). Both the
Department and the FAR Council solicited public comment, and the
initial written comment periods closed on July 27, 2015. In response to
requests for additional time to comment, however, the Department and
the FAR Council extended the comment periods through August 26, 2015.
After reviewing and carefully considering all of the timely submitted
comments, the FAR Council and the Department are now simultaneously
publishing final versions of the rule and the Guidance.
The Proposed Guidance contained sections addressing the purpose and
summary of the Order, including a discussion of the existing FAR
framework and the legal authority for the Order; the disclosure
requirements; weighing Labor Law violations; the paycheck transparency
provisions; an invitation to comment; and next steps. The Department
solicited written comments on all aspects of the Proposed Guidance and
also invited public comment on a variety of specific issues.
In the final Guidance, the Department has made several significant
adjustments to accurately describe the modifications that the FAR
Council made to its rule. In addition, in response to the comments
about topics specifically tasked to the Department, the Department has
clarified various definitions of terms used in the Order and included a
more detailed narrative of the process for disclosing, categorizing,
and weighing labor law violations.
The final Guidance, which follows this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION,
has the same basic structure as the Proposed Guidance with some
additional sections added for clarity. It contains the following
sections: (I) Purpose and summary of the Order, (II) Preaward
disclosure requirements, (III) Preaward assessment and advice, (IV)
Postaward disclosure and assessment, (V) Subcontractor responsibility,
(VI) Preassessment, (VII) Paycheck transparency, and (VIII) Effective
date and phase-in of requirements.
This Guidance satisfies most of the Department's responsibilities
for issuing guidance, and the Department will publish at a later date a
second guidance that satisfies its remaining responsibilities. The
second guidance will be, as this Guidance was, submitted for notice and
comment, published in the Federal Register, and accompanied by a
proposed amendment to the FAR rule. The Department will likewise submit
for notice and comment and publish any future updates to the Guidance
that will have a significant effect beyond the operating procedures of
the Department or that will have a significant cost or administrative
impact on contractors or offerors. The Department will coordinate with
the FAR Council in determining whether updates will have a significant
cost or administrative impact.
IV. Summary of Comments Received
The Department received 7,924 comments on the Proposed Guidance
from a wide variety of sources. Among these comments, some 7,784 were
in the nature of mass mailings expressing general support for the
Order, the FAR Council's proposed rule, and the Department's Proposed
Guidance (collectively ``the Order and the proposals''). Another 30
comments were in the nature of form letters, most of which expressed
general opposition to the Order and the proposals. The Department also
received an additional 109 individual submissions.
As discussed above, the FAR Council is issuing the implementing
regulations for the Order by amending the FAR. The FAR Council
published its proposed rule on the same date as the Department
published its Proposed Guidance and similarly extended the comment
period on the proposed rule to August 26, 2015. The Department and the
FAR Council have coordinated efforts to assure the comments submitted
that are relevant to the Guidance or to the FAR rule are shared with
the appropriate agency, regardless of which agency may have initially
received any specific comment.
A wide variety of interested parties submitted comments on the
Proposed Guidance. Commenters included Members of Congress; State
executive agencies; individual Federal contractor entities; national
and State-level employer associations and advocacy organizations;
professional associations; labor union federations; worker advocacy
organizations; civil rights and human rights advocacy organizations;
other non-profit advocacy organizations; and the Small Business
Administration's Office of Advocacy, among others.
The Department recognizes and appreciates the value of comments,
ideas, and suggestions from all those who commented on the proposal,
and the final Guidance was developed only
[[Page 58658]]
after consideration of all the material submitted.
V. Discussion of General Comments
This section of the preamble to the final Guidance discusses the
general comments that the Department received.
A. Comments Requesting Changes to the Order or the Proposed FAR Rule
Several industry commenters took issue with the text of the Order
itself. In promulgating the Guidance and rule, the Department and the
FAR Council are guided by the plain language of the Order. For example,
several commenters argued that the FAR Council and the Department
should change the contract value that will trigger the Order's
disclosure requirements. Yet this $500,000 threshold comes from section
2 of the Order itself. Comments such as these are generally not
addressed here.
Similarly, several commenters from both industry and worker-
advocacy organizations took issue with requirements specific to the FAR
Council's proposed rule, and not to the Guidance. The government's
response to these comments will appear in the FAR Council's final rule.
They are generally not addressed here.
B. Comments About Costs and Burdens of the Order
A number of employers and employer associations expressed concern
that the requirements and processes established by the Order and the
proposals will impose a heavy compliance burden that will increase
their costs and cause delays in Federal contracting. Several of these
industry commenters suggested that these potential costs and delays
would harm the government and the public by increasing bid prices,
discouraging companies from bidding on Federal contracts, or delaying
the acquisition of key government goods and services.
Other commenters expressed general support for the Order and the
proposals. Several argued that the disclosure requirements do not go
far enough. These commenters suggested that contractors should be
required to provide more information about each Labor Law violation
than proposed by the Department, and argued that all of the information
disclosed to contracting agencies should be compiled in a public,
searchable database.
The Department recognizes that compliance with the Order's and the
proposals' new requirements and processes will involve costs to
contractors associated with the required representation and
disclosures. These costs and burdens are addressed in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA) that accompanies the final FAR rule. Accordingly,
the Department does not specifically list and respond to each comment
about costs and burdens in this final Guidance document. Likewise,
comments asserting that the RIA in the proposed FAR rule was flawed are
addressed by the FAR Council and therefore are not summarized or
answered here.
C. Comments About Alternatives and the Need for the Order
Various industry commenters suggested that the Order and its
requirements are unnecessary because any problems associated with Labor
Law violations by Federal contractors can be addressed through existing
rules and processes. Several commenters suggested that problems
associated with Labor Law violations should be addressed in the
existing suspension-and-debarment process instead of through the
preaward responsibility process. Others suggested that the Order's
disclosure requirements, specifically, are unnecessary because the
government already obtains information about violations under the laws
covered by the Order. These commenters argued that enforcement agencies
already have the necessary information and that the disclosure
requirements are duplicative of other reporting and information-
gathering projects already in existence.
While these commenters have raised important issues, the Department
does not believe that the Order is unnecessary or duplicative of
existing processes. As an initial matter, the Department emphasizes
that the purpose of the Order is to increase efficiency in contracting
by encouraging compliance during contract performance, not to increase
the use of suspension and debarment. The Order's new requirements and
processes are designed to identify and help contractors address Labor
Law violations and come into compliance before a contracting agency
turns to the suspension-and-debarment process. The Order does not in
any way alter the suspension-and-debarment process; however, the
expectation is that its new requirements and processes will help
contractors avoid the consequences of that process.
The Department believes that focusing on the preaward process--in
addition to a functional suspension-and-debarment regime--is efficient
for the government as well as for those contractors that are given the
opportunity to avoid suspension or debarment. Without effective
preaward screening, the government faces the difficult decision about
whether to expend resources on suspending or debarring a company that
may in fact not be planning to subsequently bid on a government
contract.\26\ And, as the chief construction inspector for the Los
Angeles Bureau of Contract Administration has explained, front-end
responsibility screening ``is more effective and more beneficial to the
public than a reactionary system. When you get a bad contractor on the
back end, they've already done the damage, and then it's a costly
process of kicking them out.'' \27\
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\26\ See Yuri Weigel, ``Is `Protection' Always in the Best
Interests of the Government?: An Argument to Narrow the Scope of
Suspension and Debarment,'' 81 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 627, 660-61 (2013)
(arguing that suspension and debarment are not always worth the
administrative costs); HELP Committee Report, supra note 11 at 28-29
(discussing the inefficacies of the suspension and debarment
process).
\27\ Sonn & Gebreselassie, supra note 16, at 476-77.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, when one Federal agency suspends or debars a contractor,
that action applies across the entire Federal Government. The
collateral consequences--both for a debarred contractor and for other
contracting agencies that may need the services of that contractor--can
be severe.\28\ Thus, while the suspension-and-debarment process plays
an important role in addressing significant concerns regarding an
entity's responsibility and has a broad-reaching impact,\29\ the
preaward framework employed by the Order is an equally important tool,
one that allows responsibility concerns to be addressed on a
procurement-by-procurement basis with attendant benefits to both the
government and the contracting community.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See Robert Stumberg et al., ``Turning a Blind Eye:
Respecting Human Rights in Government Purchasing,'' Int'l Corp.
Accountability Roundtable, 39-40 (2014) available at https://icar.ngo/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Procurement-Report-FINAL.pdf;
see also John B. Warnock, ``Principled or Practical Responsibility:
Sixty Years of Discussion,'' 41 Pub. Cont. L.J. 881, 914 (2012)
(``Government-wide debarment is punitive debarment to the extent
that it disregards agencies' individual requirements and abilities
to mitigate procurement risks.'').
\29\ In some cases, denying access to Federal contracts may in
fact ``be the only realistic means of deterring contractors from
[labor violations] based on a cold weighing of the costs and
benefits of non-compliance.'' Janik Paving & Constr., Inc. v. Brock,
828 F.2d 84, 91 (2d Cir. 1987) (holding that the Department had
authority to debar a contractor over violations of the Contract Work
Hours and Safety Standards Act).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recognition of the benefits of early detection and prevention
underlies the existing Federal procurement rules that require
disclosure and consideration of various non-labor violations at the
preaward stage. A bidder must disclose
[[Page 58659]]
information such as tax delinquencies in excess of $3,500 and certain
criminal convictions, indictments, civil judgments, and charges (for
example, for violations of Federal or State antitrust statutes related
to the submission of offers, commission of embezzlement, and making
false statements); and a bidder with Federal contracts and grants
totaling in excess of $10 million must additionally disclose
information such as civil and administrative findings of fault and
liability in connection with the award to or performance by the bidder
of a Federal contract or grant.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See FAR 52.209-5, 52.209-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By mandating preaward consideration of Labor Law violations, the
Order does no more than treat such violations the same as these other
existing responsibility red flags. By doing so, the Order will
facilitate timely communication, coordination, and cooperation among
Government officials--including contracting officers, suspending and
debarring officials, and others--regarding responses to Labor Law
violations to the fullest extent appropriate to the matter and
permissible by law. By working together in this way, Federal Government
agencies can better protect the government's interests in efficient
contract administration and high-quality contract performance.
The Department also disagrees with the commenters that suggested
the Order's disclosure requirements, specifically, are unnecessary and
therefore unnecessarily burdensome. The Order's disclosure requirements
are carefully tailored: It requires only a limited yes-or-no
representation by all bidders and reserves the more detailed disclosure
only for bidders for whom the contracting officer is making a
responsibility determination--which most often is only the apparent
awardee of the contract. The disclosure requirement is thus designed to
request information from only those contractors for whom it is
necessary in order for the contracting officer to assure that he or she
is contracting with a responsible source, as required under existing
law.
While some commenters stated that this disclosure requirement was
unnecessarily burdensome, others found the Order's disclosure
requirement to be appropriate. The National Employment Law Project, for
example, argued that the contractor is ``best positioned to furnish
complete and accurate records about its labor violation.'' The
Department finds this argument to be persuasive. The Order requires
disclosure of various categories of information that the Federal
Government does not have in its possession, including information about
State law violations, private litigation, and arbitration. Contractors
are the best source of this information.
In addition, the Order balances the disclosure requirement with a
parallel instruction for the Department to review its own data
collection requirements and processes, and to work with the Director of
the Office of Management and Budget, the Administrator for the General
Services Administration, and other agency heads to improve those
processes and existing data collection systems, as necessary, to reduce
the burden on contractors and increase the amount of information
available to agencies. See Order, section 4(a)(iii). As noted in the
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis that was part of the proposed
FAR rule, this review and the related improvement to Federal databases
has been initiated, and the Department is confident that it will
ultimately be successful in further reducing the disclosure burden
associated with the Order's disclosure requirements. See 80 FR 30562.
Until that time, however, the system of disclosure created under the
Order is the most efficient and least burdensome method of making
information about labor violations available to contracting officers.
See id.
D. Comments About the Legal Authority for the Order
The Department received a number of comments challenging the legal
authority upon which the Order and the proposals were issued. The
commenters alleged that several provisions of the Proposed Guidance
were contrary to Federal law and constitutional principles. The
Department briefly summarizes those arguments and provides the
following response:
1. The Procurement Act
Several industry commenters questioned the President's use of the
Federal Property and Administrative Services Act (the Procurement Act),
40 U.S.C. 101 et seq., as the legal authority for the Order. They
argued that the Order and the proposals do not have the nexus to
``economy and efficiency'' in government procurement that courts have
required for Executive action taken under the Procurement Act. The
commenters argued that, instead, the Order will lead to higher
procurement costs and a more burdensome procurement system. Commenters
also questioned whether there is a relationship at all between labor
law violations and poor contract performance.
After carefully reviewing these comments and the relevant case law,
the Department disagrees with the commenters. The Order, the FAR rule,
and this Guidance do not exceed the President's authority under the
Procurement Act. The Procurement Act grants the President broad
authority to prescribe policies and directives that the President
considers necessary to carry out the statutory purposes of ensuring
economical and efficient government procurement. The requisite nexus
exists where the President's explanation for how an Executive order
promotes efficiency and economy is reasonable and rational. As the
Department discussed in the Proposed Guidance, the overall objective of
the Order is to increase the government's ability to contract with
companies that will comply with labor laws, thereby increasing the
likelihood of timely, predictable, and satisfactory delivery of goods
and services. The Department believes that agencies will benefit from
additional information--through the new disclosure requirements--to
better determine if a potential contractor is a responsible source.
The Order and the FAR rule provide ample basis for concluding that
the goals of economy and efficiency in procurement are served. The RIA
cites various studies showing a correlation between labor law
violations and poor quality construction, low performance ratings,
wasteful practices, and other performance problems.\31\ And, by looking
at contractors' recent violations of the law, Federal agencies can
reasonably predict future behavior. As one academic study found, the
existence of three or more prior violations of the law by a corporation
is a ``highly significant'' predictor of subsequent illegal
activity.\32\ The President's explanation for how the Order promotes
economy and efficiency is reasonable and rational. The final FAR rule
and Department Guidance are therefore appropriate under the Procurement
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ The Department notes that both a correlation and a causal
relationship exist between labor law violations and contract
performance. In predicting and explaining unlawful corporate
behavior, many academic researchers have emphasized the problem,
above all, of ``top management in tolerating, even shaping, a
corporate culture that allows for deviance.'' William S. Laufer,
``Corporate Liability, Risk Shifting, and the Paradox of
Compliance,'' 52 Vand. L. Rev. 1343, 1410-11 (1999) (citing various
studies). Thus, in many cases, labor law violations and other
harmful practices (such as contract fraud)--both of which cause poor
contract performance--may all be symptoms of the underlying
management failures or malfeasance.
\32\ Baucus & Near, supra note 25 at 27.
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[[Page 58660]]
2. Separation of Powers
Several commenters argued that the Order and the proposals impinge
on separation-of-powers principles. These arguments were presented in
two ways: (1) The Order is preempted by the Labor Laws, and (2) the
Order improperly amends Federal laws by creating new categories of
violations and imposing new penalties. Several commenters focused
specifically on the NLRA, citing court decisions in Wis. Dep't. of
Indus. v. Gould, Inc., 475 U.S. 282 (1986), and Chamber of Commerce v.
Reich, 74 F.3d 1322 (D.C. Cir. 1996).\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Various commenters also made a separation-of-powers type of
argument about the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and the Order's
limits on certain pre-dispute mandatory arbitration clauses. The
Department is not providing guidance regarding that section of the
Order and therefore does not address the legal arguments about the
FAA. The FAR Council addresses FAA-related legal arguments in the
preamble to its final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After careful review of the comments and the law, the Department
concludes that the Order does not offend separation-of-powers
principles. The Department disagrees with the commenters who suggested
that traditional preemption principles apply to Federal Executive
actions. Rather, the appropriate question is whether the Executive
action under the Procurement Act conflicts with some more specific
statute Congress has enacted. An Executive action may not prohibit
activity that Congress has explicitly declared permissible, or vice
versa. Here, however, the Order and proposals do neither.
The Department also disagrees with the characterization of the
Order as creating new categories of violations or a new penalty--the
possibility of being found nonresponsible and denied government
contract work. The Order does not materially alter the current
procurement process. As discussed above in the background section,
contracting officers already may consider Labor Law violations when
assessing a contractor's responsibility. Other than requiring
disclosure of Labor Law violations, the Order does no more regarding
the responsibility determination process than provide additional
assistance to contracting officers to assist them in carrying out their
existing duties.
The purpose of the existing FAR responsibility determination is to
evaluate conduct that may be remediable or punishable under other
statutes. Contractors are already required to report numerous types of
conduct, including fraud, anti-competitive conduct, embezzlement,
theft, forgery, bribery, falsification or destruction of records,
making false statements, tax evasion, receiving stolen property, and
tax delinquencies, that are unlawful and separately punishable under
existing Federal and State laws. See FAR 52.209-5(a)(1)(i)(B)-(D). Such
reporting and consideration does not create a new penalty under those
statutes because the purpose of these FAR provisions is not to penalize
a contractor, but rather to assure that the government contracts with
responsible parties as it carries out its proprietary business. For the
same reason, the Order's express consideration of the Labor Laws does
not create new categories of violations or new penalties.
Finally, the Department disagrees that this analysis applies
differently to the NLRA than to the other Labor Laws covered under the
Order. Courts have upheld various Executive orders absent a direct
conflict with the NLRA's statutory provisions. The decisions in Gould
and Reich relied upon by the commenters do not suggest otherwise. Those
two decisions involved initiatives that directly targeted only NLRA-
covered violations. Moreover, the Gould decision did not involve a
Federal Executive order, but rather a State law, and one that the Court
found to have ``the manifest purpose'' of enforcing the requirements of
the NLRA and which could not even ``plausibly be defended as a
legitimate response'' to local procurement needs. 475 U.S. at 291. The
Reich decision did involve an Executive order, but one which the court
found to have the intent and effect of depriving contractors of the
ability to hire permanent replacements during a strike--something that
``promise[d] a direct conflict'' with the NLRA. 74 F.3d at 1338. In
both cases, the courts found that the provisions at issue were intended
to affect the relationship between management and organized labor as
opposed to seeking to advance a narrow proprietary interest with a
close nexus to achieving economy and efficiency in Federal procurement.
In contrast, here the Order endeavors only to treat the NLRA no
differently than any of the other 13 covered Labor Laws. Thus, unlike
in Gould and Reich, the inclusion of the NLRA in the Order here
demonstrates the Order's intent to promote the government's proprietary
interest in efficient contracting in an evenhanded manner.
3. Due Process
Many industry commenters expressed concern that that the Order and
the proposals do not provide contractors with constitutionally
sufficient due process protections. For example, two employer
representatives argued that the Order and the proposals could infringe
upon protected liberty interests because an adverse responsibility
determination could harm a prospective contractor's reputation. Others
argued that a contractor's protected property interests may be
infringed where postaward violations lead to an adverse action such as
the non-renewal of an option, contract termination, or debarment.
The Department agrees that the preaward responsibility
determination, the exercise of postaward contract remedies, and the
suspension-and-debarment process each require consideration of a
contractor's right to due process. However, the Department emphasizes
that neither the Order nor the Guidance diminish the existing
procedural safeguards already afforded to prospective contractors
during the preaward responsibility determination or to contractors
after they have been awarded a contract. Moreover, the Order does not
infringe upon liberty or property interests because contractors receive
notice that the responsibility determination is being made and are
offered a pre-decisional opportunity to be heard by submission of any
relevant information--including mitigating circumstances related to any
Labor Law violation that must be disclosed.\34\ Finally, nothing in the
Order diminishes contractors' post-decisional opportunity to be heard
through existing administrative processes and the Federal courts.
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\34\ See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(1)(ii). Several commenters argued that
the definition of administrative merits determination will be costly
because it will force contractors to litigate a Labor Law violation
in two separate fora--first, in front of the enforcement agency that
has made the determination; and, second, by submitting mitigating
circumstances to a contracting officer when submitting a bid. While
mindful of the additional costs that this process may entail for
some contractors, the Department submits that contractors'
opportunity to provide relevant information (including mitigating
circumstances) during the responsibility determination addresses the
due process concerns raised by the employer associations.
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Various commenters also challenged the Proposed Guidance's
definition of administrative merits determinations, claiming that
requiring contractors to report nonfinal and appealable allegations
denies them due process. Commenters asserted that a contractor may feel
pressured to negotiate or sign a labor compliance agreement and forgo a
challenge to a nonfinal administrative merits determination in order to
receive a pending contract.
The Department has carefully considered this argument, but does not
believe that the specific requirement to
[[Page 58661]]
disclose nonfinal administrative merits determinations violates
contractors' rights to due process. Though the Order and FAR rule (and
therefore the Guidance) place value on a contractor's effort to
remediate violations through a settlement or labor compliance
agreement, neither contains any requirement that a contractor must
settle all open cases in order to be found responsible and receive a
contract award--a fact that the Department has emphasized in the final
Guidance. See Guidance, section III(B)(1)(a). Similarly, the final
Guidance also emphasizes that a contractor may enter into a labor
compliance agreement while at the same time continuing to contest an
underlying Labor Law violation. See id. section III(C)(1). Because a
contractor is not required to forgo the right to appeal any nonfinal
Labor Law violation in order to secure a Federal contract, the
requirement to disclose nonfinal violations clearly does not violate
due process.
4. The Administrative Procedure Act
Some commenters argued that the Guidance does not comply with the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553(b). They asserted that
the Guidance is, in effect, a legislative rule that requires notice and
comment. The Department has reviewed these comments and finds them to
be without merit. The Guidance is not a legislative rule; it does not
bind private parties or agency officials, and it does not meet the
four-part test for a legislative rule that would require notice and
comment. See Am. Mining Cong. v. Mine Safety & Health Admin., 995 F.2d
1106, 1109 (D.C. Cir. 1993).
First and foremost, the Order provides an independent and adequate
basis for enforcement, apart from the Guidance. See Am. Mining, 995
F.2d at 1112. The Order and the FAR Council rule provide disclosure and
process requirements that bind private parties and agency officials.
The Guidance only supplies additional clarity to these requirements
through the Department's interpretation of certain terms of the Order
and narrative description of the process. Second, the Department has
not explicitly invoked its general legislative authority. See id.
Rather, it has acted to create a guidance document at the explicit
instruction of the Order itself. See Guidance, section I(B). Third, the
Guidance does not effectively amend the Order or any regulations;
rather, it is consistent with their requirements. An agency action
``does not, in this inquiry, become an amendment merely because it
supplies crisper and more detailed lines than the authority being
interpreted.'' Am. Mining, 995 F.2d at 1112. Finally, the Guidance will
not be published in the Code of Federal Regulations. See id.
Moreover, even if the Guidance were considered to be a legislative
rule, the Department met the APA's procedural requirements by
publishing the Proposed Guidance in the Federal Register and soliciting
and considering comments before issuing the final Guidance.
In another set of comments directed at procedural aspects of the
Guidance, a few employer groups raised concerns that the impact of the
Guidance could not be properly assessed because the Department decided
to identify only a small number of the State laws equivalent to the 14
Federal laws listed in the Order and to leave the remaining State laws
for a subsequent guidance document. One commenter also stated that the
Proposed Guidance did not contain a sufficient justification for this
two-step process, suggesting that the final Guidance cannot be upheld
unless the Department provides appropriate reasons for delaying the
identification of equivalent laws. The Department has reviewed these
comments and finds that they are premature and without merit. The
Department has identified in this Guidance that OSHA State Plans are
equivalent State laws; but the Department has decided to delay the
identification of additional equivalent State laws as part of the
phase-in of the Order's requirements that will allow contractors and
contracting agencies time to adjust to the new requirements. The
comments also do not account for the fact that the additional guidance
released in the future will also be submitted as a proposal with an
opportunity for comment and accompanied by a proposed amendment to the
FAR and a Regulatory Impact Analysis.
Finally, one employer advocacy group commented that the Order
directs the Department to issue guidance regarding only a single
portion of the paycheck transparency provision, which is the
identification of substantially similar State wage-statement laws. This
commenter, Equal Employment Advisory Council (EEAC), requested
clarification regarding what authority the Department has for issuing
the ``guidance, binding or not, on the additional provisions of the
paycheck transparency provision.'' The commenter misunderstands the
reason that the Department addressed all aspects of the paycheck-
transparency requirements in the Proposed Guidance. The Department
intends the Guidance to be a stand-alone document that will be helpful
to agency officials and contractors as they implement the requirements
in the Order and the FAR rule. Accordingly, the Department has included
in the final Guidance a description of the requirements of the Order
and the FAR--regardless of whether the Order specifically required the
Department to provide guidance on those specific provisions.
Section-by-Section Analysis
In addition to submitting general comments, commenters also
commented on specific elements of the Proposed Guidance. The Department
appreciates the effort from these commenters to carefully review the
Order and the Proposed Guidance. The Department now modifies the final
Guidance in response to those comments in a number of areas. The
comments, responses, and modifications are summarized below in a
section-by-section analysis.
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
Section I of the Guidance is an introduction that explains the
purpose of Executive Order 13673, briefly summarizes the legal
authority for the Order and the existing FAR rules to which the Order
applies, and recites a summary of the new requirements and processes
contained in the Order. The subsection on legal authority specifically
identifies the Procurement Act, 40 U.S.C. 101 et seq., as providing the
statutory authority for the Order.
The Department received a number of comments questioning whether
the Order would achieve its stated purpose of increasing economy and
efficiency in Federal procurement, and--as a related matter--whether
the President was justified in issuing the Order under the Procurement
Act. As discussed above, the Department disagrees with those commenters
that have questioned the purpose of and authority for the Order. The
Department therefore concludes that it is not necessary to amend this
section in response to these comments. The Department does, however,
amend section I of the final Guidance to include the discussion of the
purpose of the Order previously included in another section of the
Proposed Guidance, to conform the summary to changes made to the FAR
rule, to add language reiterating that the Guidance is not a
legislative rule, and to improve its clarity.
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements (Formerly ``Disclosure
Requirements'')
During both the preaward and postaward periods, the Order requires
contractors and subcontractors
[[Page 58662]]
(collectively, ``contractors'') to disclose administrative merits
determinations, civil judgments, and arbitral awards or decisions
rendered for violations of the Labor Laws (collectively, ``Labor Law
decisions'').\35\ Section II of the Guidance assists agencies in
interpreting the preaward disclosure requirements in the Order and the
FAR rule.\36\ Because the FAR rule governs the requirements discussed
below, the Department has modified the Guidance to parallel changes
made in the final FAR rule and has included additional descriptions of
the rule's requirements to assist contractors and contracting agencies.
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\35\ The Department has made several nonsubstantive changes to
the Guidance in the disclosure section for clarity. The final
Guidance now uses ``contractors'' to refer to both prime contractors
and subcontractors; where relevant, however, the distinction between
prime contractors and subcontractors is noted. In addition, the
Guidance now refers to a contractor's requirement to provide
information as ``disclosure'' instead of ``reporting.'' This change
is intended only for consistency with the language of the FAR rule.
\36\ The Department has summarized the FAR's rules on postaward
disclosures and assessment in section IV of the Guidance. The
comments regarding the postaward process are discussed in a parallel
section below.
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A. Covered Contracts (Formerly ``Who Must Make Disclosures Under the
Order'')
The first part of section II of the Guidance discusses the types of
contracts covered by the Order and the scope of a contractor's
requirement to disclose Laboe Law decisions. These types include
contracts between Federal agencies and prime contractors that meet
certain conditions (covered procurement contracts). And they include
subcontracts that meet similar, but not identical, conditions (covered
subcontracts). The Guidance uses the term ``covered contract'' to refer
to both covered procurement contracts and covered subcontracts.
The Department received several comments requesting that the
definition of the various types of covered contracts be amended. One
industry commenter, the Aerospace Industries Association (AIA),
suggested that all commercial item contracts--and especially commercial
item subcontracts--should be excluded from the Order's disclosure
requirements. AIA noted that the Order does expressly exclude
subcontracts for commercially available off-the-shelf items (COTS), and
it asserted that there is no basis for distinguishing between contracts
for COTS items and contracts for commercial items. It noted that there
is a ``major government initiative'' to increase government acquisition
of commercial items.
The Department declines to amend the Guidance as suggested. The
definition of covered contracts is within the jurisdiction of the FAR
Council. As the FAR Council indicates in the preamble to its final
rule, the plain language of the Order does not provide for a blanket
exclusion of commercial item contracts, which are distinct from COTS
contracts in the FAR. The Order expressly excludes contracts for COTS
items from covered subcontracts, see Order, section 2(a)(iv), and does
not specifically address commercial items. Had the Order intended to
also exclude contracts for commercial items, it would have done so
expressly. The Guidance thus adopts the proposed definitions of
``covered procurement contracts,'' ``covered subcontracts,'' and
``covered contracts;'' and the Department has added additional language
to highlight the applicability of the Order to procurement contracts
for both COTS and commercial items.
The Department also received multiple comments about the definition
of a ``contractor'' in this section. The Proposed Guidance explained
that references to ``contractors'' include both individuals and
entities and both offerors on and holders of contracts. Several
employer organizations asked the Department to clarify whether this
definition of ``contractor'' requires parties bidding on or holding
covered contracts to disclose the violations of their parent
corporations, subsidiaries, or affiliates. One commenter, the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, suggested that the Guidance the term contractor be
limited to mean ``the entity that legally executes a contract with the
Government'' and should not include ``affiliated legal entities.''
Another commenter, the Society for Human Resource Management et al.,
recommended that disclosure be at the Commercial and Government Entity
(CAGE) Code level because it would be less burdensome and because any
alternative would not be reasonably related to the responsibility of
the ``specific entity that will perform the federal contract.'' Other
industry commenters requested clarity on which entity is obligated to
report the violations of affiliated entities after acquisitions,
spinoffs, and mergers occur and any violations that occurred at
facilities no longer in use.
In contrast, union and worker-advocacy organizations suggested that
the Guidance define ``contractor'' to expressly include a contractor's
affiliates and/or recommended that the Guidance otherwise require
contractors to report the Labor Law violations of their affiliates.
Some recommended that the Guidance use the FAR definition of
``affiliates'' at FAR 2.101, which defines ``affiliates'' in the
context of direct or indirect control of an entity or business.
The Department declines to amend the definition of ``contractor''
in the final Guidance. The applicability of the Order's disclosure
requirements to a contracting entity's corporate affiliates is within
the jurisdiction of the FAR Council. As the FAR Council indicates in
the preamble to its final rule, the scope of prime contractor and
subcontractor representations and disclosures follows the general
principles and practice of the FAR that are the same for other FAR
provisions requiring representations and disclosures. The requirement
to represent and disclose applies to the legal entity whose name and
address is entered on the bid/offer and that will be legally
responsible for performance of the contract. Consistent with current
FAR practice, representations and disclosures do not apply to a parent
corporation, subsidiary corporation, or other affiliates, unless a
specific FAR provision (e.g., FAR 52.209-5) requires that additional
information. The Department additionally notes that the Order's
disclosure requirements do not amend the existing FAR provisions
regarding the relationship between a contractor's affiliates and its
responsibility. The FAR continues to require contracting officers to
consider all relevant information when reviewing a contractor's
responsibility--including the past performance and integrity of a
contractor's affiliates when they affect the prospective contractor's
responsibility. See FAR 9.104-3(c).
The Department also received comments specifically directed at
``covered subcontracts.'' In the final Guidance, the Department created
a new section dedicated specifically to subcontractor responsibility.
See Guidance, section V. The comments about subcontract coverage are
addressed in a parallel section of the section-by-section analysis
below.
B. Labor Law Decisions (Formerly ``What Triggers the Disclosure
Obligations'')
The second part of section II discusses the categories of Labor Law
decisions that contractors must disclose. The Order requires
contractors to disclose Labor Law decisions rendered against them
within the preceding 3-year period for a violation of the Labor Laws.
See Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A). The Proposed Guidance
interpreted the relevant 3-year period to be the 3-year period
preceding the date of the offer, contract bid, or proposal. 80 FR
30574, 30578. Labor Law decisions rendered
[[Page 58663]]
during that 3-year period must be disclosed even if the underlying
unlawful conduct occurred more than 3 years prior to the date of the
report. See id. The Proposed Guidance further explained that
contractors must disclose Labor Law decisions that were issued during
the relevant 3-year period even if they were not performing or bidding
on a covered contract at the time of the decision. Id. at 30578-79.
Timing of the Initial Representation Requirement
The FAR Council proposed rule provided that, consistent with the
Order, all ``offerors'' must initially represent at the time of their
bids whether they have decisions that must be disclosed. See 80 FR
30552. One industry commenter proposed that only the contractor
selected for an award of the contract should have to make the initial
representation required by the Order. The FAR rule reasonably creates a
two-step process requiring an initial representation equivalent to
``yes or no.'' See FAR 22.2004-1(a). And only contractors for whom a
contracting officer will initiate a responsibility determination must
make more detailed disclosures. Id. This staggered process provides an
appropriate balance by requiring detailed disclosures only from
offerors for whom the contracting officer is conducting a
responsibility determination.
The 3-Year Disclosure Period
Several commenters addressed the 3-year disclosure period. For
example, the Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) argued that, at
least with respect to administrative merits determinations, ``only
those determinations based on conduct that occurred or ceased within
the prior three years'' should be disclosed. However, the Order states
that contractors must disclose violations ``rendered against'' the
contractor within the 3-year disclosure period. Order, sections
2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A). This language clearly refers to the date of the
Labor Law decision, as opposed to when the underlying conduct occurred.
The final Guidance includes an additional example to illustrate this
principle.
The Council of Defense and Space Industry Associations (CODSIA)
requested that the period of coverage for the disclosure requirements
be reduced to 6 or 12 months. The plain language of the Order provides
for a 3-year disclosure period, see Order, section 2(a)(i); thus it is
not possible to permanently reduce the disclosure period. However, as
described in section VIII of the Guidance and the corresponding section
of the section-by-section analysis below, the final FAR rule phases in
the disclosure period so that the full 3-year period will not be fully
effective until October 25, 2018.
Proposal To Add Labor Laws
Some commenters suggested requiring disclosures for violations of
statutes other than the enumerated Labor Laws. For example, the United
Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) proposed adding
``the anti-discrimination provisions of the Immigration and Nationality
Act as amended by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 which
are codified at [8 U.S.C. 1324b].'' Two labor union commenters urged
the Department to require disclosure of safety-and-health violations
under statutory authority separate from the OSH Act, such as the Atomic
Energy Act, 42 U.S.C. 2282c.\37\
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\37\ Although the Order does not require the disclosure of
violations of other Federal occupational safety-and-health statutes,
such violations may be otherwise considered during the contracting
process. For example, a contractor may bid on a Department of Energy
contract for which the work will be covered by the Atomic Energy Act
rather than the OSH Act. Such a contractor, however, may be
performing work, or has performed work, that is covered by the OSH
Act for another government agency or in the private sector. It is
clear from the plain terms of the Order that a contractor, when
bidding on a contract, must disclose any violations of the OSH Act,
even if the work for which the contractor is bidding will not be
covered by the OSH Act.
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The Department declines to adopt these proposals. The Order
specifically identifies 14 Federal laws and Executive orders for which
violations must be disclosed. Order, section 2(a)(i)(A)-(N). The
Department cannot alter the list of laws covered by the Order.
Disclosure of Criminal Violations
The Center for American Progress Action Fund (CAPAF) requested
clarification as to whether the Order requires disclosure of criminal
violations of the Labor Laws, as the FLSA, the Migrant and Seasonal
Agricultural Worker Protection Act (MSPA), and the OSH Act provide for
criminal sanctions. CAPAF is concerned that, if not, there would be a
``significant loophole.''
The Department declines to modify the final Guidance in response to
this comment. The Order does not reference criminal violations of the
Labor Laws. The Order requires disclosure only of a civil judgment,
arbitral award or decision, or administrative merits determination, and
a criminal conviction is not encompassed within those terms.\38\
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\38\ While disclosure of criminal convictions is not required
under the provisions of the Order, the Department notes that the FAR
does require contractors to disclose criminal convictions in certain
circumstances. See FAR 52.209-7.
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OSHA State Plans
The Order directs the Department to define the State laws that are
equivalent to the 14 identified Federal labor laws and Executive
orders. Order, section 2(a)(i)(O). The Proposed Guidance stated that
OSHA-approved State Plans are equivalent State laws for purposes of the
Order's disclosure requirements because the OSH Act permits certain
States to administer OSHA-approved State occupational safety-and-health
plans in lieu of Federal enforcement of the OSH Act. See 80 FR 30574,
30579.
Several commenters addressed the inclusion of OSHA-approved State
Plans as equivalent State laws. One labor organization commenter agreed
that State Plans are equivalent to the OSH Act, as the State Plans
function in lieu of the OSH Act in those States, and the National
Council for Occupational Safety and Health (National COSH) called it
``essential'' to the Order's purpose that both the OSH Act and ``its
state law equivalents'' be included.
In contrast, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce argued that the State
Plans are not equivalent State laws. The Chamber noted that while State
Plans must be ``at least as effective'' as the Federal OSHA
program,\39\ substantial differences nevertheless exist, because some
State Plans ``impose requirements . . . that are not required by, or
differ from, federal law.''
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\39\ See Section 18(c) of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 667 (c).
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The Department declines to modify this aspect of the Proposed
Guidance. As an initial matter, the Department interprets the Chamber's
comment to suggest that a State law must be identical to be considered
``equivalent'' under the Order. The Department notes that other
commenters emphasized that ``equivalent'' does not equate to
``identical.'' The Department agrees with these commenters; requiring
equivalent State laws to be identical would be underinclusive because
State laws are rarely if ever identical to Federal laws.
The Department finds State Plans to be equivalent to the OSH Act
because they perform the same functions as OSHA--setting standards,
conducting enforcement inspections, and issuing citations. OSHA has
only limited enforcement authority in those twenty-two States with
State Plans, so failing to include OSHA State Plans as equivalent State
laws would lead to a gap in disclosure for safety-and-health violations
in those States under the Order. Including the State Plans results
[[Page 58664]]
in a more level playing field than would excluding them. For these
reasons, the Guidance adopts the inclusion of OSHA-approved State Plans
as equivalent State laws. The Guidance now also includes additional
resources about State Plans and a link to a list of OSHA-approved State
Plans on the OSHA Web site.
Disclosure of All Relevant Violations
Several industry commenters objected to disclosing Labor Law
violations where the underlying conduct did not occur in the course of
performance of a Federal contract. In contrast, several employee-
advocacy groups supported requiring contractors to disclose Labor Law
violations regardless of whether the violation arose from the
performance of a Federal contract.
The Order's disclosure requirement does not distinguish between
violations committed during performance of a Federal contract and those
that are not. See Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A). The Order aims
to incorporate the full picture of a contractor's Labor Law compliance
into the responsibility determination process. A contractor's past
performance--whether in the course of performing a Federal contract or
not--is an indicator of the contractor's future performance.\40\ It is
also relevant to a determination of the contractor's integrity and
business ethics. The existing responsibility determination process
already requires contractors to disclose unlawful conduct that may not
have occurred during work on government contracts. FAR 52.209-
5(a)(1)(i)(B)-(D). Thus, contractors must disclose any Labor Law
decision issued for a violation of the Labor Laws, even if the
violation was not committed in the performance of work on a Federal
Government contract or subcontract. Because some commenters thought
this was not clear in the Proposed Guidance, the Department modifies
the Guidance for clarity.
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\40\ This principle is the same one a contractor uses when
conducting a review of prospective subcontractors. A contractor
would consider any prior misconduct or performance problems by the
subcontractor, regardless of where the problems occurred and for
which contractor the subcontractor was working at the time they
occurred.
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Violations Related to Actions or Omissions of a Federal Agency
Several industry commenters suggested that contractors should not
be required to disclose Labor Law violations that result from actions
or omissions of the contracting agency. For example, two such
commenters cited a wage violation resulting from the failure of the
contracting agency to include the applicable clause or wage
determination in the contract. Furthermore, although one trade
association commenter and one advocacy organization commenter
acknowledged that the Proposed Guidance would allow contractors to
present additional information and mitigating factors along with the
disclosed violation, they expressed concern that the information will
not be properly evaluated.
The Department declines to adopt the proposed changes to the
Guidance. It recognizes that some Labor Law violations may result where
a Federal contract did not include a required clause or wage
determination. Whatever the reason for the failure to include the
required clause or wage determination, a violation still occurred. See,
e.g., 41 CFR 60-1.4(e) (stating that the Executive Order 11246 equal
opportunity clause ``shall be considered to be a part of every
[covered] contract . . . whether or not it is physically incorporated
in such contracts''). Thus, the Department believes the better approach
is to take this information into account as a mitigating factor, rather
than to make exceptions to the disclosure requirements.
The Proposed Guidance was clear that contractors are encouraged to
submit any additional information they believe may be helpful in
assessing the violations at issue--particularly mitigating information.
The Proposed Guidance stated that mitigating factors can include
situations where the findings of the enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel support a conclusion that the contractor
acted in good faith and had reasonable grounds for believing that it
was not violating the law. 80 FR 30574, 30591. As discussed below, the
Guidance lists ``good faith and reasonable grounds'' as a mitigating
factor that weighs in favor of a recommendation that a contractor has a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. That discussion
specifically provides the example of a situation where a violation is
caused by the failure of a contracting agency to include a required
clause in the contract.
Disclosure of ``Relatively Minor'' Violations
The Association of General Contractors (AGC) suggested that it is
``burdensome and unfair'' to require the disclosure of ``relatively
minor violations'' that are not serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive as defined by the Department. Because only violations deemed
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive bear on the assessment of the
contractor's integrity and business ethics, AGC recommended that only
those violations should be disclosed.
The Department declines to adopt AGC's proposal. The Order plainly
requires contractors to disclose all violations of the Labor Laws that
result in Labor Law decisions. The disclosed violations are then
classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive--or not. See
Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A), 4(a)-(b). Only those violations
classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive will be
considered as part of the weighing step and will factor into the ALCA's
written analysis and advice. Violations determined by the ALCA to not
be serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive will be annotated as such
in the analysis that the ALCA provides to the contracting officer.
Disclosure of Violations That Are Subsequently Settled
Jenner & Block LLP commented that it was unfair to require
disclosure of violations that have been settled, thus rendering them
``potentially sanctionable[ ] event[s].'' According to the comment,
doing so would cause ``the Federal government to violate its own
contractual obligations'' when there is a non-admission provision in
the settlement agreement.
The Department declines to amend the Guidance's treatment of
settled violations. The Order requires the disclosure of violations,
and the fact that a violation was subsequently settled does not negate
the fact that the enforcement agency, after a thorough investigation,
found a violation to have occurred.
In some settlements, the enforcement agency may agree as part of
the settlement to vacate a prior administrative merits determination.
In such a case, the settlement would have the same effect as a court
decision reversing or vacating the original violation. As the Guidance
notes, in such a circumstance, the contractor does not need to disclose
the original Labor Law decision. See Guidance, section II(B)(4).
Unless an enforcement agency has agreed to vacate or rescind the
underlying violation entirely, however, the contractor must still
disclose the related Labor Law decisions when required by the Order,
notwithstanding any settlement agreement. A non-admission provision,
for example, does not generally involve an enforcement agency's
agreement to withdraw any finding of a violation. Thus, a non-admission
provision does not affect the
[[Page 58665]]
existence of any prior Labor Law decision, and therefore does not
change the Order's requirement that a contractor must disclose any
Labor Law decision that preceded the settlement. Similarly, an
enforcement agency will not include, and an ALCA will not consider,
language in a settlement agreement purporting to determine or affect
whether a violation or related Labor Law decision must be disclosed
under the Order.\41\
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\41\ Nor will an enforcement agency include, or an ALCA
consider, language in a settlement agreement purporting to determine
how a violation will be classified under the Order (e.g., language
stating that, for the purposes of the Order, the violation was not
serious, willful, repeated, or pervasive).
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Although settlement agreements will not affect a contractor's
disclosure requirements under the Order, a settlement agreement may be
an important factor in the ALCA's overall assessment of the
contractor's compliance record. The Order requires ALCAs to consider
steps taken to correct the violation or improve compliance, and the
Guidance accordingly provides that the remediation of a Labor Law
violation through a settlement agreement is an important mitigating
factor that can weigh in favor of a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. See Guidance, section III(B)(1).
Comments About Specific Subsections
The Order instructs the Department to define the three categories
of Labor Law decisions that must be disclosed: ``administrative merits
determination,'' ``civil judgment,'' and ``arbitral award or
decision.'' Order, section 2(a)(i).
1. Defining ``Administrative Merits Determination''
In the Proposed Guidance, the Department described an
administrative merits determination as including
notices or findings--whether final or subject to appeal or further
review--issued by an enforcement agency following an investigation
that indicates that the contractor or subcontractor violated any
provision of the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30574, 30579-80.
The Department defined ``enforcement agency'' as including the
Department and its agencies--OSHA, WHD, and the Office of Federal
Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP). Enforcement agencies also include
the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC); the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC); the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB); and certain State agencies.
The Department identified the specific notices and findings issued
by these agencies that are administrative merits determinations. The
Department provided that administrative merits determinations also
include ``a complaint filed by or on behalf of an enforcement agency
with a Federal or State court, an administrative judge, or an
administrative law judge alleging that the contractor or subcontractor
violated any provision of the Labor Laws,'' and ``any order or finding
from any administrative judge, administrative law judge, the
Department's Administrative Review Board [(ARB)], the [OSHRC] or State
equivalent, or the [NLRB] that the contractor or subcontractor violated
any provision of the Labor Laws.'' 80 FR 30574, 30579-80. This list of
notices, findings, and documents was an exhaustive one.
a. Inclusion of Nonfinal and Appealable Decisions
A number of industry commenters objected on due process and related
grounds to the inclusion of nonfinal and appealable decisions in the
definition of ``administrative merits determination.'' These commenters
characterized such determinations as ``allegations.'' One form comment
submitted by various employers and employer groups asserted that
requiring disclosure of nonfinal agency actions could cause contractors
to lose a contract because of cases that are not yet fully adjudicated.
The form comment stated that this would infringe upon Federal
contractors' due process rights.
These commenters also argued that the notices, findings, and
documents identified as administrative merits determinations in the
Proposed Guidance often reflect mistakes by the enforcement agencies
and/or are often reversed or settled, and that requiring disclosure of
nonfinal and appealable determinations assumes that contractors are
guilty until proven innocent. One form comment asserted that a number
of the proposed administrative merits determinations are ``routinely
overturned once the initial determination is challenged.'' A few of
these commenters asserted that the disclosure of ``nonfinal
allegations'' may cause economic and reputational harms to contractors,
particularly if the reported violation is later reversed.
For these commenters, administrative merits determination should
include only final and adjudicated agency decisions. Jenner & Block, in
a representative comment, suggested that only ``final decision[s] of
administrative bodies with quasi-judicial authority'' should be
administrative merits determinations. These commenters suggested that
such a limit might include only decisions of administrative bodies such
as OSHRC or the ARB, and those decisions of individual administrative
law judges that are not appealed and therefore become final agency
actions.
Several commenters, including the Society for Human Resource
Management, the Council for Global Immigration, and the College and
University Professional Association for Human Resources, also noted
that the FAR Council's ``Contractor Responsibility'' rulemaking in 2000
,\42\ which was later rescinded, would have required the reporting of
``adverse decisions by federal administrative law judges, boards or
commissions'' but not ``preliminary agency assessments.'' One industry
commenter asserted that the FAR Council previously rejected the notion
that nonfinal allegations should influence the procurement process.
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\42\ Federal Acquisition Regulation; Contractor Responsibility,
Labor Relations Costs, and Costs Relating to Legal and Other
Proceedings, 65 FR 80256 (Dec. 20, 2000).
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In contrast, union and worker-advocacy commenters supported the
scope of agency determinations included in the proposed definition of
administrative merits determination. For example, Change to Win (CTW)
emphasized its strong support for including initial agency findings in
the responsibility inquiry because, otherwise, violations would go
undisclosed while ``awaiting the outcome of potentially and often
frivolous employer challenges to such findings and orders.'' Another
commenter, North America's Building Trades Unions (NABTU), explained
that:
[t]he fact that a government enforcement agency has decided, after
conducting an investigation, to pursue a citation, complaint or
other action against a contractor is a signal of potential serious
problems that could go unreported if the contractor were permitted
to wait until the case is completely adjudicated--a process that can
take years[.]
The Department believes that the due process and related critiques
of the proposed definition of administrative merits determination are
unwarranted. The Order delegates to the Department the authority to
define the term. See Order, section 2(a)(i). The proposed definition is
consistent with the Order and the authority delegated. The Department
limited the definition to a finite number of findings, notices, and
documents--and only those issued ``following an investigation by the
[[Page 58666]]
relevant enforcement agency.'' 80 FR 30574, 30579.
If the Department limited its definition of administrative merits
determination solely to findings of an ALJ, board, or commission, then
thousands of uncontested enforcement agency determinations that Labor
Laws have been violated would go undisclosed. For example, most WHD
determinations that the FLSA's minimum wage and/or overtime provisions
have been violated are never contested before an adjudicative body;
rather, they are resolved prior to any litigation by the employer
agreeing to pay the back wages reflected in a WH-56 form. Likewise,
89.1 percent of citations issued by OSHA between October 1, 2012 and
September 30, 2015 were not contested or were settled using OSHA's
informal settlement agreements or expedited informal settlement
agreements.\43\ And, at the NLRB, the settlement rate for meritorious
unlawful labor practices cases was 92.4 percent in fiscal year
2015.\44\
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\43\ This information and additional information below regarding
OSHA citations were compiled from citations issued by Federal OSHA
offices (as opposed to by State agencies under OSHA-approved State
Plans) and recorded in OSHA's Information System.
\44\ NLRB, ``NLRB FY 2015 Performance and Accountability
Report'' 36, https://www.nlrb.gov/sites/default/files/attachments/basic-page/node-1674/14445%20NLRB%20PAR%202015%20v2_508.pdf.
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Moreover, a narrower definition of administrative merits
determination would also exclude all those initial agency
determinations that a contractor is actively contesting. Excluding
these determinations would in many cases result in a particularly long
delay between the prohibited conduct and the obligation to disclose.
For example, contested OSHA citations frequently take years to become
final. In the interim, a contractor with many OSHA citations could
secure Federal contracts without any consideration of those citations.
In addition, the assertion by some commenters that administrative
merits determinations are routinely overturned is not the case. For
example, in fiscal year 2015 the NLRB's litigation success rate before
ALJs and the Board was 88 percent, and 80 percent of Board decisions
were enforced in whole or in part by courts of appeals.\45\ An even
smaller percentage of all OSHA citations--less than 2 percent--are
later vacated.
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\45\ Id. at 36, 58.
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The definition of administrative merits determination simply
delineates the scope of contractors' disclosure obligations--the first
stage in the Order's process. Not all disclosed Labor Law decisions are
relevant to a recommendation regarding a contractor's integrity and
business ethics. Only those that involve violations classified as
serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive will be considered as part
of the weighing step and will factor into the ALCA's written analysis
and advice.\46\ Moreover, when disclosing Labor Law decisions, a
contractor has the opportunity to submit all relevant information it
deems necessary to demonstrate responsibility, including mitigating
circumstances and steps taken to achieve compliance with Labor Laws.
See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(1)(ii). As the Guidance provides, the information
that the contractor is challenging or appealing an adverse
administrative merits determination will be carefully considered. The
Guidance also states that Labor Law violations that have not resulted
in final determinations, judgments, awards, or decisions should be
given lesser weight. The Department believes that contractors'
opportunity to provide all relevant information--including mitigating
circumstances--and the Guidance's explicit recognition that nonfinal
administrative merits determinations should be given lesser weight
resolve any due process concerns raised by the commenters.
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\46\ In addition, contractors are encouraged to disclose the
subsequent reversal or modification of Labor Law decisions, which
will reduce the potential impact of any erroneous administrative
merits determination.
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b. Specific Categories of Administrative Merits Determinations
In the Proposed Guidance, the Department enumerated an agency-by-
agency list of notices, findings, and documents that will be considered
to be administrative merits determinations. A number of commenters
commented about these agency-specific lists.
WH-56 Summary of Unpaid Wages Form
The Proposed Guidance identified several types of documents issued
by WHD, including a WH-56 ``Summary of Unpaid Wages'' form (WH-56
form), as administrative merits determinations. See 80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several industry commenters objected to the inclusion of the WH-56 form
as an administrative merits determination. For example, one commenter,
SAIC, stated that a WH-56 form is ``not an admission of liability'' but
``a mechanism of settlement to resolve conflicts arising out of the
investigation, and has been used as a practical and effective means of
resolving complaints short of the litigation process.'' Another
commenter, Jenner & Block, argued that a WH-56 form is ``not a `merits
determination' at all,'' ``includes solely a list of names, dates, and
dollars owed,'' and ``contains no description of the purported
violation, and no findings regarding any investigation that may have
preceded its issuance.'' And another commenter, Jackson Lewis LLC,
asserted that WH-56 forms are regularly issued ``before the employer
has been provided a full opportunity to refute the basis of alleged
violations and/or back pay calculated by the DOL in connection with the
alleged violation,'' and are issued in a ``speculative and
inconsistent'' manner.\47\
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\47\ One commenter, Littler's Workplace Policy Institute, stated
that the Department ``would require a contractor to report as an
`administrative merits determination' a FLSA letter determination
from the Wage and Hour Division, yet the agency has vigorously
argued that such letters do not constitute final agency action that
a company can challenge.'' However, the Order does not indicate that
the required disclosures be defined by reference to the
Administrative Procedure Act. Rather, the Order requires the
disclosure of ``administrative merits determinations'' and
authorizes the Department to define that term.
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The Department retains the WH-56 form as an administrative merits
determination in the Guidance. WH-56 forms reflect WHD's determination
that an employer violated one or more wage-and-hour laws and owes back
wages. The WH-56 forms contain the specific amount of back wages due to
each employee, the statute(s) violated, and the date(s) of the
violation(s). WHD issues WH-56 forms only after an investigation--
during which employers are given the opportunity to provide relevant
information and articulate their legal position. Moreover, WHD's policy
is to issue a WH-56 form only after the employer has been informed of
the investigation findings, has been provided an opportunity to explain
the reasons for the violation(s), has been advised of how to comply
with the law(s) at issue, and, most importantly, has agreed to fully
comply with the law(s) going forward. In almost every case when WHD
issues a WH-56 form, there is no further violation determination by
WHD, a court, or an ALJ; the WH-56 is almost always the final
assessment of an employer's back wage liability. In 88.2 percent of
cases concluded in fiscal years 2013 through 2015 in which WHD issued a
WH-56 form after determining that a Labor Law was violated, the
employer paid all or some (usually all) of the back wages due on the
form.\48\
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\48\ This information was compiled from data recorded in the
Wage and Hour Investigative Support and Reporting Database
maintained by WHD. When the employer does not pay back wages due, it
may be because it is unable to pay or refuses to pay, or for some
other reason. When the employer does not pay, the Department may
pursue further action, including litigation.
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[[Page 58667]]
OSHA Citations
The Proposed Guidance identified several types of documents issued
by OSHA, including citations, as administrative merits determinations.
See 80 FR 30574, 30579. Some industry commenters opposed the use of
OSHA citations as administrative merits determinations. For example,
Jenner & Block, citing OSHA's regulations at 29 CFR 1903.14(a)-(b) and
1903.15(a), argued that ``an OSHA citation is merely an `alleged
violation,' not a merits determination,'' and ``is issued merely if an
OSHA Area Director `believes' that an employer has violated an OSHA law
or regulation, not after a `determination' has been made'' (emphasis in
original). This comment emphasized that ``when a contractor receives a
citation, the employer has received very limited information about the
enforcement agency's facts and legal position regarding the alleged
violation . . . a citation is merely an allegation of violation of
specified or general duty OSHA standards.'' Associated Builders and
Contractors asserted that ``most OSHA citations are routinely changed
after investigation and negotiation between the employer and the
investigating agency, resulting in a lesser fine or type of citation.''
The Department retains the OSHA citation as an administrative
merits determination in the Guidance. OSHA issues citations only after
conducting inspections during which OSHA affords employers the
opportunity to put forth their position. The OSHA regulations cited
above simply recognize that, under the applicable administrative
scheme, citations are not ``final,'' may be contested, and are
``alleged'' until they are made final--either by OSHRC adjudication or
because they were not contested. See 29 U.S.C. 659(a), (c). That does
not mean that citations are not reasoned agency determinations that an
OSH Act violation has occurred. Moreover, as the Supreme Court has
recognized, OSHA citations can be entitled to deference:
The Secretary's interpretation of OSH Act regulations in an
administrative adjudication, however, is agency action, not a post
hoc rationalization of it. Moreover, when embodied in a citation,
the Secretary's interpretation assumes a form expressly provided for
by Congress.
Martin v. OSHRC, 499 U.S. 144, 157 (1991) (citing 29 U.S.C. 658)
(emphasis in original).
Furthermore, contrary to some commenters' claims, OSHA citations
are rarely overturned. Of citations issued between October 1, 2012 and
September 30, 2015, 89.1 percent were not formally contested and either
became final under 29 U.S.C. 659(a) or were settled using OSHA's
informal settlement agreements or expedited informal settlement
agreements. Of those that were contested, over one-half (58.7 percent)
have settled, and the vast majority (82 percent) of those settlements
upheld at least part of the citation. Of those that did not settle, the
citation was upheld in the vast majority (81.6 percent) of contested
cases that have been resolved by an ALJ, OSHRC, or a court as of April
2016 (some contested cases from the time period are ongoing), more
often than not without any reduction in penalty. Less than 2 percent of
all of the citations issued during the time period have been vacated.
OFCCP Show Cause Notices
The Proposed Guidance identified ``a show cause notice for failure
to comply'' issued by OFCCP as an administrative merits determination.
See 80 FR 30,574, 30,579. OFCCP uses such notices to enforce the
affirmative action and nondiscrimination rules in Executive Order 11246
and other laws.
Some industry commenters argued that OFCCP show cause notices
should not be considered administrative merits determinations. For
example, one commenter, Roffman Horvitz, objected to the inclusion of
show cause notices because they are not ``final agency determinations
reviewable in the Federal courts under the Administrative Procedures
Act.'' According to this comment, OFCCP issues show cause notices to
contractors at the outset of audits if the contractor does not provide
the requested information within an initial 30-day period. The
commenter alleged that OFCCP ``has become extremely reluctant to grant
extensions of time'' of that period and ``approaches conciliation with
a take-it-or-leave-it attitude.''
Another commenter, DirectEmployers Association, stated that a show
cause notice generally contains ``alleged violations related to highly
technical Affirmative Action Program drafting and recordkeeping issues,
or a failure to engage in adequate outreach and recruitment of women
and/or minorities.'' This commenter asserted that a ``very small
minority of the [show cause notices] that OFCCP issues may also contain
allegations of unlawful discrimination (typically fewer than in 2
percent of all OFCCP audits).''
The same commenter also stated that ``routine'' show cause notices
are issued ``prior to . . . completion of the investigatory phase of
the audit'' and ``prior to considering the contractor's response to the
agency's preliminary investigative conclusions'' (emphasis in
original). According to this commenter, ``oftentimes the alleged
violations raised in [a show cause notice] are voluntarily withdrawn by
OFCCP,'' ``are resolved through conciliation, or are later dismissed by
an administrative court.''
The Department retains the OFCCP show cause notice as an
administrative merits determination. OFCCP issues a show cause notice
when it determines that a contractor has violated one or more of the
laws under OFCCP's jurisdiction. See Federal Contract Compliance
Manual, ch. 8D01 (Oct. 2014). OFCCP issues fewer than 200 show cause
notices per year, and issues them after a substantial process. OFCCP
typically issues show cause notices after it has investigated, made
findings, issued a notice of violation,\49\ given the contractor an
opportunity to respond, considered any response from the contractor,
and attempted to resolve the issue through conciliation. OFCCP may
issue a show cause notice if a contractor fails, after being requested
by OFCCP, to submit the affirmative action plans or other information
that it is required by law to maintain. Contrary to the commenter's
assertion, OFCCP gives a contractor multiple chances, including
extensions of time, to provide the requested information; and it gives
a contractor the opportunity to explain its position before issuing a
show cause notice. OFCCP must, if other efforts are unsuccessful, issue
show cause notices in those few circumstances when contractors refuse
to comply with their legal obligations to provide information. These
obligations are crucial to OFCCP's ability to enforce its laws and
investigate potential violations. Indeed, OFCCP cannot determine
whether there was in fact unlawful discrimination until it receives the
plans or other information that the contractor is required by law to
maintain and provide.
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\49\ Notices of violations are not administrative merits
determinations under the Order.
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EEOC Letters and Actions
The Proposed Guidance identified ``a letter of determination that
reasonable cause exists to believe that an unlawful employment practice
has occurred or is occurring'' issued by the EEOC and ``a civil action
filed on behalf of the EEOC'' as administrative merits determinations.
See 80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several industry commenters objected. Some argued that reasonable
cause letters are a preliminary action
[[Page 58668]]
and are not based on sound proof that a violation actually occurred.
Some asserted that few reasonable cause findings result in a court
complaint or an eventual judgment. Others noted that reasonable cause
findings are often excluded as evidence in subsequent litigation
because their prejudicial value outweighs their probative value.
The Department retains reasonable cause letters as a type of
administrative merits determination. An EEOC reasonable cause
determination reflects an assessment of a charge's merits: ``that there
is reasonable cause to believe that the charge is true,'' 42 U.S.C.
2000e-5(b), based on information obtained in the investigation,
including that provided by the employer, see EEOC, ``What You Can
Expect After a Charge is Filed,'' https://www.eeoc.gov/employers/process.cfm. In fiscal year 2015, about 3.5 percent of charges filed
with the EEOC resulted in reasonable cause determinations.\50\ After
making a reasonable cause determination, the agency transitions from
its investigatory, fact-finding role to its role as a conciliator and,
if conciliation efforts fail, the agency becomes a potential litigant
with authority to file a lawsuit to protect the public interest,
including to obtain relief for individuals harmed by the discriminatory
practices on which reasonable cause was found. The agency does not
revisit the reasonable cause determination in conciliation. Rather, the
EEOC must try to ``eliminate'' the ``alleged unlawful employment
practice'' through conciliation before it can sue. 42 U.S.C. 2000e-
5(b).
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\50\ The EEOC data in this paragraph and the following paragraph
are available on the EEOC's Web site at https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/statistics/enforcement/all.cfm.
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That the EEOC decides to sue in a relatively small percentage of
cases in which it has found reasonable cause has little to no bearing
on the determinations' merits. A large portion of reasonable cause
determinations are conciliated. See 42 U.S.C. 2000e-5(b) (describing
the conciliation process). For example, in fiscal years 2014 and 2015
combined, the EEOC successfully conciliated 41 percent of its
reasonable cause determinations. Because of limited resources, EEOC can
file lawsuits in only a small proportion of cases where it finds
reasonable cause. Rather, the EEOC decides which cases to litigate
based on a range of factors, including ``the wider impact the lawsuit
could have on EEOC efforts to combat workplace discrimination.'' EEOC,
``Litigation Procedures,'' https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/litigation/procedures.cfm. Thus, the Department concludes that it is appropriate
to include EEOC reasonable cause letters as administrative merits
determinations.
As mentioned above, the Proposed Guidance also included as an EEOC
administrative merits determination ``a civil action filed on behalf of
the EEOC.'' 80 FR 30574, 30579. This was unnecessary because the
Proposed Guidance generally identified complaints filed by or on behalf
of enforcement agencies with courts as administrative merits
determinations. The Department eliminates this redundancy in the final
Guidance.
NLRB Complaints
The Proposed Guidance identified ``a complaint issued by any
Regional Director'' of the NLRB as an administrative merits
determination. 80 FR 30574, 30579. Several industry commenters opposed
this proposal, arguing that such complaints are only allegations. For
example, one such commenter, the Littler Workplace Policy Institute,
characterized such complaints as being based on ``investigatory
findings without judicial or quasi-judicial safeguards.'' This
commenter further argued that ``[e]ven the [NLRB]'s own determinations
are not self-enforcing, as section 10 of the NLRA makes clear, because
only a court of appeals can enforce orders of the Board.''
Industry commenters also asserted that a relatively low percentage
of complaints issued by NLRB Regional Directors result in NLRB
determinations, and that even fully litigated NLRB decisions are often
overturned by courts of appeals. And commenters stated that the NLRB
sometimes pursues legal theories that have been rejected by some U.S.
Courts of Appeals, meaning a contractor could be forced to disclose a
decision involving conduct that some courts have ruled does not amount
to a violation. Others argued that they must purposefully violate the
NLRA in certain circumstances in order to test the validity of the
NLRB's certification of a representation election in Federal court.
The Department retains the definition of administrative merits
determinations for NLRA violations as proposed. The Department
disagrees with the premise of the industry commenters' comments. As
discussed above, the fiscal year 2015 NLRB settlement rate was 92.4
percent, the litigation success rate of General Counsel complaints
before ALJs and the Board was 88 percent, and 80 percent of Board
decisions were enforced in whole or in part by Courts of Appeals. The
Department also disagrees that NLRB complaints should not be disclosed
because some employers may purposefully violate the NLRA to ``test''
the validity of an election. Disclosure is only the first step in the
Order's process; when disclosing Labor Law decisions, contractors are
encouraged to submit all relevant information, including mitigating
factors.
Some labor organizations suggested that the definition of
``administrative merits determination'' should be expanded. These
commenters advocated including as administrative merits determinations
those NLRB General Counsel findings in which the General Counsel
notifies employers that it will issue a complaint absent settlement.
The Department considers this addition to be unwarranted. If the
General Counsel does issue a complaint, the complaint itself will be an
administrative merits determination that must be disclosed.
Accordingly, the Department maintains the definition as proposed.
Complaints Filed With Courts or Administrative Agencies
The list of administrative merits determinations in the Proposed
Guidance included ``a complaint filed by or on behalf of an enforcement
agency with a Federal or State court, an administrative judge, or an
administrative law judge alleging that the contractor or subcontractor
violated any provision of the Labor Laws.'' 80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several industry commenters criticized this category. One
commenter, Jenner & Block, stated that a civil action ``can only
represent a set of allegations and can never be viewed as a
determination on the merits'' (emphasis added). Another commenter
questioned whether the Department was justified in distinguishing
between a government agency's complaint and a private litigant's
complaint--as the latter was not included as an administrative merits
determination.
The Department retains the Guidance as proposed. The distinction
between complaints filed by an enforcement agency and complaints filed
by private parties to initiate lawsuits is valid. Agencies pursue
litigation only after fully investigating the case, soliciting the
adverse party's position, and making efforts to resolve the matter.
Thus, the filing of a complaint by an enforcement agency in court or
before an administrative agency is an agency determination that the
relevant law has been violated.\51\ Moreover, the inclusion
[[Page 58669]]
of court complaints filed by or on behalf of enforcement agencies is
necessary because some of the most egregious violations of the Labor
Laws found by agencies may be enforced only through court actions
depending on the particular Labor Law's enforcement scheme.
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\51\ Jenner & Block asserted that including ``civil actions as
reportable events directly conflicts with the terms of the Order,
which requires only `civil judgments' to be reported.'' (emphasis
added). However, the Order separately requires ``administrative
merits determinations'' to be disclosed, and for the reasons
explained above, a complaint filed by an enforcement agency in court
or before and administrative agency is an administrative merits
determination even though it is not a civil judgment.
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Finally, while it is true that not every complaint filed by an
enforcement agency succeeds, the Department reiterates that the
definition of administrative merits determination is relevant only to
the initial disclosure requirement. The definition simply determines
the scope of contractors' disclosure obligations--the first step in the
Order's process. Not all disclosed violations are relevant to
contractors' integrity and business ethics; only those that are
serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive will be considered as part
of the weighing step and will factor into the ALCA's written analysis
and advice.
Retaliation Violations
Several commenters representing labor and worker advocacy
organizations advocated that the definition of ``administrative merit
determinations'' include notices or findings of violations of the anti-
retaliation provisions of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 660(c) (``Section
11(c)''), and the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3) (``Section 15(a)(3)'').
These anti-retaliation provisions are vital components to the
enforcement of the OSH Act and the FLSA, and the Department did not
intend to exclude them. The relevant administrative merits
determination for these anti-retaliation violations is a complaint
filed on behalf of the agency in court. As discussed above, such
complaints are included in the Guidance's definition of
``administrative merits determination.'' \52\
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\52\ This would also cover the OSHA-approved State Plans that
enforce their equivalents to section 11(c) through State courts. To
the extent some State Plans enforce their anti-retaliation
provisions through administrative processes, the relevant
administrative merits determinations will be identified in the
second guidance to be issued by the Department identifying the State
laws that are equivalent to the Federal Labor Laws.
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In addition to such court actions, WHD also may issue determination
letters finding retaliation in violation of FLSA section 15(a)(3). The
Proposed Guidance incorrectly limited the residual category of
administrative merits determinations to ``a letter indicating that an
investigation disclosed a violation of sections six or seven of the
FLSA . . .'' \53\ To assure that WHD letters finding a retaliation
violation will be disclosed, the Department has revised the Guidance to
remove the phrase ``of sections six or seven.'' Thus, a WHD
determination letter finding any FLSA violation--not just minimum wage
and overtime violations--is an administrative merits determination.
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\53\ Sections six and seven refer to the FLSA's minimum wage and
overtime provisions, 29 U.S.C. 206, 207.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed concern that violations of the anti-
retaliation provisions of the statutes enforced by the EEOC may not
meet the definition of administrative merits determinations because it
is possible that retaliation is not an ``unlawful employment
practice.'' The Department and the EEOC consider the phrase ``unlawful
employment practice'' to include unlawful retaliation.
False Statement Violations Under the OSH Act
One commenter requested that the Guidance include violations of
section 17(g) of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 666(g), which prohibits
knowingly making false statements in reports or other documents
required to be maintained by the OSH Act, as violations that must be
disclosed under the Order. False statement violations have only
criminal sanctions under the OSH Act. See id. As discussed above,
criminal convictions of the Labor Laws are not reflected in the
administrative merits determinations, civil judgments, or arbitral
awards or decisions that must be disclosed. The Department therefore
declines to amend the Guidance as requested.
c. Settlements
Several commenters representing labor and worker advocacy
organizations urged the Department to define administrative merits
determination to expressly include settlements reached with an
enforcement agency before the institution of legal proceedings, which
would mean that contractor would be required by the Order to disclose
any such settlements as ``Labor Law decisions.'' Commenters argued that
their proposal would address a concern that employers might repeatedly
negotiate preemptive settlements with an enforcement agency during an
investigation, and thus avoid the issuance of a Labor Law decision that
would otherwise have to be disclosed. In such situations, according to
these commenters, these employers' apparently clean records would not
reflect their repeated unlawful conduct. Another commenter agreed that
settlements should not be considered reportable findings of violation,
but argued that they should nevertheless be disclosed as part of a
responsibility determination. Another sought clarification whether a
settlement reached prior to a complaint being filed must be disclosed
under the Order.
The Department maintains the Guidance as proposed. Settlements are
not administrative merits determinations, and therefore contractors are
not required by the Order to disclose them. The Department believes
that the inclusion of settlements as administrative merits
determinations could serve as a disincentive against settlements.
Settlements at the earliest possible stage of a dispute are often the
ideal outcome for both employers and their employees and the most
efficient outcome for contracting agencies, as early settlements
generally include improved compliance with the Labor Laws. The
Department also notes that most settlements of agency investigations or
enforcement actions follow or are accompanied by a notice or finding
from the agency that meets the definition of an administrative merits
determination. For example, OSHA settlements usually include the
affirmation of citations. Those citations are themselves administrative
merits determinations that must be disclosed. Likewise, settlements of
FLSA investigations are often accompanied by a WH-56 form indicating
WHD's determination that back wages are due because of an FLSA
violation. The WH-56 form is an administrative merits determination and
must be disclosed. However, any settlement agreement itself is not an
administrative merits determination and therefore need not be
disclosed.
Although settlement agreements are not administrative merits
determinations, a settlement including remediation of violations is
considered to be a mitigating factor that the contractor may choose
voluntarily to disclose. As a result, in cases where a settlement
accompanies or follows a Labor Law decision that must be disclosed, the
Department anticipates that contractors will voluntarily disclose the
settlement because it is in the contractor's interest to show that it
has remedied the violation. As discussed in the preaward assessment and
advice section of the Guidance, remediation of a violation is the most
important mitigating factor in the weighing
[[Page 58670]]
process before an ALCA recommendation. See Guidance, section III(B).
In sum, the Department considers the addition of settlements
themselves as a type of administrative merits determination to be
unwarranted.
2. Defining ``Civil Judgment''
The Proposed Guidance defined ``civil judgment'' as
any judgment or order entered by any Federal or State court in which
the court determined that the contractor or subcontractor violated
any provision of the Labor Laws, or enjoined or restrained the
contractor or subcontractor from violating any provision of the
Labor Laws.
80 FR 30574, 30580. The Proposed Guidance discussed the types of court
judgments or orders that meet the definition of ``civil judgment'' and
explained that a ``private settlement where the lawsuit is dismissed by
the court without any judgment being entered is not a civil judgment.''
Id. The Proposed Guidance provided that ``civil judgment'' includes a
judgment or order that is not final or is subject to appeal. Id.
A number of industry commenters who objected to the inclusion of
nonfinal agency determinations in the definition of administrative
merits determination had similar concerns about the definition of civil
judgment. They objected to defining civil judgments to include court
judgments that are either nonfinal or still subject to appeal, and they
were concerned that they could lose a contract as a result of a
judgment that is later reversed. For these commenters, a civil judgment
should include only final orders or judgments where all appeals have
been exhausted or not pursued. In addition, several industry commenters
objected to including preliminary injunctions.
The Department has carefully considered all of these comments and
declines to limit the definition of civil judgment. The Proposed
Guidance defined civil judgment to include some nonfinal and subject-
to-appeal court judgments for the same reasons that it defined
administrative merits determinations to include nonfinal agency
determinations. In addition to those reasons, which the Department
incorporates here as well, the Department notes that it would make
little sense to exclude Federal court judgments that follow a full
discovery process under the Federal rules simply because these
judgments still may be subject to appeal or have been appealed to a
Federal court of appeals.
The Department also reiterates that the Guidance's definition of
civil judgment does not include all court decisions that are nonfinal.
The Guidance's definition is limited to those judgments or orders in
which the court ``determined'' that there was a Labor Law violation or
``enjoined or restrained'' a violation. This means that, for example, a
court order denying an employer's motion to dismiss a complaint about
an alleged Labor Law violation or an order denying an employer's motion
for summary judgment would not be ``civil judgments.'' In both of those
examples, the court has found only that it is possible that the
complainant may be able to succeed later at trial; it has not made a
determination that a Labor Law has been violated.
As several commenters noted, a type of nonfinal court order that
the Department explicitly included as a civil judgment in the Proposed
Guidance is a preliminary injunction that ``enjoins or restrains a
violation of the Labor Laws.'' 80 FR 30574, 30580. Preliminary
injunctions issued in Federal court are not considered to be ``final''
orders. However, enforcement agencies may pursue injunctive relief when
faced with the most egregious violations of the Labor Laws (for
example, imminent danger actions under the OSH Act or 10(j) injunctions
under the NLRA), and courts grant preliminary injunctions only in
extraordinary circumstances and after a strong showing of a likelihood
of success. Accordingly, the Department concludes that the granting of
such relief may be relevant to the assessment of a contractor's respect
for legal obligations and workplace conditions. It is therefore
appropriate to require disclosure.
Finally, the Department reiterates that the definition of ``civil
judgment'' simply determines the scope of contractors' disclosure
obligations--the first stage in the Order's process. Not all disclosed
violations are relevant to contractors' integrity and business ethics.
Only those that are later determined to be serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive will be considered as part of the weighing step and
will factor into the ALCA's written analysis and advice. Moreover,
contractors have an opportunity to submit any additional information--
including mitigating information--that they believe may be helpful in
assessing their overall record of compliance. In sum, court judgments
and orders that meet the definition of ``civil judgment'' must be
disclosed--even where nonfinal or still subject to appeal.
While the Department is not changing the definition of civil
judgment, two clarifications are necessary. One commenter, the Equal
Employment Advisory Council (EEAC), expressed concern that the
definition of civil judgment would include temporary restraining orders
(TROs). The Proposed Guidance did not intend to include TROs under the
definition of civil judgment. TROs are distinct from preliminary
injunctions under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and can, in
certain circumstances, be issued without notice to the adverse party.
Compare Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 65(a) (preliminary injunctions) with Fed. R.
Civ. Proc. 65(b) (TROs). To avoid any confusion, the Guidance has been
revised to clarify that TROs are not civil judgments for the purposes
of the Order, and need not be disclosed.
Another commenter, National Security Technologies, LLC, requested
that the Department limit the definition of civil judgements to exclude
judgments entered pursuant to accepted Offers of Judgment under Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure 68, which are ``in the nature of
settlements.'' The Department agrees that accepted offers of judgment
under Rule 68 are akin to settlements and are not ``civil judgments''
for the purposes of the Order. The Guidance has been revised
accordingly.
3. Defining ``Arbitral Award or Decision''
The Proposed Guidance defined ``arbitral award or decision'' as
any award or order by an arbitrator or arbitral panel in which the
arbitrator or arbitral panel determined that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of the Labor Laws, or enjoined
or restrained the contractor or subcontractor from violating any
provision of the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30580. The Proposed Guidance stated that arbitral awards and
decisions must be disclosed ``even if the arbitral proceedings were
private or confidential.'' Id. It further provided that ``arbitral
award or decision'' includes an award or order that is not final or is
subject to being confirmed, modified, or vacated by a court. Id.
Several industry commenters objected to disclosing arbitral awards
or decisions that are confidential or private. The AARP, on the other
hand, supported the disclosing of private or confidential arbitration
awards and decisions. Industry commenters contended that disclosing
awards may have a chilling effect on arbitration, that disclosure may
require the breaking of arbitration or labor contracts, and that the
confidentiality of arbitration is provided by some State laws. One
commenter, the Aerospace Industries Association, suggested excluding
[[Page 58671]]
arbitral awards from confidential or private arbitrations conducted
under arbitration agreements executed before the effective date of any
final rule implementing the Order.
The Department declines to narrow its interpretation of the
disclosure requirement to exclude confidential or private arbitrations.
The Order specifically requires the disclosure of arbitral awards or
decisions without exception, see Order, section 2(a)(i), and
confidentiality provisions generally have exceptions for disclosures
required by law. Moreover, there is nothing particularly sensitive
about the four pieces of basic information that contractors must
publicly disclose about each arbitral award or decision--the Labor Law
that was violated, the case number, the date of the award or decision,
and the name of arbitrator. See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(1)(i). Parties
routinely disclose more information about an arbitral award when they
file a court action seeking to have the award vacated, confirmed, or
modified.
In addition to the commenters discussed above who object generally
to disclosing any nonfinal determinations or judgments, some industry
commenters specifically objected to disclosing nonfinal arbitration
awards or decisions. The Department declines to modify the Guidance in
response to these comments. The disclosure of arbitral awards that are
nonfinal or still subject to court review is appropriate for all of the
same reasons discussed above supporting the Department's inclusion of
administrative merits determinations and civil judgments that are
nonfinal or subject to appeal. Furthermore, the Department notes that
the Federal Arbitration Act provides a very high standard that must be
met for a court to vacate or modify an arbitral award. See 9 U.S.C. 10
(standard for vacating award); 9 U.S.C. 11 (standard for modifying
award).
The AARP supported the proposed definition of arbitral award or
decision, but proposed broadening the definition to include awards and
decisions where the employee has succeeded ``on any significant issue
or receives even some of the benefits sought.'' Under this proposal, an
award or decision would have to be disclosed, ``even if there was no
formal determination of a legal violation.'' The Department declines to
modify the Guidance in response to this comment. The Order requires
disclosure of arbitral awards or decisions rendered against the
contractor ``for violations of any of the [Labor Laws].'' Order,
section 2(a)(i). The Department believes that this requires a finding
that a Labor Law was violated in order to trigger the Order's
disclosure requirement.
Two industry commenters requested clarification about arbitral
decisions that involve both a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) and
one of the Labor Laws. One asserted that the Guidance's disclosure
requirements should expressly exclude arbitral decisions finding CBA
violations that do not amount to statutory violations. The other
commenter, the Association of General Contractors of America (AGC),
stated that arbitral decisions involving CBAs are often unclear about
whether their rulings are ``on a matter of law, contract, or both.''
The Department agrees that an arbitrator's decision finding only a CBA
violation does not trigger the disclosure requirement. However, where
the arbitrator does make an express finding that there was a violation
of one of the Labor Laws, then the decision or award must be disclosed,
regardless of whether the same conduct also violated the CBA.
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising From the Same Underlying
Violation
The Proposed Guidance addressed and gave examples regarding how
contractors should disclose successive administrative merits
determinations, civil judgments, and/or arbitral awards or decisions
that arise from the same underlying violation. See 80 FR 30580-81. One
commenter, Jackson Lewis LLC, stated that this discussion would have
been ``unnecessary'' had the Department not required disclosure of
``alleged violations.'' According to this comment, ``[n]othing in the
already dense DOL Guidance is more complex than sorting what successive
determinations must be reported and what need not be reported.'' After
considering this comment, the Department modifies this section of the
Guidance for improved readability--but does not make any substantive
changes. The Department believes that the examples provided, including
a new example, will help contractors meet their disclosure obligations
under the Order.
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed (Formerly ``What Information Must
Be Disclosed'')
The Order itself contains guidance for what information a
contractor must disclose. See Order, section 2(a). And the FAR rule
includes specific disclosure requirements and processes. See FAR
22.2004-1(a). This section of the Proposed Guidance directly tracked
the language of the proposed FAR rule. Where the FAR Council has
modified relevant language in its final rule, the Department has
modified the final Guidance accordingly. In addition, in one
nonsubstantive change to this section of the Guidance, the Department
has created a separate subsection to highlight the process for
contracting officers to give contractors the opportunity to submit any
additional relevant information (including mitigating factors) about
Labor Law violations. Several commenters submitted concerns or
suggestions about this section; however, because comments took issue
with the content of the FAR rule, the FAR Council has addressed those
comments, and the comments are not summarized or discussed here.
Specific Disclosure Requirements
The Proposed Guidance included the requirements from the proposed
FAR rule about the specific information that a contractor must
disclose, at the time of the responsibility determination, about each
Labor Law decision. It provided that, for each decision, the contractor
disclose: (1) The Labor Law that was violated; (2) the case number,
inspection number, charge number, docket number, or other unique
identification number; (3) the date of the determination, judgment,
award, or decision; and (4) the name of the court, arbitrator(s),
agency, board, or commission that rendered it. See 80 FR 30574, 30581.
Several labor unions and employee advocacy organizations suggested
requiring disclosure of more information than the four types of
information listed above. The Department retains the Guidance as
proposed. The specific disclosure requirements are promulgated in the
final FAR rule, FAR 22.2004-2(b)(1)(i), and they are included in the
Guidance only for completeness. Moreover, the Department notes that
contracting officers have an existing duty under the FAR to obtain such
additional information as may be necessary to be satisfied that a
contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics,
see FAR 9.105-1(a), and the FAR rule requires contracting officers to
request Labor Law decision documents from contractors where the ALCA is
otherwise unable to obtain them, see FAR 22.2004-2(b)(2)(iii). While
the Department has not amended the list of specific disclosure
requirements, it has added to the final Guidance a list of the relevant
unique identification numbers for each category of violation.
[[Page 58672]]
Accuracy of Contractor Disclosures
One group of worker-advocacy organizations expressed concern that
the Guidance does not instruct contracting officials to verify the
accuracy of the information that a contractor submits. The comment
noted that a new Labor Law violation might be found against a
contractor after the contractor's initial representation about its
record. In such a case, the comment suggested, a contractor that
responds negatively at the initial representation stage should be
required at the subsequent preaward stage to provide an update about
any new violations (assuming that a responsibility determination is
undertaken at that point).
Several unions and worker-advocacy groups applauded the proposed
FAR rule and the Proposed Guidance for significantly improving
reporting requirements and public disclosures; however, they also
expressed concerns that the penalties for contractors who misrepresent
or omit information when disclosing Labor Law violations should be
strengthened. Several of these commenters argued that disclosures
regarding Labor Law violations should be provided under oath and/or
under penalty of perjury. Another commenter, the AARP, suggested that
the FAR Council should clearly state that ``failure to report
violations will lead to a determination of nonresponsibility.''
The Department does not believe that contractor representations
regarding Labor Law matters should be treated differently than other
representations related to responsibility. Under the FAR, a contractor
who fails to furnish a certification related to responsibility matters
or to furnish such information as may be requested by the contracting
officer related to that contractor's responsibility shall be given an
opportunity to remedy the deficiency. See FAR 9.104-5. Ultimately,
failure to furnish the certification or such information ``may render
the offeror nonresponsible.'' Id. In addition, well-established
penalties already exist for bad faith and material misrepresentations
regarding responsibility matters.\54\
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\54\ A contractor may be disqualified, the award canceled, or
the contract terminated if the misrepresentation is made in bad
faith or has materially influenced the agency's responsibility
determination. See Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v.
United States, 238 F.3d 1324, 1339-40 (Fed. Cir. 2001). Where the
award is canceled, the contractor can be precluded from bidding on a
reprocurement contract. See Northrop Grumman Corp. v. United States,
50 Fed. Cl. 443, 468 (2001). Moreover, under appropriate
circumstances, a contractor may also be suspended or debarred, or
held liable under the False Claims Act, among other available
remedies. See 31 U.S.C. 3730; 18 U.S.C. 1001.
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The Department does recognize that a substantial period of time may
pass between the contractor's initial representation and the date of
the award. In particular, as the commenter referenced above suggested,
a contractor may initially represent that it has no Labor Law decisions
to disclose, but a Labor Law decision may be rendered against it after
that initial representation prior to the date of an award. Contractors
have a duty to provide an update to the contracting officer prior to
the date of an award if the contractor's initial representation is no
longer accurate. Thus, the final FAR rule now provides that if a new
Labor Law decision is rendered or the contractor otherwise learns that
its representation is no longer accurate, the contractor must notify
the contracting officer of an update to its representation. See FAR
52.222-57(e). This means that if the contractor made an initial
representation that it had no Labor Law decision to disclose, and since
the time of the offer the contractor has a Labor Law decision to
disclose, the contractor must notify the contracting officer. The
reverse is also true: If, for example, an offeror made an initial
representation that it has a Labor Law decision to disclose, and since
the time of the offer that Labor Law decision has been vacated by the
enforcement agency or a court, the contractor must notify the
contracting officer.
Postaward Disclosure Updates
The disclosure section of the Proposed Guidance included a
description of the Order's requirement that contractors update their
disclosures postaward, during performance of a covered procurement
contract. See 80 FR 30574, 30581. The Department has reorganized the
final Guidance to consolidate discussion of postaward disclosure and
assessment issues in a new section (Section IV). Comments about the
postaward disclosure are addressed in a parallel section of this
preamble section-by-section analysis, below.
Subcontractor Disclosures
The disclosure section of the Proposed Guidance also included an
explanation of the Order's subcontractor disclosure provisions. See 80
FR 30574, 30582. The Department has reorganized the final Guidance to
consolidate discussion of subcontractor issues in a new section
(Section V). Comments about the subcontractor disclosure provisions are
addressed in a parallel section of this preamble section-by-section
analysis, below.
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice (Formerly ``Weighing Violations of
the Labor Laws'')
Section III of the Guidance explains the process by which ALCAs
classify, weigh, and provide advice about a contractor's violations of
the Labor Laws during the preaward period. Based on the comments
received, the Department believes that the separate steps in this
process may not have been emphasized clearly enough in the Proposed
Guidance. Several commenters, for example, appeared to conflate the
determination that a contractor had committed a serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive violation with a finding of
nonresponsibility.
In response to these comments, the final Guidance clarifies that
the ALCA's preaward assessment of a contractor's Labor Law violations
and the contracting officer's responsibility determination are separate
process points, performed by two separate individuals: The ALCA
assesses the nature of the violations and provides analysis and advice;
the contracting officer, informed by the ALCA's analysis and advice,
makes the responsibility determination--the determination of whether
the contractor is a responsible source to whom a contract may be
awarded. Contracting officers consider assessments provided by ALCAs
consistently with advice provided by other subject matter experts
during the responsibility determination.
The final Guidance also clarifies that the ALCA's role involves a
three-step process. First, an ALCA reviews all of the contractor's
violations to determine if any are serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive. Second, the ALCA then weighs any serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive violations in light of the totality of the
circumstances, including the severity of the violation(s), the size of
the contractor, and any mitigating factors that are present. Third,
after this holistic review, the ALCA provides written analysis and
advice to the contracting officer regarding the contractor's record of
Labor Law compliance, and whether a labor compliance agreement or other
action is warranted.
As noted above, the final Guidance clarifies that it is the
contracting officer who makes the final determination of whether a
contractor is, or is not, a responsible source.
The assessment of violations postaward, during the performance of
the contract, is now addressed separately in section IV of the
Guidance.
[[Page 58673]]
Similarly, the assessment of subcontractor violations is addressed
separately in section V of the Guidance.
The Department has modified Appendix E to reflect changes in the
final Guidance's description of the PreAward Assessment and Advice
process.
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations (Step One)
The first step in this process is the classification of Labor Law
violations as serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. The Order
specifically directs the Department to develop guidance to assist
agencies in making these classification determinations. Order, section
4(b)(i). The Order specifies that the Department's Guidance should
``incorporate existing statutory standards for assessing whether a
violation is serious, repeated, or willful'' where they are available.
Id. In addition, the Order provides the Department with parameters for
developing standards where none are provided by statute. Id.
Subjectivity of Classification Criteria
A number of industry commenters argued that the Proposed Guidance's
definitions of serious, repeated, willful, and pervasive violations are
too subjective and do not provide enough direction for contractors to
determine whether their violations could put them at risk of losing
Federal contracts. Some commenters expressed concern that whether a
violation is serious, repeated, or willful may depend in some cases on
an exercise of discretion by the official or investigator at the
enforcement agency that issued the underlying administrative merits
determination. In contrast, many worker-advocacy organizations and
labor unions expressed support for the flexibility of these
classification criteria and the Department's overall approach to
weighing violations and assessing mitigating factors.
While the Department acknowledges that some of the criteria for
classifying Labor Law violations require closer analysis, the
Department notes that many of the definitions set out objective
criteria that leave little, if any, room for ambiguity. For example,
whether a violation involves at least $10,000 in back wages or $5,000
in fines or penalties (one of the criteria for classifying serious
violations), or whether a violation occurs within 3 years of a prior
violation (one of the criteria for classifying repeated violations) are
straightforward matters. Furthermore, the Department expects that ALCAs
will develop substantial expertise in administering the Order and will
be well-positioned to classify and weigh each violation. In some cases,
as set forth below, the Department has modified criteria that were not
sufficiently clear.
Moreover, the Department disagrees that the contracting officer's
responsibility determination will be arbitrary if it includes
consideration of the ALCA's assessment of Labor Law enforcement actions
that themselves involve the exercise of prosecutorial discretion, such
as an enforcement agency's decision as to how much of a fine or penalty
to assess, or whether to find one violation or multiple violations. The
Department believes that the legitimate exercise of such discretion is
inherent in prosecuting Labor Law violations--just as it is for
prosecuting violations of fraud, tax, and other laws that are already
expressly considered in the responsibility determination under the
FAR--and does not undermine the contracting officer's consideration of
Labor Law enforcement actions under the Order.
Furthermore, ALCAs are advisors to the contracting officer on one
aspect of responsibility: Integrity and business ethics with regard to
labor law compliance. Contracting officers consider the information
provided by advisors such as ALCAs, as well as advice from other
experts in fields such as audit, law, engineering, information
security, and transportation.
Relationship of Classification Criteria to Disclosure Requirements
A few commenters representing employers also expressed concern that
they would be uncertain as to which violations must be disclosed due to
perceived ambiguities in the definitions of serious, repeated, willful,
and pervasive violations. Such comments misapprehended the role that
these definitions play in the implementation of the Order. All Labor
Law decisions must be disclosed, whether or not they involve violations
that are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive. As described above,
the definitions of these four terms are used by ALCAs during the
classification process to screen out minor infractions that have been
disclosed, not by contractors to determine whether the decisions must
be disclosed in the first place. The Department clarifies this point in
the final Guidance.
Standard for Determining Application of Classification Criteria
One industry commenter questioned what quantum of evidence will be
necessary to support a determination that a Labor Law violation meets
one of the criteria for establishing that a violation is serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive. In this regard, the commenter focused
on language in the Proposed Guidance stating that a violation would
meet one of the classification criteria if the Labor Law decision
``support[s] a conclusion'' that the criterion in question had been
met, and the commenter expressed concern that this standard suggested
that contractors could be found to have committed a serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive violation based on only scant evidence in the
record supporting such a classification.
The Department has clarified in the Guidance that to serve as the
basis for a determination that a violation is serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive, the relevant criteria must be readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law decision itself. This means that ALCAs
should not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the
decisions of reviewing officials, courts, and arbitrators. It also
means that a contractor will not be deemed to have committed a serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive violation based on a minimal or
arguable showing. While ALCAs and contracting officers may seek
additional information from the enforcement agencies to provide
context, they should rely on only the information contained in the
Labor Law decisions themselves to determine whether violations are
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive.
Subcontractor Violation Classification
Some of the comments by employer groups voiced additional concern
about the way the Proposed Guidance described the process for a prime
contractor to classify and weigh its subcontractors' Labor Law
violations. These commenters asserted that many prime contractors,
especially small businesses, will not have access to labor law experts
or legal counsel familiar with the intricacies of the fourteen Labor
Laws, and that these prime contractors would not be well-equipped to
evaluate whether violations are serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive.
The Guidance now contains a separate section addressing
subcontractor responsibility (Section V). The Department addresses
comments related to subcontractor responsibility in a parallel section
of the preamble section-by-section analysis, below.
Scope of Classification Criteria
Many commenters representing employer groups argued that the
criteria for serious, repeated, willful, and pervasive violations were
too broad and
[[Page 58674]]
would encompass too many violations, which would increase the burden of
the Order by subjecting more contractors to scrutiny. These commenters
expressed concern that a prospective contractor would be found
nonresponsible based on, for example, a pair of violations that were
inadvertent but nonetheless met the criteria for repeated violations;
or one or two OSH Act violations that, while meeting the statutory
criteria for serious violations, caused no harm and were addressed
swiftly. Some feared that even a single serious violation would
necessarily lead to a nonresponsibility determination.
The Department believes that this fear is misplaced. Below, in
parts 1 through 4 of this subsection, the Department responds to
commenters' specific concerns regarding the criteria used to classify
violations as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive. In some cases,
as explained below, the definitions have been narrowed in response to
concerns of over-inclusiveness.
The Department believes the final Guidance appropriately defines
its criteria, given their use in the classification and weighing
process. It is important to note that the classification of a
contractor's violation as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive does
not mean that the contractor loses an award. Rather, as noted in the
Guidance, one of the purposes of classifying violations as serious,
repeated, willful, and pervasive is to screen out many violations that
may be inadvertent or less likely to have a significant impact. These
classifications limit consideration of a contractor's violations to
those that may merit closer examination. After the initial screening,
ALCAs will conduct a review of these more significant violations,
taking into account the totality of the circumstances, including any
mitigating factors. In this weighing phase, the serious, repeated,
willful, and pervasive classifications provide a useful framework for
analysis and help ensure government-wide consistency. In the final
Guidance, the Department clarifies the description of this process and
has reiterated that classifying a violation as serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive does not automatically result in a finding that a
contractor lacks integrity and business ethics.
In sum, the Department believes the criteria set forth in the final
Guidance for determining whether violations are serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive are fair, appropriate, and administrable.
Classification of Violations Involving Retaliation
Some commenters representing employee interests expressed concern
that the definitions of serious, repeated, and willful violations did
not sufficiently account for violations involving retaliation. In
general, it is the intent of the Guidance that violations of the Labor
Laws that involve retaliation must be reported and assessed under the
Order. The Department has made a number of modifications to the
Guidance--discussed further below in the separate sections on serious,
repeated, and willful violations--to ensure that this is the case. As
stated in both the proposed and final Guidance, all violations
involving retaliation are considered serious violations under the
Order.
Effect of Reversal or Vacatur of Basis for Classification
Some commenters expressed concern that under the Proposed Guidance,
a violation could be classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive based on a determination by an agency, arbitrator, or court
that was later reversed, vacated, or otherwise rescinded. For example,
some of these commenters expressed concern that a contractor could be
found to have committed a serious violation based on an OSHA citation
that was originally classified as ``serious'' and later changed to
``other than serious'' or withdrawn entirely.
In response to these comments, the final Guidance clarifies that if
a Labor Law decision or portion thereof that would otherwise cause a
violation to be classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive is reversed or vacated, the violation will not be classified
as such under the Order. Just as a Labor Law decision that is reversed
or vacated in its entirety need not be disclosed, so too, if a Labor
Law decision is modified such that the underlying basis for the
violation's classification as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
has been reversed or vacated, the classification no longer applies.
The sections below discuss comments received regarding the criteria
for classifying violations as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
and the changes that the Department has made to the Guidance in
response to these comments. In addition to the changes discussed below,
where necessary, the Department has also made conforming changes to the
examples in the four appendices listing examples of the four categories
of violations.
1. Serious Violations
The Proposed Guidance set forth several classification criteria for
determining whether a violation is serious under the Order. As an
initial matter, some commenters indicated that the Proposed Guidance
was unclear as to whether a violation needs to meet only one of the
listed criteria in order to be considered serious. The Department
believes that the Proposed Guidance was clear on this point in that it
stated that a Labor Law violation that meets ``at least one'' of the
listed classification criteria for seriousness will be considered a
serious violation. To provide additional clarity, the final Guidance
states that a violation involving ``any one'' of the listed criteria
will be classified as serious. The Guidance also further clarifies that
separate criteria apply to OSH Act violations enforced through
citations, as discussed in the section below.
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations and Equivalent State Documents (Formerly ``OSH Act'')
In the Proposed Guidance, the Department stated that a violation is
serious under the Order if OSHA or an OSHA-approved State Plan issued a
citation that it designated as serious, issued a notice of failure to
abate, or issued an imminent danger notice. The Proposed Guidance also
listed several criteria under which violations of any of the Labor Laws
can be classified as serious. The Department received several comments
regarding the classification of violations under the OSH Act and OSHA-
approved State Plans.
Classification of Non-Citation OSHA Violations
Several commenters requested clarification about the classification
of OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plan violations that are not
enforced through citations--such as retaliation, false-statement
violations, notices of failure to abate, and imminent danger notices
(``non-citation OSHA violations''). These commenters noted that such
violations are enforced not through citations but through notices or
through complaints filed in court. Thus, for these violations, OSHA and
State Plan agencies never make a designation of ``serious,'' as they do
with OSH Act and State Plan violations enforced by citation (``citation
OSHA violations''). These commenters suggested that the Guidance should
be clarified to ensure that non-citation OSHA violations may still be
classified as serious under the Order.
The Department agrees that non-citation OSHA violations may still
be classified as serious under the Order. The final Guidance therefore
clarifies the treatment of OSH Act violations by
[[Page 58675]]
dividing serious violations into two categories. The first consists of
citation OSHA violations, while the second consists of all other
violations of the Labor Laws. This second category includes all non-
citation OSHA violations, as well as violations of the other Labor
Laws. The final Guidance states that a citation OSHA violation is
serious if--and only if--the violation involves a citation or
equivalent State document that was designated as serious or an
equivalent State designation.\55\ Non-citation OSHA violations are
classified as ``serious'' according to the same criteria that are used
to classify violations of the other Labor Laws. For example, if a court
issues a civil judgment finding that a contractor violated the OSH
Act's anti-retaliation provisions by firing a worker in retaliation for
filing a complaint with OSHA, an ALCA should find that this violation
is serious because it meets the retaliation criterion for serious
violation under the Order, as discussed below in section
III(A)(1)(b)(vi) of this section-by-section analysis.\56\
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\55\ Thus, OSH Act and State Plan citations that were designated
by the relevant enforcement agency as other-than-serious cannot be
classified as serious under the Order, even if they satisfy one of
the criteria applicable to other violations of the Labor Laws (such
as violations that affect 25 percent of the workforce).
\56\ As a result of this clarification, notices of failure to
abate a violation and imminent danger notices, which are non-
citation OSHA violations, are now discussed below in subsection (v)
of section III(A)(1)(b), ``All other violations of the Labor Laws.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Classification of Citation OSHA Violations
With respect to OSH Act and State Plan violations enforced through
citations, the Department received several comments. Employee advocates
generally supported the Department's proposal to use OSHA or OSHA-
approved State Plan designations of ``serious'' as the basis for
classifying violations as ``serious'' under the Order. In contrast,
industry commenters expressed concern with this approach. The industry
commenters pointed out that a substantial majority of OSHA violations
were designated as serious.\57\ They argued that while the term
``serious'' may be appropriate in the context of OSH Act enforcement,
the use of the OSH Act's ``serious'' designation for the Order is
inconsistent with the Proposed Guidance's goal of identifying those
violations that are ``most concerning and bear on an assessment of a
contractor's or subcontractor's integrity and business ethics.'' Some
of the industry commenters noted that serious violations under the OSH
Act may in some cases include what they characterized as ``technical
violations'' of certain standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ In 2015, approximately 74 percent of OSHA violations were
designated as serious. This data is available on OSHA's Web site at
https://www.osha.gov/dep/2015_enforcement_summary.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the Department recognizes these commenters' concerns, the
final Guidance retains this aspect of the definition of serious
violations. The Order requires that the Department's Guidance ``shall .
. . where available, incorporate existing statutory standards for
assessing whether a violation is serious, repeated, or willful.''
Order, section 4(b)(i)(A). The OSH Act is alone among the Labor Laws
identified in the Order in that it contains an explicit statutory
standard for assessing whether a violation is serious. See 29 U.S.C.
666(k) (stating that a violation is serious ``if there is a substantial
probability that [the hazard created by the violation could result in]
death or serious physical harm . . . unless the employer did not, and
could not with the exercise of reasonable diligence, know'' of the
existence of the violation). This standard reflects a congressional
determination that OSH Act violations that meet the above definition
are serious and should be evaluated and enforced accordingly. Moreover,
this standard underscores the severe consequences that can result from
such violations, regardless of their relative prevalence.
Accordingly, the Guidance's definition explicitly incorporates the
OSH Act's definition of a serious violation, as contemplated by the
Order. The Guidance retains the approach under which ALCAs will
classify as ``serious'' under the Order any citation that the relevant
enforcement agency designated as serious. As noted above, the
classification of a violation as serious under the Order does not mean
that the contractor will not receive an award. Rather, the purpose of
classifying certain violations as serious is to limit the scope of
violations that will be considered by an ALCA to those that merit
closer examination. Moreover, in the second step of the assessment
process, ALCAs will review all mitigating factors provided by the
contractor, including whether a violation has been remediated.
b. All Other Violations of the Labor Laws
The Proposed Guidance listed several other criteria that, if met,
would result in the classification of a violation as serious. As noted
above, under the final Guidance, these criteria apply to all violations
except OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plan violations that are
enforced through citations and equivalent State documents. Comments on
each of these classification criteria are addressed in turn below.
i. Violation Affects at Least 10 Workers Making up at Least 25 Percent
of the Contractor's Workforce at the Worksite or Overall (Formerly
``25% of the Workforce Affected'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that a Labor Law violation is serious
if the affected workers made up 25 percent or more of the workforce at
the worksite. Consistent with the Order's direction, the Department
believes that violations impacting a significant number of employees
are serious. The Department specifically sought comments on this
classification criterion.
Some unions and employee-advocacy organizations argued that this
threshold may exclude violations that affect significant numbers of
people--such as a violation that affects all of the workers in a
particular job category--but do not reach the 25 percent threshold.
Some groups advocated for a lower threshold such as 5 percent, while
others argued that additional thresholds should be added, such as
deeming a violation serious if it affects at least a certain number of
employees (e.g., at least 50 employees). Some of these groups also
argued that a violation should be serious if it affects at least 25
percent of a contractor's overall workforce--in addition to the
worksite-specific threshold.
In contrast, some employer groups argued that the 25 percent
threshold is too low and will be over-inclusive. Some asserted that
certain types of violations, such as an employer's failure to post
required employee-rights notices or establishment of general workplace
policies that are found to violate the law but whose consequences may
not be readily apparent, should not qualify as serious. Some of these
commenters proposed eliminating the 25 percent criterion, raising the
threshold, tailoring it to each Labor Law, or permitting it to be
waived under appropriate circumstances. Some recommended that this
threshold, if it remains in the Guidance, apply only to employers with
at least a specified minimum number of employees to avoid situations in
which the threshold is triggered by a very small number of affected
workers.
Additionally, some commenters requested that the Department clarify
how the 25 percent threshold would apply to violations spanning
multiple worksites. Two of these commenters criticized the Department's
definition of
[[Page 58676]]
the term ``worksite,'' suggesting that it was ambiguous when compared
with the regulatory definition under the Worker Adjustment and
Retraining Notification (WARN) Act, 29 U.S.C. 2101-2109. See 20 CFR
639.3. Two commenters requested the Department clarify how the 25
percent threshold would apply to construction contractors. One proposed
that the Guidance state that ``a violation is serious if it affects 25
[percent] of the workforce of the particular contractor or
subcontractor, working at a specific construction site.'' Another noted
that in the construction industry the number of workers at a worksite
often varies, so it would be difficult to determine the total number of
workers for this analysis.
After careful consideration of all these comments, the Department
retains the 25 percent threshold for this criterion in the final
Guidance, though with some modifications. The Order explicitly directs
the Department to take into account ``the number of employees
affected'' in determining whether a violation is serious. Order,
section 4(b)(i)(B)(1). Accordingly, the Department considers a
violation affecting numerous employees to be serious, even if it may
not result in significant back wages or penalties or place workers in
danger of immediate harm. This includes precisely the types of
violations identified by industry commenters. Failing to post a legally
required notice, for example, is serious because it deprives employees
of knowledge of their rights under the Labor Laws, which could result
in violations not being detected. The Department believes that the
threshold is appropriate.
In response to the commenters' concerns, however, the Department
has modified the 25 percent threshold so it applies only when the
violation affects at least 10 workers. This change avoids triggering
the 25 percent threshold when only a few workers are affected. The
Department declines to set a higher minimum number of workers because
it believes that violations affecting a significant percentage of a
workforce are serious even if the overall size of a workforce is small.
For example, if a small business that employs only 40 employees commits
a violation that affects 15 of those employees, such a violation should
be considered serious even though the overall number of affected
employees is relatively low.
The Department has also added an example to the Guidance to help
clarify how this criterion applies to worksites with multiple
employers. The Proposed Guidance stated that for purposes of
calculating the 25 percent threshold, the number of workers at the
worksite
does not include workers of another entity, unless the underlying
violation of the Labor Laws includes a finding that the contractor
or subcontractor is a joint employer of the workers that the other
entity employs at the worksite.
80 FR 30583. The final Guidance now explains that if a contractor
employs 40 workers at a worksite, then a violation is serious if it
affects at least 10 of the contractor's workers at the site, even if
other companies also employ an additional 40 workers at the same site.
The Department declines to replace the 25 percent threshold
entirely with a threshold based on an absolute minimum number of
workers. Such a threshold would disproportionately affect larger
employers. The Department also declines to adopt a criterion based on a
violation's effect on all employees in a particular job classification.
Such a criterion would not be easily administrable because it would
frequently require ALCAs to perform the difficult task of
distinguishing between job classifications.
The Department also declines to lower the threshold of affected
workers from 25 percent. While any threshold will necessarily include
some violations and exclude others, the Department believes that 25
percent is an appropriate benchmark for determining whether a violation
affects a sufficient number of workers to be considered serious--
therefore warranting further review. While recognizing the concerns of
employee advocates that certain violations may fall short of the
threshold, the Department notes that these violations may meet other
criteria for seriousness. The Department also recognizes the concerns
of employer groups that the 25 percent threshold is overinclusive, but
the Department believes that these concerns will be addressed by the
overall assessment of a contractor's violations, and particularly the
assessment of mitigating factors.
The Department declines to make other changes to the definition of
``worksite.'' The Department notes that the definition in the Guidance
is already similar to the definition of ``single site of employment''
under WARN Act regulations. Both definitions provide that: (1) A
worksite can be a single building or a group of buildings in one campus
or office park, but that separate buildings that are not in close
proximity are generally separate worksites; and (2) for workers who do
not have a fixed worksite, their worksite is the site to which they are
assigned as their home base, from which their work is assigned, or to
which they report. See 20 CFR 639.3(i). These similarities support the
Department's conclusion that the definition of ``worksite'' in the
Guidance is appropriate.
With regard to construction workers specifically, the Department
anticipates that construction workers who regularly work at multiple
sites will in most cases fall into the latter category described above;
namely, their worksite will be the site to which they are assigned as
their home base, from which their work is assigned, or to which they
report. The FMLA's implementing regulations, which adopt a similar
definition of worksite, provide helpful examples for determining the
number of workers at construction worksites. See 29 CFR 825.111(a)(2).
The Department agrees with the commenters who suggested that a
violation should be serious if it affects at least 25 percent of a
contractor's overall workforce (provided that it affects at least 10
workers). The final Guidance has been modified accordingly. In
practice, in the vast majority of cases (if not all cases) in which a
violation affects at least 25 percent of a contractor's overall
workforce, it will also affect at least 25 percent of the contractor's
workforce at a particular worksite; however, this criterion has been
added to ensure coverage of violations that are not specific to a
particular worksite.
ii. Fines, Penalties, and Back Wages (Formerly ``Fines, Penalties, Back
Wages, and Injunctive Relief'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that a violation would be serious if
fines and penalties of at least $5,000 were assessed, back wages of at
least $10,000 were due, or injunctive relief was imposed by an
enforcement agency or a court.
Threshold Amounts
Numerous commenters addressed the proposed $5,000 and $10,000
thresholds. These commenters were divided as to whether the thresholds
were too high or too low. Industry commenters advocated raising these
amounts. In particular, they argued that the $10,000 back-wage
threshold is overbroad and would encompass too many violations. A few
of these commenters addressed the fine-and-penalty thresholds and urged
the Department to base them on the amount collected rather than
assessed. One commenter suggested that the back wage threshold should
be tied to the size of the contractor. Another organization argued that
such a standard is overbroad
[[Page 58677]]
as it applies to violations of anti-discrimination Labor Laws. This
commenter asserted that the monetary thresholds under this criterion
would disproportionately classify discrimination violations as serious
when compared, for instance, to wage-and-hour violations. Another
commenter similarly asserted that most actions under Title VII, the
ADA, the ADEA, and the NLRA seeking backpay would trigger a finding of
a serious violation using a $10,000 threshold.
In contrast, many employee-advocacy and union commenters asserted
that the $10,000 back-wage threshold is too high and would not capture
violations affecting low-wage workers. Several requested clarification
regarding whether the back-wage threshold could be satisfied by adding
together the back wages due to multiple employees in the same matter.
Three of these commenters proposed, as an alternative or additional
metric, that a violation be characterized as serious when the amount of
back wages due is equal to ten percent or more of wages paid the worker
annually. Some commenters also suggested that the Department define a
violation as serious any time that fees are awarded or penalties are
assessed for wage-and-hour violations.
After carefully reviewing all of these comments, the Department
retains the $5,000 and $10,000 thresholds in the final Guidance. The
Order explicitly instructs the Department to take into account ``the
amount of damages incurred or fines or penalties assessed with regard
to the violation.'' Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(1).
While violations of some Labor Laws may satisfy the monetary
thresholds more often than others, the Department concludes that
creating statute-specific thresholds would not further the goals of the
Order. First, even if discrimination violations are more likely than
wage-and-hour law violations to result in back-wage awards of greater
than $10,000, in both cases an employer has wrongfully denied
employee(s) $10,000 in wages.\58\ In terms of the economic impact on
the workforce, $10,000 in lost wages due to discrimination is just as
serious as $10,000 in lost wages due to a wage-and-hour violation. A
sum of $10,000 is over 18 percent of the median household income in the
United States, and over 31 percent of the median nonfamily household
income.\59\
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\58\ The Department has removed one paragraph from the Guidance
relating to statistics on the WHD administrative merits
determinations that would meet the $10,000 and $5,000 thresholds.
This modification is intended to eliminate extraneous information
from the final Guidance and does not indicate any substantive change
in its application.
\59\ See U.S. Census Bureau, ``Income, Poverty and Health
Insurance Coverage in the U.S.: 2015,'' https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2015/cb15-157.html (Sept. 16, 2015).
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Second, as described above, classifying violations as serious,
repeated, willful, and pervasive aims to screen out Labor Law
violations that are less significant for purposes of the Order and to
focus on those violations that are more likely to implicate a
contractor's integrity and business ethics. After this initial
screening, an ALCA then weighs these violations in light of the
totality of the circumstances and any mitigating factors that are
present. Thus, while a single civil judgment awarding $15,000 in back
wages to an employee in a Title VII lawsuit will be classified as
serious under the Order, an ALCA generally should not make a negative
assessment of the contractor's record of Labor Law compliance based on
this violation standing alone.
It is also noteworthy that, as discussed below, many violations of
the Labor Laws will not implicate these thresholds at all because back
wages and penalties have not, or cannot, be assessed. For example,
reasonable cause determinations by the EEOC cannot implicate these
thresholds because they do not specify an amount of back wages.
Similarly, as discussed below, the $5,000 threshold for fines and
penalties (as opposed to back wages) will only be implicated in
administrative enforcement matters where fines and penalties are
assessed, and not private litigation or arbitration where they are not.
The Department also declines to lower the amounts of the monetary
thresholds under this criterion because it believes the amounts are
appropriate. Some unions and employee advocates appeared to construe
the Proposed Guidance as suggesting that the $10,000 back-wage
threshold applied only on a per-employee basis. The Department
clarifies in the final Guidance that the thresholds are cumulative;
i.e., they can be satisfied by summing the fines and penalties assessed
for all workers affected by the violation or by summing the back wages
due to all affected employees.
Similarly, the Department rejects the proposal to classify as
serious all wage-and-hour violations involving fees or penalties. The
Order instructs the Department to take into account ``the amount'' of
fines or penalties assessed in defining serious violations. Order,
section 4(b)(i)(B(1). Thus, the Order contemplates that the Department
will establish a threshold for fines or penalties assessed for the
purposes of determining whether a violation is serious.
The Department also does not adopt the proposal to use an
alternative criterion for serious violations based on the ratio of back
wages due compared with the affected workers' annual pay. While this
could be an informative metric, this information will generally not be
readily ascertainable from Labor Law decisions. To facilitate efficient
and consistent enforcement of the Order, the Department seeks to ensure
that ALCAs rely only on information that can be easily obtained by
reviewing Labor Law decisions.
However, in response to these and other comments, the Department
has modified the guidance on monetary thresholds in several respects.
First, the Proposed Guidance stated that the threshold amounts are
measured by the amount the enforcement agency ``assessed.'' Many
employer groups argued that this threshold should instead take into
consideration any later reduction in the assessed amount--either where
the enforcement agency unilaterally reduces this amount or where it is
reduced during settlement negotiations. These commenters asserted that
enforcement agencies may initially assess a very high amount or the
statutory maximum as a negotiating tactic with little regard for the
seriousness of the violation. One commenter further argued that the
meaning of ``assessed'' is ambiguous given that some enforcement
agencies, such as the NLRB, typically do not quantify or otherwise
assess monetary amounts in a complaint.
The Department agrees with industry commenters on this point and
has modified the Guidance accordingly. The final Guidance states that
the thresholds are measured by the amount ``due.'' This means that if
an enforcement agency consents to accept a reduced amount of either
back wages or penalties for a violation, it is that lesser amount that
will be used to determine seriousness. As stated in the Proposed
Guidance, a reduced settlement amount may be based on factors other
than the seriousness of a violation. In other circumstances, however,
the reduction may reflect the enforcement agency's judgment that a
lower assessment more appropriately reflects the seriousness of a
particular violation. The Department believes that reliance on the
final agreed-upon amount will avoid confusion because this amount will
likely be the one memorialized in the parties' records. Similarly, if
the amount initially assessed by an enforcement
[[Page 58678]]
agency is later reduced by an adjudicative body--for example, if the
Department files a civil complaint in an FLSA case seeking $15,000 in
back wages but a court awards only $8,000--it is the reduced amount
that is relevant for evaluating seriousness.
Reliance on a lesser amount will not apply if an employer files for
bankruptcy and cannot pay the full amount, or simply refuses to pay
such that the full penalty is never collected. In such cases, the
original assessed amount is the amount due, and therefore should be
used when evaluating seriousness.
The Department has also modified the definition of ``fines and
penalties'' that will implicate the $5,000 threshold. Specifically,
this definition now includes only monetary penalties imposed by an
administrative agency and does not include liquidated damages under the
ADEA or punitive damages under other statutes. This change has been
made both in response to concerns about the scope of the $5,000
threshold and to simplify administration of the Order. As noted in
Guidance, however, liquidated damages under the FLSA are included in
the calculation of back wages because they are compensatory in nature.
For clarity, the Department has also added a paragraph to the
Guidance explaining that if an enforcement agency issues an
administrative merits determination that does not include an amount of
back wages due or fines or penalties assessed--for example, if the
Department files a complaint seeking back wages but does not specify
the amount--then the violation cannot be classified as serious using
this criterion until the amount has been determined.
Finally, one commenter recommended clarifying the Guidance to
address any mitigation of damages from an employee's interim
employment. The commenter argued that employees' earnings from
obtaining interim employment should not be factored into the amount of
total back wages for the purpose of the $10,000 threshold. The
Department declines to modify the Guidance on this point. ALCAs will
use the amount of back wages due set forth in the Labor Law decision,
whether or not that amount reflects an adjustment for mitigation. To
facilitate efficient and consistent enforcement of the Order, the
Department seeks to ensure that ALCAs rely only on information that is
readily ascertainable from Labor Law decisions.
Injunctive Relief
The Proposed Guidance stated that a violation would be classified
as serious if injunctive relief ``was imposed by an enforcement agency,
a court, or an arbitrator or arbitral panel.'' 80 FR at 30584.
In response to the proposal, some industry groups commented that
the imposition of injunctive relief alone should not justify
classifying a violation as serious. In their view, injunctive relief is
often imposed regardless of the nature or severity of the violation,
and as a result, they expressed concern that this criterion would
capture minor or technical violations. For example, these commenters
noted that the NLRB always or almost always imposes injunctive relief,
including requiring the employer to post a notice that it has been
found in violation of the NLRA. These commenters suggested that this
criterion should be eliminated or modified to include additional
criteria justifying the conclusion that the violation was serious. In
contrast, commenters representing workers agreed with the Proposed
Guidance that the imposition of injunctive relief warrants
characterizing the violation as serious, given that such relief is
rarely imposed by courts.
After the consideration of the above comments, the Department has
removed injunctive relief from the list of criteria used to classify
violations as serious in the final Guidance. The Department agrees that
including all injunctions entered by courts, arbitrators, and
enforcement agencies as serious may include violations that do not
necessarily bear on a contractor's integrity and business ethics.
However, the Department believes that the imposition of injunctive
relief by courts could be relevant to the ALCA's ultimate assessment of
a contractor's record of Labor Law compliance. Courts issue injunctions
only in rare circumstances.\60\ A preliminary injunction--an injunction
entered before a final judgment--is an ``extraordinary remedy.'' Winter
v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 555 U.S. 7, 22, 24 (2008). Specifically,
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\60\ For example, as an article cited by one commenter noted,
studies have found that courts issue injunctions in less than 3
percent of Federal employment discrimination cases. See Mark D.
Gough, ``The High Costs of an Inexpensive Forum: An Empirical
Analysis of Employment Discrimination Claims Heard in Arbitration
and Civil Litigation,'' 35 Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 91, 105 n.62
(2015).
[a] plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must establish that
he is likely to succeed on the merits, that he is likely to suffer
irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, that the
balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in
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the public interest.
Id. at 20. Thus, in cases involving the enforcement of the Labor
Laws, preliminary injunctions will be issued only when a court has
concluded that the employer has likely violated one of the Labor Laws
and that such conduct threatens to irreparably harm workers and the
public interest. A permanent injunction--one issued at the end of
litigation--requires essentially the same showing, except that the
plaintiff must show actual success on the merits rather than a
likelihood of success. See Amoco Prod. Co. v. Vill. of Gambell, AK, 480
U.S. 531, 546 n.12 (1987).
Because both preliminary and permanent injunctions imposed by
courts are rare and require a showing of compelling circumstances,
including irreparable harm to workers and a threat to the public
interest, the Department believes that if a contractor has already been
found to have committed serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
violations, ALCAs should examine whether any of those violations
resulted in the imposition of injunctive relief by a court. The
Department has therefore moved the discussion of injunctive relief into
the ``weighing'' section of the Guidance: ``Factors that weigh against
a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.'' See Guidance, section
III(B)(2). Thus, the imposition of injunctive relief alone will not
result in a violation being classified as serious. However, if a
violation has already been classified as serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive, the imposition of injunctive relief for such a
violation will weigh against a finding that the contractor is
responsible.
iii. Any Violations That Cause or Contribute to Death or Serious Injury
(Formerly ``MSPA or Child Labor Violations That Cause or Contribute to
Death or Serious Injury'')
Under the Proposed Guidance, any violation of MSPA or the FLSA
child labor provisions that causes or contributes to the death or
serious injury of one or more workers is a serious violation.
Several employee advocacy organizations suggested that a violation
of any Labor Law, not just MSPA or the FLSA, should be serious when the
violation causes or contributes to the death or serious injury of a
worker. Many also requested that physical assault--whether or not it
results in death or a serious injury--be considered a serious
violation. They argued that any physical assault was inherently severe
and so should be deemed serious. Similarly, some commenters suggested
that any violation involving sexual
[[Page 58679]]
harassment should be deemed a serious violation.
The Department adopts the first of these proposals but not the
latter two. The Proposed Guidance limited this criterion to MSPA and
the FLSA child-labor provisions because, other than the OSH Act and
State Plans, violations of MSPA's health-and-safety provisions and the
FLSA's child-labor provisions are most likely to have the potential to
result in death or serious injury.\61\ However, in the less likely
event that a violation of one of the remaining Labor Laws causes or
contributes to death or serious injury, the Department agrees that the
violation would be serious. The Department therefore adopts this change
in the final Guidance. As a related matter, the final Guidance also
modifies the definition of ``serious injury'' for purposes of this
criterion; rather than incorporating by reference the meaning of
``serious injury'' from the FLSA's child labor provisions, the Guidance
explicitly defines ``serious injury'' as an injury that requires the
care of a medical professional beyond first-aid treatment or results in
more than five days of missed work.
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\61\ The Proposed Guidance did not reference the OSH Act or
OHSA-approved State Plans here because any violation of the OSH Act
or OSHA-approved State Plans involving a risk of death or serious
injury will be enforced with a citation designated as serious and
thus will already be a serious violation under the Order. This
criterion is intended to capture violations of other Labor Laws that
result in death or serious injury.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department does not adopt the suggestions regarding physical
assault or sexual harassment. While the Department agrees that many
violations involving physical assault or sexual harassment are serious,
the Department declines to broaden this criterion because these terms
can also include more minor workplace altercations or interactions.
iv. Employment of Minors Who Are Too Young To Be Legally Employed or in
Violation of a Hazardous Occupations Order
The Department did not receive comments directly addressing this
criterion. The Department retains the Guidance as proposed.
v. Notices of Failure To Abate and Imminent Danger Notices
The Proposed Guidance stated that a violation is serious under the
Order if it involves a notice of failure to abate an OSH Act violation
or an imminent danger notice under the OSH Act or an OSHA-approved
State Plan. The Department did not receive comments specifically
addressing these criteria, with the exception of the comments described
above requesting that the Department clarify that non-citation OSHA
violations such as these are serious under the Order despite not having
being designated as ``serious'' by the relevant enforcement agency.
As noted above, the Department has clarified this matter in the
final Guidance by dividing OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plan
violations into two categories: Citation OSHA violations, which are
serious if, and only if, they were designated as such by the relevant
enforcement agency; and Non-Citation OSHA Violations, which are serious
if they meet other criteria listed in the Guidance. Because notices of
failure to abate and imminent danger notices fall into the second
category, the final Guidance lists them separately from citation OSHA
violations. The final Guidance also clarifies that notices of failure
to abate State Plan violations (as well as any State equivalents of
notices of failure to abate or imminent danger notices) are serious
violations because failing to correct a hazard after receiving formal
notification of the need to do so represents a serious disregard for
the law.
vi. Retaliation (Formerly ``Adverse Employment Actions or Unlawful
Harassment for Exercising Rights Under Labor Laws'')
The Proposed Guidance classified violations involving ``adverse
employment actions or unlawful harassment for exercising rights under
Labor Laws,'' i.e., retaliation, as serious. The Department defined
``adverse employment actions'' to include discharge, refusal to hire,
suspension, demotion, or threats.
A number of commenters expressed general support for the inclusion
of retaliation within the definition of a serious violation. Some
supportive commenters were concerned, however, that the Department had
limited ``adverse employment action'' to only the five types of adverse
action explicitly listed in the Proposed Guidance. These commenters
urged the Department to adopt instead the Supreme Court's definition of
adverse employment action in Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway
Company v. White, 548 U.S. 53 (2006). Under Burlington Northern, to
prove retaliation under Title VII, a plaintiff ``must show that a
reasonable employee would have found the challenged action materially
adverse, which in this context means it well might have dissuaded a
reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of
discrimination.'' Id. at 68 (internal citations and quotation marks
omitted). While this definition does not include ``petty slights, minor
annoyances, and simple lack of good manners,'' it does include
constructive discharges; transfers to undesirable shifts, locations, or
positions; or changes in other terms and conditions of employment, see
id., none of which were specifically listed in the Proposed Guidance.
The Department finds the comments regarding Burlington Northern
persuasive. In particular, it agrees with the AARP comment that
``[r]etaliation that could deter a reasonable worker from exercising a
protected right [under the Labor Laws] is per se serious.'' The
Department concludes that Burlington Northern provides a useful
standard for what constitutes an adverse action sufficient to support a
finding of retaliation, and modifies the Guidance to adopt it. The
Department further notes that the list of examples of adverse actions
in the Guidance is not meant to be exclusive.
In contrast to the generally supportive comments about this
criterion from employee-advocacy groups, several employer groups
opposed the classification of violations involving retaliation as
serious. These industry commenters argued that many allegations of
discrimination include accusations of retaliation as a matter of
course, and that many large employers will have one or more such
allegations pending at any given time.
The Department retains retaliation as a classification criterion
for serious violations. As noted in the Proposed Guidance, retaliation
is serious because it dissuades workers from reporting violations and
therefore may mask other serious conduct by employers. In response to
concerns that retaliation allegations may be included in discrimination
complaints as a matter of course, the Department reiterates that a
private complaint is not disclosable as a Labor Law decision under the
Order unless and until it leads to an administrative merits
determination, a civil judgment, and or an arbitral award or decision.
A complaint alone must be disclosed only if it has been filed by an
enforcement agency following an investigation, and therefore
constitutes an administrative merits determination. In sum, the
Department believes that retaliation is serious, and the final Guidance
retains this criterion.
While retaining the criterion, the Department modifies it for
clarity. Two industry commenters suggested that the language in the
Proposed Guidance could have allowed a finding that an ``adverse
employment action'' alone is a serious violation under the Order--
regardless of whether it was taken in
[[Page 58680]]
retaliation for protected activity. That was not the Department's
intent. Rather, an adverse employment action only becomes relevant to
this criterion when it is taken in retaliation for a worker exercising
a right protected by any of the Labor Laws. To clarify the Guidance,
the Department has changed the title of this criterion to
``retaliation'' and has adjusted the wording of the description
accordingly.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ Similarly, the Business Roundtable commented on one of the
Proposed Guidance's examples of retaliatory behavior that referenced
an employee who is disciplined for making a complaint about
potential violations of Labor Laws. The Business Roundtable
expressed concern that any employee complaint could be deemed a
serious violation. However, the Proposed Guidance did not suggest
that the employee's complaint itself could be considered a serious
violation; rather, the relevant serious violation would be where an
administrative merits determination, civil judgment, or arbitral
award or decision finds that the employer retaliated against the
employee for making the complaint.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed concern about the NLRA example of a serious
violation in Appendix A, which describes a contractor that fired the
employee who was the lead union adherent during the union's organizing
campaign. The commenter noted that such behavior would only be unlawful
if the discharge was in retaliation for the employee's protected
activity. The Department agrees with the commenter and modifies the
example in the Appendix A of the final Guidance to clarify this point.
vii. Pattern or Practice of Discrimination or Systemic Discrimination
The Proposed Guidance stated that violations involving a ``pattern
or practice of discrimination or systemic discrimination'' are serious.
Specifically, the Proposed Guidance defined a pattern or practice of
discrimination as involving ``intentional discrimination against a
protected group of employees, rather than discrimination that occurs in
an isolated fashion.'' 80 FR 30585. Systemic discrimination involves
``a pattern or practice, policy, or class case where the discrimination
has a broad impact on an industry, profession, company or geographic
area.'' Id. Systemic discrimination also includes ``policies and
practices that are seemingly neutral but may cause a disparate impact
on protected groups.'' Id.
Several employee-advocacy commenters argued that the Guidance
should explicitly state that systemic discrimination is not limited to
class actions or government agency enforcement, so that individual or
multi-plaintiff lawsuits challenging a widely-applicable practice or
rule should fall within the definition of serious. Because the
definition in the Proposed Guidance singled out ``class cases,'' these
commenters believed that one could infer that the Guidance excludes
individual or multi-plaintiff non-class action cases in which the Labor
Law decision includes a finding that systemic discrimination occurred.
The Department agrees that systemic discrimination is not limited to
litigation brought in a class action, and has clarified this point in
the final Guidance.
Several of these commenters also advocated that this criterion for
serious violations should not be limited to ``systemic
discrimination,'' but instead should include all ``systemic labor law''
violations. Commenters cited the misclassification of employees as
independent contractors and the failure to provide adequate safety
equipment to an entire workforce as systemic violations involving
company-wide policies that should be deemed serious.
The Department declines to expand the definition of systemic
discrimination. The term ``systemic discrimination'' has a well-
established meaning under anti-discrimination laws, and the Department
intended to restrict this criterion to such violations. Moreover, the
Department expects that many widespread violations unrelated to
discrimination will likely be classified as serious under other
criteria in the Guidance.
Finally, one industry commenter criticized the systemic
discrimination criterion, asserting that it was too broad because
virtually all of OFCCP's discrimination allegations are ``pattern or
practice'' or systemic allegations. The Department disagrees. While
OFCCP does focus on this category of discrimination, only a small
fraction of OFCCP's show-cause notices include a finding that systemic
discrimination has occurred. Additionally, as noted earlier, OFCCP
issues fewer than 200 show-cause notices per year; thus, the overall
number of OFCCP cases implicated by this criterion is not large. In the
Department's view, systemic or pattern-or-practice discrimination
remains an appropriate criterion for determining whether a violation is
serious.
While the Department has not made any substantive changes to the
definitions for this criterion, the Department has added a list of the
Labor Laws to which this criterion will generally apply, as well as a
reference to a leading Supreme Court case defining ``pattern or
practice,'' International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. United States,
431 U.S. 324, 336 (1977).
viii. Interference With Investigations
The Proposed Guidance stated that a Labor Law violation is serious
if the Labor Law decision's findings support a conclusion that the
contractor interfered with an enforcement agency's investigation. The
Proposed Guidance also listed several examples of interference.
Several industry commenters voiced concern about this category.
Specifically, these commenters argued that this category could penalize
contractors for raising good-faith challenges to the scope of an
agency's investigation. For example, commenters stated that a
contractor may refuse to provide documents to an agency because it
takes the position that the agency's request is overbroad. Some of
these commenters argued that the contractor has a right to challenge
the scope of a subpoena, document request, or request for information,
and that the assertion of such rights should not be construed as
interference--regardless of whether a court ultimately decides in favor
of the contractor. One commenter suggested that such disputes should be
distinguished from more serious obstruction such as threatening workers
who speak to enforcement agency investigators, falsifying or destroying
records, or making misrepresentations to investigators.
After careful consideration of the comments received, the
Department is retaining this criterion for serious violations in the
final Guidance but is limiting its scope. The Department views
interference with investigations as serious because such behavior
severely hinders enforcement agencies' ability to conduct
investigations and correct violations of law. The Department also
recognizes, however, that employers may have good-faith disputes with
agencies about the scope or propriety of a request for documents or
access to the worksite.
Accordingly, the Department has narrowed the ``interference''
criterion such that interference is defined to include only the
following circumstances:
(1) A civil judgment was issued holding the contractor in contempt
for failing to provide information or physical access to an enforcement
agency in the course of an investigation; or
(2) It is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that
the contractor--
(a) Falsified, knowingly made a false statement in, or destroyed
records to frustrate an investigation under the Labor Laws;
[[Page 58681]]
(b) Knowingly made false representations to an investigator; or
(c) Took or threatened to take adverse actions against workers (for
example, termination, reduction in salary or benefits, or referral to
immigration or criminal authorities) for cooperating with or speaking
to government investigators or for otherwise complying with an agency's
investigation (for example, threatening workers if they do not return
back wages received as the result of an investigation).
This revision aims to capture two primary categories, both of which
the Department considers serious: First, instances in which a court not
only concludes that the employer unlawfully withheld documents or
access from an agency, but holds the employer in contempt for doing so;
and second, instances in which an employer takes affirmative steps to
frustrate an investigation.
ix. Material Breaches and Violations of Settlements, Labor Compliance
Agreements, or Orders (Formerly ``Material Breaches and Violations of
Settlements, Agreements, or Orders'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that a violation is serious if it
involves a breach of the material terms of any agreement or settlement,
or a violation of a court or administrative order or arbitral award.
One commenter expressed concern regarding this criterion, stating that
the Guidance did not clearly explain how to determine that a settlement
agreement had been materially breached.
The Department retains this criterion for serious violations in the
Guidance, with a clarification. The concept of material breach is well-
established in law. See, e.g., Frank Felix Associates, Ltd. v. Austin
Drugs, Inc., 111 F.3d 284, 289 (2d Cir. 1997) (stating that a material
breach, under New York law, is one that ``go[es] to the root of the
agreement between the parties''). The Department believes that in most
cases, the existence of a material breach will be clear. For example,
if an employer agrees in a settlement to classify certain types of
workers as employees, but continues to classify them as independent
contractors, this will constitute a material breach. The intent of this
provision is not to capture technical or questionable breaches; rather,
it is to capture those cases in which an employer agrees, as part of a
settlement, to take certain steps to remedy Labor Law violations but
then fails to do so. The Department also clarifies the relevant
``agreements'' whose material breach will constitute a serious
violation. The term ``agreements'' includes settlements and labor
compliance agreements.
c. Table of Examples
The Department has updated the table of examples to reflect the
changes in the final Guidance.
d. Other Comments on Serious Violations
The National Women's Law Center suggested that the Guidance should
include a separate subcategory of serious violations that captures
``the scope and severity of harm caused by a violation,'' such as
violations that implicate more than one right under the Labor Laws,
severe monetary losses, or other types of severe losses.
The Department agrees that the Guidance should capture the scope
and severity of harm caused by a violation, but does not believe it is
necessary to create an additional criterion or separate subcategory of
serious violations. The existing criteria for serious violations
generally seek to capture the scope and severity of harm, by focusing
on, for example, the degree of monetary harm, the number of affected
workers, and the extent to which a violation risked or caused death or
serious injury. In addition, scope and severity of harm are taken into
consideration during the process by which ALCAs weigh a contractor's
overall record of Labor Law compliance. As discussed below, in
analyzing a contractor's record during the weighing process, an ALCA
does not need to give equal weight to two violations that receive the
same classification. Some violations may have more significant
consequences on a contractor's workforce than others, and therefore
will be given more weight during the determination of whether a
contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. See
Guidance, section III (B).
Several industry commenters expressed concern that a contractor
could be found to have committed a serious violation based on a novel
legal theory asserted by an agency or upheld for the first time by a
court. These commenters cited, for example, recent NLRB complaints
challenging employee handbooks and corporate social media policies and
EEOC reasonable cause determinations challenging employer background
check policies.
The Department declines to adopt a per se rule under which
violations based on a novel legal theory would not be deemed serious.
Many cases call for the application of established legal rules to new
circumstances, and the fact that no identical violation has been
previously prosecuted is not relevant to the measure of the violation's
effect on the contractor's workers. If a contractor believes that a
violation should carry less weight because it was based on a novel
legal theory, the contractor should make such arguments when submitting
mitigating information about the violation. The Guidance provides that
a recent legal or regulatory change may be a factor weighing in favor
of a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. This may be the case
where ``prior agency or court decisions suggested that a practice was
lawful, but the Labor Law decision finds otherwise.'' Guidance, section
III (B)(1)(e).
One labor union commenter urged that an NLRA ``hallmark violation''
should be treated as a serious violation, and that more than one
hallmark violation should be considered pervasive. Hallmark violations
include certain violations that are particularly coercive, including
``threats of plant closure or loss of employment, discharge or other
serious adverse action against union adherents, and grants of
significant benefits to employees.'' Regency Manor Nursing Home, 275
NLRB 1261, 1262 (N.L.R.B. 1985).
The Department declines to modify the definitions of serious and
pervasive violations to include a new criterion of NLRA hallmark
violations. Unlike, for example, OSHA, which clearly designates
citations as ``serious'' on the face of the citation, the General
Counsel of the NLRB does not characterize violations as ``hallmark'' in
a complaint. Thus, the ALCA would have to make a determination
regarding whether a violation is a hallmark one, and the Department
does not envision ALCAs having such a role. Nevertheless, the
Department notes that many hallmark violations would likely be
considered serious under one of the existing criteria, such as the
criteria on retaliation and violations that affect at least 10 workers
comprising 25 percent of a contractor's workforce.
Similarly, another labor union commenter suggested that the
Guidance add a criterion addressing corporate policies that
significantly chill employees' rights to speak out, organize, or file
complaints. The commenter specifically suggested that multiple policies
aimed at silencing workers should be considered serious. The Department
declines to adopt this suggestion. When a contractor is found to have
maintained such an unlawful, corporate policy governing employee
conduct, such a policy will likely affect at least 25 percent of the
employer's workforce and will be classified as
[[Page 58682]]
serious on that basis. As noted above, the criterion setting out the 25
percent threshold is meant to capture violations to the extent that
they affect a sufficient number of employees. Accordingly, the
Department believes that an additional category of serious violations
that captures only certain types of corporate policies is unnecessary.
2. Repeated Violations
The Order provides that the standard for repeated violations should
``incorporate existing statutory standards'' to the extent such
standards exist. Order, section 4(b)(i)(A). The Order further provides
that, where no statutory standards exist, the standards for repeated
should take into account ``whether the entity has had one or more
additional violations of the same or a substantially similar
requirement in the past 3 years.'' Id. section 4(b)(i)(B)(2). None of
the Labor Laws contains an explicit statutory definition of the term
``repeated.'' Accordingly, the Proposed Guidance defined ``repeated''
violations using the ``substantially similar'' language suggested by
the Order. See 80 FR 30587.
The final Guidance generally maintains the Proposed Guidance's
definition of ``repeated'' violations, with some modifications. First,
where the Proposed Guidance included a general definition followed by a
list of examples, the final Guidance instead sets forth a statute-
specific, exhaustive list of repeated violations. This list closely
parallels the examples that were presented in the Proposed Guidance,
with the exception of some changes explained below.
The Department has made several nonsubstantive changes to the
definition for clarity. The Guidance now uniformly refers to the
initial violations that form the basis for a repeated violation as
``prior'' violations, instead of ``predicate'' violations. Where
discussing the relationship between the prior violation and the
repeated violation itself, the Guidance refers to the latter as the
``subsequent violation.'' The Guidance also now refers to the relevant
3-year period for determining if a violation is repeated as the ``3-
year look-back period.'' The Department also has changed the order of
and retitled some of the subsections within the definition, and has
created a separate sub-heading for ``citation OSHA violations.''
Finally, the Department has made a few additional changes to the
definition in response to comments, as discussed below.
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The Proposed Guidance stated that ``[f]or violations of the OSH
Act, violations are repeated if they involve the same or a
substantially similar hazard.'' 80 FR 30574, 30588.
Employee-advocacy commenters as well as an industry commenter
submitted comments on this criterion. These commenters stated that this
definition seemed to classify some violations as repeated for the
purposes of the Order that would not be considered ``repeat'' under the
OSH Act. The reason is that the enforcement scheme of the OSH Act
includes both OSHA and the OSHA-approved State Plans. Under that
scheme, violations of State Plans are not considered by Federal OSHA
when classifying a Federal violation as ``repeat.'' Similarly, State
Plan agencies typically do not cite an employer for a repeat violation
if the prior violation occurred outside the State's jurisdiction.
The employee advocates supported application of the ``substantially
similar'' standard as proposed in the Guidance, regardless of the
variance from the OSH Act. The industry commenter argued that ALCAs and
contracting officers would not have the expertise to determine that two
violations were substantially similar if the relevant enforcement
agency did not originally designate them as such.
After carefully considering all of the comments received, the
Department has decided to modify the Guidance criterion for repeated
violations under the OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plans. It was not
the Department's intention to expand the scope of repeated violations
beyond those already deemed ``repeat'' under the OSH Act and OSHA State
Plans. Rather, the Department's reference in the Proposed Guidance to
violations that involve the same or a substantially similar hazard was
solely intended to incorporate the Federal OSH Act's standard for
repeated violations. See Potlatch Corp., 7 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 1061, 1063
(O.S.H.R.C. 1979). Therefore, the Guidance now states that an OSH Act
or OSHA-approved State Plan violation that was enforced through a
citation or equivalent State document (a ``citation OSHA violation'')
will only be ``repeated'' under the Order if OSHA or the relevant State
Plan agency originally designated the citation as repeated, repeat, or
any similar State designation.
While modifying the OSHA definition in this way, the Department
retains the 3-year timeframe limitation discussed in the Proposed
Guidance. In making ``repeated'' designations, OSHA's current policy is
to consider whether the employer has violated a substantially similar
requirement any time within the previous 5 years. The Order, however,
indicates that a 3-year look-back period is appropriate. Accordingly,
when a contractor discloses a decision involving an OSH Act
``repeated'' violation, the ALCA will need to review the decision to
determine whether the prior violation occurred in the previous 3 years.
This means that the prior violation must have become a final order of
the OSHRC or equivalent State agency within the previous 3 years. In
sum, only those citations that have been designated as repeated and
where the prior violation occurred in the 3 years preceding the second
citation should be classified as repeated under the Order.
The final Guidance also deletes a statement from the Proposed
Guidance that violations of MSPA and the OSH Act may be substantially
similar if they involve substantially similar hazards. Upon further
consideration, the Department believes that such an approach is not
easily administrable.
For non-citation OSHA violations, neither OSHA nor State Plan
agencies make ``repeated'' designations. Accordingly, the Guidance
clarifies that ALCAs will classify non-citation violations as repeated
using the same general criteria that apply to all other violations. See
Guidance, section III(A)(2)(b).
b. All Other Violations
Under the final Guidance, for all Labor Law violations other than
citation OSHA violations, a violation is ``repeated'' if it is
the same as or substantially similar to a prior violation of the
Labor Laws that was the subject of a separate investigation or
proceeding arising from a separate set of facts, and became
uncontested or adjudicated within the previous 3 years.
Guidance, section III(A)(2). Comments related to this definition
are discussed below.
i. Prior Violation Must Have Been Uncontested or Adjudicated (Formerly
``Type of Violations'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that the prior violation that forms
the basis for a repeated violation must be a civil judgment, arbitral
award or decision, or adjudicated or uncontested administrative merits
determination. Under the Proposed Guidance, this restriction did not
apply to the subsequent violation. In other words,
[[Page 58683]]
the violation classified as repeated did not itself need to be
adjudicated.
Several employer groups challenged this distinction. Most of these
commenters argued that the definition should require both the prior and
subsequent violations to have been adjudicated for the subsequent one
to be classified as repeated. One commenter asserted that limiting the
prior violation to adjudicated or uncontested administrative merits
determinations implicitly recognizes that unadjudicated determinations
are inherently suspect. Many of these comments echoed those made by
employer groups regarding the required disclosure of nonfinal
administrative merits determinations, in which these groups suggested
that only final agency decisions should have to be disclosed under the
Order.
In the final Guidance, the Department generally retains the
proposed framework, though with some modifications discussed below. The
purpose of classifying a violation as repeated is to identify those
employers who fail to modify their conduct after having committed a
previous substantially similar violation. Employers who have repeatedly
violated the law are more likely than other contractors to commit
future similar Labor Law violations during performance of a Federal
contract. Because an ALCA will give a repeated violation additional
scrutiny, it is appropriate to create more limited parameters for the
prior violation by requiring it to have been uncontested or
adjudicated. As the Guidance notes, this framework is intended to
ensure that violations will only be classified as repeated when the
contractor has had the opportunity--even if not exercised--to present
facts or arguments in its defense before an administrative adjudicative
authority concerning the prior violation.
Moreover, the Department chose to require the prior violation to be
uncontested or adjudicated because this formulation is similar to the
one used to designate repeated violations under the OSH Act. In
enforcing the OSH Act, OSHA requires a prior substantially similar
violation to have become a final order of the OSHRC before the
occurrence of the subsequent violation. The subsequent violation
itself, however, need not be a final order of the OSHRC. The Department
has chosen to model the definition of ``repeated'' under the Order
after the OSH Act practice.
While the Department declines to change basic underlying framework,
the final Guidance contains a few minor changes in response to the
comments received and for clarity.
First, for clarity, the final Guidance explains that any Labor Law
decision--not just administrative merits determinations--must be
uncontested or adjudicated to be a prior violation. Since civil
judgments and arbitral awards or decisions are inherently adjudicated
proceedings, this change is nonsubstantive; but it is made to emphasize
that the same basic standard applies to all Labor Law decisions.
Second, in response to concerns of employer commenters, the final
Guidance narrows the definitions of ``uncontested'' and
``adjudicated,'' as follows:
An ``uncontested'' violation is now defined as a violation that is
reflected in:
(1) A Labor Law decision that the employer has not contested or
challenged within the time limit provided in the Labor Law decision or
otherwise required by law; or
(2) A Labor Law decision following which the employer agrees to at
least some of the relief sought by the agency in its enforcement
action.
These changes are made to ensure that a violation will not be
considered uncontested unless it is resolved or any applicable time
period to contest it has expired. Under the Proposed Guidance's
definition, an administrative merits determination would have been
considered uncontested unless a timely appeal of the determination was
filed or pending. This definition, however, did not account for cases
in which a contractor may intend to dispute an agency's determination,
but the burden is on the agency to initiate litigation in order to
continue enforcement, such as in the case of EEOC reasonable cause
determinations or FLSA enforcement proceedings brought by WHD. Under
the revised definition, such violations will not be considered
uncontested.
An ``adjudicated'' violation is now defined as a violation that is
reflected in:
(1) A civil judgment,
(2) an arbitral award or decision, or
(3) an administrative merits determination that constitutes a final
agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority following a
proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present
evidence or arguments on its behalf.
The Guidance explains that ``administrative adjudicative
authority,'' as used in (3) above, means an administrative body
empowered to hear adversary proceedings, such as the ARB, the OSHRC, or
the NLRB. ALJs are also administrative adjudicative authorities;
however, their decisions will only constitute adjudicated violations if
they are adopted as final agency orders. The Guidance notes that this
typically will occur, for example, if the party subject to an adverse
decision by an ALJ does not file a timely appeal to the agency's
administrative appellate body, such as those referenced above. Thus, if
an administrative merits determination is subject to multiple levels of
appellate review, such as proceedings before the Department that go
before an ALJ and then the ARB, only a decision following the final
level of appellate review constitutes an adjudicated administrative
merits determination.
Finally, the Department also modifies the Guidance to clarify that
the prior violation must be uncontested or adjudicated before the date
of the Labor Law decision for the subsequent violation in order for the
subsequent violation to be classified as repeated. The Guidance
includes an example illustrating this point.
ii. 3-Year Look-Back Period (Formerly ``Timeframe'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that the prior violation for a
repeated violation must have occurred within the 3-year ``reporting
period.''
As an initial matter, the Department has recognized that this
characterization did not accurately describe the 3-year timeframe for
considering whether a violation is repeated. The 3-year ``reporting
period'' (which the Guidance now refers to as the ``3-year disclosure
period'') is relevant to the Order's basic requirement of which Labor
Law decisions a contractor must disclose at all--not to the
determination of whether a violation was repeated. This disclosure time
period extends back from the date of the contractor's offer. The
Department, however, interprets section 4(b)(i)(B)(2) of the Order,
which directs the Department to consider ``whether the entity has had
one or more additional violations of the same or a substantially
similar requirement in the past 3 years,'' to refer to a distinct look-
back period for identifying repeated violations--wherein the prior
violation must have occurred no earlier than 3 years prior to the date
of the subsequent violation (not the date of the offer). The Department
has included language clarifying this distinction in the Guidance.\63\
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\63\ Along the same lines, the Department notes that although,
as noted above, there will be a phase-in of the 3-year disclosure
period, there is no such phase-in for the 3-year look-back period
for classification of repeated violations. Thus, an ALCA may find
that violation was repeated based on the occurrence of a prior
violation even if the Labor Law decision related to the prior
violation was not disclosed by the contractor but was instead
identified by the ALCA using government enforcement databases.
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[[Page 58684]]
Some employee-advocacy groups argued that a 3-year look-back period
is too short. Two of these groups argued that the look-back period
should be expanded beyond 3 years, stating that because agency
investigations and related litigation often take months or even years,
it will be difficult to identify patterns of repeated violations within
only a 3-year window. These commenters suggested that in the preaward
phase, the contractor should be asked if it committed any similar
violations during the previous 5 years, and in the postaward phase, the
look-back period should be expanded to include all years in which the
contractor held contracts.
The Department declines to modify the Guidance in response to these
suggestions. The 3-year look-back period is explicitly set forth in the
Order and reflects the intention of the President that only violations
during this time period will be considered in determining whether
violations are repeated. See Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(2). A 5-year
period would be inconsistent with the Order.
In contrast, one industry commenter suggested that the 3-year look-
back period is too long, and would result in the consideration of a
contractor's conduct that may have occurred long before the beginning
of the look-back period. Even if the prior violation itself occurred
within the 3-year look-back period, argued the commenter, the
underlying conduct that led to that prior determination could have
taken place much earlier, especially if the prior violation has a long
litigation history.
As noted earlier in the discussion of disclosure requirements, the
Department recognizes that there will be Labor Law decisions that must
be disclosed under the Order where the underlying conduct occurred
outside the 3-year disclosure period. This is unavoidable in a system
under which violations need not be disclosed until there is an
administrative merits determination, civil judgment, or arbitral award
or decision. The same is true for the separate 3-year look-back period
for repeated violations.
However, the Department understands the commenter's concern that,
under the Proposed Guidance, a violation that is the subject of lengthy
litigation could create a later repeated violation that the Order
clearly did not intend to classify as such. For example, OFCCP could
issue a show cause notice to a contractor on January 1, 2017. The
contractor could contest the violation, resulting in an ALJ
determination on January 1, 2018, an ARB determination on January 1,
2019, a civil judgment by a district court on January 1, 2020, and a
civil judgment by a court of appeals on January 1, 2021. If the
contractor commits a substantially similar violation on December 31,
2023, it would be less than 3 years after the court of appeals
decision. But it would be 6 years after the initial OFCCP show cause
notice was rendered--far outside the 3-year look-back period. The
Department agrees that it would be contrary to the spirit of the Order
to use the 2021 date to determine whether the conduct in 2023 is
``repeated.''
To address this issue, the Department has modified the Guidance in
the following manner: The final Guidance explains that for a violation
to be classified as repeated, the prior violation must have become
uncontested or adjudicated (in other words, first become adjudicated)
no more than 3 years prior to the date of the repeated violation (that
is, the violation that is classified as repeated).
The final Guidance explains that the violation becomes uncontested
either on the date on which any time period to contest the violation
has expired, or on the date of the employer's agreement to at least
some of the relief sought by the agency in its enforcement action
(e.g., the date a settlement agreement is signed). A prior violation
becomes adjudicated on the date on which the violation first becomes an
adjudicated violation. This means that the violation becomes
adjudicated on the date when the violation first becomes a civil
judgment, arbitral award or decision, or a final agency order by an
administrative adjudicative authority following a proceeding in which
the contractor had an opportunity to present evidence or arguments on
its behalf.
Thus, for a violation that is the subject of successive
adjudications such as in the above example, the dates of subsequent
decisions after the first adjudication are not relevant. Accordingly,
in the above example--which is reproduced in the final Guidance--the
relevant date of the prior violation is January 1, 2019, the date of
the ARB order, because this is the date on which the violation becomes
a final agency order by the ARB, and therefore first becomes an
adjudicated violation. It could serve as a prior violation only for a
substantially similar violation decision that is issued after January
1, 2019 and prior to January 1, 2022.\64\ The dates of the subsequent
Federal court decisions are not relevant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ This modification of the guidance on repeated violations
does not, however, affect the contractor's disclosure requirements.
The disclosure requirements for violations that involve successive
Labor Law decisions are discussed in section II(B)(4) of the
Guidance and the preamble section-by-section analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Separate Investigations or Proceedings
The Proposed Guidance also stated that ``[t]he prior violation(s)
must be the subject of one or more separate investigations or
proceedings.'' 80 FR 30587. One industry commenter expressed concern
that this requirement could be applied inconsistently in cases where
multiple agencies (e.g., OSHA and WHD) investigate an employer. The
commenter suggested that if both agencies conduct a joint
investigation, then no violations would be repeated, but if the
agencies conduct separate investigations, some of the violations could
be repeated.
The Department agrees that the language in the Proposed Guidance
was ambiguous and modifies the Guidance to address this issue. The
final Guidance clarifies that for violation to be classified as
repeated, it must be based upon a separate set of facts from those
underlying the prior violation. Although the Department does not
foresee a scenario along the lines of the one envisioned by the
commenter (in part because violations investigated by different
agencies are less likely to be substantially similar), the new language
clarifies that this scenario would not give rise to a repeated
violation.
iv. Violation Committed by the Contractor (Formerly ``Company-Wide
Consideration'')
Under the Proposed Guidance, the determination of a repeated
violation takes a company-wide approach; that is, a prior violation by
any establishment of a multi-establishment company can render
subsequent violations repeated, provided the other relevant criteria
are satisfied. Several labor unions and employee-advocacy groups
expressed strong support for this approach. One employer association
expressed opposition to this approach, arguing that large companies
often have disparate components that are managed independently.
Finally, three commenters suggested that the Department clarify the
scope of ``company-wide'' and ``establishment.''
The Department retains this provision in the Guidance and clarifies
that ``company-wide'' includes any
[[Page 58685]]
violations committed by the same legal entity. By using the term
``establishment'' in the phrase ``multi-establishment company,'' the
Guidance simply means a physical location where the contractor
operates, such as an office, factory, or construction worksite. Thus,
for the purposes of determining whether a violation is repeated, prior
violations that occurred at different physical locations will be
considered as long as they were committed by the same legal entity.
This approach is consistent with the Order, which uses the term
``entity'' in its requirement that the Department's definition to take
into account ``whether the entity has had one or more additional
violations of the same or a substantially similar requirement in the
past 3 years.'' Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(2). This is also consistent
with the manner in which the Federal agencies administering the two
statutory regimes that currently assess ``repeated'' violations--the
FLSA and the OSH Act--evaluate repeated violations. In short, this
principle simply affirms that all violations by a contractor will be
considered in assessing whether the contractor committed repeated
violations.
v. Substantially Similar Violations
The Proposed Guidance provided a definition for how to determine
whether violations are ``substantially similar'' for the purposes of
classifying a later violation as ``repeated.'' The Proposed Guidance
included a general principle and illustrative examples. It stated that
substantially similar does not mean ``exactly the same''; rather, two
things may be substantially similar where they share ``essential
elements in common.'' 80 FR 30574, 30587 (internal citation omitted).
It further noted that ``[w]hether a violation is `substantially
similar' to a past violation turns on the nature of the violation and
underlying obligation itself.'' Id. The Proposed Guidance then provided
examples of how this general principle applies in the context of the
various Labor Laws. The Department specifically sought comment
regarding this definition.
General Comments
Several labor unions and other employee advocacy groups expressed
general support for the way that the Proposed Guidance addressed
substantially similar violations. In contrast, employer groups and
advocates argued that the Department's proposed guidance on these
violations was too broad or too vague, particularly in the context of
those Labor Laws that concern equal employment opportunity and
nondiscrimination. One commenter representing industry interests argued
that repeated violations should be limited to the same type of
violation of the same statute.
In response to concerns that the guidance on the meaning of
``substantially similar'' was insufficiently clear, the final Guidance,
rather than proceeding by way of a general definition and statute-
specific examples, sets forth a statute-specific, exhaustive list of
violations that are substantially similar to each other, similar to the
Department's statute-specific guidance on serious and willful
violations. This list largely tracks the examples that were presented
in the Proposed Guidance, but some changes have been made, as noted
below. The Department believes that this approach will increase clarity
and lessen ambiguity regarding the classification of repeated
violations.
Under the final Guidance, as in the Proposed Guidance, certain
violations may be substantially similar to each other even though they
arise under different statutes. While the Department recognizes that
there may be violations that will be ``repeated'' under the Guidance
that are different in character or degree, such violations will often
point to underlying compliance practices in a company that the Order
seeks to eliminate from the performance of Federal contracts. An overly
narrow definition will fail to capture many violations that could help
identify such practices. While any definition of ``substantially
similar'' would likely draw criticism for both over-inclusiveness and
under-inclusiveness, the Department believes that the definitions in
the final Guidance strike the appropriate balance. The Department also
believes that these definitions are sufficiently clear for ALCAs to be
able to apply them.
The Department did not receive specific comments on the definitions
of ``substantially similar'' for violations of the FLSA, DBA, SCA,
Executive Order 13658, and MSPA, or on its proposal to treat as
substantially similar any two violations involving retaliation, any two
recordkeeping violations, or any two failures to post required notices.
The Department did receive comments on the definitions of
``substantially similar'' for other Labor Laws, as discussed below.
Family and Medical Leave Act
One advocacy organization commenter addressed the treatment of
repeated violations of the FMLA. The individual notice provisions of
the FMLA require that when an employee requests leave for a qualifying
reason, the employer must notify the employee of certain rights and
other information. The commenter argued that violations of this notice
provision should be treated as substantially similar to other FMLA
violations, such as interference and discrimination, because the FMLA's
individual notice provisions relate to a specific leave request and an
individual's ability to exercise his or her FMLA rights.
The Department declines to change this aspect of the definition of
repeated violations. The general notice and individual notice
requirements are both included in the same provision of the FMLA
regulations. 29 CFR 825.300. This provision is separate from the
regulatory provisions governing interference and discrimination. While
the Department agrees that a violation of individual notice
requirements could potentially be tied to, or result in, interference
and discrimination, this is also true for violations of the general
notice provisions. The Department believes that notice requirements are
sufficiently different from an employer's actual failure to provide
leave or other benefits that they should not be considered
substantially similar to those violations in the context of repeated
violations.
National Labor Relations Act
The Proposed Guidance stated, by way of example, that any two
violations of section 8(a)(3) of the NLRA would be substantially
similar to each other, but would not be substantially similar to
violations of section 8(a)(2). The Department did not provide further
guidance on the circumstances under which other NLRA violations would
be substantially similar. Consistent with the Department's decision to
set forth statute-specific definitions rather than examples, the final
Guidance states that any two violations of the same numbered subsection
of section 8(a) of the NLRA, which lists unfair labor practices by
employers, will be substantially similar. The Department also notes
that any two violations of the NLRA (or any of the Labor Laws) that
involve retaliation are substantially similar.
One labor organization commenter argued that the amendment of an
NLRB complaint should constitute a separate administrative merits
determination for the purpose of determining whether an employer has
committed a repeated violation. The commenter noted that sometimes the
NLRB will amend a complaint rather than issuing a new one where an
employer has committed
[[Page 58686]]
violations relating to an ongoing labor dispute over a long period of
time.
The final Guidance does not incorporate this suggestion. First, a
pending and contested NLRB complaint cannot serve as a prior violation
for the purposes of a repeated violation determination. As discussed
above, only an uncontested or adjudicated Labor Law decision can
constitute a prior violation. After adjudication or settlement of an
NLRB complaint, the complaint typically would not be amended.
Additionally, because complaints can be amended for numerous reasons
other than those identified by the commenter, the Department believes
that it would be impractical to require ALCAs to examine complaints in
order to determine when and why they were amended. As such, a single
NLRB complaint, regardless of whether it is amended, will constitute a
single administrative merits determination.
The same commenter also recommended that the Department treat
violations of section 8(a)(1), which prohibits employers from
interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of
the rights guaranteed in section 7 of the NLRA, as substantially
similar to violations of section 8(a)(3), which generally prohibits
employers from discriminating in regard to hire or tenure of
employment, or any term or condition of employment, to encourage or
discourage membership in a labor organization, for the purposes of
determining whether a violation was repeated. The Department declines
to adopt this suggestion, as it believes that it is overbroad in scope
and could result in dissimilar violations being classified as repeated.
Anti-Discrimination Labor Laws \65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ The term ``anti-discrimination Labor Laws'' refers to Title
VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the ADA, the
ADEA, section 6(d) of the FLSA (known as the Equal Pay Act, 29
U.S.C. 206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965, the
Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972, and the
Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some employer-group commenters expressed concern about the
application of the definition to the anti-discrimination laws. Under
the Proposed Guidance, such violations would be substantially similar
if they involved the same or an overlapping protected status, even if
they did not involve the same employment practice. One noted that, for
example, under the definition in the Guidance, if a company employed a
hiring test resulting in a disparate impact on women, and within 3
years, an individual manager in a different department engaged in
sexual harassment, the company would be found to have committed
repeated violations.
In response to these comments, the Department has made
modifications to narrow the definition of repeated violations in the
discrimination context. For purposes of the anti-discrimination Labor
Laws, violations are substantially similar if they involve (1) the same
protected status, and (2) at least one of the following elements in
common: (a) The same employment practice, or (b) the same worksite. In
nonsubstantive changes, the Department has removed the reference to
``overlapping'' protected statuses and the list of examples of
protected statuses, but has clarified that violations are considered to
involve the same protected status as long as the same status is present
in both violations, even if other protected statuses may be involved as
well. For the purpose of determining whether violations involve the
same worksite, the same definition of ``worksite'' that was used in the
discussion of the 25 percent criterion for a serious violation applies,
except that any two or more company-wide violations are considered to
involve the same worksite. The Department believes that this narrower
definition will better capture violations that are substantially
similar to each other.
Also, a number of employee advocates argued in their comments that
discrimination on the basis of sex, gender identity, sexual
orientation, and pregnancy should be considered to be ``the same or
overlapping'' protected statuses for the purpose of determining whether
a violation was repeated. These commenters asserted that discrimination
on the basis of these characteristics typically arises out of gender-
based stereotypes and that it would be appropriate to treat such
violations as substantially similar for purposes of the Order.
The Department has incorporated this suggestion in part. The
treatment of discrimination on the basis of pregnancy as a type of sex
discrimination is consistent with Title VII as amended by the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act. See 42 U.S.C. 2000e(k). Additionally, the treatment
of discrimination on the basis of gender identity (including
transgender status) as a type of sex discrimination is consistent with
the views of the EEOC, the Department, the Department of Justice, and
two Federal courts of appeals.\66\ With regard to discrimination on the
basis of sexual orientation, some courts have recognized in the wake of
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins \67\ that discrimination ``because of sex''
includes discrimination based on sex stereotypes about sexual
attraction and sexual behavior \68\ or about deviations from
``heterosexually defined gender norms.'' \69\ In addition, the EEOC has
concluded that Title VII's prohibition of discrimination ``because of
sex'' includes sexual orientation discrimination because discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily involves sex-based
considerations.\70\ The Department has taken the position that
discrimination on the basis of sex includes, at a minimum, sex
discrimination related to an individual's sexual orientation where the
evidence establishes that the discrimination is based on gender
stereotypes.\71\ Consistent with recent regulatory activity,\72\ the
Department will continue to monitor the developing law on sexual
orientation discrimination as sex discrimination under Title VII and
will interpret E.O. 11246's prohibition of sex discrimination in
conformity with Title VII principles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ See Macy v. Holder, Appeal No. 0120120821, 2012 WL 1435995
(EEOC 2012), Dep't of Labor, Ofc. of Fed. Contract Compliance
Programs, Final Rule, Discrimination on the Basis of Sex, 81 FR
39108, 39118-19 (June 15, 2016) (``OFCCP Sex Discrimination Final
Rule''); Memorandum from Attorney General Eric Holder to United
States Attorneys and Heads of Department Components (Dec. 15, 2014),
https://www.justice.gov/file/188671/download; Glenn v. Brumby, 663
F.3d 1312 (11th Cir. 2011); Smith v. City of Salem, 378 F.3d 566,
575 (6th Cir. 2004).
\67\ 490 U.S. 228 (1989).
\68\ See Videckis v. Pepperdine Univ., No. CV 15-00298, 2015 WL
8916764, at *5 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 15, 2015).
\69\ Isaacs v. Felder Servs., No. 2:13cv693-MHT, 2015 WL
6560655, at *4 (M.D. Ala. Oct. 29, 2015) (internal quotation
omitted).
\70\ Baldwin v. Dep't of Transp., Appeal No. 0120133080, 2015 WL
4397641, at *5 (EEOC 2015). For a more comprehensive discussion on
the state of the law on these issues, please see the OFCCP Sex
Discrimination Final Rule cited above; see also Dep't of Labor, Ofc.
of the Sec'y, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Implementation of the
Nondiscrimination and Equal Opportunity Provisions of the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act, 81 FR 4494, 4507 (Jan. 26, 2016)
(``CRC WIOA NPRM'').
\71\ OFCCP Sex Discrimination Final Rule, 81 FR at 39118; CRC
WIOA NRPM, 81 FR at 4508-09.
\72\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In recognition of Title VII's explicit incorporation of pregnancy
discrimination as a type of sex discrimination and the Department's
previously articulated positions on gender identity discrimination
related to sexual orientation based on gender stereotyping, the
Department clarifies in the final Guidance that violations involving
discrimination on the bases of sex, pregnancy, gender identity
[[Page 58687]]
(including transgender status), and sex stereotyping (including
discrimination related to sexual orientation based on such
stereotyping) are considered to involve discrimination on the basis of
the same protected status for the purpose of determining whether two
violations are substantially similar. While the use of the term
``same'' does not intend to suggest that all of these forms of
discrimination are identical, these violations are sufficiently similar
to be classified as substantially similar violations under the Order.
Finally, one union commenter argued that any time an employer
commits multiple discrimination violations, regardless of whether they
involve the same protected status or employment practice, they should
be considered repeated violations. The Department declines to adopt
this suggestion. Violations of anti-discrimination requirements are
often fact-intensive and the Department does not believe it would be
appropriate to treat all such violations as substantially similar
absent the additional factors described above.
Alternative Proposal
A few commenters, including unions and other employee advocates,
argued that the scope of repeated violations should be expanded to
include any time a contractor has violated any one of the covered Labor
Laws five times in the last 3 years. The final Guidance does not adopt
this suggestion because it is inconsistent with the Order's specific
direction that a determination of a repeated violation be based on
``the same or a substantially similar requirement.'' However, the
Department notes that multiple violations that are not substantially
similar to each other may be properly considered in an evaluation of
whether such violations show sufficient disregard for the Labor Laws
that they constitute pervasive violations.
3. Willful Violations
The Proposed Guidance set forth several classification criteria for
determining whether a violation of one of the Labor Laws is a willful
violation under the Order. 80 FR 30585. Under the Proposed Guidance, a
willful violation was specifically defined for five Labor Laws--the OSH
Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan; the FLSA (including the Equal Pay
Act), the ADEA, Title VII, and the ADA. Under these statutes, the term
``willful'' has a well-established meaning or an analogous statutory
standard exists that is consistent with the Order. The Proposed
Guidance included a residual criterion for all other Labor Laws,
stating that a violation would be willful if
the findings of the relevant enforcement agency, court, arbitrator,
or arbitral panel support a conclusion that the contractor . . .
knew that its conduct was prohibited by any of the Labor Laws or
showed reckless disregard for, or acted with plain indifference to,
whether its conduct was prohibited by one or more requirements of
the Labor Laws.
Id.
a. OSH Act or OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The Proposed Guidance set forth a specific definition of a willful
violation for the OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plans. It stated that
OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plan violations would be willful if the
relevant enforcement agency had designated the citation as willful or
any equivalent State designation. 80 FR 30585.
As noted above, a few worker-advocate commenters expressed concern
that the Proposed Guidance's definitions of serious, repeated, willful,
and pervasive violations did not sufficiently account for OSH Act
violations that are not enforced through citations, such as retaliation
violations. As a result of these comments, the Department has clarified
this point of ambiguity by dividing OSH Act and OSHA-approved State
Plan violations into two categories: Citation OSHA violations and non-
citation OSHA violations. For the former, an OSHA or OSHA-approved
State Plan designation of ``willful'' (or an equivalent State
designation) controls the classification of the violation under the
Order. For the latter, a violation is willful if it meets the residual
standard for a willful violation--knowledge, reckless disregard, or
plain indifference.
In a nonsubstantive change, the final Guidance has also deleted
language stating that OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plan citations
designated as willful are willful violations under the Order only if
the designation has not been subsequently vacated. This language is
unnecessary in light of the broader statement in the final Guidance
that if a Labor Law decision or portion thereof that would otherwise
cause a violation to be classified as serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive is reversed or vacated, then the violation will not be
classified as such under the Order.
b. Violations of the Minimum Wage, Overtime, and Child Labor Provisions
of the FLSA
The Proposed Guidance stated that a violation of the FLSA would be
willful if an administrative merits determination sought or assessed
civil monetary penalties for a willful violation, or there was a civil
judgment or arbitral award or decision finding the contractor or
subcontractor liable for back wages for greater than 2 years or
affirming the assessment of civil monetary penalties for a willful
violation. 80 FR 30586. As in the case of OSH Act violations, these
criteria did not sufficiently account for all violations of the FLSA
because these criteria apply only to the FLSA's provisions on minimum
wage, overtime, and (in the case of civil monetary penalties) child
labor. See 29 U.S.C. 216(e)(1)(A)(ii), 216(e)(2), 216(e)(3)(C), 255.
Accordingly, the final Guidance clarifies that these criteria will only
be used to classify these violations of the FLSA, while other
violations of the FLSA--such as retaliation, see 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3)--
will be classified using the residual criterion.
One commenter also expressed concern that it would be inappropriate
to classify an FLSA violation as willful due to the assessment or award
of more than 2 years of back wages because there are occasions when
employers agree to pay back wages for greater than 2 years even when an
FLSA violation is not willful. The Department declines to change the
Guidance in response to the above comment. Under the FLSA, WHD's
standard practice is to use an investigative period of up to 2 years
for non-willful violations and up to 3 years for willful violations,
and to assess back wages for the relevant investigative period. Thus,
WHD's standard practice is to assess no more than 2 years of back wages
in a form WH-56 unless the agency makes an investigative finding that
the violation was willful.
As a related matter, however, the Department has clarified that for
civil judgments and arbitral awards or decisions under the FLSA's
minimum wage and overtime provisions, a violation will only be
classified as willful under the Order if the Labor Law decision
includes a finding that the violation was willful. This is because in
such litigation, the 2-year limit for non-willful violations only
limits the recovery to the 2 years prior to the commencement of the
litigation. See 29 U.S.C. 255. It does not affect the recovery of
additional back wages if the violations continue while the litigation
is pending. If the violations continue after the commencement of
litigation, back wages can ultimately be awarded for more than 2
years--for up to 2 years prior to the commencement of the litigation,
plus any additional period of time from the date the litigation is
[[Page 58688]]
initiated until final judgment. Thus, because a non-willful violation
of the FLSA's minimum wage or overtime provisions reflected in a civil
judgment or arbitral award or decision may result in more than 2 years
of back wages, the final Guidance clarifies that whether such
violations are willful under the Order depends on whether the court or
arbitrator(s) makes a finding of willfulness--and does not depend on
the number of years of back wages awarded.
c. Violations of the ADEA
The Proposed Guidance stated that violations of the ADEA are
willful if the enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel
assessed or awarded liquidated damages. One commenter asserted that an
ADEA violation might be willful even if liquidated damages are not
awarded, and therefore suggested that the Department apply the
willfulness residual criterion to ADEA violations in addition to the
liquidated damages criterion. The Department declines to expand the
application of the residual criterion to cover the ADEA. As discussed
below, in the discussion of the residual criterion generally, an
expansion of the residual criterion is unnecessary and would not
further the efficient administration of the Order.
d. Title VII and the ADA
One commenter suggested that the statute-specific criteria for
willful violations under Title VII and the ADA did not sufficiently
account for violations involving retaliation, and suggested adding the
words ``or retaliatory'' to describe the types of violations that could
involve punitive damages. The Department, however, believes that the
language in the Proposed Guidance sufficiently accounts for retaliation
cases. The criteria specified in the Guidance for willful violations
under Title VII and the ADA already applies to their anti-retaliation
provisions. See 42 U.S.C. 1981a(b)(1) (stating that punitive damages
may be awarded for any violation of Title VII or the ADA in which the
employer acts with malice or reckless indifference). As such, no
changes to the Guidance are necessary to clarify that retaliation
violations of these statutes may be classified as willful if they meet
the listed criteria.
e. Any Other Violations of the Labor Laws (Formerly ``Other Labor
Laws'')
The Proposed Guidance stated that for any Labor Laws for which a
specific criterion for willfulness was not listed, a violation would be
willful if
the findings of the relevant enforcement agency, court, arbitrator,
or arbitral panel support a conclusion that the contractor . . .
knew that its conduct was prohibited by any of the Labor Laws or
showed reckless disregard for, or acted with plain indifference to,
whether its conduct was prohibited by one or more requirements of
the Labor Laws.
80 FR 30586.
Several employee advocates argued that this residual standard
should apply to all of the Labor Laws, including the five statutes for
which the Guidance also includes statute-specific criteria (OSH Act/
OSHA-Approved State Plans, FLSA, ADEA, Title VII, ADA). These
commenters argued that the statute-specific criteria would not
necessarily capture all violations of those statutes in which the
employer engaged in willful conduct.
The Department declines to broaden the application of the residual
standard to all of the Labor Laws. The purpose of listing specific
standards for the five laws that already incorporate a concept of
willfulness (or, in the case of Title VII and the ADA, the related
standard of malice or reckless indifference) is to further the
efficient administration of the Order. Moreover, the Department
believes it is inappropriate for ALCAs to second-guess the decisions of
enforcement agencies, arbitrators, or courts as to whether or not a
violation was willful. Accordingly, for Labor Laws with an existing
willfulness framework, violations are only willful under the Order if
the relevant Labor Law decision explicitly includes such a finding.\73\
In contrast, for Labor Laws that do not have a willfulness framework,
an ALCA may examine the relevant Labor Law decision to determine
whether it is readily ascertainable from the decision that the
violation was willful under the residual criterion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ Some worker-advocacy commenters noted that the EEOC does
not assess punitive or liquidated damages at the reasonable-cause
stage. The Department recognizes that this means EEOC reasonable
cause determinations will not provide a basis for finding a
violation ``willful.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A number of industry commenters expressed concern that the Proposed
Guidance's residual criterion is too vague, overbroad, and would not be
applied correctly or consistently. Several of these commenters
expressed particular concern about how prime contractors would be able
to apply this standard when assessing violations by subcontractors.
The final Guidance retains the residual criterion for willful
violations. While the Department agrees that a determination of
knowledge, reckless disregard, or plain indifference will depend on the
facts of individual cases, it believes that ALCAs will be able to
implement this standard with assistance of this Guidance and its
appendices. This standard is well-established, having been applied for
many years by courts and administrative agencies in the context of the
OSH Act, FLSA, and ADEA. The Department is confident that it can be
applied in the context of other Labor Laws as well. The Department also
notes that the key language of the residual criterion comes from the
Order itself, which states that where no statutory standards exist, the
standard for willfulness should take into account ``whether the entity
knew of, showed reckless disregard for, or acted with plain
indifference to the matter of whether its conduct was prohibited by the
requirements of the [Labor Laws].'' Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(3). The
residual criterion in the Proposed Guidance conforms to the Order's
text, and the Department declines to narrow it further.
One industry commenter argued that this definition was too broad
and could in some cases be counterproductive, such as by penalizing
contractors for having a written policy in place which could in turn be
used as evidence of the contractor's knowledge of its legal
requirements. While the Department recognizes the commenter's concerns,
an employer's deviation from a written policy is plainly evidence that
the employer was aware of its legal obligations but chose to ignore
them. The Department believes that employers have sufficient existing
incentives to maintain written policies such that classifying a
violation as willful under these circumstances will not cause employers
to forgo written policies.
Another industry commenter expressed concern that one of the
examples of a non-willful VEVRAA violation in Appendix B of the
Proposed Guidance (now Appendix C in the final Guidance) described a
disparate impact case, which the commenter believed could create
confusion by suggesting that a disparate impact case under certain
circumstances could be a willful violation. The Department agrees that
disparate impact cases under VEVRAA, absent unusual circumstances, will
not be willful violations under the Order, and the intent of the
example is to illustrate just that.
The Department believes that the final FAR rule addresses the
industry commenters' concerns about application of the residual
willfulness standard by prime contractors. As noted in section V of
this section-by-section analysis, below, the final FAR rule clarifies
that subcontractors will make their detailed
[[Page 58689]]
Labor Law disclosures directly to the Department, and will receive
advice about their record of compliance from DOL which they may provide
to contractors. Under this structure, contractors will be able to rely
on the Department's classification determinations rather than making
the classification determinations themselves.
The Department further emphasizes that a determination of
willfulness will only be made if it is readily ascertainable from the
findings of the Labor Law decision. ALCAs will not examine case files
or evidentiary records in order to make assessments of willfulness.
Where the findings of the Labor Law decision do not include any facts
that indicate that a violation was willful, the violation will not be
considered willful under the Order.
f. Table of Examples
The Department has updated the table of examples to reflect the
changes in the final Guidance.
g. Other Comments on Willful Violations
Some employer groups also argued that the definition of willful
violations fails to account for the fact that employers sometimes must
deliberately commit a violation to obtain review of an agency's ruling.
They noted that, for example, employers must violate section 8(a) of
the NLRA by refusing to bargain with a union in order to obtain
appellate review of the NLRB's determination that a group of employees
is an appropriate bargaining unit. Two of these groups asserted that
such violations are ``technical'' violations that should not be
considered willful or even to be violations at all.
The Department declines to adopt a bright-line rule under which so-
called ``technical'' violations would not be considered violations or
would not be classified as willful. A contractor's belief that it had
justifiable reasons for committing a Labor Law violation is best
considered as a possible mitigating factor during the weighing process
described in section III(B) of the Guidance.
Some industry commenters also suggested that a violation should
only be classified as willful where the violation has been
``adjudicated.'' According to these commenters, agencies will often
initially allege that an employer's actions are willful or knowing,
even though they may not be. For example, OSHA might initially
designate a violation as willful in a citation, only to eventually
retreat from this position. Therefore, these commenters suggested,
willful violations should be limited solely to those administrative
merits determinations made by a neutral fact-finder after the employer
has been accorded the opportunity for a hearing.
For the same reasons the Department has provided in support of its
use of non-adjudicated administrative merits determinations generally,
the Department declines to limit willful violations to adjudicated
proceedings. However, as discussed above under ``Effect of reversal or
vacatur of basis for classification,'' the final Guidance clarifies
that a violation should not be classified as willful if an agency has
rescinded or vacated the aspect of an administrative merits
determination upon which a willfulness determination was based.
4. Pervasive Violations
The Proposed Guidance defined pervasive violations to be violations
that reflect a basic disregard by the contractor for the Labor Laws as
demonstrated by a pattern of serious or willful violations, continuing
violations, or numerous violations. See 80 FR 30588. The Proposed
Guidance also included additional factors and examples.
In General
Several employer groups expressed concern about the Proposed
Guidance's explanation of pervasive violations. These groups generally
argued that the definition was not sufficiently specific and would not
be applied consistently. Some of these commenters argued that the
category of pervasive violations should be eliminated entirely and that
the analyses relevant to pervasive violations (such as the involvement
of upper management) should instead be incorporated into the overall
assessment of a contractor's responsibility. Some argued that the
definition should instead be based on more ``objective'' criteria such
as numeric thresholds. One commenter, the Equal Employment Advisory
Council, urged the Department to amend the definition such that only a
contractor with a ``clear record of violations that unambiguously
demonstrates a lack of commitment to compliance responsibilities'' may
be found to have pervasive violations. In contrast, employee advocates
and civil rights groups generally supported the Department's definition
of pervasive violations. One labor union commenter suggested that a
large employer's violations be treated as pervasive if multiple
violations occur at a particular targeted facility, and that multiple
violations be treated as pervasive if they impact at least 25 percent
of the employees in the portion of the workforce targeted by the
employer.
The Department declines to eliminate the definition of pervasive.
The Order specifically instructs the Department to define a
classification of ``pervasive'' violations. Moreover, the Department
disagrees that the inquiry into whether a contractor has pervasive
violations is identical to the determination of whether that contractor
is responsible. In particular, a contractor with pervasive violations
may nonetheless ultimately be found responsible, depending on the
existence of mitigating factors and, potentially, the adoption of a
labor compliance agreement.
The Department also declines to make significant modifications to
the definition of pervasive or to adopt bright-line criteria. In the
Department's view, this definition necessarily must be flexible.
Notwithstanding the utility of the definitions of serious, repeated,
and willful violations, the Department recognizes that violations
falling within these classifications may still vary significantly in
their gravity, impact, and scope. Thus, it would not be reasonable to
require a finding of ``pervasive'' violations based on a set number or
combination of these violations. Similarly, the Department declines to
adopt rigid criteria that would mandate, for example, that any company
of a certain size with at least a certain designated number of serious,
repeated, or willful violations would be deemed to have pervasive
violations.
The lack of a bright-line test is not unique to the definition of
pervasive violations. The FAR provides contracting officers with
significant flexibility when assessing other elements of a contractor's
responsibility and past performance. See FAR 9.104-1, 42.1501. For
example, as a part of the responsibility determination, contracting
officers must consider a number of factors, including ``integrity and
business ethics'' and whether the contractor has ``the necessary
organization, experience, accounting and operational controls, and
technical skills, or the ability to obtain them.'' Id. 9.104-1.
Similarly, in past performance evaluations, contracting officers
consider factors such as whether the contractor has exhibited
``reasonable and cooperative behavior and commitment to customer
satisfaction'' and ``business-like concern for the interest of the
customer.'' Id. 42.1501(a). Finally, during the suspension and
debarment process, a suspending and debarring official has the
discretion not to debar a contractor based on a holistic
[[Page 58690]]
evaluation of multiple factors, such as the contractor's cooperation,
remedial measures, and effective internal control systems, which may
demonstrate a contractor's responsibility. See id. 9.406-1(a).
Accordingly, the Department does not believe that it is necessary or
appropriate to adopt rigid numerical criteria to define pervasive. The
Department notes, however, that violations will not be classified as
pervasive if they are minimal in nature, given that this category seeks
to encompass those contractors who act with a basic disregard for their
obligations under the Labor Laws. To that end, the Department expects
that this classification will be applied sparingly.
Size of the Contractor
The Order provides that the standards for pervasive should take
into account
the number of violations of a requirement or the aggregate number of
violations of requirements in relation to the size of the entity.
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(4). The Proposed Guidance stated that
whether a contract is found to have pervasive violations ``will depend
on the size of the contractor . . ., as well as the nature of the
violations themselves.'' 80 FR 30574, 30588. The Proposed Guidance
specifically requested comments by interested parties regarding how
best to assess the number of a contractor's violations in light of its
size.
One industry commenter requested clarification on how the size of a
contractor will impact the determination of whether violations are
pervasive, and on the meaning of the terms ``small,'' ``medium-sized,''
and ``large'' within the meaning of the examples set out in the
Guidance. In contrast, several employee advocates cautioned against
giving undue weight to a company's size when assessing whether
violations are pervasive. These commenters argued that while smaller
companies with numerous violations clearly should be considered
pervasive violators, the size of a large company alone should not
excuse its violations of Labor Laws.
The Department declines to modify the definition of pervasive
either to eliminate or to further specify criteria for measuring
company size. The Department does not eliminate the company-size factor
because, as noted above, the Order explicitly requires the Department
to take this factor into account in the definition of pervasive. Order,
section 4(b)(i)(B)(4). This makes sense because, as the Proposed
Guidance notes, larger companies can be expected to have a greater
number of violations overall than smaller companies. The Department
agrees, however, that an employer's size does not automatically excuse
any violations. Rather, the size of the employer will be one factor
among many assessed when considering whether violations are pervasive.
Likewise, the Department declines to establish specific criteria for
how company size will affect the determination of pervasive violations.
As noted above, the violations that ALCAs will consider and assess will
vary significantly, making the imposition of bright-line rules for
company size inadvisable. However, the Department has modified the
examples in the Guidance so that each example notes the number of
employees for the contractor. These examples are not intended to serve
as minimum requirements, but simply as illustrations of circumstances
under which violations may be classified as pervasive.
Involvement of Higher-Level Management
The Proposed Guidance also explained that a violation is more
likely to be pervasive when higher-level management officials are
involved in the misconduct. This is because such involvement signals to
the workforce that future violations will be tolerated or condoned.
Involvement of high-level managers may also dissuade workers from
reporting violations or raising complaints. The Guidance also noted
that if managers actively avoid learning about Labor Law violations,
this may also indicate that the violations are pervasive.
While worker-advocacy groups supported the inclusion of the higher-
level management factor, some employer groups asked the Department to
clarify what constitutes higher-level management and expressed concern
that this criterion would be applied to low-level management. For
example, one commenter suggested that discrimination or harassment by a
``rogue'' manager should not result in a determination that the
violations are pervasive if the company had strong nondiscrimination
and anti-harassment policies in place and takes swift and appropriate
remedial action upon learning of the manager's actions. Another
commented that the Guidance should add that managers need to be trained
only to the extent needed to perform their managerial duties.
By using the term ``higher-level management,'' the Department did
not suggest that the involvement of any employees with managerial
responsibilities would be deemed a pervasive violation. The Department
agrees that a violation is unlikely to be classified as pervasive where
the manager involved is low-level (such as a first-line supervisor),
acting contrary to a strong company policy, and the company responds
with appropriate remedial action, and the Department has clarified this
point in the final Guidance. The Department further notes that in the
weighing step of the assessment process (discussed below), an ALCA will
consider a contractor's remedial action as an important factor that may
mitigate the existence of a violation.
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and Mitigating Factors (Step Two)
(Formerly ``Assessing Violations and Considering Mitigating Factors'')
As discussed above, an ALCA's assessment of and advice regarding a
contractor's Labor Law violations involves a three-step process. In the
classification step, the ALCA reviews all of the contractor's
violations to determine if any are serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive. In the weighing step, the ALCA then analyzes any serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive violations in light of the totality
of the circumstances, including any mitigating factors that are
present. In the final advice step, the ALCA provides written analysis
and advice to the contracting officer regarding the contractor's record
of Labor Law compliance, and whether a labor compliance agreement or
other action is needed.
Based on the comments and additional deliberations, the Department
modifies the final Guidance to improve the clarity and organization of
the weighing section. For example, the Department has changed the
reference in the Proposed Guidance to violations that ``raise
particular concerns'' to ``factors that weigh against a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance.'' The Department has also included
further explanation of the process to clarify that ALCAs do not make
findings that specific violations are ``violations of particular
concern.'' Rather, the ALCA proceeds with a holistic review that
considers the totality of the circumstances and considers all of the
relevant factors.
A summary of the comments, the Department's responses, and any
changes adopted in the final Guidance are set forth below.
ALCA Capacity and Training
A number of commenters expressed concern about the capacity of
ALCAs to
[[Page 58691]]
complete their duties effectively. One employer representative argued
that ALCAs will not be equipped to analyze employer submissions
regarding mitigating factors. This commenter believed that contractors
will likely attempt to show mitigating circumstances by submitting
evidence in an effort to re-litigate whether a violation actually
occurred or whether the amount of damages awarded was correct.
Contractors will also make legal arguments about ``good faith'' and
whether remediation was appropriate. The commenter asserted that ALCAs
may have difficulty sifting through the legal complexities of these
submissions.
As a related matter, some commenters stressed the importance of
adequate training and support for ALCAs. For example, several labor
unions highlighted the need for ALCA training, and suggested such
training should include a role of unions and other interested parties.
A number of employer representatives argued that the Federal Government
likely did not have sufficient resources to provide enough staff and
training to prevent bottlenecks in evaluating contractor integrity and
business ethics.
The Department has considered these comments and, as a general
matter, believes that they support the Department's development of this
Guidance to include specific guidelines for classifying Labor Law
violations and for evaluating the totality of the circumstances. The
Department's intent with this Guidance has been to create a document
that contains appropriate context and narrative description to assist
ALCAs and other interested parties with carrying out their
responsibilities under the Order.
In response to these comments, the Department has also added
language to the Guidance that clarifies the role of ALCAs in assessing
contractors' records of compliance. The Guidance clarifies that in
classifying Labor Law decisions, ALCAs consider ``information that is
readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decisions themselves.''
Guidance, section III(A). And, while mitigating circumstances will be
considered, the Department has clarified in the Guidance that re-
litigation of a disclosed Labor Law decision is not appropriate. See
id. (``ALCAs do not second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or
the decisions of reviewing officials, courts, and arbitrators.''). The
Department has also tailored the ``good faith'' mitigating factor to
situations where ``the findings in the relevant Labor Law decision''
support the contractor's argument, so that the consideration of good
faith does not become a far-reaching effort to re-litigate the decision
itself. See id. section III(B)(1)(f).
Finally, the Department strongly agrees with the comments on the
importance of adequate training and support for ALCAs, and the
Department--in coordination with the Office of Management and Budget--
will provide such training as part of the implementation of the FAR
rule and the Guidance.
Exercise of Discretion
Numerous employer organizations argued that the guidelines for
weighing violations of particular concern and mitigating factors are
subjective and ambiguous, which may lead to inconsistent determinations
between ALCAs and across agencies. These groups argued that the
Proposed Guidance gave ALCAs and contracting officers too much
discretion in how to weigh the various factors and whether to require
negotiation of a labor compliance agreement.
The Department rejects the argument that the weighing process will
involve improper subjective decision-making by ALCAs or contracting
officers. These assessments will necessarily involve exercising
judgment and discretion, but the exercise of judgment and discretion
are a fundamental part of the pre-existing FAR responsibility
determination.\74\
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\74\ See Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United
States, 238 F.3d 1324, 1334-35 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (``Contracting
officers are generally given wide discretion in making
responsibility determinations and in determining the amount of
information that is required to make a responsibility
determination.'' (internal quotations marks and citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, the FAR provides contracting officers with
significant flexibility when assessing other elements of a contractor's
responsibility. See FAR 9.104-1. Contracting officers must consider a
number of factors, such as ``a satisfactory performance record,''
``integrity and business ethics,'' and whether the contractor has ``the
necessary organization, experience, accounting and operational
controls, and technical skills, or the ability to obtain them.'' Id.
The test for debarment similarly relies on a holistic evaluation of
multiple factors, such as the contractor's cooperation, remedial
measures, and effective internal control systems. See FAR 9.406-1(a).
The Department does not believe that the new requirements and
processes that implement the Order require the exercise of more
discretion or subjectivity than these existing determinations. To the
contrary, the final FAR rule and the final Guidance contain detailed
guidelines and examples to assist ALCAs and contracting officers in
their respective roles.
The Department also notes that the Order expressly requires the FAR
and the Department to create processes to ensure government-wide
consistency in the implementation of the Order. ALCAs will work closely
with the Department during more complicated determinations, and the
Department will be able to assist ALCAs in comparing a contractor's
record with records that have in other cases resulted in advice that a
labor compliance agreement is needed, or that notification of the
suspending and debarring official is appropriate. Through its work with
enforcement agencies, the Department also will provide assistance in
analyzing whether remediation efforts are sufficient to bring
contractors into compliance with Labor Laws and whether contractors
have implemented programs or processes that will ensure future
compliance in the course of performance of Federal contracts. This
level of coordination will ensure that ALCAs (and through them,
contracting officers), receive guidance and structure.
Concern About Delays in the Procurement Process
Industry commenters raised various concerns about burdens
associated with the assessment by ALCAs of a contractor's Labor Law
violations, citing potential regulatory bottlenecks and delays. For
example, commenters opined that an awarding agency's ALCA could
disagree with another agency's ALCA on the impact of a particular
violation on the contractor's responsibility--or that an ALCA could
disagree with its own agency's contracting officer, delaying one
agency's award until the differences could be resolved.
The Department has carefully considered these comments, but finds
them to take issue largely with the structure mandated by the Order
itself and not with any specific aspect of the Department's Guidance.
The plain text of the Order requires contracting officers to consider
Labor Law violations as part of the responsibility determination and
requires contracting officers to consult with ALCAs as a part of this
process. Order, section 2(a)(iii).
The Department also notes that the FAR Council has structured the
assessment and advice process to limit the risk of delay. As discussed
below, the final FAR rule maintains the default 3-day period for an
ALCA to provide advice. FAR 22.2004-2(b)(2)(i). It also retains the
requirement that if the
[[Page 58692]]
contracting officer has not received timely advice, the contracting
officer must proceed with the responsibility determination ``using
available information and business judgment.'' Id. 22.2004-
2(b)(5)(iii). The Department believes that this authority granted to
contracting officers will allow contracting officers to proceed without
delay where necessary.
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory Record of
Labor Law Compliance
The Order instructs contracting officers to afford contractors the
opportunity to disclose any steps taken to come into compliance with
Labor Laws. Order, section 2(a)(ii). It also seeks to ensure that ALCAs
and contracting officers give appropriate consideration to remedial
measures and other mitigating factors when assessing a contractor's
record. See id. section 4(a)(ii). The Department's Proposed Guidance
provided a non-exclusive list of mitigating factors that ALCAs should
consider in the weighing process. 80 FR 30574, 30590-91. It stated that
remediation efforts--actions to correct the violation and prevent its
recurrence--are typically the most important mitigating factor. Id. at
30590.
General Comments
A number of unions and employee-advocacy organizations raised
concerns with the mitigating factors listed in the Guidance. One
commenter stated that the Guidance should not treat circumstances such
as ``a long period of compliance'' or ``a single violation'' as
mitigating factors. It argued that these factors may not provide an
accurate assessment of the contractor's behavior, as a single violation
may be severe and impactful. The commenter also noted that the low
number of violations may be due to infrequent inspections by the
enforcement agency during the 3-year period, rather than conduct that
actually complies with Labor Laws.
Some worker-advocacy organizations argued that the Guidance should
not take into account the number of violations relative to the size of
the contractor. These commenters cautioned that size should not be an
excuse for a large number of major violations. They further noted that
large companies, due to their greater resources, may actually be more
capable of preventing and remedying violations than smaller companies.
Similarly, a number of commenters discussed whether a contractor's
safety-and-health program should be considered a mitigating factor.
Some union and employee-advocacy organizations argued that only
certain, qualifying safety-and-health programs should be considered as
mitigating factors. They suggested that the contractor must show that
its program is being actively and effectively implemented and meets
other requirements. For example, some commenters stated that a
contractor with repeated or pervasive OSHA violations should not be
able to point to its safety-and-health program as a mitigating factor
because the violations demonstrate that the employer's safety-and-
health programs have not been adequate.
The Department declines to make any substantive changes to the
guidance on mitigating factors. In most instances, the number of
violations, the period of compliance, the violations relative to size,
and the implementation of compliance programs will be important factors
in weighing the significance of a contractor's Labor Law violations. In
response to the commenters' concerns, the Department notes that the
ALCA will weigh a contractor's Labor Law violations based on the
totality of the circumstances. For example, it is generally true that a
single violation will not lead to a conclusion that the contractor has
an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. However, it is
possible that a single violation may merit advice that a labor
compliance agreement is needed because of the violation's severity and
because the harm has not been remediated. Similarly, concerns about
``paper'' compliance programs will also be addressed through the ALCAs'
consideration of the totality of the circumstances--which may include
the adequacy of a compliance program put forth as a mitigating
circumstance.
Remediation Efforts
The Proposed Guidance explained that ALCAs should give greater
mitigating weight to contractors' remediation efforts when they involve
two components: (1) ``correct[ing] the violation itself, including by
making any affected workers whole'' and (2) taking steps to ensure
future compliance so that violations do not recur. See 80 FR 30574,
30590. The Proposed Guidance stated that the fact that a contractor has
entered into a labor compliance agreement should be considered a
mitigating factor. Id.
Several employer groups stated that the discussion of remediation
efforts in the Proposed Guidance was confusing, and they expressed
concerns about the extent of their obligations under the Order. In
particular, some objected to the Proposed Guidance statement that ``in
most cases, the most important mitigating factors will be the extent to
which the contractor or subcontractor has remediated the violation and
taken steps to prevent its recurrence.'' 80 FR at 30590. In their view,
this suggests that ALCAs--through labor compliance agreements--could
impose remediation measures that go beyond what is required to comply
with the labor law at issue. They also argued that the Proposed
Guidance was unclear about what constitutes appropriate remedial
measures.
One employer representative, the Equal Employment Advisory Council
(EEAC), urged the Department to clarify the Proposed Guidance's
reference to ``making any affected workers whole.'' 80 FR at 30590.
EEAC suggested that where an employer has entered into a settlement
agreement with an enforcement agency for backpay that is less than the
amount initially proposed in an administrative merits determination,
the compromise amount of relief should be accepted as a ``make whole''
remedy of the violation.
Finally, several employer representatives objected to the use of
remediation as a mitigating factor when the employer has challenged the
violation and the matter has not yet been fully adjudicated--that is,
while the employer is seeking administrative or judicial review of an
administrative merits determination. The EEAC asserted that a
contractor ``cannot enter into remediation as described by the proposal
if it chooses to contest the agency's finding through administrative
tribunals, in court, or elsewhere.'' The EEAC argued that the Guidance
should ``recognize that where a violation is being contested, a
contractor may still demonstrate mitigating factors apply, although
remediation may not be the most important factor in such cases.''
After carefully considering all the comments, the Department
modifies the discussion of remediation in the Guidance for clarity, but
otherwise declines to make substantive changes. The Department does not
believe that the Guidance was unclear about what constitutes a remedial
measure. As the Guidance notes, remedial measures can include measures
taken to correct an unlawful practice, make affected employees whole,
or otherwise comply with a contractor's obligations under the Labor
Laws. See Guidance, section III(B)(1)(a). The measures taken to correct
an unlawful practice or make employees whole are necessarily specific
to the Labor Law violation at issue. For example, where WHD finds that
an employee was misclassified as an independent contractor and not paid
[[Page 58693]]
a minimum wage or overtime under the FLSA, remedial measures could
include correcting the practice by appropriately classifying the
employee going forward (or appropriately classifying all similarly
situated employees going forward) and making the employee whole by
paying to the employee the back wages that the Labor Law decision
specifies are owed to the employee.
The Department does not agree that the Guidance should limit
consideration of preventative measures as ``remediation'' because those
measures may go beyond the basic legal requirements under the Labor
Laws. The commenters that suggested such a limit confuse both the
purpose of the Order and the authority under which it was promulgated.
The purpose of the Order is not to better enforce the Labor Laws
generally, and the President did not promulgate the Order under the
legal authority of the specific Labor Law statutes. Rather, the Order's
purpose is to increase efficiency and cost savings in the work
performed by parties that contract with the Federal Government by
ensuring that they understand and comply with labor laws. See Order,
section 1. And the Order was promulgated under the President's
authority under the Procurement Act, not the Labor Laws. Accordingly,
ALCAs and contracting officers are not barred from crediting
contractors for implementing future-oriented measures that go beyond
the minimum specifically required under the Labor Laws--whether
voluntarily, through a settlement with an enforcement agency, or
through a labor compliance agreement negotiated at the suggestion of an
ALCA.\75\
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\75\ The Department has modified the Guidance to include a
separate and more extensive explanation of labor compliance
agreements as a part of the subsequent section III(C), ``Advice
regarding a contractor's record of Labor Law compliance.''
Accordingly, the Department summarizes and responds to comments
regarding labor compliance agreements below as a part of a parallel
section in this section-by-section analysis. In that section, the
Department responds to commenters' concern about whether it is
appropriate for a labor compliance agreement to require preventative
measures that may go beyond minimum compliance with the Labor Laws.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Guidance recognizes enterprise-wide efforts and enhanced
settlement agreements as particularly important because they reflect a
contractor's commitment to preventing future Labor Law violations and
may include internal compliance mechanisms that will catch (and
encourage the correction of) potential problems at an early stage.
These kinds of preventative measures are exactly the type of policies
and practices that increase efficiency in Federal contracting by
limiting the likelihood that violations will occur during the
subsequent performance of a Federal contract. The Department clarifies
in the final Guidance that ALCAs thus may appropriately consider such
efforts or measures as weighing in favor of a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance.
The Department agrees with the EEAC that ALCAs should not second-
guess the remediation that has already been negotiated by enforcement
agencies. A contractor's prior settlement with an enforcement agency
should generally be considered to be ``make-whole'' relief on behalf of
affected workers. Such settlement agreements reflect the agency's
decisions about the appropriate amount of backpay owed and the specific
steps needed to correct the violations or otherwise make affected
workers whole. Accordingly, ALCAs will not revisit whether an existing
agreement with an enforcement agency adequately corrects a violation.
Nonetheless, the existence of a settlement agreement does not bar
an ALCA from considering that a violation occurred in the first place.
Nor does remediation carried out because of such a settlement agreement
necessarily have great weight where there are other factors present--
such as an extensive pattern of violations, other violations that were
not within the jurisdiction of the agency negotiating the settlement,
or the existence of new violations subsequent to the settlement. In
such circumstances, if the settlement agreement does not include
measures to prevent future violations, then a contracting officer (in
consultation with an ALCA) may decide that a labor compliance agreement
is warranted in order to consider the contractor to be responsible or
may find the contractor nonresponsible. See Guidance, section III(C).
With regard to the commenters' concerns about engaging in
remediation during ongoing litigation, the Department does not believe
any change to the Guidance is necessary. It is not clear from the EEAC
comment why a contractor could not remediate while continuing to
contest a violation. Employers often choose to remediate during ongoing
litigation for various reasons, including to limit backpay liability.
Finally, the Department rejects the commenters' implication that
crediting remediation during ongoing litigation violates a contractor's
right to due process. Employers who receive administrative findings of
Labor Law violations have the right to due process, including various
levels of adjudication and review before administrative and judicial
tribunals, depending on the labor law involved in the violation. The
purpose of the Order is not to circumvent that adjudicatory and
appellate process. Rather, contracting officers have a duty to protect
the procurement process by conducting responsibility determinations
(and ALCAs have a duty to provide advice regarding Labor Law
violations) to ensure that Federal contractors are responsible and that
they will not engage in Labor Law violations that could undermine the
quality and timeliness of Federal contract performance. Thus, the
purpose of valuing remediation as a mitigating factor--even during
ongoing litigation--is to give a contractor with a significant record
of non-compliance an opportunity to take corrective action and make
systemic changes in order to prevent violations during the performance
of a future Federal contract.
Worker Participation in Safety-and-Health Programs
Several unions proposed that to qualify as a mitigating factor,
safety-and-health programs should encourage active worker
participation. One union commented that these programs must encourage
the reporting of work hazards and injuries without penalty. Some
commenters also supported the implementation of joint labor-management
safety-and-health committees. One industry commenter recommended that
the category of mitigating factors related to safety-and-health
programs should ``explicitly include participation in OSHA Voluntary
Protection Programs'' as well as include reference to ISO 45001, which
is a voluntary consensus standard for occupational safety-and-health
management systems currently under development. The commenter argued
that both of these include elements similar to the standards already
referenced in the Proposed Guidance, including employee involvement and
continuous improvement.
As discussed above, the Department considers further specific
guidance on the content of safety-and-health programs to be
unnecessary. ALCAs will have the ability to take additional information
about safety-and-health programs into consideration as part of their
review of the totality of the circumstances. In particular, the
Department agrees that OSHA's Voluntary Protection Programs and the ISO
45001 consensus standard are similar to the programs and standards
[[Page 58694]]
cited in the proposed guidance on mitigating factors. As such,
employers who participate in such programs or have adopted safety-and-
health management systems pursuant to recognized consensus standards
are encouraged to include this information when they have an
opportunity to provide relevant information, including regarding
mitigating factors.
Other Compliance Programs
One commenter suggested that other types of compliance programs--
not just safety-and-health programs or grievance procedures--should be
considered as mitigating factors. The commenter recommended retitling
this factor or adding a separate subsection specifically on compliance
programs.
The Department agrees that other compliance programs should be
included in this category, and notes that the Proposed Guidance already
references ``other compliance programs'' in the mitigating factors
discussion. To improve clarity, the Department adopts the commenter's
recommendation to retitle this factor. This category is now entitled
``Safety-and-health programs, grievance procedures, or other compliance
programs.''
Good Faith and Reasonable Grounds
One industry commenter, the Associated General Contractors of
America (AGC), expressed concern that contractors' good-faith defenses
``will not carry considerable weight in the responsibility
determination.'' AGC argued that while ALCAs may have the legal
understanding to make informed judgments about good faith disputes, the
contracting officers who ultimately make a responsibility determination
do not--and will instead defer to the agency determination or court
judgment.
The Department believes that it is important to provide contractors
with an opportunity to explain violations in cases where the contractor
may have made efforts to ascertain and meet its legal obligations, but
nonetheless have violated the law because of reliance on advice of a
government official or an authoritative agency or court decision.
For example, several commenters proposed that the Guidance should
account for situations where a violation is due to an agency error.
With regard to the DBA and the SCA, for example, commenters noted that
some violations are caused by the failure of the contracting agency to
include the appropriate wage determination contract language. One
commenter argued that contractors should not have to disclose these
types of violations, while the other noted that the Proposed Guidance
is unclear about how the Department will assess these types of
violations. The Department agrees that it is important to account for
violations that result from errors beyond the contractor's control.
Where the contractor submits information showing that a violation
occurred as the result of action or inaction by the contracting agency,
such as the failure to include a required contract clause or wage
determination, this information supports a conclusion that the
contractor acted in good faith and had reasonable grounds for its
conduct. While the Department believes that the language of the
Proposed Guidance was broad enough to incorporate this concept, the
final Guidance includes a clarification to this effect.
In addition, as discussed above in section III(A)(3)(e), some
employer groups noted that employers must violate section 8(a) of the
NLRA by refusing to bargain with a union in order to obtain appellate
review of the NLRB's determination that a group of employees is an
appropriate bargaining unit. While the Department does not view such
violations as excusable or merely ``technical,'' it does agree that the
contractor's belief that it had justifiable reasons for committing a
Labor Law violation should be taken into account as a possible
mitigating factor during the weighing process.
The Department believes that the Order and the related new
requirements and processes adequately address AGC's concerns about the
capacity of contracting officers to weigh good-faith arguments. As
discussed above, GAO reports have repeatedly stated that prior to the
Order, contracting officers had the authority to consider labor
violations during the responsibility determination process, but were
reluctant to do so in part because of a lack of expertise on the
matter. In response, the Order directed executive agencies to designate
ALCAs and to coordinate with the Department so that contracting
officers receive enough support. ALCAs will assist contracting officers
with interpreting information about good faith and reasonable grounds
as part of ALCAs' analysis and advice regarding contractor's record of
Labor Law compliance.
Significant Period of Compliance
One employee-advocacy organization suggested that the Guidance
should not include the ``long period of compliance'' factor. The
organization commented that this factor may not provide an accurate
assessment of the contractor's responsibility because a long period of
``compliance'' may be the result of infrequent inspections by Federal
enforcement agencies during the 3-year disclosure period. It also
commented that the duration of the ``significant period of compliance''
was not clearly defined.
Although the Department has declined to eliminate this factor, the
Department has added language to address the concern that the duration
of ``significant period'' was not defined. The Department has clarified
that this factor is a stronger mitigating factor where the contractor
has a recent Labor Law decision that it must disclose, but the
underlying conduct took place significantly before the 3-year
disclosure period and the contractor has had no subsequent violations.
Proposals To Expressly Include Additional Mitigating Factors
The Department also received comments that the Guidance should
include additional mitigating factors.
Some labor organizations proposed that a contractor's participation
in a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) should be considered a
mitigating factor. This proposal is based on the view that workers
covered by a CBA are likely to feel more secure reporting violations
and working to get the violations resolved. In these circumstances,
unionized employers may have a higher number of disclosed Labor Law
decisions than non-union employers, particularly in the area of safety
and health.
While the final Guidance does not explicitly list a CBA as a
mitigating factor, the Department clarifies in response to this comment
that the list of mitigating factors in the Guidance is non-exclusive.
The FAR rule states that an ALCA's analysis and advice must include
whether there are ``any'' mitigating factors. FAR 22.2004-2(b)(4)(iii).
Thus, to the extent that a contractor believes that a CBA provision is
relevant to the violation at issue, a contractor should submit this
information for consideration as a mitigating factor.
Finally, one industry commenter stated that the FAR rule and
Guidance sections on mitigating circumstances should place greater
emphasis on a contractor's overall commitment to compliance to Labor
Laws (as evidenced by its policies and practices), and require ALCAs
and contracting officers to consider such information. The Department
considers any such modification to be unnecessary. The Proposed
Guidance already recognized the importance of a contractor's overall
commitment to compliance by assessing
[[Page 58695]]
various factors such as the number and severity of violations, the
existence of safety-and-health programs, and arguments about good faith
and reasonable grounds.
2. Factors That Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
The Department received numerous comments about the Proposed
Guidance's explanation of violations that ``raise particular concerns''
about contractor integrity and business ethics. The Proposed Guidance
provided a non-exclusive list of certain types of violations that raise
particular concern: Pervasive violations, violations that meet two or
more of the serious, repeated, or willful classifications, violations
that are reflected in final orders, and violations of particular
gravity. Some commenters felt that these categories were too broad,
while others proposed expanding them further.
Several employer organizations argued that the Proposed Guidance
did not provide sufficient detail on how ALCAs and contracting officers
are to assess the various factors. These commenters said that the
categories of violations that ``raise particular concern'' were vague
and too expansive, and as a result ALCAs and contracting officers would
have unchecked discretion when making assessments.
The Department declines to modify the Guidance in this respect. The
Department does not agree that the categories of violations discussed
in this section of the Guidance are too broad or vague. The categories
are specific and are based on concrete, factual information--for
example, the total damages and penalties assessed--that will usually be
readily apparent from the findings in the Labor Law decisions.
However, the Department has changed the name of this category from
``violations of particular concern'' to ``factors that weigh against a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.'' This change is not
substantive but helps make clear that ALCAs will not make a finding as
to whether any individual violation is a ``violation of particular
concern.'' Rather, ALCAs will assess all facts and circumstances that
weigh for and against a conclusion that a contractor has a satisfactory
record of compliance in order to provide helpful analysis and advice to
the contracting officer.
Pervasive Violations
The Proposed Guidance stated that pervasive violations should
receive greater weight because they raise particular concern about a
contractor's integrity and business ethics. Several industry
representatives commented that the Guidance does not provide sufficient
direction on how to weigh whether pervasive violations would trigger
the requirement for a labor compliance agreement. One suggested that
quantitative information based on DOL enforcement data should be used
to make an empirical definition of pervasiveness, based on a comparison
with other employers in the same industry and jurisdiction. Other
employer representatives repeated their view that the pervasive
category is overly broad and vaguely defined, giving contracting
officers and ALCAs too much discretion in assessing the record of a
contractor with pervasive violations or deciding whether a labor
compliance agreement is warranted.
The Department declines to modify the guidance on weighing
pervasive violations. As explained above and in the previous discussion
of the definition of pervasive, flexibility and discretion are
necessary when assessing the severity of pervasive violations, given
the range of factors that must be considered. The Department does not
believe it would be appropriate to set a finite threshold for the
number or types of violations that indicate a lack of integrity and
business ethics and therefore suggest that a labor compliance agreement
may be warranted.
Violations That Meet Two or More of the Serious, Repeated, or Willful
Classifications
The Proposed Guidance stated that violations that fall into at
least two of the serious, repeated, or willful classifications are
violations of particular concern. Some industry groups questioned this
approach. For example, one employer organization argued that these
classifications are defined so broadly that many violations will fall
into two of them even though the violations themselves are not
significant enough to bear on contractor integrity and business ethics.
The Department retains this criterion as an example of a factor that
weighs against a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance; and the
Department has added an additional clarification to section III(A) of
the Guidance that a single violation may satisfy the criteria for more
than one classification. As explained above, the Department disagrees
that the serious, repeated, and willful classifications are defined too
broadly.
Violations That Are Reflected in Final Orders
In the Proposed Guidance, the Department stated that violations
reflected in final orders should receive greater weight. Several
commenters supported this proposal. The Service Employees International
Union (SEIU), however, argued that lodging an appeal should not prevent
a determination from receiving greater weight if the contractor's
``appeal is clearly non-meritorious or frivolous and was taken in order
to delay compliance.'' SEIU further stated that, conversely, if an
appeal of an adverse determination is ``of a close or unsettled point
of law, lesser weight should be given to the nonfinal violation(s).''
The Department declines to change the Guidance in this manner.
ALCAs will not be able to evaluate the legal merit of or motivation
behind a contractor's appeal, nor should they attempt to do so.
However, the Department agrees with SEIU commenter that whether a
violation involves a ``close or unsettled point of law'' may in certain
circumstances be relevant in the assessment process. For example, as
discussed above, the Guidance provides that a contractor's good-faith
effort to meet its legal obligations may be a mitigating factor--and
that this may occur where a new statute, rule, or standard is first
implemented and the issue presented is novel.
SEIU's underlying concern is that providing extra weight to final
decisions could incentivize contractors to contest a Labor Law decision
that they might otherwise not have contested--simply in order to delay
it from becoming final under after a contract has been awarded. The
Department acknowledges that such an outcome would be problematic and
could lead to unnecessary litigation and uncertainty, and perhaps a
delay in the correction of a violation or relief to injured workers.
However, the Department does not believe that this outcome will be the
practical result of the Guidance.
As an initial matter, if a Labor Law decision is contested,
subsequent decisions (e.g., on an appeal) will themselves be Labor Law
decisions that will need to be disclosed under the Order. See Guidance,
section II(B)(4). However, an uncontested (and therefore final)
decision will no longer be considered by an ALCA during review of the
contractor's record, nor by the contracting officer during the
responsibility determination, after 3 years. And, as the final Guidance
notes, ``[w]hile a violation that is not final
[[Page 58696]]
should be given lesser weight, it will still be considered as relevant
to a contractor's record of Labor Law compliance.'' Id. section
III(B)(2)(e). This provides a counterweight to the perceived incentive
to contest violations.
An even more significant counterweight is the value placed on
mitigating factors, and, in particular, remediation as a mitigating
factor. If a contractor has remediated the violation, that factor
weighs in favor of a satisfactory record of compliance. Thus, while
there may be an incentive for contractors to contest a violation,
contractors have an equally powerful incentive to stop contesting a
violation and remediate. As the Guidance notes, ``[d]epending on the
facts of the case, even where multiple factors [weighing against a
satisfactory record] are present, they may be outweighed by mitigating
circumstances.'' Guidance, section III(B)(2). Thus, a prospective
contractor with Labor Law violations that is planning to bid on future
contracts may be best served by considering how to remediate and
resolve violations, not by contesting them.
The Department also received a comment from the Equal Employment
Advisory Council (EEAC) that questioned the manner in which the
Proposed Guidance treated final orders. The EEAC agreed that final
orders generally should be given more weight, but argued that this is
not appropriate when the final order only involves ``minor or technical
violations.''
The Department declines to modify the Guidance in response to this
comment. In general, the question of whether a violation is ``minor''
or ``technical'' is addressed by the classification of violation as
serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. If a violation is not
classified as serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive, then it is not
factored into the ultimate analysis and advice--whether or not it has
been the subject of a final order. Moreover, even where a violation is
classified as serious, repeated willful, or pervasive and has also been
the subject of a final order, it will not necessarily result in a
finding that the contractor has an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. As explained above, the assessment process requires
consideration of the totality of circumstances, including any
mitigating factors. Thus, while a final order may provide additional
weight against a finding of a satisfactory record in a given case, the
contractor's good-faith arguments and remediation of the violation may
weigh even more heavily in the other direction. The Department believes
that these processes for considering the totality of the circumstances
are sufficient to take into account any argument that a particular
violation or violations was ``minor'' or ``technical.''
Violations for Which Injunctive Relief is Granted
As explained above in section III(A)(1)(b) of this section-by-
section analysis, the Department has determined that the granting of
injunctive relief by a court is better considered as part of the
weighing process than as a criterion for a serious violation. This
means that the fact that injunctive relief has been granted is only
relevant during an ALCA's assessment process if the violation at issue
is already classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive.
If the violation is so classified, then the fact that injunctive relief
was granted as part of the remedy for the violation is a factor that
will weigh against a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.
As discussed above, taking injunctive relief into consideration in
this manner is responsive to concerns that it would be overinclusive as
a criterion for a serious violation--and it still appropriately values
the fact that courts rarely grant either preliminary or permanent
injunctions and require a showing of compelling circumstances,
including irreparable harm to workers and a threat to the public
interest. Accordingly, where a court grants injunctive relief to remedy
a violation that is already classified as serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive, the ALCA should take this into account as a factor
that increases the significance of that violation to the contractor's
overall record of Labor Law compliance.
Violations of Particular Gravity
The purpose of the ``particular gravity'' factor is to identify
examples of violations that generally have more severe adverse effects
on workers and more potential to disrupt contractor performance, and
thus should receive greater weight in determining whether a labor
compliance agreement is needed or other action is necessary. In the
Proposed Guidance, the Department listed four examples of violations of
particular gravity: ``violations related to the death of an employee;
violations involving a termination of employment for exercising a right
protected under the Labor Laws; violations that detrimentally impact
the working conditions of all or nearly all of the workforce at a
worksite; and violations where the amount of back wages, penalties, and
other damages awarded is greater than $100,000.'' 80 FR 30,574, 30,590.
Several industry commenters criticized this category. In a
representative comment, the EEAC articulated several of these concerns:
[T]he Department's category of violations of ``particular gravity''
is also too broad. Equating every type of retaliation claim with
violations resulting in the death of an employee strains
credibility. Further, including in this category any violation where
the amount of back wages, penalties, and other damages is greater
than $100,000 would include an overrepresentative proportion of
routine administrative merits determinations found by the EEOC . . .
. Finally, the category of violations that ``detrimentally impact
the working conditions of all or nearly all the workforce at a
worksite'' is unclear as the guidance provides no direction as to
what conduct will constitute ``detrimental impact'' of working
conditions.
Other employer groups echoed these concerns.
While unions and worker-advocacy groups generally supported the
definition of ``violations of particular gravity,'' several suggested
that the Department should modify one of the examples in its list of
violations of particular gravity. These commenters proposed broadening
the retaliatory termination example to include interference with any
protected right and clarifying that it includes retaliatory
constructive-discharge situations.
The Department has considered the concerns raised by industry
comments and declines to make any substantive changes to the category
of violations of particular gravity.
First, the Department does not agree that this factor is too broad
because it includes both violations that involve the death of an
employee and violations involving retaliatory termination of an
employee. While the Department agrees that the death of a worker is a
tragedy that cannot be easily compared to other violations, it would be
unreasonable to suggest that other violations are not of a particular
gravity simply because there has been no loss of life. Moreover, the
EEAC's comment misstates the treatment of retaliation in the proposed
guidance. Retaliation can involve many types of adverse action. The
guidance specifies only that violations ``involving a termination of
employment for exercising a right protected under the Labor Laws''
receive greater weight. By this language, the Department did not intend
to suggest (as the EEAC stated) that ``every type of retaliation
claim'' is considered per se to be of particular gravity.
[[Page 58697]]
Second, the Department believes that the Guidance's $100,000
threshold is appropriate, as the amount of damages in a case provides a
practical measure of the extent losses experienced by employees. The
Department does not agree with the argument that such a threshold is
inappropriate because it would include an ``overrepresentative''
proportion of EEOC determinations. The Department believes that it is
misguided to focus on the proportion of decisions that would meet a
monetary test of gravity. Rather, it is appropriate to give additional
weight to those violations that have a severe harmful effect on
workers. In terms of the economic impact on the workforce, $100,000 in
lost wages due to discrimination is just as severe as $100,000 in lost
wages due to a wage-and-hour violation.
Third, the Department considers it appropriate to give greater
weight to those violations that ``detrimentally impact the working
conditions of all or nearly all the workforce at a worksite.'' 80 FR
30574, 30590. When unlawful conduct causes negative impact that is
widespread in scope, additional weight is warranted.
Finally, in response to employee groups' concerns, the Department
believes that it is unnecessary to state explicitly that a retaliation
violation involving a constructive discharge should be considered the
same as a retaliation violation involving a termination. Enforcement
agencies are responsible for finding violations. The enforcement
agencies and adjudicatory tribunals--not ALCAs--decide whether a
constructive discharge amounts to an unlawful termination. The
Department also finds it unnecessary to characterize all violations
involving an interference with protected rights as violations of
particular gravity. The list of violations of particular gravity is not
an exclusive list, and the Department does not intend to limit an
ALCA's ability to describe a violation as one of particular gravity
where the facts of the case merit such a description.
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor's Record of Labor Law Compliance (Step
Three)
In the final Guidance, the Department creates a new subheading for
the discussion of an ALCA's advice to contracting officers and the
relationship of labor compliance agreements to that process. The core
parameters of this process are defined in the FAR rule. The Department
has modified the description of the advice process in the Guidance to
conform to the structure in the rule. The Department received many
comments about this process. Because these comments and the reasons for
changes to the proposed FAR rule are discussed in the preamble to the
final FAR rule, they are not included here.
While the FAR rule governs the advice process, the Department and
its individual enforcement agencies play an important role in
negotiating labor compliance agreements and assisting ALCAs with their
duties. The Order instructs contracting officers to consult with ALCAs
about Labor Law violations and labor compliance agreements during the
preaward responsibility determination and also during the postaward
period when considering whether to take actions such as the exercise of
an option on a contract. Order, section 2(a)(iii), (b)(ii). The Order
directs ALCAs to provide this advice in consultation with the
Department or other relevant enforcement agencies. Id. section
3(d)(ii). As a result, the Department has expanded its discussion of
labor compliance agreements in the final Guidance and addresses
relevant comments below.
Summary of the ``Advice and Analysis'' Component of the Final FAR Rule
The final FAR rule discusses the written advice and analysis that
an ALCA provides to the contracting officer for use in the
responsibility determination. FAR 22.2004-2(b)(3). The rule provides
that ALCAs may make one of several recommendations, including that a
labor compliance agreement is necessary, the appropriate timing for
negotiations of an agreement, and whether notification of the agency
suspending and debarring official is appropriate. Id. Contracting
officers consider advice provided by ALCAs along with advice provided
by other subject matter experts.
The ALCA's advice and analysis must also include the number of
Labor Law violations; their classification as serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive; any mitigating factors or remedial measures;
and any additional information that the ALCA finds to be relevant. FAR
22.2004-2(b)(4). If the ALCA concludes that a labor compliance
agreement or other appropriate action is warranted, then the written
analysis must include a supporting rationale. See id.
Timeframe for ALCA Advice and Analysis
The FAR Council's proposed rule set out a 3-day period for ALCAs to
provide contracting officers with recommendations about the
contractor's record of Labor Law compliance. The Department received
many comments expressing concern that this timeframe is infeasible and
will lead to unfair responsibility determinations. Commenters
representing both employers and employees commented that in some cases
ALCAs will have to review a large amount of information to make their
recommendations. One union, in a representative comment, argued that
while 3 days may be enough in many cases, this timeframe would be too
short when an ALCA's recommendation involves weighing existing labor
compliance agreements; high severity violations; or multiple willful,
pervasive, or repeated violations.
The proposed rule suggested that contracting officers would be
permitted to make a responsibility determination without input from an
ALCA if the ALCA failed to make a recommendation within the 3-day
period. Some employer organizations speculated that the contracting
officer might delay the contract award while waiting for the ALCA
recommendation, regardless of the authority to act independently; or,
if he or she does act independently, the contracting officer might make
a determination inconsistent with other contracting officers,
contracting agencies, or ALCAs.
These comments are addressed in the preamble to the final FAR rule
and therefore are not addressed here. In brief, the final FAR rule
retains the default 3-day period for an ALCA to provide advice. See FAR
22.2004-2(b)(2)(i). It also retains the possibility for the contracting
officer to provide the ALCA with ``another time period'' for submitting
the advice. See id. And it retains the requirement that if the
contracting officer has not received timely advice, the contracting
officer must proceed with the responsibility determination using
available information and business judgment. See id. 22.2004-
2(b)(5)(iii).
De Facto Debarment
Members of Congress and industry advocates also expressed concern
that the short timeframe for ALCA advice may lead to ``de facto''
debarment of contractors that have been subject to a prior
nonresponsibility determination. ``De facto debarment occurs when a
contractor has, for all practical purposes, been suspended or
blacklisted from working with a government agency without due process,
namely, adequate notice and a meaningful hearing.'' Phillips v. Mabus,
894 F.Supp.2d 71, 81 (D.D.C.2012). These commenters suggested that
contracting officers might try to save time and effort by improperly
following earlier determinations without conducting their own
assessments. This, the commenters
[[Page 58698]]
suggested, would result in effectively ``blacklisting'' certain
companies from Federal contracting.
De facto debarment may occur where a contracting agency effectively
avoids the due process requirements of a debarment hearing by instead
repeatedly finding a contractor nonresponsible and denying individual
contracts based on one initial nonresponsibility determination. See
generally Old Dominion Dairy Prods., Inc. v. Sec'y of Def., 631 F.2d
953 (D.C. Cir. 1980). A single nonresponsibility determination is
insufficient to establish a de facto debarment. Redondo-Borges v. U.S.
Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., 421 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2005). However,
because an initial nonresponsibility determination based on a lack of
integrity or business ethics must be recorded in the Federal Awardee
Performance and Integrity Information System (FAPIIS), see FAR 9.105-
2(b), and contracting officers must review FAPIIS during each
subsequent responsibility determination, id. 9.104-6(b), a risk of de
facto debarment is inherent in the existing Federal procurement
system--and contracting agencies, OMB, and the Office of Federal
Procurement Policy must continually guard against it.
The Department disagrees with the commenters that the Order and the
related structure of the FAR rule present an unreasonable risk of de
facto debarment. The Department agrees that it would be inappropriate
for an ALCA to base his or her advice and analysis solely on a prior
analysis of a contractor's Labor Law compliance record. However, the
FAR requires contracting officers--with the assistance of ALCAs--to
make independent decisions in every case based on the information
provided by contractors during the respective solicitation process. See
generally FAR 22.2004-2.
Circumstances Warranting Negotiation of a Labor Compliance Agreement
The Department received several comments that the proposed rule and
Proposed Guidance did not clearly specify when an ALCA and a
contracting officer will require a contractor to negotiate a labor
compliance agreement. One employer organization argued that determining
whether an agreement is necessary or sufficient calls for subjective
decisions by ALCAs. The organization also expressed concern that labor
unions might use labor compliance agreements to pressure employers
while negotiating neutrality or collective bargaining agreements.
Numerous worker-advocacy organizations commented that a labor
compliance agreement should be required as a condition of receiving a
contract, especially if the employer has ``violations of particular
concern,'' as they are described in the Proposed Guidance. Several
commenters proposed that a labor compliance agreement should always be
required when a contractor violates the Labor Laws during the
performance of a Federal contract, unless the ALCA determines that the
violation is minor, old, or unlikely to recur after a long period of
time.
The Department has carefully considered these comments and has
included additional language discussing when it is appropriate for an
ALCA to recommend that a labor compliance agreement is warranted. See
Guidance, section III(C)(1). A labor compliance agreement may be
warranted where the ALCA has concluded that a contractor has an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. Id. section III(C)(1).
This may be the case where the contractor has serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive Labor Law violations that are not outweighed
by mitigating factors--but the ALCA identifies a pattern of conduct or
policies that could be addressed through preventative actions. Where
this is the case, the contractor's record of Labor Law violations
demonstrates a risk to the contracting agency of repeated violations
during contract performance, but these risks may be mitigated through
the implementation of appropriate enhanced compliance measures. A labor
compliance agreement also may be warranted where the contractor
presently has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, but there
are also clear risk factors present, and a labor compliance agreement
would reduce these risk factors and demonstrate steps to maintain Labor
Law compliance during contract performance.
A labor compliance agreement is not needed where a contractor has
no Labor Law violations within the 3-year disclosure period or has no
violations that meet the definitions of serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive. A labor compliance agreement may also not be needed where
the contractor does have violations that meet the definitions of
serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive, but under the totality of the
circumstances the existence of the violations is outweighed by
mitigating factors or other relevant information.
Finally, there are circumstances in which a contractor may have an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, but a labor compliance
agreement is not warranted--and instead the agency suspending and
debarring official should be notified. This is the case where the
contractor has serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive Labor Law
violations that are not outweighed by mitigating factors--and, in
addition, there are indications that a labor compliance agreement would
not be successful in reducing the risk of future noncompliance. The
final Guidance contains examples that illustrate when this may be the
case.
However, the Department disagrees with the commenters--both
industry and worker-advocacy groups--that argued that the final
Guidance should further limit the discretion of contracting officers
and ALCAs. Contracting officers and ALCAs must have the ability to
review all relevant facts concerning Labor Law violations and
mitigating factors, and to make determinations as to when agreements
are appropriate. As discussed above, ALCAs and contracting officers are
provided with robust parameters for making this underlying
determination--from the FAR and the Guidance, and also through
consultation with the enforcement agencies.
Moreover, the Department specifically declines to adopt the
employee advocate suggestion that a labor compliance agreement is
always warranted where a contractor has a ``violation of particular
concern.'' As discussed above in section III(B) (Weighing Labor Law
violations and mitigating factors) of this section-by-section analysis,
the Department has clarified that it did not intend for ALCAs to make
specific findings that violations are ``violations of particular
concern.'' Rather, the analysis requires a weighing process, where
certain factors will weigh in favor of an overall conclusion that a
contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, and
others will weigh against. Thus, it is not appropriate to tie advice
about the need for a labor compliance agreement to existence of any one
of these factors.
Negotiation of a Labor Compliance Agreement
The Department notes that some commenters may have incorrectly
understood that ALCAs or contracting officers would negotiate labor
compliance agreements directly with contractors. The final FAR rule and
the final Guidance clarify that it is enforcement agencies--not ALCAs
or contracting officers--who negotiate labor compliance agreements. The
Guidance provides additional detail on the roles and duties of each of
these
[[Page 58699]]
actors--ALCAs, contracting officers, and enforcement agencies--with
regard to determining the need for and negotiation of labor compliance
agreements.
The ALCA conducts a holistic review of the circumstances
surrounding the contractor's Labor Law violations, including any
mitigating factors. Guidance, sections III(A) (classification step),
III(B) (weighing step). If the ALCA concludes that a contractor has an
unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, the ALCA will consider
whether the negotiation of a labor compliance agreement may be
warranted. After that, the ALCA produces a written advice and analysis
for the contracting officer. Id. section III(C) (advice and analysis
step).
If the ALCA assessment indicates a labor compliance agreement is
warranted, the contracting officer provides written notice to the
contractor. FAR 22.2004-2(b)(7). The notice includes the name of the
enforcement agency with which the contractor should confer regarding
the negotiation of the agreement. Id. The contractor and the
enforcement agency may then initiate negotiations. Any resulting labor
compliance agreement will be an agreement between that enforcement
agency and the contractor.
Labor Compliance Agreements as a Mitigating Factor
In its discussion of remediation as a mitigating factor, the
Proposed Guidance stated that enhanced settlement agreements and labor
compliance agreements between a contractor and an enforcement agency
represent important ways to mitigate the weight of a Labor Law
violation. The Proposed Guidance noted that entering into a labor
compliance agreement indicates that the contractor recognizes the
importance that the Federal Government places on compliance with the
Labor Laws.
Industry commenters criticized how the Proposed Guidance addressed
the relationship between mitigating factors and labor compliance
agreements. Several stated that requiring such agreements raised due
process and fairness concerns. They asserted that a contractor may feel
pressured to negotiate or sign a labor compliance agreement and forgo a
challenge to a nonfinal administrative merits determination in order to
receive a pending contract. Several employer organizations argued that
labor compliance agreements would unfairly penalize contractors by
subjecting them to multiple rounds of remedial requirements in response
to the same underlying conduct.
The Department declines to change the Guidance in response to the
criticisms discussed above. The Department notes that considering labor
compliance agreements in the mitigating factor analysis is consistent
with the Order and the FAR rule. See Order, section 2(a)(ii); FAR
22.2004-2(b)(3)-(4). Labor compliance agreements may contain remedial
measures (such as the payment of back wages) or enhanced compliance
measures (such as the implementation of new safety-and-health
programs). When implemented outside of the context of a labor
compliance agreement, these types of measures are individually
mitigating factors. It is therefore reasonable to consider a labor
compliance agreement containing such measures also to be a mitigating
factor.
The Department disagrees that labor compliance agreements raise due
process concerns. As the Department has clarified in the final
Guidance, in appropriate circumstances contractors may enter into labor
compliance agreements while at the same time continuing to contest an
underlying Labor Law violation. And, if a contractor and a contracting
officer disagree about whether a labor compliance agreement is
necessary and the contractor refuses to negotiate an agreement, the
existing procurement process provides ample opportunity to contest any
resulting nonresponsibility determination. The contractor can bring a
bid protest and receive a hearing and judicial review of the agency
action.
The Department also disagrees with the argument that labor
compliance agreements will unfairly penalize contractors. The purpose
of a labor compliance agreement is not to penalize a contractor for
past violations; it is to protect the Federal Government's interest in
economy and efficiency in the prospective contract at issue. As
discussed above, Federal agencies have a duty to contract only with
responsible sources, and a track record of Labor Law violations raises
serious questions about whether a contractor can be trusted to comply
with Labor Laws--or with other non-labor laws--during the course of
contract performance. Labor compliance agreements provide contractors
that are otherwise at risk of being found nonresponsible with an
additional opportunity to take the steps necessary to assure
contracting officers that their past noncompliance will not be repeated
during contract performance. Thus, they are properly understood as an
opportunity for contractors, not a penalty.
Duration of a Labor Compliance Agreement
One employer organization commented that contractors needed more
information about the procedural aspects of labor compliance
agreements. One question this commenter raised is how long labor
compliance agreements will last.
The Department declines to specify a set duration for labor
compliance agreements. In general, the duration of an agreement will be
the subject of negotiations between the contractor and the enforcement
agency--and the enforcement agency will take a position regarding the
appropriate length of agreement based on the facts and circumstances of
the case and that agency's current practices in negotiating enhanced
compliance agreements. However, the extent to which a labor compliance
agreement extends beyond the expected duration of the contract will not
be taken into consideration in determining a contractor's
responsibility or in other decisions related to the contract at issue.
Elements of a Labor Compliance Agreement
Several unions and worker groups proposed that the Guidance should
require that all labor compliance agreements contain a prescribed list
of elements. Suggestions included (1) remedies for any labor law
violation; (2) notice and training for workers about the labor
compliance agreement and instructions for reporting violations; (3) a
plan to prevent future violations; (4) an agreement that the contractor
will self-report any alleged violations of the agreement; and (5)
enforceable safeguards to prevent employer retaliation against
employees who lodge complaints.
The Department does not agree that it should prescribe the content
of labor compliance agreements. The enforcement agencies, which will
negotiate labor compliance agreements, will determine the terms of each
labor compliance agreement on a case-by-case basis, taking into
consideration the totality of the circumstances.
Remedial Measures To Be Included in Labor Compliance Agreements
Labor union and worker-advocacy commenters emphasized that labor
compliance agreements should require employers to take remedial actions
that would prevent future violations. In contrast, numerous employer
representatives commented that labor compliance agreements should not
impose ``enhanced compliance''
[[Page 58700]]
measures--or remedial measures that go beyond basic compliance with the
requirements of the labor law that has been violated. For example, one
employer organization raised a question about whether an agreement
would apply only to the business unit or location with the alleged
violation--or would apply company-wide. Other commenters raised similar
concerns that labor compliance agreements might impose remedial
measures that are broader than remedies that could be imposed by courts
or enforcement agencies under the Federal labor laws.
Another employer organization expressed a related point about what
remedial actions can be expected in labor compliance agreements:
While we agree that any contractor practices that go above and
beyond the requirements of the law may constitute evidence of
remediation or otherwise serve as a mitigating factor, these
provisions should not be read so as to require remediation efforts
that exceed the law's requirement simply to get ``full credit'' for
remediation.
The Department agrees with the commenters that assert that labor
compliance agreements are not limited to providing compensation for
individual employees, abating a hazard, or changing an unlawful policy.
Rather, agreements may (and often should) contain additional provisions
that are directed at ensuring future compliance with the law. The Order
expressly requires that the contracting officer, when making a
responsibility determination, must give a contractor with a violation
the opportunity to disclose ``any agreements entered into with an
enforcement agency.'' Order, section 2(a)(ii). The ALCA then must
advise the contracting officer about the need for an agreement to
implement remedial measures or steps to ``avoid further violations.''
Id.
The requirement that contractors take actions to avoid future
violations is not new in the Federal contracting process. Because
contracting with the Federal Government is a privilege and not a right,
contracting agencies can generally require that contractors meet
specific conditions in order to receive a contract award. Accordingly,
Federal contractors already have a duty to implement programs intended
to prevent some labor law violations. For example, FAR 36.513 Accident
Prevention requires a contractor to submit a written safety-and-health
plan for identifying and controlling hazards where work is of a
hazardous nature. Similarly, under current practice, suspending and
debarring officials routinely negotiate ``administrative agreements''
that contain exactly the sort of enhanced compliance measures about
which the industry commenters raised concerns.\76\ By entering into a
labor compliance agreement, a contractor agrees to take specific
actions designed to achieve and maintain compliance during the contract
period; this is not any different than administrative agreements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ See Office of Management and Budget, M-06-26, ``Suspension
and Debarment, Administrative Agreements, and Compelling Reason
Determinations'' (2006), available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/omb/memoranda/fy2006/m06-26.pdf
(``Agencies sometimes enter into administrative agreements . . . as
an alternative to suspension or debarment.''); Interagency
Suspension & Debarment Comm., ``Report by the Interagency Suspension
And Debarment Committee on Federal Agency Suspension and Debarment
Activities for FY 2012 and FY 2013,'' 10 (2014) (``[T]he use of
administrative agreements increase the Government's access to
responsible sources and, thereby, promotes competition in the
Federal marketplace.''); see also Jennifer S. Zucker and Joseph
Fratarcangeli, ``Administrative Compliance Agreements: An Effective
Tool in the Suspension and Debarment Process,'' The Army Lawyer
(Feb. 2005), at 19-24 (describing the content of administrative
agreements negotiated between the Army and contractors).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, as commenters' references to ``enhanced compliance
agreements'' indicate, the negotiation of preventative measures as part
of a settlement is also a traditional aspect of both criminal and civil
law enforcement--of the Labor Laws and otherwise. Enforcement agencies
such as OSHA, WHD, and OFCCP currently negotiate enhanced compliance
agreements, including enterprise-wide agreements, as part of the
settlement of enforcement actions under their respective Labor Laws. In
sum, the inclusion of preventative measures in labor compliance
agreements--which are negotiated with these enforcement agencies--is a
reasonable and well-established mechanism for enforcing the existing
law and protecting the integrity of the Federal contracting process.
Relationship of Labor Compliance Agreement Terms to the Procurement
Contract
Several unions and worker-advocacy organizations proposed that the
terms of a labor compliance agreement should be incorporated into the
procurement contract. One commenter stated that the terms of labor
compliance agreements should operate as mandatory contract clauses that
are enforceable, whether or not expressly included in the contract
language. Many worker-advocacy organizations argued that labor
compliance agreements should provide for specific penalties, including
contract termination, if the contractor fails to implement agreed-upon
remedial measures during the contract period. Employer groups also
suggested that the Guidance delineate the consequences of violating a
labor compliance agreement.
The Department notes that final FAR rule does include reference to
consequences for the breach of a labor compliance agreement. Breach of
labor compliance agreement during the performance of a contract may
justify the exercise of contract remedies, such electing not to
exercise an option, terminating the contract, or notifying the agency
suspending and debarring official. See FAR 22.2004-3(b)(3)(v)(C),
(b)(4)(i)(B)(2)-(4). Additionally, where a prospective contractor has
previously breached a labor compliance agreement, this may justify and
ALCA's recommendation that the contracting officer could find that the
contractor has an unsatisfactory record of integrity and business
ethics and that the suspending and debarring official should be
notified. See id. 22.2004-3(b)(3)(v); see also Guidance, section
III(C)(1)(e).
Timing of Negotiation
Certain unions and employee advocacy organizations argued that if
the contracting officer determines that a labor compliance agreement is
necessary in order to establish that an employer can be considered a
responsible contractor, then the agreement must be fully negotiated
prior to the award of the contract. These commenters proposed that
merely engaging in good-faith negotiations should not be considered
sufficient to overcome a record of Labor Law violations. Rather, they
suggested that a finalized enforceable remedial agreement should be
required in order to permit a finding of contractor responsibility.
SEIU proposed in the alternative that a labor compliance agreement
should be executed within 2 months of the contract award and if the
contractor fails to comply, ``payments due the contractor under the
contract should be withheld until [a labor compliance agreement] is
executed.''
The Department believes these comments address issues outside the
scope of the Guidance and directs commenters to the preamble to the
final FAR rule. However, the Department notes that, as discussed above,
the final FAR rule provides that a contracting officer may require the
contractor to commit, prior to award, to negotiate a labor compliance
agreement ``in good faith within a reasonable period of time.'' FAR
22.2004-2(b)(7)(ii). The contracting officer may also require that the
contractor negotiate and execute an agreement prior to award. See id.
22.2004-2(b)(7)(iii). The ALCA is also required, during the performance
of a
[[Page 58701]]
contract, to report to the contracting officer whether the contractor
is continuing to negotiate a labor compliance agreement or whether the
contractor is adhering to an agreement that has been established. Id.
22.2004-3(b)(3)(i). The contracting officer then uses this information
to determine whether to, among other actions, elect to exercise an
option on the contract. Id. 22.2004-3(b)(4)(i).
Relationship Between Labor Compliance Agreements and Settlement
Agreements for Violations Under Litigation
Several industry commenters raised concerns about the relationship
between labor compliance agreements and litigation-specific settlements
for violations. One commenter stated that labor compliance agreements
could overlap with and contradict provisions of settlement agreements
that are already in place or administrative agreements reached as part
of suspension and debarment proceedings.
One industry group argued that the negotiation process for labor
compliance agreements could conflict with the Title VII conciliation
process, citing a recent Supreme Court decision, Mach Mining, LLC v.
EEOC, 135 S. Ct. 1645 (2015). Mach Mining addressed a statutory
provision that requires EEOC to conciliate with employers following a
reasonable cause determination. This commenter argued that the Order
would remove the determination of good faith negotiation from Federal
courts and place it in the hands of ALCAs or contracting officers.
The Department believes that concerns about labor compliance
agreements conflicting with existing settlements are unwarranted.
Contractors are encouraged to disclose information about existing
settlements as a potential mitigating factor in the weighing process.
In determining whether a labor compliance agreement is necessary, the
ALCA will consider any preexisting settlement agreement--and recommend
a labor compliance agreement only where the existing settlement does
not include measures to prevent future violations.
In addition, the Department notes that a labor compliance agreement
is an agreement between a contractor and an enforcement agency.
Enforcement agencies will know if they previously entered into
agreements with the contractor and can assure that any labor compliance
agreement does not conflict with prior agreements.
Finally, the Department disagrees with the commenter's
interpretation of Mach Mining. Mach Mining does not apply here because
a labor compliance agreement is not a conciliation agreement, nor does
it replace the EEOC's efforts to conciliate. Negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement is separate and distinct from the conciliation
process under Title VII.
Public Access to Labor Compliance Agreements, Recommendations, and
Responsibility Determinations
Union commenters proposed that the Guidance specify that ALCA
advice and analysis must be included in a public database, and that
contracting officers' responsibility determinations, along with the
reasons on which they are based, also must be made accessible to the
public. Several also proposed that a contracting officer should be
required to justify in writing if he or she makes a decision not to
adopt an ALCA's recommendation that a labor compliance agreement be
negotiated, and that this explanation should be made available to the
public.
Several of these commenters also proposed that labor compliance
agreements, as well as the contracting officers' responsibility
determinations and ALCA recommendations, should be public documents.
They stated that labor compliance agreements should be public so that
employees and other commenters can monitor whether contractors meet
their obligations under the terms of the agreements.
The Department declines to adopt the public-disclosure proposal.
Mechanisms for public access to information on government contracts
already exist, including the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
USAspending.gov, and the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System (FAPIIS)--a government database that tracks
contractor misconduct and performance. FAPIIS will indicate where a
contractor has entered into a labor compliance agreement. In addition,
the enforcement agencies that negotiate labor compliance agreements
have the discretion to make the agreements themselves publicly
available.
However, the Department notes that the final FAR rule does require
the contracting officer to document in the contract file how he or she
has taken into account an ALCA's recommendation and analysis--including
whether a labor compliance agreements is warranted--in making the
responsibility determination for the award. See FAR 22.2004-
2(b)(5)(ii). In addition, the final FAR rule also states that where a
contractor enters into a labor compliance agreement, the entry will be
noted in FAPIIS by the ALCA and the fact that a labor compliance
agreement has been agreed to will be public information. Id. 22.2004-
2(b)(9). The Department has added reference to this procedure in
section II(C)(3) of the Guidance.
Other Criticism of Labor Compliance Agreements
One employer advocate, in a representative comment, stated that the
use of labor compliance agreements forces contractors to defend
themselves in multiple forums on the same issues. Other employer
organizations commented that the use of labor compliance agreements
would deter businesses from seeking Federal contracts because they will
add another layer of negotiation and uncertainty.
The Department has carefully considered these comments but does not
modify the Guidance in response. Labor compliance agreements will
enable contractors with a significant record of Labor Law violations,
who might not otherwise be considered responsible, to obtain government
contracts. Thus, as discussed above, labor compliance agreements are
properly viewed as expanding opportunity and not imposing additional
burdens. With regard to the question of competition, the commenters
have not provided any objective evidence to support their statement
that the use of labor compliance agreements would deter, rather than
encourage, participation in Federal contracting. And, the Department
also received comments from employee representatives stating that the
Order's requirement that remedial measures be put in place through
labor compliance agreements will enhance fair competition. These
commenters argued that law-abiding contractors are currently deterred
from seeking government business because they believe they will be
underbid by unscrupulous contractors. The Department believes that the
final FAR rule's inclusion of a structure for labor compliance
agreements can only benefit competition by allowing contractors that
might otherwise be barred from contracting--either through an
individual nonresponsibility determination, suspension, or debarment--a
path to responsibility instead.
IV. Postaward Disclosure and Assessment of Labor Law Violations
The Order requires contractors that made initial preaward
disclosures of Labor Law violation information to update that
information semiannually during performance of the covered procurement
contract. Order, section 2(b). Where new Labor Law violation
[[Page 58702]]
information is disclosed or otherwise brought to the attention of the
contracting officer, the Order requires the contracting officer to
consider whether action is necessary--including agreements requiring
appropriate remedial measures or remedies such as decisions not to
exercise an option on a contract, contract termination, or referral to
the agency suspending and debarring official. Id. section 2(b)(ii). The
Proposed Guidance referenced these provisions of the Order, and
explained that postaward disclosures should include both (a) any new
Labor Law decisions rendered since the last disclosure and (b) updates
to previously disclosed information. 80 FR 30574, 30581.
Disclosure Update Requirements
The Department received a number of comments discussing the Order's
postaward disclosure requirements. In general, employee-advocacy
organizations approved of the requirements and urged the Department to
strengthen them--particularly with regard to the consequences of
violating a labor compliance agreement. In contrast, several industry
commenters expressed concern that the semiannual, postaward disclosure
requirement is unduly burdensome. These commenters suggested
elimination of the requirement entirely.
The Department does not amend the Guidance to eliminate the
postaward disclosure requirement. The final FAR rule has implemented
this requirement in section 22.2004-3 of the FAR, and created a
contract clause that incorporates these requirements into covered
contracts, see id. 55.222-59(b). The Department agrees that this
requirement is appropriate, because the Order expressly mandates
postaward disclosures. See Order, section 2(b).
The Department also received multiple comments from industry groups
requesting clarification about the timing of postaward disclosure and
whether each contract would have its own disclosure cycle based on the
date of each award. Some of these commenters asserted that companies
with multiple Federal contracts would have an onerous reporting burden
because the Order and the proposals will require such companies to
constantly make disclosures. They proposed alternative ways to schedule
their disclosure requirements; in particular, they suggested that the
Department establish a unified, fixed-date disclosure schedule as
opposed to reporting on the anniversary of each contract award.
The Department notes that the timing of postaward disclosures is a
question that is resolved in the FAR rule. In response to similar
comments, the final FAR rule provides the flexibility requested by
commenters, allowing the contractor to use any date that it chooses
before the six-month anniversary date of the award. FAR 22.2004-
3(a)(2). The Department has included this clarified language in the
Guidance.
Postaward Assessment of Labor Law Violations
Some industry commenters expressed concern that it would be
disruptive to find a contractor nonresponsible in the middle of the
performance of a contract based on a violation that is disclosed
postaward. Similarly, other industry commenters were critical of using
postaward violations as a basis for terminating a contract that was
otherwise being properly and timely performed. These commenters argued
that such information should only be used in connection with a
contracting officer's consideration of whether to exercise an option to
extend the contract.
The consideration of appropriate postaward actions is within the
jurisdiction of the FAR Council, and the Department has deferred to the
treatment of these issues in the final FAR rule. Under the final rule,
the ALCA will follow a similar assessment process for postaward
disclosures as for preaward disclosures. See FAR 22.2004-3(b)(3). The
ALCA assesses the information disclosed and provides analysis and
advice to the contracting officer regarding, among other questions,
whether violations should be considered serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive, see id. 22.2004-3(b)(3)(i); and whether the
contractor is adequately adhering to any labor compliance agreements,
see id. 22.2004-3(b)(3)(v)(C). The contracting officer may then take no
action and continue the contract, or may exercise one or more contract
remedies under existing FAR regulations and procedures. FAR 22.2004-
3(b)(4).
The Department believes that the FAR Council's rule appropriately
implements the plain language of the Order requiring postaward
consideration of the specified contract remedies. The Order expressly
includes various appropriate remedies, including contract termination.
Order, section 2(b)(ii). The Department notes that the Order and the
final rule do not deviate in any significant way from what the FAR
otherwise requires when a contracting officer receives information
during contract performance that implicates a contractor's
responsibility.
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
The Department has re-organized the discussions of subcontractor
responsibility that appeared in several locations of the Proposed
Guidance into a new section V of the final Guidance. The Department
received several comments about the extent of subcontracts covered by
the Order, the method of subcontractor disclosure, and the assessment
by prime contractors of their subcontractors' responsibility. These
comments are discussed in turn below.
Covered Subcontracts
The Proposed Guidance described ``covered subcontracts'' as
including subcontracts for commercial items, but, as prescribed by the
Order, excluding those for commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS)
items. As discussed above in section II(A) of this section-by-section
analysis, one industry commenter suggested that all commercial item
contracts--and especially commercial item subcontracts--should be
excluded from the Order's disclosure requirements. The commenter
asserted that there is no basis for distinguishing between contracts
for COTS items and contracts for commercial items.\77\ In the
alternative, the commenter suggested that coverage of commercial item
subcontracts be delayed 5 years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ Another commenter, Ogletree Deakins, asked a specific
question about the definition of COTS items. The law firm stated
that a construction company client ``is of the opinion that its
construction materials qualify as COTS items'' and ``seeks
confirmation'' from the Department that this opinion is correct. In
response, the Department notes that Order does not require the
Department to provide guidance regarding the definition of COTS
items. The Department, however, interprets the use of ``commercially
available off-the-shelf items'' in the Order as subject to the
definition of that term in the FAR. See Order, section 2(a)(iv); FAR
2.101.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department declines to adopt the commenter's suggestions. As
noted above, contract coverage is within the jurisdiction of the FAR
Council, and the final FAR rule maintains the inclusion of ``commercial
item'' subcontracts as proposed. See FAR 52.244-6. The final FAR rule
also did not adopt the commenter's alternative request that coverage of
commercial item subcontracts be delayed 5 years. However, in
recognition of the additional complexity of the prime contractors'
determination of subcontractor responsibility, the FAR Council has
delayed implementation of all of the subcontractor disclosure and
assessment requirements in the Order for an additional year beyond the
[[Page 58703]]
effective date of the final rule. See FAR 22.2007(b).
Subcontractor Disclosures
The Proposed Guidance contemplated that subcontractors would
disclose Labor Law violations to prime contractors for assessment. See
80 FR 30577. However, the Proposed Guidance also noted that ``the FAR
Council is considering allowing contractors to direct their
subcontractors to report violations to the Department, which would then
assess the violations'' (instead of contractors). Id. n.9.
Various industry commenters raised concerns about the original
subcontractor disclosure and assessment provision in the Proposed
Guidance. In a representative form comment, one commenter stated that
the task of assessing subcontractor responsibility under the Order
would be overly burdensome for prime contractors, who may have up to 30
subcontractors for a multimillion dollar contract. Another commenter,
SAIC, raised a concern with the structure by which subcontractors would
give violation information to prime contractors on the grounds that the
subcontractor and the prime may be competitors on the next contract,
and ``competitors should not have access to sensitive information about
one another.''
In contrast, another commenter objected to the structure of the
proposed alternative. In a comment made to the FAR Council on the
proposed FAR rule, the commenter questioned whether there might be
conflicts of interest if the Department is given the authority to
assess subcontractor violations. The commenter suggested that a
conflict could arise because the Department would often be charged with
classifying and assessing the weight of violations that may be under
active enforcement or litigation by enforcement agencies within the
Department; presumably the concern would be that the Department could
tip the scales in its own ongoing litigation by providing a more
negative assessment of the subcontractor's record than it might
otherwise do in order to force the contractor into settling.
After carefully considering these and other similar comments, the
FAR Council decided to adopt the proposed alternative structure under
which subcontractors will be able to make detailed disclosures to the
Department instead of to prime contractors directly. See FAR 52.222-
59(c)(3)(ii). Pursuant to Order (as amended), the FAR Council has the
express authority to designate the entity to which subcontractors
submit disclosure information.
Under the final FAR rule, upon receiving a subcontractor's
disclosure, the Department will provide advice that the subcontractor
provides to the contractor for the contractor's use in the determining
the subcontractor's responsibility. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(4).
Ultimately, however, the Order does not change the underlying principle
in the FAR that it is the prime contractor (and not the Department)
that has the duty to make a determination that its subcontractors are
responsible sources. See id. 9.104-1.
The FAR Council and the Department have carefully considered the
concern that the structure of the subcontractor responsibility
assessment would create a conflict of interest, and we have concluded
that the proposed structure is appropriate. ALCA training will include
material that addresses prevention of such conflicts of interest. The
Guidance clarifies that in assessing violations, the Department will
apply the same Guidance language that ALCAs apply in classifying and
weighing violations and that any Labor Law decisions from an
enforcement agency will be evaluated objectively and without regard for
the enforcement agency's litigation interests. See Guidance, section
V(B). As the FAR Council notes in its response to this issue,
administrative decision makers enjoy a presumption of honesty and
integrity. See Withrow v. Larkin, 421 U.S. 35, 47 (1975). Moreover, if
the subcontractor disagrees with the Department about the assessment,
it may provide an explanation of its disagreement, along with the
relevant information, to the contractor, FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(3),
and in this situation the contractor may award the subcontract
notwithstanding the Department's negative assessment, id. 52.222-
59(c)(5).
In sum, the Department has tracked the FAR rule in the final
Guidance. The Department believes that the FAR Council's modification
of the subcontractor responsibility structure will address the above-
described concerns that contractors (and especially small business
contractors) would find it challenging to assess subcontractors'
violations. This change will also ensure a greater degree of expertise
and consistency in assessing subcontractors' Labor Law violations.
VI. Preassessment
The Proposed Guidance noted that the Department will be available
to consult with contractors to assist them in fulfilling their
obligations under the Order, and, specifically, that contractors would
have the opportunity to receive early guidance before bidding on a
contract. In this ``preassessment,'' contractors would receive the
Department's advice as to ``whether any of their violations of the
labor laws are potentially problematic, as well as the opportunity to
remedy any problems.'' 80 FR 30575 n.7.
The Department received few comments specifically addressing
preassessment. However, several commenters stated that contracting
agencies must provide enough time for ALCAs to assess the information
disclosed regarding violations, mitigating circumstances, and remedial
measures. Many commenters stated that the 3-day timeframe for ALCAs to
give analysis and advice to contracting officers is insufficient and
will cause delays in decision-making. The Department believes that the
preassessment process will help avoid such delays. With regard to
subcontractor preassessment, AGC stated in its comment that ``pre-
approving national subcontractors may be helpful,'' while noting that
there are disadvantages to limiting the pool of acceptable
subcontractors to those that have been pre-approved.
After considering these comments, the Department has decided that
there will be a preassessment process whereby contractors may
voluntarily agree to have their record of Labor Law violations assessed
by the Department. The preassessment process does not limit the pool of
contractors in the manner that AGC suggested could be disadvantageous.
Rather, preassessment will provide contractors with early information
that their record of Labor Law compliance is satisfactory--and, if that
is not the case, with information about how to address any issues
before bidding on a contract. The preassessment process does not
circumvent or replace the structured preaward disclosure and assessment
process required by the Order.
The Guidance now clarifies that the Department's advice during
preassessment is similar to the analysis that ALCA's provide to
contracting officers during the preaward assessment process--including
``advice regarding whether any of the disclosed violations are serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive; and regarding whether a labor
compliance agreement is warranted.'' Guidance, section VI. And, it
clarifies that if a contractor whose record have been assessed by the
Department subsequently submits a bid, and the contracting officer
initiates a responsibility determination of the contractor, the
contracting officer and the ALCA may rely on the Department's
assessment that the contractor has a
[[Page 58704]]
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance unless additional Labor Law
violations have been disclosed.
VII. Paycheck Transparency
Section VII of the Guidance assists agencies in interpreting the
paycheck transparency provisions of the Order and the FAR rule. The
purpose of these provisions is to increase transparency in compensation
information and employment status, which will enhance workers'
awareness of their rights, promote greater employer compliance with
Labor Laws, and thereby increase economy and efficiency in government
contracting.
A. Wage Statement Provisions
Section 5(a) of the Order requires covered contractors, including
subcontractors, to provide ``all individuals performing work'' under
the contract for whom the contractor must maintain wage records under
the FLSA, the DBA, the SCA, or equivalent State laws with a
``document'' each pay period containing ``information concerning that
individual's hours worked, overtime hours, pay, and any additions made
to or deductions made from pay.'' As the Department noted in the
Proposed Guidance, this means that a wage statement must be provided to
every worker subject to the FLSA, all laborers and mechanics subject to
the DBA, and all service employees covered by the SCA--regardless of
the contractor's classification of the worker as an employee or
independent contractor. See 80 FR 30591.
In the Proposed Guidance, the Department interpreted the term
``pay'' in the Order to mean the total or ``gross pay'' that is due the
worker for the pay period. 80 FR 30591. The Proposed Guidance noted
that additions to gross pay may include bonuses, awards, and shift
differentials, and that deductions from gross pay may include
withholding for taxes and for employee contributions to health
insurance premiums or retirement accounts. 80 FR 30591-30592.
The Order requires that the wage statement must be issued every pay
period and contain the total number of hours worked in the pay period
and any overtime hours worked, among other information. Order, section
5(a). In those cases where the wage statement is not provided weekly
and is instead provided bi-weekly or semi-monthly, the FAR Council's
proposed rule provided that the hours worked and overtime hours
detailed in the wage statement be broken down to correspond to the
period for which overtime is actually calculated and paid (which will
almost always be weekly). 80 FR 30571.
The Proposed Guidance suggested that if the contractor regularly
provides documents to workers electronically, the wage statement may be
provided electronically if the worker can access it through a computer,
device, system, or network provided or made available by the
contractor. 80 FR 30591. The FAR Council proposed the requirement that,
if a significant portion of the contractor's workforce is not fluent in
English, the contractor must provide the wage statements in English and
the language(s) in which the significant portion(s) of the workforce is
fluent. 80 FR 30572.
The Department received many comments regarding the different
aspects of the proposed wage-statement requirements discussed above.
Employee advocates generally supported the Order's wage-statement
provisions.\78\ Employer organizations, on the other hand, commented
that the wage-statement provisions are overly burdensome and in
addition made several specific suggestions and objections. The
Department addresses these comments below.
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\78\ The Department received many comments generally supporting
the paycheck transparency provisions, including more than 1,700
comments submitted by the National Women's Law Center (NWLC).
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1. Rate of Pay
Several unions and employee advocacy organizations suggested that
contractors should be required to include in the wage statement: (a)
The worker's rate of pay, (b) hours and earnings at the basic rate, and
(c) hours and earnings at the overtime rate. In their view, these would
allow ``a worker to fully understand the basis for his or her net
pay.'' They argued that the term ``pay'' in the Order should be defined
to include both the worker's regular rate of pay and the total amount
of pay for the pay period. SEIU noted that several States, including
Alaska, California, New York, and Hawaii, already require rate-of-pay
information in wage statements, ``demonstrating the reasonableness of
this requirement.'' The Midwest Region Foundation for Fair Contracting
and the Foundation for Fair Contracting of Massachusetts suggested that
the wage statement should include the ``overtime rate of pay and hours
calculated,'' reasoning that the ``rate of pay alone is not sufficient
for a worker to calculate his or her overtime hours[.]'' The Center for
American Progress Action Fund (CAPAF) and SEIU also suggested that the
Guidance ``should make clear that the terms used in the paycheck
transparency provisions have the same meaning as they do under the
FLSA.''
In response to similar comments, the FAR Council has included in
its final rule that rate-of-pay is a required element on the wage
statement. See FAR 52.222-60(b)(1)(iii). The Department has modified
the final Guidance accordingly. The Department believes that this
decision accords with the plain text of the Order, which states that
the wage statement must contain the worker's ``pay.'' Order, section
5(a). As the commenters above noted, the term ``pay'' can and should be
defined to include both ``gross pay'' and ``rate of pay.''
The Department believes that a worker's rate of pay is a crucial
piece of information that should appear in the wage statement, because
a worker's knowledge of his or her rate of pay enables the worker to
more easily determine whether all wages due have been paid. Inclusion
of rate of pay in wage statements will therefore reduce the time an
employer spends resolving pay disputes because workers will have
available the information on which his or her pay was determined, and
be able to identify any problems at an earlier date. By aiding in the
early identification of problems, including rate of pay in the wage
statement will help to implement the Order's purpose of reducing
execution delays and avoiding distractions and complications that arise
from Labor Law noncompliance during the course of contract performance.
See Order, section 1. All parties have an interest in ensuring workers
receive their full pay when it is earned--including contractors
themselves, who benefit from fair competition, employee satisfaction,
and reduced liability for damages resulting from unpaid wages.
Also, in most cases, contractors compute gross pay by multiplying
the regular hours worked by the worker's rate of pay and, in overtime
workweeks, by also multiplying the overtime hours worked by time-and-
one-half of the rate of pay. As contractors cannot compute the worker's
earnings without the rate-of-pay information, workers similarly cannot
easily determine how their earnings are computed without inclusion of
the rate-of-pay information in the wage statement.
Moreover, the relevant laws already require that the employer keep
a record of the rate of pay. As one employee-advocacy organization
pointed out, an employer must maintain a record of a non-exempt
employee's rate of pay under the FLSA. See 29 CFR 516.2(a)(6)(i). A
requirement to keep
[[Page 58705]]
rate-of-pay information also applies to SCA-covered contracts, see 29
CFR 4.6(g)(1)(ii), and to DBA-covered contracts, see 29 CFR
5.5(a)(3)(i).\79\ In addition, a number of States currently require the
worker's rate of pay to be included in wage statements.\80\ Contractors
located in one of these States already are including the rate of pay in
the wage statements that they provide. Therefore, including this
information in the wage statement helps to realize the purposes of the
Order with limited burden to contractors.
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\79\ In general, for DBA and SCA, the basic hourly rate listed
in the wage determination is considered the rate of pay that is to
be included in the wage statement. Under the FLSA, the regular
hourly rate of pay is determined by dividing the employee's total
remuneration (except statutory exclusions) by total hours worked in
the workweek. See 29 CFR 778.109.
\80\ States that currently require rate of pay information to be
included in wage statements are: Alaska, California, Colorado,
Hawaii, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, North
Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.
This list is not the list of ``Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States'' that the Order requires the Department to identify. As
discussed below, whether a State law is substantially similar
requires consideration of all of the required elements in a wage
statement--not simply rate of pay.
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The rate of pay information on the wage statement will most often
be the regular hourly rate of pay. If the worker is not paid by the
hour, the rate of pay information should reflect the basis of pay by
indicating the monetary amount paid on a per-day, per-week, per-piece,
or other basis. See FAR 52.222-60(b)(1)(iii). This information is
required to be kept by the employer for non-exempt employees under the
FLSA, and would allow the worker to recognize any underpayments. See 29
CFR 516.2(a)(6)(i)-(ii), 778.109.
The Department, however, believes that it is not essential for the
overtime rate of pay to be included in the wage statement. For example,
in order to check the accuracy of the wages paid in weeks when overtime
hours are worked, a worker can generally perform the following
calculation: (1) The rate of pay multiplied by 40 hours equals regular
earnings; (2) rate of pay multiplied by 1.5 equals the overtime rate of
pay; (3) overtime rate of pay multiplied by the overtime hours worked
equal overtime earnings; and (4) regular earnings plus overtime
earnings equals gross pay. The inclusion of the overtime rate of pay in
the wage statement would only slightly simplify this calculation for
the worker by eliminating step two. In most situations, once the worker
knows his or her rate of pay, the worker can readily determine what the
overtime pay rate should be by simply multiplying the rate of pay by
time and one half (by a factor of 1.5).
In addition, the FLSA, SCA, and DBA regulations do not require
contractors to keep a record of the overtime pay rate in their payroll
records.\81\ Similarly, with some exceptions, State laws generally do
not require that the overtime rate of pay be included in wage
statements. Therefore, requiring the overtime rate of pay in the wage
statement would be a new burden on contractors and, as discussed above,
having the overtime pay-rate information in the wage statement does not
significantly improve the worker's ability to determine whether the
correct wages were paid.
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\81\ Of the three Federal statutes referenced in section 5(a) of
the Order, only the FLSA requires the payment of overtime; however,
the FLSA recordkeeping regulations do not require the contractor to
maintain overtime rates of pay on payroll records. The FLSA
regulations do require a supplemental record documenting the
overtime pay calculation. See 29 CFR 516.6(a)(2). The DBA and SCA do
not contain an overtime pay provision and, as a result, the
regulations governing these statutes make no reference to listing
overtime rates of pay on payroll records. See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i)
and 5.32(a) for DBA; 29 CFR 4.6(g) and 4.180 for SCA.
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With regard to SEIU's comment that the Guidance should make clear
that the terms used in the Order's paycheck transparency provision
should be given the same meaning as in the FLSA, the Department agrees
with this comment to the extent the FLSA provides relevant meaning and
context to the terms in the Order's paycheck transparency provisions.
The Department has cited to the FLSA regulations where applicable.
2. Itemizing Additions to and Deductions From Wages
Employee advocates urged the Department to require contractors to
itemize additions to and deductions from wages in the wage statement.
SEIU stated that there should be ``no lump sums for additions or
deductions.'' The AFL-CIO urged the Department to require contractors
to ``itemize the contributions for fringe benefits and identify each
plan or fund to which such contributions are being paid.'' NABTU noted
that a number of States require contractors to itemize in this manner
in the certified payroll records that are filed with the State. The
Indiana-Illinois-Iowa Foundation for Fair Contracting (Foundation for
Fair Contracting) suggested that wage statements required by the Order
should include the hourly fringe benefit rates, the name and address of
each fringe benefit fund, and the plan sponsor and administrator of
each fringe benefit plan, if applicable. Foundation for Fair
Contracting noted that the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act requires
contractors on public-works projects to submit certified payrolls that
contain such information.
In response to similar comments, the FAR Council has included in
its final rule the requirement that additions and deductions to gross
pay must be itemized in the wage statement. See FAR 52.222-60(b)(1)(v).
Accordingly, the final Guidance clarifies that additions and deductions
must be itemized.
The Department agrees that it is appropriate to require itemization
of additions and deductions. Section 5(a) of the Order provides that
the wage statement should, among other items, include ``any additions
made to or deductions made from pay.'' The Order, therefore, already
contemplates that any and all additions or deductions be separately
noted in the wage statement; in other words, the wage statement must
itemize or identify each addition or deduction, and not merely provide
a lump sum for the total additions and deductions.
The Department notes that the relevant FLSA regulations require
covered employers to maintain records regarding the nature of each type
of addition to or deduction from gross wages. For instance, besides
having to record the total additions to or deductions from wages, the
FLSA regulations at 29 CFR 516.2(a)(10) also require covered employers
to maintain records for non-exempt employees of the dates, amounts, and
nature of the items which make up the total additions and deductions.
Also, both DBA and SCA regulations require covered contractors to
maintain a record of deductions from wages paid. See 29 CFR
5.5(a)(3)(i), 4.6(g)(1)(iv).\82\ Because these statutes already require
contractors to maintain a record of any additions or deductions,
requiring contractors to provide the same itemized information to
workers in the wage statement will not be overly burdensome.
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\82\ Optional form WH-347 that is typically used by contractors
and subcontractors on Federal or federally-aided construction-type
contracts and subcontracts to submit weekly certified payrolls, for
instance, lists deductions from the worker's gross pay.
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The Department did not receive comments specifically objecting to
the itemization of additions or deductions. Many States currently
require itemized deductions to be included in wage statements.\83\
Contractors working in
[[Page 58706]]
one of these States are already including itemized deductions from
gross pay in the wage statements that they provide. The Department thus
believes that it is reasonable to presume that contractors who already
furnish wage statements usually provide information identifying any
additions or deductions from gross pay.
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\83\ States that currently require itemized deductions include:
Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,
Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island,
Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming. This list is not the list of ``Substantially Similar Wage
Payment States'' that the Order requires the Department to identify.
As discussed below, whether a State law is substantially similar
requires consideration of all of the required elements in a wage
statement--not simply of itemized additions and deductions.
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Moreover, including itemized additions and deductions in the wage
statement allows workers to determine whether they are paid correctly,
identify any error, and promptly raise any questions with the
contractor as necessary. As the Department noted in the Proposed
Guidance, ``[p]roviding a worker with gross pay and all additions to
and deductions from gross pay will necessarily allow the worker to
understand the net pay received and how it was calculated.'' 80 FR
30592.
With regard to suggestions by employee advocates that the wage
statements should identify the name and address of each fringe benefit
fund, and the plan sponsor and administrator of each fringe benefit
plan, the Department believes that listing such information in the wage
statement would be duplicative. Generally, when a worker participates
in a fringe benefit fund or plan, he or she must complete an enrollment
form for the fund or plan to become a registered participant in the
fund or plan. An enrolled or registered worker is given a document with
the fund or plan contact information including, but not limited to: The
name of the fund or plan; the fund's or plan's address, contact number,
and email address; and the amount of the worker's contributions into
the fund or plan. The worker also receives quarterly earnings
statements or plan usage statements, as well as a summary of worker
contributions. See 29 CFR 2520.102-2, .102-3. This information is also
typically available online via the fund's or plan's Web site.
Furthermore, the fund or plan contact information is not essential in
order to understand and calculate the worker's earnings on a pay period
basis or to timely detect errors in their pay; therefore, the
Department does not believe that including this information in the
worker's wage statement is necessary to meet the Order's requirements
and purposes.
Foundation for Fair Contracting also requested that the hourly
fringe-benefit rate be listed in the wage statement. The Department
does not believe it is essential to include the hourly fringe-benefit
rate in the wage statement. The amount of the fringe benefit required
by the DBA or SCA is typically expressed as an hourly rate in the wage
determinations issued by the Department.\84\ The contractor may pay
this amount as a contribution to a fringe benefit fund or plan, or in
``cash'' as an addition to the worker's wages. Section 5(a) of the
Order requires any additions made to gross pay to be listed in the wage
statement. The Department believes that fringe-benefit amounts paid by
the contractor into a fund or plan (e.g., health insurance or
retirement plan) on behalf of the worker should not be considered
additions to the worker's gross pay for purposes of the Order. Such
fringe-benefit contributions are excludable from the regular rate for
purposes of computing overtime pay under the FLSA \85\ and are not
taxable. Fringe-benefit contributions paid by the contractor on behalf
of the worker thus do not need to be included in the wage statement, as
such information has no bearing on determining whether the worker
received the correct cash wages as reported in the wage statement.
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\84\ The wage determination issued under the DBA and SCA that is
applicable to the contract must be posted by the contractor at the
site of work in a prominent and accessible place where it can be
easily seen by the workers. See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(1)(i), 4.6(e). Workers
therefore have access to fringe benefit rate information, further
negating the necessity to include the fringe benefit rate amount in
the wage statement.
\85\ See 29 U.S.C. 207(e)(4); 29 CFR 778.214, 778.215.
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On the other hand, when the contractor elects to meet their fringe
benefit obligation under the DBA or SCA by paying all or part of the
stated hourly amount in ``cash'' to the worker, the payments are
subject to tax withholdings, and the wage statement should list the
fringe benefit amounts paid as an addition to the worker's pay.\86\
Such amounts are part of gross pay.
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\86\ When the fringe benefit (or a portion thereof) is paid in
cash, that amount is excludable from the regular rate for purposes
of computing overtime pay. See 29 CFR 4.177(e), 5.32(c)(1).
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3. Information To Be Included in the Wage Statement
As discussed above, in order to implement the purposes of the
Order's wage-statement requirement, the final FAR rule has interpreted
the term ``pay'' to mean both gross pay and rate of pay. See FAR
52.222-60(b)(1). And the final rule has clarified that any additions to
or deductions made from gross pay be itemized or identified in the wage
statement. See id. The final Guidance, therefore, provides that wage
statements required under the Order must contain the following
information: 1) hours worked, 2) overtime hours, 3) rate of pay
(whether the regular hourly rate of pay or the monetary amount paid on
a per-day, per-week, per-piece, or other basis), 4) gross pay, and 5)
an itemization of each addition to or deduction from gross pay. See
Guidance, section VII(A).\87\
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\87\ Nothing prohibits the contractor from including more
information in the wage statement (e.g., exempt-status notification,
overtime-pay rate).
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4. Weekly Accounting of Overtime Hours Worked
The Department also received comments from industry commenters
regarding the proposed requirement that if the wage statement is not
provided weekly and is instead provided bi-weekly or semi-monthly
(because the pay period is bi-weekly or semi-monthly), that the hours
worked and overtime hours contained in the wage statement would need to
be broken down to correspond to the period for which overtime is
actually calculated and paid (which will almost always be weekly). See
80 FR 30571 (proposed rule); 80 FR 30591 (Proposed Guidance). Several
employer representatives stated that contractors generally issue wage
statements on a bi-weekly basis, and do not separately provide the
number of hours worked (regular and overtime hours) for the first and
second workweeks of the bi-weekly pay period. These commenters stated
that requiring a weekly accounting of regular hours worked (i.e., hours
worked up to 40 hours) and overtime hours worked in the wage statement
would be costly to implement and unnecessary.
The final FAR rule continues to require that ``the hours worked and
overtime hours contained in the wage statement . . . be broken down to
correspond to the period (which will almost always be weekly) for which
overtime is calculated and paid.'' FAR 52.222-60(b)(2). The Department
accordingly declines to change the Guidance in response to the comments
received.
As the Department discussed in the Proposed Guidance, transparency
in the relationships between employers and their workers is critical to
workers' understanding of their legal rights and to the speedy
resolution of workplace disputes. See 80 FR 30591. The calculation of
overtime pay on a workweek-by-workweek basis as
[[Page 58707]]
required by the FLSA has been a bedrock principle of labor protections
since 1938. 29 U.S.C. 207(a). A wage statement that is provided bi-
weekly or semi-monthly that does not separately state the hours worked
during the first workweek from those worked during the second workweek
of the pay period fails to provide workers with sufficient information
about their pay to be able to determine if they are being paid
correctly. For example, a worker who receives a wage statement showing
80 hours worked during a bi-weekly pay period and all hours paid at the
regular (straight-time) rate may, in fact, have worked 43 hours the
first week and 37 hours the second week. In this case, to comply with
the FLSA, the employer should have paid the worker at time and one half
of the worker's regular rate of pay for the three hours worked after 40
hours in the first workweek. Without documentation of the weekly hours,
it would be difficult for this worker to determine whether overtime pay
is due.
The FLSA already requires that employers calculate overtime pay
after 40 hours worked per week; and the implementing regulations under
the FLSA, DBA, and SCA require employers to maintain payroll records
for at least 3 years. Under the FLSA regulations at 29 CFR 516.2(a)(7),
for instance, an employer must maintain a record of a non-exempt
employee's total hours worked per week. A requirement to keep records
of hours worked also applies to SCA-covered contracts, see 29 CFR
4.6(g)(1)(iii), and to DBA-covered contracts, see 29 CFR 5.5(a)(3)(i).
Moreover, workers covered under DBA must be paid on a weekly basis
requiring a workweek-by-workweek accounting of overtime hours worked.
See 29 CFR 5.5(a)(1)(i). Therefore, including hours worked information
in the wage statement derived on a workweek basis will not be overly
burdensome.
5. Electronic Wage Statements
With regard to providing wage statements electronically, one
industry commenter agreed that providing wage statements electronically
should be an option. One labor union, the United Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners of America (UBCJA), advocated that workers
should be allowed to access wage statements using the contractor's
computer network during work hours. According to UBCJA, merely
providing workers with the Web site address to access their wage
statements on their own would be insufficient as such an arrangement
would require the worker to purchase internet connection to access the
information. One employee advocate suggested that the contractor should
be allowed to provide wage statements electronically only with written
permission from the worker and if written instructions on how to access
the wage statements are provided to the worker.
The final FAR rule provides that contractors have the option of
providing wage statements either by paper-format (e.g., paystubs), or
electronically if the contractor regularly provides documents
electronically and if the worker can access the document through a
computer, device, system, or network provided or made available by the
contractor. FAR 52.222-60(e)(2). The final Guidance accordingly
provides the same. See Guidance, section VII(A). The Department agrees
with UBCJA that merely providing workers with a Web site address would
be insufficient; the contractor must provide the worker with internet
or intranet access for purposes of viewing this information.
The Department, however, believes that it is not necessary to
require contractors to allow workers such access during work hours. The
Department assumes that employees will, in most cases, access wage
statements (or other employer-provided documents, such as leave
statements or tax forms) using the contractor's network or system
during the workday--including during the worker's rest breaks or meal
periods. However, the Department believes it is not necessary to
specifically prescribe a requirement regarding the time period during
which a wage statement can be accessed.
The Department also believes that it is not necessary to require
that workers give consent before receiving the wage statement
electronically, or to require that workers be given written
instructions on how to access the wage statement using the contractor's
computer, device, system, or network. As the Proposed Guidance noted,
the employer must already be regularly providing documents to workers
electronically in order to provide wage statements in the same manner.
See 80 FR 30592. Contractors that already provide documents
electronically presumably also provide general instructions regarding
accessing personnel records on their intranet Web pages; therefore,
additional written instructions specific to accessing the worker's wage
statement using the contractor's computer, device, network, or system
is not necessary. Similarly, requiring a written consent by the worker
is not necessary because the workers for such employers should already
be familiar with the process for receiving documents electronically.
6. Substantially Similar State Laws
The Order provides that the wage-statement requirement ``shall be
deemed to be fulfilled'' where a contractor ``is complying with State
or local requirements that the Secretary of Labor has determined are
substantially similar to those required'' by the Order. Order, section
5(a). If a contractor provides a worker in one of these ``substantially
similar'' States with a wage statement that complies with the
requirements of that State, the contractor would satisfy the Order's
wage-statement requirement. In the Proposed Guidance, the Department
stated that two requirements do not have to be exactly the same to be
``substantially similar''; they must, however, share ``essential
elements in common.'' 80 FR 30587 (quoting Alameda Mall, L.P. v. Shoe
Show, Inc., 649 F.3d 389, 392 (5th Cir. 2011)). The Proposed Guidance
offered two options for determining whether State requirements are
substantially similar to the Order's requirements.
The first proposed option identified as substantially similar those
States and localities that require wage statements to have the
essential elements of overtime hours or earnings, total hours, gross
pay, and any additions to or deductions made from gross pay. As the
Proposed Guidance noted, when overtime hours or earnings are disclosed
in a wage statement, workers can identify from the face of the document
whether they have been paid for overtime hours. Applying this method,
the current list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment States would be
Alaska, California, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, New
York, and Oregon. See 80 FR 30592.
The second proposed option would have allowed wage statements to
omit overtime hours or earnings, as long as the wage statements
included ``rate of pay,'' in addition to the essential elements of
total hours, gross pay, and any additions to or deductions made from
gross pay. The intent of this option was to allow greater flexibility
while still requiring wage statements to provide enough information for
a worker to calculate whether he or she has been paid in full. The
Department noted that one drawback of this option was that failure to
pay overtime would not be as easily detected when compared with the
first option. The worker would have to complete a more difficult
calculation to identify an error in pay. Applying this second method,
the current list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment States would be
Alaska, California, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Hawaii,
Massachusetts,
[[Page 58708]]
Minnesota, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont, Washington,
and Wisconsin. See 80 FR 30592.
The Department requested comments regarding the two options and
stated that it could also consider other combinations of essential
elements or other ways to determine whether State or local requirements
are substantially similar. 80 FR 30592.
Numerous employee advocates and members of Congress strongly
supported the first option. These commenters observed that employers
and workers benefit when workers can easily understand their pay by
reviewing their wage statement. These commenters noted that wage
statements also provide an objective record of compensated hours, which
helps employers to more easily meet their burden of demonstrating wages
paid for hours worked. National Employment Law Project (NELP), the
National Women's Law Center (NWLC), and the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU) thus advocated for the first option because
it brings ``greater . . . clarity on the face of the wage statement,''
making it ``easier . . . for an employee to notice any errors and bring
them to the attention of her employer.'' A comment by members of
Congress favored the first option because ``[d]isclosing whether
workers have been paid at the overtime rate is critical to enabling
workers to discern whether they have been paid fairly.'' While
recommending the first option, SEIU and CAPAF further recommended that
the first option be adopted with the modification that rate-of-pay
information also be included as an essential element.
The employee advocates found the second option--which would have
allowed wage statements to omit overtime hours or earnings, as long as
the wage statements include the rate of pay--to lack transparency. The
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
stated that workers ``should not be required to apply a mathematical
formula to determine the accuracy of wage payment.'' The United Food
and Commercial Workers (UFCW) noted that omitting overtime hours and
earnings ``will impede employees' ability to recognize whether
employers have failed to pay workers overtime.'' The second option is
less transparent, according to the NWLC, because it makes ``it more
difficult and confusing for employees to understand their paychecks.''
The UBCJA stated that overtime hours or earnings are vital pieces of
information that should not be omitted as such information is
``necessary to protect workers in low-wage industries who are the most
likely to be exploited and the least likely to have the math skills''
required to determine if the wage paid is accurate. As NELP pointed
out, contractors have workers' overtime hours and earnings readily
available as they are required to retain this information under the
law; it would, therefore, not be burdensome to require such information
on wage statements.
On the other hand, the Aerospace Industries Association (AIA)
recommended that the second option be adopted, primarily because it
would result in more substantially similar States and localities than
would the first option--thereby reducing compliance burdens and
providing greater flexibility to contractors. Associated Builders and
Contractors (ABC) also believed the second option ``is more in line
with employers' practices and is less burdensome than the first
option.'' Citing the paycheck-transparency provisions' alleged
``significant burdens,'' the law firm of Ogletree Deakins encouraged
the Department to adopt both options, and include a provision allowing
contractors ``to design their own substantially similar wage statements
that will comply'' with the Order. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce (the
Chamber) stated that the Proposed Guidance was not clear regarding
whether complying the requirement for any one of the substantially
similar States (e.g., the California) ``means that the contractor has
met the [Order's] requirement for all employees or just employees in
that State (i.e., California employees).'' The Chamber recommended that
contractors ``be deemed to be in compliance with the wage statement
requirements if they adopt one State's version nationwide.'' Finally,
the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) opposed implementation
of any wage-statement requirement until the Department has provided the
public an opportunity to comment on the substantially similar State and
local wage statement laws the Department ultimately identifies.
After carefully reviewing the comments received regarding the two
options discussed above, the Department adopts the first option for
determining whether wage-statement requirements under State law are
substantially similar. The list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment
States now adopted in the final Guidance is: 1) Alaska, 2) California,
3) Connecticut, 4) the District of Columbia, 5) Hawaii, 6) New York,
and 7) Oregon. These States and the District of Columbia require wage
statements to include the essential elements of hours worked, overtime
hours, gross pay, and any itemized additions to and deductions from
gross pay. The list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment States will
be available on the Department's Web site at https://www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces/. See also FAR 52.222-60(c) (providing that
the Order's wage-statement requirement is fulfilled if the contractor
complies with the wage statement laws of these States and localities).
The Department agrees with employee advocates who commented that
the second option--which would allow wage statements to omit overtime
hours worked, as long as the wage statements include the rate of pay--
is less transparent and helpful to workers. Excluding the overtime
hours worked from the wage statement would require a worker to complete
a more difficult computation in order to determine whether the correct
wages were paid. Moreover, the Department agrees with commenters who
noted that including the overtime hours in the wage statement would not
be overly burdensome as contractors are already required to keep such
information in their payroll records under the FLSA.
With regard to SEIU's comment that the Department should adopt the
first option with the modification that the rate of pay be a required
item in the wage statement, the Department declines to do so. As set
forth in the final FAR rule, rate of pay is a required element of the
core wage-statement obligation under the Order. Accordingly, covered
workers in most States will receive wage statements that include rate-
of-pay information. Only in those States and localities deemed
``substantially similar'' will it be permissible to provide a wage
statement that does not include rate of pay. The Department believes
that this accords with the definition of ``substantially similar,''
which means only that the substantially similar laws ``share essential
elements'' with the Order's requirement--not that they be identical.
Moreover, the Department notes that four of the States included in the
first option (Alaska, California, Hawaii, and New York) do already
require wage statements to have the rate-of-pay information.\88\ Thus,
contractors that have workers in those States will already need to
include the rate of pay in their wage statements to comply with
[[Page 58709]]
State law--regardless of the Department's definition in this Guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ For Alaska's wage-statement requirements, see 8 AAC
15.160(h); for California, see Labor Code sec. 226(a); for Hawaii,
see HRS sec. 387-6(c); and for New York, see NY Labor Law, art. 6,
sec. 195(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department disagrees with comments by Ogletree Deakins
encouraging the Department to adopt both options. Adopting both options
would mean effectively adopting the second option, which the Department
has deemed to be not as transparent. The Department also declines to
allow contractors ``to design their own substantially similar wage
statements that will comply'' with the Order, as this would likely
result in a variety of wage-statement content, and the provision would
then be difficult to administer. Moreover, the Order does not give the
Department authority to allow contractors to design their own wage
statements for purposes of satisfying the Order's ``substantially
similar'' criteria; thus, this specific suggestion is outside the scope
of the final Guidance.
The Chamber requested clarification regarding whether complying
with a State requirement (e.g., the California State requirement) means
that the contractor has met the Federal requirement for all employees
or just employees in that State. The Department believes that as long
as the contractor complies with the wage-statement requirements of any
of the Substantially Similar Wage Payment States, the contractor will
be in compliance with the final rule. For example, if a contractor has
workers in California and Nevada, the contractor will comply with the
final FAR rule if it provides to workers in both States the same wage
statements as long as the statements adhere to California State
law.\89\ In other words, the contractor would be in compliance with the
final rule if it adopts the wage-statement requirements of any
particular State or locality in the list of Substantially Similar Wage
Payment States in which the contractor has workers, and applies this
model for its workers elsewhere.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ California is among the States included in the list of
Substantially Similar Wage Payment States, while Nevada requires
minimal information in the wage statement provided to workers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department disagrees with NAM's comment opposing implementation
of any wage-statement requirement until the Department has specifically
identified ``the so-called `substantially equivalent' state and local
laws'' and provided an opportunity to comment. This comment may have
conflated (1) the Department's duty under section 5(a) of the Order to
identify State and local wage-statement laws that are ``substantially
similar'' to the Order's wage-statement requirement with (2) the
Department's duty under section 2(a) of the Order to identify the State
laws that are ``equivalent'' to the 14 Federal labor laws and Executive
orders for which violations must be disclosed.
Finally, the Department received many substantive comments related
to the two options discussing whether certain State and local
requirements are substantially similar to the Order's wage-statement
requirement. The Department developed this final Guidance based on a
careful review of the comments received.
7. Request To Delay Effective Date
One employer advocate suggested that the Department and the FAR
Council allow Federal contractors time to comply with the wage-
statement provisions. The commenter noted that, in the short term,
contractors will have to devise manual wage statements to comply with
the Order until automated systems are able to generate compliant wage
statements. Citing the Department's Home Care rule regarding the
application of the FLSA to domestic service, see 78 FR 60454 (Oct. 1,
2013), which had an effective date 15 months after the publication of
the final rule, the commenter recommended that contractors be provided
at least 12 to 15 months within which to comply with the wage-statement
requirement.
The FAR Council Rule provides that the paycheck transparency
requirements are effective on January 1, 2017. See FAR 22.2007(d). The
Department believes that this delay provides a reasonable length of
time and is sufficient for contractors to update their systems to
comply with the wage-statement provision. Further delaying the
effective date of the wage-statement provision is not warranted. As
discussed above, the Order's wage-statement requirement is deemed
fulfilled where a contractor complies with a State law that the
Department has determined to be ``substantially similar.'' And, in
States with wage-statement laws that are not substantially similar to
the Order's requirements, contractors will need only to supplement the
wage statements already provided pursuant to State law in order to
conform to the Order's requirements.
Moreover, the Department's enforcement experience has shown that
many employers, including Federal contractors, in the small minority of
States that do not require wage statements have opted to provide wage
statements to their workers as part of their general payroll practice.
A contractor in these States may choose either to include in the wage
statements all of the information required by the Order, or follow the
wage-statement requirements of any of the Substantially Similar Wage
Payment States in which it has employees. Finally, as discussed above,
all of the information required to be included in the wage statement
consists of items that contractors already maintain as part of their
normal recordkeeping obligations and general bookkeeping or payroll
practices. The provisions of the wage-statement requirement, in large
part, require contractors only to fine-tune the wage statements they
already provide to workers to include any additional required
information.
8. FLSA Exempt-Status Notification
According to the Order, the wage statement provided to workers who
are exempt from the overtime pay provisions of the FLSA ``need not
include a record of hours worked if the contractor informs the
individuals of their exempt status.'' Order, section 5(a). Because such
workers do not have to be paid overtime under the FLSA, hours-worked
information need not be included in the wage statement. See 80 FR
30592. Thus, if the contractor determines that a worker is exempt from
overtime pay under the FLSA and intends to not include the worker's
hours-worked information on the wage statement provided to the worker,
notification of the worker's exempt status must be provided to the
worker first.
The Department suggested in its Proposed Guidance that in order to
exclude the hours-worked information in the wage statement, the
contractor would have to provide a written notice to the worker stating
that the worker is exempt from the FLSA's overtime pay requirements;
oral notice would not be not sufficient. 80 FR 30592. The final FAR
rule provides that such notices of exempt status must be in writing.
FAR 52.222-60. The Department further proposed that if the contractor
regularly provides documents to workers electronically, the document
informing the worker of his or her exempt status may also be provided
electronically if the worker can access it through a computer, device,
system, or network provided or made available by the contractor. 80 FR
30592. The FAR Council adopted this proposal regarding electronic
notice in its final rule. See FAR 52.222-60. Finally, the proposals
suggested that if a significant portion of the contractor's workforce
is not fluent in English, the document provided notifying the worker of
exempt status must also be in the language(s) other
[[Page 58710]]
than English in which the significant portion(s) of the workforce is
fluent.\90\ See 80 FR 30592. The FAR Council adopted this translation
requirement in its final rule. See FAR 52.222-60.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ Translation requirements are also discussed below in the
context of the independent contractor notice, in section VII(B)(5)
of the section-by-section analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department received comments regarding the following issues
related to FLSA exempt status: Type and frequency of the notice,
differing interpretations by the courts regarding exemptions under the
FLSA, and phased-in implementation.
a. Type and Frequency of the Notice
One labor union commented that the contractor should be excused
from recording the overtime hours worked in the wage statement only if
the worker is correctly classified as exempt from the FLSA's overtime
pay requirements. The commenter also recommended that workers should be
informed of their exempt status on each wage statement. An employer-
advocate requested clarification on whether the exempt-status notice
should be provided once (e.g., in a written offer of employment) or on
a recurring basis (e.g., on each wage statement).
With regard to the labor union's comment on the importance of
correctly determining the exempt status of a worker under the FLSA, the
Department agrees that employers should correctly classify their
workers, but does not changes the Guidance in the manner suggested. An
employer who claims an exemption from the FLSA is responsible for
ensuring that the exemption applies. See Donovan v. Nekton, Inc., 703
F.2d 1148, 1151 (9th Cir. 1983). However, the fact that an employer
provides the exempt-status notice to a worker does not mean that the
worker is necessarily classified correctly. The Department will not
consider the notice provided by the contractor to the worker as
determinative of or even relevant to the worker's exempt status under
the FLSA. Therefore, the FAR has clarified that a contractor may not in
its exempt-status notice to a worker indicate or suggest that the
Department or the courts agree with the contractor's determination that
the worker is exempt. See 52.222-60(b)(3). The Department has modified
the Guidance to reflect this clarification.
With regard to the type of notice to be provided to the worker and
how often it should be provided, the final FAR rule requires that
contractors provide notice to workers one time before the worker
performs any work under a covered contract, or in the worker's first
wage statement under the contract. See 52.222-60(b)(3). After carefully
reviewing the comments received, the Department believes that this
requirement is sufficient. If during performance of the contract, the
contractor determines that the worker's status has changed from non-
exempt to exempt (for example, because of a change in the worker's pay,
duties, or both), it must provide notice to the worker either (a) prior
to providing a wage statement without hours worked information or (b)
in the first wage statement after the change. See id. The notice must
be in writing; oral notice is not sufficient. See id. The notice can be
a stand-alone document or be included in the offer letter, employment
contract, position description, or wage statement provided to the
worker. See id.
The Department does not believe it is necessary to require a
contractor to include the exempt-status information on each wage
statement. Although it is permissible to provide notice on each wage
statement, it is also permissible to provide the notice one time before
any work on the covered contract is performed or one time upon a change
from non-exempt to exempt status during the performance of the
contract. If the contractor provides such a one-time notice, there is
no need to provide notice in each wage statement. If the worker's
status later changes from exempt to non-exempt, no notice of the change
is required under the Order, but the contractor must thereafter include
hours worked information on the wage statements provided to the worker.
b. Differing Interpretations by the Courts of an Exemption Under the
FLSA
One industry commenter stated that it would not be prudent to
require employers to report on the exempt or non-exempt status of
workers where there is disagreement among the courts on who is and who
is not exempt under the FLSA. The commenter noted that, for example,
while two Circuit Courts have held that service advisors are exempt
``salesmen'' under section 13(b)(10)(A) of the FLSA, the Ninth Circuit
disagreed and found that the exemption is inapplicable to service
advisors. See, e.g., Navarro v. Encino Motorcars, LLC, 780 F.3d 1267
(9th Cir. 2015).\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ The Supreme Court has since vacated the Ninth Circuit's
decision and remanded the case for further proceedings. See https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/15pdf/15-415_mlho.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department understands that some court decisions regarding the
exemption status of certain workers under the FLSA may not be fully
consistent. The Department, however, does not find this to be a
persuasive reason to relieve contractors from providing the exempt-
status notice to employees. Regardless of any inconsistency in court
decisions, contractors already must make decisions about whether to
classify their employees as exempt or non-exempt under the FLSA in
order to determine whether to pay them overtime. Such determinations
are based on the facts of each particular situation, the statute,
relevant regulations, guidance from the Department, and advice from
counsel. In addition, in making these determinations, contractors
already must consider any inconsistent court decisions.
The Order does not change this status quo. Under the Order, the
contractor retains the authority and responsibility to determine
whether to claim an exemption under the FLSA. All that is required
under the Order is notice to the workers of the status that the
employer has already determined. And such notice is only required if
the employer wishes to provide workers with a wage statement that does
not contain the worker's hours worked.
c. Request To Delay Implementation of the Exempt-Status Notice
One industry association suggested that compliance with the exempt-
status notice requirements be postponed until the Department has
finalized its proposal to update the regulations defining the ``white
collar'' exemptions under section 13(a)(1) of the FLSA. See 80 FR 38515
(July 6, 2015); https://www.dol.gov/whd/overtime/NPRM2015/. The white-
collar exemptions define which executive, administrative, and
professional employees are exempt from the FLSA's minimum wage and
overtime pay protections. See 29 CFR part 541.
The Department believes that such a delay is unnecessary. The
Department published its final rule updating the white-collar exemption
regulations on May 23, 2016, see 81 FR 32391, and all employers covered
by the FLSA will continue to make determinations of FLSA exempt status
both before and after the update to the regulations becomes effective
on December 1, 2016, see id. The Order does not affect this continuing
obligation. The only new obligation under the Order is to provide
notice to employees of the determination that the contractor has
already made--and only if the contractor wishes to provide employees
with a wage statement without a record of hours worked. Because
contractors
[[Page 58711]]
will need to make exempt-status determinations regardless of any
requirements under the Order, the Department finds the argument that
the Order's requirements be delayed for this reason to be unwarranted.
\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ As discussed in section VII(A)(7) of the Guidance, the
final FAR rule delays the effective date of the Order's paycheck
transparency provisions generally until January 1, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Independent Contractor Notice
Section 5(b) of the Order states that if a contractor treats an
individual performing work under a covered contract as an independent
contractor, then the contractor must provide ``a document informing the
individual of this [independent contractor] status.'' Order, section
5(b). Contractors have to incorporate this same provision into covered
subcontracts. See FAR 52.222-60(f).
The proposed FAR Council rule specified that the notice informing
the individual of his or her independent contractor status must be
provided before the individual performs any work on the contract. 80 FR
30572. As the Department noted in the Proposed Guidance, the notice
must be in writing and provided separately from any independent
contractor agreement entered into between the contractor and the
individual. See 80 FR 30593. The Proposed Guidance also noted that if
the contractor regularly provides documents to its workers
electronically, the notice may also be provided electronically if the
worker can access it via a computer, device, system, or network
provided or made available by the contractor. Id.
The Proposed Guidance further stated that the provision of the
notice to a worker informing the worker that he or she is an
independent contractor does not mean that the worker is correctly
classified as an independent contractor under the applicable laws. 80
FR 30593. The determination of whether a worker is an independent
contractor under a particular law remains governed by that law's
definition of ``employee'' and the law's standards for determining
which workers are independent contractors and not employees. See id.
The Department received comments from several unions and other
employee advocates that were supportive of the Order's independent
contractor notice provisions. In contrast, several industry advocates
commented that aspects of the independent contractor notice requirement
need to be clarified. The Department has organized the comments in the
corresponding sections below.
1. Clarifying the Information in the Notice
The Department received comments requesting clarification of the
information that should be included in the independent contractor
notice. Several employee advocates recommended that the document also
notify the worker that, as an independent contractor, he or she is not
entitled to overtime pay under the FLSA, is not covered by worker's
compensation or unemployment insurance, and is responsible for the
payment of relevant employment taxes.
One employee advocate recommended that the notice include a
statement notifying the worker that the contractor's designation of a
worker as an independent contractor does not mean that the worker is
correctly classified as an independent contractor under the applicable
law. Several commenters suggested that the notice also include
information regarding which agency to contact if the worker has
questions about being designated as an independent contractor or needs
other types of assistance. One labor union also recommended that the
Department establish a toll-free hotline that provides more information
on misclassification of employees as independent contractors or tools
to challenge the independent contractor classification.
One industry commenter suggested that the FAR Council or the
Department publish a model independent contractor notice with
recommended language. Another industry commenter requested more
detailed guidance on what the independent contractor notice should
include.
As discussed above, section 5(b) of the Order requires that the
worker be informed in writing by the contractor if the worker is to be
classified as an independent contractor and not an employee. Thus, the
final FAR rule clarifies that the notice must be in writing and
provided separately from any independent contractor agreement entered
into between the contractor and the individual. See FAR 52.222-
60(d)(1)).
The Order, however, does not require the provision of the
additional information suggested by commenters. The Department believes
that notifying the worker of his or her status as an independent
contractor satisfies the Order's requirement. Providing such notice
enables workers to evaluate their status as independent contractors and
raise any concerns. The objective is to minimize disruptions to
contract performance and resolve pay issues early and efficiently. If
the worker has questions or concerns regarding the particular
determination, then he or she can raise such questions with the
contractor and/or contact the appropriate government agency for more
information or assistance.
As stated above, the fact that a contractor has provided a worker
with notice that he or she is an independent contractor does not mean
that the worker is correctly classified as an independent contractor. A
contractor may not in its notice to a worker indicate or suggest that
any enforcement agency or court agrees with the contractor's
determination that the worker is an independent contractor. See FAR
52.222-60(d)(1). The Department will not consider the notice when
determining whether a worker is an independent contractor or employee
under the laws that it enforces.
With regard to comments recommending that the Department establish
a hotline that provides information on issues involving
misclassification of employees as independent contractors, the relevant
agencies within the Department already have toll-free helplines that
workers and contractors can access to obtain this type of information
and for general assistance. Members of the public, for example, can
call the Wage and Hour Division's toll-free helpline at 1(866) 4US-WAGE
(487-9243), the Occupational Safety and Health Administration at 1(800)
321-OSHA (6742), the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs at
1(800) 397-6251. The National Labor Relations Board can be reached at
1(866) 667-NLRB, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission can be
reached at 1(800) 669-4000. Moreover, the enforcement agencies'
respective Web sites contain helpful information regarding employee
misclassification.
With regard to comments requesting a sample independent contractor
notice, the Department does not believe it is necessary to create a
template notice. The Department expects that any notice will explicitly
inform the worker that the contractor has made a decision to classify
the workers as an independent contractor.
2. Independent Contractor Determination
Several industry commenters suggested that the Department clarify
which statute should provide the basis for determining independent-
contractor status for purposes of the Order's requirement. These
commenters noted that the Proposed Guidance stated that the
determination of whether a worker
[[Page 58712]]
is an independent contractor or employee under a particular law remains
governed by that law's definition of ``employee.'' See 80 FR 30593. The
commenters stated that they are uncertain as to what definition should
be used in determining whether a worker is an employee or independent
contractor.
The Department does not believe that it is necessary or appropriate
to pick one specific definition of ``employee'' for the Order's
independent-contractor notice requirement. Employers already make a
determination of whether a worker is an employee (or an independent
contractor) whenever they hire a worker. The Order does not affect this
responsibility; it only requires the contractor to provide the worker
with notice of the determination that the contractor has made. If the
contractor has determined that the worker is an independent contractor,
then the employer must provide the notice.
3. Frequency of the Independent Contractor Notice
The Department received comments regarding the number of times an
individual who is classified as an independent contractor and engaged
to perform work on several covered contracts should receive notice of
his or her independent contractor status. Two industry commenters, for
example, noted that an independent contractor who provides services on
multiple covered contracts on an intermittent basis could receive
dozens of identical notices, resulting in redundancy and
inefficiencies. Other industry commenters believed that providing
multiple notices for the same work performed on different covered
contracts is burdensome and unnecessary. Two industry commenters
suggested that an independent contractor agreement between the relevant
parties should satisfy the Order's independent contractor notice
requirement.
The final FAR rule provides that the notice informing the
individual of his or her independent contractor status must be provided
at the time that an independent contractor relationship is established
with the individual or before he or she performs any work under the
contract. FAR 52.222-60(d)(1). The FAR Council has also clarified in
its final rule that contractors must provide the independent contractor
notice to the worker for each covered contract on which the individual
is engaged to perform work as an independent contractor. See id. The
Guidance reflects this clarification. The Department agrees that there
may be circumstances where a worker who performs work on more than one
covered contract would receive more than one independent contractor
notice. The Department, however, believes that because the
determination of independent contractor status is based on the
circumstances of each particular case, it is reasonable to require that
the notice be provided on a contract-by-contract basis even where the
worker is engaged to perform the same type of work. It is certainly
possible that the facts may change on any of the covered contracts such
that the work performed requires a different status determination.
Moreover, if the contractor determines that a worker's status while
performing work on a covered contract changes from employee to
independent contractor (because the nature of the relationship between
the worker and contractor changes), the contractor must provide the
worker with notice of independent contractor status before the worker
performs any work under the contract as an independent contractor. See
id. If a contractor provides a worker on a covered contract with an
independent contractor notice and later determines that the worker's
status under that contract has changed to that of an employee, no
notice of the change is required under the Order.
4. Workers Employed by Staffing Agencies
The Department received several comments regarding contractors that
use temporary workers employed by staffing agencies and whether these
contractors must provide such workers with a document notifying them
that they are independent contractors. NAM believed that in such cases,
``temporary workers are neither independent contractors nor employees
of the contractor.'' Several industry commenters suggested that the
final Guidance clarify that contractors would not be required to
provide notice of independent contractor status to temporary workers
who are employees of a staffing agency or similar entity, but not of
the contractor. Some of these commenters also recommended that the
independent contractor status notice be given only to those workers to
whom the contractor provides an IRS Form 1099.
In situations where contractors use temporary workers employed by
staffing agencies to perform work on Federal contracts, the contract
with the staffing agency may be a covered subcontract under the Order.
Section 5 of the Order requires that the independent contractor status
notice requirement be incorporated into subcontracts of $500,000 or
more. See Order, section 5(a). If the contract with the staffing agency
is a covered subcontract, and the staffing agency treats the workers as
employees, then no notices would be required. If the contract with the
staffing agency is a covered subcontract, and the staffing agency
treats the workers as independent contractors, then the staffing agency
(not the contractor) is required to provide the workers with notice of
their independent contractor status.\93\
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\93\ When using a staffing agency, a contractor should consider
whether it jointly employs the workers under applicable laws. The
Department recently issued guidance under the FLSA and MSPA for
determining joint employment. See ``Joint employment under the Fair
Labor Standards Act and the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker
Protection Act,'' https://www.dol.gov/whd/flsa/Joint_Employment_AI.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department disagrees with comments suggesting that the
contractor should provide independent contractor notices only to those
workers to whom the contractor already provides an IRS Form 1099.
Employers use a Form 1099-MISC to report, among other items, ``payments
made in the course of a trade or business to a person who is not an
employee or to an unincorporated business.'' \94\ The Order does not
limit the requirement to provide the independent contractor notice to
workers who receive a Form 1099-MISC. To the extent the contractor has
classified an individual as an independent contractor for Federal
employment tax purposes and provides the individual a Form 1099-MISC,
the contractor must provide the individual with the independent-
contractor status notice. The Department, however, declines to
interpret the Order as limiting the universe of workers who should
receive an independent contractor notice to only those workers to whom
the contractor already provides a Form 1099.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ See ``Form 1099-MISC & Independent Contractors,'' https://www.irs.gov/Help-&-Resources/Tools-&-FAQs/FAQs-for-Individuals/Frequently-Asked-Tax-Questions-&-Answers/Small-Business,-Self-Employed,-Other-Business/Form-1099-MISC-&-Independent-Contractors/Form-1099-MISC-&-Independent-Contractors (last visited July 22,
2016).
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5. Translation Requirements
The FAR Council's proposed regulations required that if a
significant portion of the contractor's workforce is not fluent in
English, the document notifying a worker of the contractor's
determination that the worker is an independent contractor, and the
wage statements to be provided to the worker, must also be in the
language(s) other than English in which the significant portion of the
workforce is ``more
[[Page 58713]]
familiar.'' 80 FR 30572. The FAR Council's final rule provides a
translation requirement. FAR 52.222-60(e)(1).
The Department received comments requesting clarification regarding
what would constitute a ``significant portion'' of the workforce
sufficient to trigger the translation requirement. One industry
commenter stated that the final Guidance should set a specific
threshold. Another stated that the translation requirement is
unnecessary and should be removed. One labor union commenter
recommended that the term ``significant portion'' of the workforce be
defined as 10 percent or more of the workforce under the covered
contract.
One industry commenter, AGC, posited a situation where there are
various foreign languages spoken in the workplace. AGC requested
clarification regarding whether the contractor would be required to
provide the wage statement and the independent contractor notice to
workers in every language that is spoken by workers not fluent in
English. AGC suggested that the wage-statement translation requirement
be revised such that the contractor need only provide the wage
statement in English and ``in each other language in which a
significant portion of the workforce is fluent.''
With regard to translating the independent contractor notice, AGC
recommended that this requirement apply only when the company is aware
that the worker is not fluent in English. Another industry commenter
also stated that it would not be sensible to require contractors to
provide notice in Spanish to an independent contractor who only speaks
English simply because a significant portion of the contractor's
workforce is fluent in Spanish. AGC further advocated that, instead of
including the complete translation in each wage statement or
independent contractor notice for each worker, contractors should be
allowed to provide only a Web site address where the translations are
posted.
After carefully reviewing the comments, the Department declines to
provide a specific threshold interpreting what would constitute a
``significant portion'' of the workforce sufficient to trigger the
translation requirement. The Department notes that this requirement is
similar to regulatory requirements implementing two of the Labor Laws,
the FMLA, 29 CFR 825.300(a)(4), and MSPA, 29 CFR 500.78. The term
``significant portion'' has not been defined under these regulations,
and the lack of a definition or bright-line test has not prevented
employers from complying with the requirement. For these reasons, the
term is not defined in the final Guidance.
The Department agrees with AGC's suggestion about workplaces where
multiple languages are spoken. Where a significant portion of the
workforce is not fluent in English, the Department believes that the
contractor should provide independent-contractor notices to workers in
each language in which a significant portion of the workforce is
fluent. However, the Department does not agree with AGC's suggestion
that it will be sufficient in all cases to provide a Web site address
where the translated notice would be posted. Where workers are not
fluent in English, providing a link to a Web site for the translation
would be ineffective at providing the required notice.
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-in of Requirements
The effective date of the FAR Council's final rule is October 25,
2016. The Department received various comments related to the effective
date of the Order's requirements. These commenters expressed two
general concerns: First, about the burden of the disclosure
requirements and the need for time to implement the necessary systems
to track Labor Law violations; and second, about fairness related to
the consideration of Labor Law violations that occurred before the
effective date of the FAR rule. As discussed below, the FAR Council is
phasing in the effective date of the disclosure requirements to address
these concerns. The Department has created a separate section of the
Guidance, section VIII, that contains a summary of the relevant
provisions.
Phase-in of Disclosure Requirements
Multiple industry commenters expressed concern that contractors
would not have time to be prepared for the implementation of the FAR
rule unless the effective date of the rule is delayed. One commenter
specifically expressed concern that existing contractor staff are not
equipped to gather and report all violations. Another expressed concern
specifically about the difficulty for prime contractors of making
responsibility determinations for their subcontractors, and requested
that subcontractor disclosure requirements be phased in over the course
of 5 years.
In response to these concerns, the FAR Council has staggered the
phase in of the Order's core disclosure requirements. From the October
25, 2016 effective date to April 24, 2017, the Order's prime-contractor
disclosure requirements will apply only to solicitations with an
estimated value of $50 million or more, and resultant contracts. FAR
22.2007(a) and (c)(1). After April 24, 2017, the prime-contractor
disclosure requirements will apply to all solicitations greater than
$500,000--which is the amount specified in the Order--and resultant
contracts. Id. 22.2007(a) and (c)(2); Order, section 2(a). This also
applies to the commercial items equivalent for prime contractors, at
FAR 52.212-3(s). The subcontractor disclosure requirements are further
staggered; they are not effective for the first year of operation of
the FAR rule implementing the Order. While the rule overall is
effective on October 25, 2016, the subcontractor disclosure
requirements are not effective until October 25, 2017. See FAR
22.2007(b). This phasing in of the requirements is discussed in the new
``Effective date and phase-in of requirements'' section of the
Guidance.
``Retroactivity'' of Disclosure Requirement
With regard to the concern about fairness of disclosing violations
prior to the effective date of the FAR rule, a number of commenters
expressed concern that the 3-year disclosure period will require
contractors to ``retroactively'' disclose Labor Law violations during
the rule's first years of operation. For example, the HR Policy
Association argued that it is ``fundamentally unfair'' to require
contractors to disclose violations Labor Law decisions that were
rendered prior to the effective date of the Order and that any
disclosure ``should be only prospective in nature.'' The Section of
Public Contract Law of the American Bar Association (PCL Section)
recommended that the disclosure requirement be phased-in and that only
decisions after the disclosure requirement's effective date be
disclosed. According to the PCL Section, a phase-in of the 3-year
disclosure period would allow ``contractors the opportunity to put
systems in place'' and would give ``the federal procurement process
time to adapt[.]''
The Department agrees that the requirement to look back 3 years
when disclosing Labor Law decisions should be phased-in, and the FAR
Council's final rule provides for such a phase-in. See FAR 55.222-
57(c)(1)-(2), 55.222-58(b). This 3-year disclosure period is being
phased in so that contractors will not disclose any decisions that were
rendered against them prior to October 25, 2015. In the language of the
FAR, disclosures of Labor Law violations must be made for decisions
rendered
[[Page 58714]]
during ``the period beginning on October 25, 2015 to the date of the
offer, or for 3 years preceding the date of the offer, whichever period
is shorter.'' Id. 55.222-57(c)(1)-(2), 55.222-58(b). Thus, full
implementation of the 3-year disclosure period will not be reached
until October 25, 2018. As a result of this phase-in, contractors will
not disclose Labor Law decisions that were rendered against them more
than 1 year prior to the effective date of the FAR rule.\95\
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\95\ As discussed above, the date on which the Labor Law
decision was rendered--not the date of the underlying conduct--
controls whether a decision must be disclosed. Therefore, even with
the phase in of the disclosure requirements, a contractor may still
need to disclose Labor Law decisions for which the underlying
conduct occurred more than 1 year prior to the effective date of the
FAR rule.
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Phased Implementation of Equivalent State Laws
The Order directs the Department to define the State laws that are
equivalent to the 14 identified Federal labor laws and Executive
orders. Order, section 2(a)(i)(O). Contractors are required to disclose
violations of these equivalent State laws, in addition to the 14
Federal laws and orders. See id. In the Proposed Guidance, the
Department proposed that OSHA-approved State Plans should be considered
equivalent State laws for purposes of the Order, and stated that the
Department would identify additional equivalent State laws in a second
guidance to be published in the Federal Register at a later date. See
80 FR 30574, 30579.
Several commenters expressed concern with this proposed phased
implementation and argued that the Guidance is incomplete without
identification of all equivalent State laws. A number of them argued
that without knowing all of the equivalent State laws, employers are
unable to estimate the costs associated with implementing the Order,
including the disclosure requirements. One commenter asserted that by
failing to identify equivalent State laws, the Proposed Guidance
ignored the costs of tracking and disclosing violations of potentially
hundreds of additional laws and the potential costs of entering into
labor compliance agreements with respect to those additional laws. Some
industry commenters called for a delay of the implementation of the
Order's requirements until guidance identifying the equivalent State
laws is issued. NAM requested that the second guidance not be issued at
all because the requirement will be ``unworkable.'' Several employee
advocates, in contrast, encouraged the Department to issue the second
guidance ``swiftly'' before the end of 2015.
The Department has considered these comments and declines to modify
the Guidance as suggested. The final Guidance reiterates that the
Department will identify the equivalent State laws in addition to OSHA-
approved State plans in a second guidance published in the Federal
Register at a later date. The Department notes that the future guidance
and accompanying FAR rulemaking on equivalent State laws will
themselves be subject to notice and comment, and the rulemaking will
address any additional economic burden resulting from the addition of
equivalent State laws to the list of laws for which violations must be
disclosed.
While the Department believes that contractors may incur some
limited costs when adjusting compliance tracking systems to track
violations of any newly-identified State laws, the Department believes
such costs will be de minimis. In contrast, delaying implementation of
the entirety of the Order's disclosure requirements until the
subsequent rulemaking would have negative consequences on economy and
efficiency of Federal contracting by allowing contractors who have
unsatisfactory records of compliance with the 14 Federal labor laws
identified in the Order, and OSHA-approved State Plans, to secure new
contracts in the interim.
Paycheck Transparency Provisions
The final FAR rule implementing the paycheck transparency
provisions specifies that contracting officers will be required to
insert the paycheck transparency contract clause into covered contracts
beginning on January 1, 2017. FAR 22.2007(d). This delayed effective
date is included in the final Guidance.
IX. Other Comments
A. Public Availability of Disclosures and Assessment Information
Concerns about the accuracy of the information that contractors
will disclose were the basis of a number of requests from commenters
that the information disclosed be made publicly available. Many unions
and worker-advocacy groups suggested that the information disclosed by
contractors pursuant to the Order's requirements be made available in a
database or Web page that is accessible to the public and easy to use.
Commenters argued that making this information public will help ensure
that the contractors disclose their entire legal record and interested
parties are able to spot incomplete or inaccurate disclosures.\96\ For
some of these commenters, public disclosure requirements are essential
to effective third-party involvement, which in their view is the most
effective means to capture contractor misrepresentations or ongoing
violations. Several commenters stated that making information publicly
available is key in ensuring transparency in the process. A group of
labor and employment lawyers stated that
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ Similarly, some of these commenters expressed concern that
OSHA's public database of violations does not include, or does not
include enough information about, violations of section 11(c) of the
OSH Act. The Department notes that OSHA's database does include
information about certain 11(c) cases, and it does include
information from some OSHA-approved State Plans about their
retaliation cases.
[r]esponsible contractors should welcome greater transparency and
accountability because it will ensure that they do not face unfair
competition from companies that cut corners by cheating their
workers or ignoring important health-and-safety obligations.\97\
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\97\ One commenter recommended that a list of the companies
undergoing responsibility reviews be published and updated by the
Department. Another commenter proposed that each contracting agency
track and annually report to the Department specific information
regarding its contractors' compliance with the Labor Laws. However,
these recommendations are beyond the Department's authority under
the Order.
In contrast, industry commenters believed that the disclosure
requirements are already too public. They suggested that protections be
put in place to protect confidential and proprietary information in
disclosures made by contractors pursuant to the Order's requirements.
Several also suggested that any information disclosed by contractors
and made publicly available should be redacted to remove any personally
identifiable information. A few commenters were concerned that the
release of information disclosed by contractors would have a negative
effect on a contractor's business and reputation, especially if there
are errors in the data presented, and as such, these commenters
requested that the Department or the FAR establish a means of
correcting information made publicly available.
The Department believes that the final FAR rule provides a
reasonable balance between these two opposing views. The final FAR rule
distinguishes between the required Labor Law decision disclosures and
the optional additional relevant information that a contractor can
submit to demonstrate its responsibility. The required initial
representation and disclosure of limited information about each Labor
Law
[[Page 58715]]
decision is information that will be publicly available in the Federal
Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System (FAPIIS). FAR
22.2004-2(b)(1)(i); id. 52.222-57(f). Similarly, where a contractor
enters into a labor compliance agreement, the entry will be noted in
FAPIIS by the ALCA and the fact that a labor compliance agreement has
been agreed to will be public information. Id. 22.2004-2(b)(9). The
optional additional information that a contractor provides, however,
will only be made public if the contractor determines that it wants the
information to be made public. Id. 22.2004-2(b)(1)(ii). The Department
believes that this strikes an appropriate balance; it allows access to
Labor Law decision information so that the public can assist in
assuring full disclosure, while protecting more sensitive information
about internal business practices.
With regard to the comments about personally-identifiable
information and other confidential information, the Department adds
that information disclosed by contractors pursuant to the Order will--
like any other information submitted during the procurement process--be
subject to the protections of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and
the Privacy Act. The Department does not believe that the information
submitted should be made any more or less publicly available than other
information already disclosed by contractors as part of the contracting
process and responsibility determinations. Although the Order's
disclosure requirements may be new, the disclosed information fits into
an existing process for making responsibility determinations, and the
public availability of information disclosed pursuant to the Order
should be the same as the public availability of information that
already must be disclosed--which includes information about violations
of other laws, organizational capacity, financing, and other
potentially sensitive or confidential information.
B. Participation of Third-Parties
Many employee advocacy groups urged the Department to provide more
specific guidance about the participation of interested third-parties
in the processes required by the Order. Several of these commenters
suggested that the Department provide further specificity about how
third-parties should submit information about a contractor's Labor Law
violations to ALCAs for consideration when assessing a contractor's
record. The commenters identified parties that might provide
information as: The general public, worker representatives, community
groups, labor-management cooperative committees, other contractors,
worker advocate groups, and others. One commenter, NABTU, warned that
competitors should not be considered ``stakeholders'' in this process,
``to avoid contractors using the responsibility determination process
to undercut one another.''
The Department agrees that the participation of interested third-
parties is an important element of the effective implementation of the
Order. The Order contemplates that information regarding Labor Law
violations will be ``obtained through other sources.'' Order, section
2(b)(ii). The Department interprets this term to include any other
relevant source--including employees, worker representatives, community
groups, and the public. The Department finds no reason to exclude
competitors from this process. Under longstanding Federal procurement
rules, ``[c]ontracting officers are `generally given wide discretion'
in making responsibility determinations and in determining the amount
of information that is required to make a responsibility
determination.'' Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United
States, 238 F.3d 1324, 1334-35 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (quotations marks and
citations omitted). The Department does not believe that the Order
intended to limit the sources of information that contracting officers
may consider--either during the preaward or postaward process.
If an interested third party has information about relevant Labor
Law decisions that it believes has not been properly disclosed by a
contractor, the interested party is encouraged to provide that
information to the relevant ALCA. The Department will maintain a list
of ALCAs, including the Department's ALCA, and their contact
information on its Web site at https://www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces. Relevant third-party information can further
inform ALCAs and help them perform duties such as encouraging
prospective contractors with serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations to work with enforcement agencies to address
compliance problems; providing input to past performance evaluations;
and notifying agency suspending and debarring officials when
appropriate. However, the Department notes, the amount of information
given out to the public about ongoing procurements is limited and
controlled, see Procurement Integrity Act, 41 U.S.C. Chapter 21, and
therefore contracting officers cannot contact third parties during an
ongoing procurement to solicit information about a prospective
contractor.
Numerous worker-advocacy organizations also suggested that ALCAs
and contracting officers should be required to consult with worker
representatives during negotiation of a labor compliance agreement.
These commenters observed that employees have direct knowledge of
working conditions, and therefore that they and their representatives
can provide useful input about what remedial measures would be most
effective and should be included in a labor compliance agreement. One
worker advocacy organization proposed that labor compliance agreements
should contain a process for contracting officers to receive third-
party complaints about grievances and Labor Law violations, monitoring
arrangements, or labor compliance agreements. Several labor
organizations commented that employees and their representatives should
be able to report compliance problems to the ALCA or the Department
with protections against retaliation.
The Department declines to modify the Guidance to specifically
require the involvement of worker representatives in the negotiation of
labor compliance agreements. As stated above, the FAR rule contemplates
that enforcement agencies--not ALCAs or contracting officers--will
negotiate labor compliance agreements with contractors. Therefore, the
enforcement agencies will decide, based on their policies and
procedures, if they will consult with or otherwise involve third
parties during negotiations of labor compliance agreements.
The same is true of methods for third parties to submit information
about adherence to a labor compliance agreement. As discussed above in
section III(C) of this section-by-section analysis, enforcement
agencies will determine the terms of each labor compliance agreement on
a case-by-case basis, taking into consideration the totality of the
circumstances. Many enhanced compliance agreements and suspension-and-
debarment administrative agreements contain auditing, monitoring, and
whistleblower protection mechanisms that are intended to encourage
employees and others to provide information about adherence to the
agreement. Enforcement agencies may include these types of mechanisms
in labor compliance agreements, and may provide information about
adherence to agreements to the relevant ALCAs. The final FAR rule
requires an ALCA to consult with the Department as needed
[[Page 58716]]
when verifying whether the contractor is meeting the terms of the
agreement, see FAR 22.2004-3(b), through which any information that
enforcement agencies have received from third parties may be provided
to the ALCA. Conversely, if the ALCA has received information from
third parties, he or she may provide that information to the relevant
enforcement agency.
C. Anti-Retaliation and Whistleblower Protections for Reporting
Information
Several employee-advocacy organizations expressed concerns that
contractor employees who report Labor Law violations to ALCAs may be
subject to retaliation and suggested that workers of contractors
receive notice about anti-retaliation and whistleblower protections.
The Northern California Basic Crafts Alliance further requested that a
notice of Federal whistleblower protections be included in all
documents that public officials are required to complete under the
Order and its accompanying regulations. This commenter also suggested
that government workers tasked with carrying out the Order be provided
such notice.
The Department appreciates the serious concern raised by these
commenters, but declines to make any changes to the Guidance. The Order
does not provide for additional protections for whistleblowers. The
Department notes, however, that Federal law already provides
whistleblower protections to contractor employees who report fraud or
other violations of the law related to Federal contracts. See, e.g., 31
U.S.C. 3730(h) (the False Claims Act), 10 U.S.C. 2409 (protecting
Department of Defense and NASA whistleblowers from retaliation).
Whistleblower protection for contractor employees is also covered in
FAR subpart 3.9. With regard to government employees, the Notification
and Federal Employee Antidiscrimination and Retaliation Act of 2002
(known as the No Fear Act) requires that agencies provide annual notice
to Federal employees, former Federal employees, and applicants for
Federal employment of the rights and protections available under
Federal antidiscrimination and whistleblower protection laws.
Guidance for Executive Order 13673, ``Fair Pay Safe Workplaces''
Table of Contents
Introduction
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
A. Statutory Requirements for Contracting With Responsible
Sources
B. Legal Authority
C. Summary of the Order's Requirements and Interaction With
Existing Requirements
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
A. Covered Contracts
B. Labor Law Decisions
1. Defining ``Administrative Merits Determination''
2. Defining ``Civil Judgment''
3. Defining ``Arbitral Award or Decision''
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising From the Same
Underlying Violation
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
1. Initial Representation
2. Required Disclosures
3. Opportunity To Provide Additional Relevant Information,
Including Mitigating Factors
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
1. Serious Violations
2. Repeated Violations
3. Willful Violations
4. Pervasive Violations
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and Mitigating Factors
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory
Record of Labor Law Compliance
2. Factors That Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor's Record of Labor Law
Compliance
1. ALCA Recommendation
2. ALCA Analysis
IV. Postaward Disclosure Updates and Assessment of Labor Law
Violations
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
VI. Preassessment
VII. Paycheck Transparency
A. Wage Statement
B. Independent Contractor Notice
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of Requirements
Appendix A: Serious Violations
Appendix B: Repeated Violations
Appendix C: Willful Violations
Appendix D: Pervasive Violations
Appendix E: Assessing Violations of the Labor Laws
Introduction
The Department of Labor (the Department) issues this guidance
document (the Guidance) to assist the Federal Acquisition Regulatory
Council (FAR Council) and Federal agencies in the implementation of
Executive Order 13673, Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces (the Order), 79 FR
45309, as amended.\98\ Among other important directives, the Order
provides new instructions to Federal agency contracting officers to
consider a Federal contractor's compliance with 14 identified Federal
labor laws and Executive orders and equivalent State laws
(collectively, ``Labor Laws'') as a part of the determination of
contractor responsibility that Federal contracting officers must
undertake before awarding a contract.
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\98\ Executive Order 13673 was amended by Executive Order 13683,
December 11, 2014 (79 FR 75041, December 16, 2014) and Executive
Order __ (FR __, [DATE]). This document provides guidance for the
Order as amended.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Order directed the FAR Council to issue regulations as
necessary to implement the new requirements and processes. The Order
also created detailed implementation roles for the Department, the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the General Services
Administration (GSA). These agencies are implementing the Order in
stages, on a prioritized basis.
The Order gives the Department several specific implementation and
coordination duties. The Order directs the Secretary of Labor (the
Secretary) to develop guidance to define various relevant terms,
identify the State laws that are equivalent to those Federal laws
covered by the Order, and specify which State wage-statement
requirements are substantially similar to the Order's wage-statement
requirement. The Order also directs the Secretary to develop processes
for coordination between the Department and newly-designated agency
labor compliance advisors (ALCA) and processes by which contracting
officers and ALCAs may give appropriate consideration to determinations
and agreements made by Federal enforcement agencies.
This Guidance satisfies most of the Department's responsibilities
for issuing guidance, and the Department will publish at a later date a
second guidance that satisfies its remaining responsibilities. The
second guidance will be, as this Guidance was, submitted for notice and
comment, published in the Federal Register, and accompanied by a
proposed amendment to the FAR rule. The Department will likewise submit
for notice and comment and publish any future updates to the Guidance
that will have a significant effect beyond the operating procedures of
the Department or that will have a significant cost or administrative
impact on contractors or offerors. The Department will coordinate with
the FAR Council in determining whether updates will have a significant
cost or administrative impact.
This Guidance contains the following sections. Section I discusses
the reasons for the Order and summarizes its requirements. Section II
provides guidance about the Order's preaward disclosure requirements
and defines the types of information that prime contractors and
subcontractors must disclose under the Order. The Guidance defines
``administrative merits determinations,'' ``civil judgments,'' and
``arbitral awards or decisions'' (collectively, ``Labor Law
decisions'').
[[Page 58717]]
Section III explains how ALCAs should assess Labor Law violations
and provide advice and analysis to contracting officers during the
preaward process. The first part of section III deals with how ALCAs
should classify violations, and it defines the classification terms
``serious,'' ``repeated,'' ``willful,'' and ``pervasive'' for purposes
of the Order. The second part of section III explains how ALCAs should
weigh a contractor's violations, including any potential mitigating
factors and factors that weigh against a recommendation that the
contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. The third
part explains the process in the FAR rule for the ALCA to provide
advice and analysis to the contracting officer about a contractor's
record of Labor Law compliance, including whether negotiation of a
labor compliance agreement is warranted.
Section IV provides guidance on the disclosure and assessment
process during the postaward period. Section V summarizes the process
under the Order for determining subcontractor responsibility. Section
VI sets out the Department's preassessment process to help contractors
come into compliance before the contractor bids on a solicitation.
Section VII provides guidance on the Order's paycheck transparency
provisions. Section VIII discusses the effective date and phase-in of
the Order's requirements, including the phase-in of the Order's
requirement for disclosure of violations of equivalent State laws.
I. Purpose and Summary of the Order
The Order states that the Federal Government will promote economy
and efficiency in procurement by contracting with responsible sources
that comply with labor laws. See Order, section 1. The Order seeks to
increase efficiency and cost savings in the work performed by parties
that contract with the Federal Government by ensuring that they
understand and comply with labor laws. See id.
Beyond their human costs, labor law violations create risks to the
timely, predictable, and satisfactory delivery of goods and services to
the Federal Government, and Federal agencies risk poor performance by
awarding contracts to companies with histories of labor law violations.
Poor workplace conditions lead to lower productivity and creativity,
increased workplace disruptions, and increased workforce turnover. For
contracting agencies, this means receipt of lower quality products and
services and increased risk of project delays and cost overruns.
Contracting agencies can reduce execution delays and avoid other
complications by contracting with contractors with track records of
labor law compliance--and by helping to bring contractors with past
violations into compliance. Contractors that consistently adhere to
labor laws are more likely to have workplace practices that enhance
productivity and to deliver goods and services to the Federal
Government in a timely, predictable, and satisfactory fashion.
Moreover, contractors who invest in their workers' safety and
maintain a fair and equitable workplace should not have to compete with
contractors who offer lower bids--based on savings from skirting labor
laws--and then ultimately deliver poor performance to taxpayers. By
contracting with employers who are in compliance with labor laws, the
Federal Government can ensure that taxpayers' money supports jobs in
which workers have safe workplaces, receive the family leave to which
they are entitled, get paid the wages they have earned, and do not face
unlawful workplace discrimination.
A. Statutory Requirements for Contracting With Responsible Sources
By statute, contracting agencies are required to award contracts to
responsible sources only. See 10 U.S.C. 2305(b); 41 U.S.C. 3702(b),
3703. A ``responsible source'' means a prospective contractor that,
among other things, ``has a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics.'' 41 U.S.C. 113(4). Part 9 of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) implements this statutory ``responsibility''
requirement. The FAR states that ``[p]urchases shall be made from, and
contracts shall be awarded to, responsible prospective contractors
only.'' FAR 9.103(a).\99\ In accordance with the statutory definition
of ``responsible source,'' the FAR states that ``[t]o be determined
responsible, a prospective contractor must . . . [h]ave a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics . . . .'' FAR 9.104-1(d). Thus,
for every procurement contract, an agency contracting officer must
consider whether a contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics and then make an affirmative determination of
responsibility--that the awardee is a responsible source.
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\99\ The FAR can be found at title 48 of the Code of Federal
Regulations. Citations in this Guidance to the FAR use format FAR
[section] instead of 48 CFR [section].
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B. Legal Authority
The President issued the Order pursuant to his authority under
``the Constitution and the laws of the United States,'' expressly
including the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act (the
Procurement Act), 40 U.S.C. 101 et seq. The Procurement Act authorizes
the President to ``prescribe policies and directives that the President
considers necessary to carry out'' the statutory purposes of ensuring
``economical and efficient'' government procurement and administration
of government property. 40 U.S.C. 101, 121(a). The Order establishes
that the President considers the requirements included in the Order to
be necessary to economy and efficiency in Federal contracting. See
Order, section 1.
The Order directs the Secretary to define certain terms used in the
Order and to develop guidance ``to assist agencies'' in implementing
the Order's requirements. Order, sections 2(a)(i), 4(b). The Guidance
does not bind private parties or agency officials. Rather, the Order
directs the FAR Council to issue the regulations necessary to implement
the new requirements and processes. It is the Order and the FAR Council
regulations that bind prospective contractors, subcontractors,
contracting officers, and other agency officials--not the Guidance. The
Guidance is not a regulation, and it does not amend or supersede the
Order or the FAR. Where the Guidance uses mandatory language such as
``shall,'' ``must,'' ``required,'' or ``requirement,'' it does so only
to describe the Department's interpretation of the regulatory
requirements in the FAR.
C. Summary of the Order's Requirements and Interaction With Existing
Requirements
The Order builds on the pre-existing procurement system by
instructing Federal agency contracting officers to consider a
contractor's Labor Law violations, if any, as a factor in determining
if the contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity and business
ethics and may therefore be found to be a responsible source eligible
for a contract award. See Order, section 2(a)(ii) and (iii). The
Order's requirements are implemented through Part 22 of the FAR, which
requires Federal agencies to include certain contract clauses in
covered contracts.
To facilitate the responsibility determination, the Order provides
that, for all covered procurement contracts (defined below in section
II(A)), each agency must require that the contractor make an initial
representation regarding whether there have been any Labor Law
decisions rendered against the contractor within the preceding 3-year
[[Page 58718]]
period for violations of the 14 identified Labor Laws. See Order,
section 2(a)(i); Guidance, section II (Preaward disclosure
requirements).
The 14 Federal labor laws or Executive orders identified in the
Order are:
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA);
the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSH Act);
the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection
Act (MSPA);
the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA);
40 U.S.C. chapter 31, subchapter IV, also known as the
Davis-Bacon Act (DBA);
41 U.S.C. chapter 67, also known as the Service Contract
Act (SCA);
Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965 (Equal
Employment Opportunity);
section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973;
the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of
1972 and the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974;
the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA);
title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII);
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA);
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA);
and
Executive Order 13658 of February 12, 2014 (Establishing a
Minimum Wage for Contractors).
Prior to an award, as a part of the responsibility determination,
contractors with Labor Law decisions to disclose must make an
additional disclosure of information about each violation. See FAR
22.2004-1(a). In addition, contracting officers must provide
contractors with an opportunity to disclose any steps taken to correct
any disclosed violations or improve compliance with the Labor Laws,
including any agreements entered into with an enforcement agency. See
Order, section 2(a)(ii); Guidance, section II(C)(3). Contracting
officers, in consultation with the relevant ALCA, then must consider
the information in determining if a contractor is a responsible source
with a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics. See Order,
section 2(a)(iii); Guidance, section III (Preaward assessment and
advice). ALCAs provide advice and analysis to the contracting officer
about the contractor's record of Labor Law compliance, including in
some cases a recommendation that the contractor needs to enter into an
agreement to implement appropriate remedial measures or other actions
to avoid further violations (a labor compliance agreement) or a
recommendation that the agency suspending and debarring official should
be notified. See FAR 22.2004-2(b).
Similar requirements apply to subcontractors. See Order, section
2(a)(iv); FAR 52.222-59(c); Guidance, section V (Subcontractor
responsibility). Contractors are bound by the contract clause in their
Federal award to require subcontractors on covered subcontracts to
disclose any Labor Law decisions rendered against the subcontractor
within the preceding 3-year period. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(3). A
subcontractor with Labor Law decisions to disclose is required to make
this disclosure to the Department, which provides the subcontractor
with advice regarding its record of Labor Law compliance. See FAR
52.222-59(c)(3)(ii), (c)(4)(ii)(C); [Amended Order]. The subcontractor
then must provide the Department's advice to the contractor, which will
use that advice in determining whether the subcontractor is a
responsible source. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C). The contractor will
(in most cases, before awarding the subcontract) consider the advice
from the Department in determining whether the subcontractor is a
responsible source that has a satisfactory record of integrity and
business ethics. See id. 52.222-59(c)(2).
The Order's disclosure requirement continues after an award is
made. Semiannually during the performance of the contract, contractors
must update the information provided about their own Labor Law
violations and obtain the required information for covered
subcontracts. See Order, section 2(b)(i); Guidance, section VI
(Postaward disclosure updates and assessment of Labor Law violations).
If a contractor discloses information regarding Labor Law violations
during contract performance, or similar information is obtained through
other sources, the contracting officer, in consultation with the ALCA,
considers whether action is necessary. See Order, section 2(b)(ii).
Such action may include requiring the contractor to enter into a labor
compliance agreement, declining to exercise an option on a contract,
terminating the contract in accordance with relevant FAR provisions, or
referring the contractor to the agency suspending and debarring
official. See id. If information regarding Labor Law decisions rendered
against a contractor's subcontractor is brought to the attention of the
contractor, then the contractor shall similarly consider whether action
is necessary with respect to the subcontractor. See id. section
2(b)(iii).
The Order requires each contracting agency to designate a senior
agency official to be an ALCA to provide consistent guidance to
contracting officers. See Order, section 3. In consultation with the
Department and other agencies responsible for enforcing the Labor Laws,
ALCAs help contracting officers to: Review information regarding Labor
Law decisions disclosed by contractors; assess whether disclosed
violations are serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive; review the
contractor's remediation of the violation and any other mitigating
factors; and determine if the violations identified warrant remedial
measures, such as a labor compliance agreement. See id. section 3(d);
FAR 22.2004-1(c)(3).
The Order also contains two paycheck transparency requirements. See
Order, section 5; Guidance, section VII (Paycheck transparency). First,
the Order requires contractors to provide all individuals performing
work under the contract for whom they are required to maintain wage
records under the FLSA, DBA, SCA, or equivalent State laws with a wage
statement that contains information concerning that individual's hours
worked, overtime hours, pay, and any additions made to or deductions
made from pay. See Order, section 5(a). The Order instructs that the
wage statement for individuals who are exempt from the overtime
compensation requirements of the FLSA need not include a record of
hours worked if the contractor informs the individuals of their exempt
status. See id. Contractors can satisfy the Order's wage-statement
requirement by providing a wage statement that complies with an
applicable State or local wage-statement requirement that the Secretary
has determined is substantially similar to the Order's wage-statement
requirement. See id. Second, the Order provides that if a contractor is
treating an individual performing work under a covered contract as an
independent contractor, and not an employee, the contractor must
provide a document informing the individual of this status. See id.
section 5(b). The Order and the implementing FAR contract clause
require contractors to incorporate these same two paycheck transparency
requirements into covered subcontracts. See id. sections 5(a)-(b); FAR
52.222-60.\100\
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\100\ The Order further requires contracting agencies to ensure
that for all contracts where the estimated value of the supplies
acquired and services required exceeds $1 million, provisions in
solicitations and clauses in contracts shall provide that
contractors agree that the decision to arbitrate claims arising
under Title VII or any tort related to or arising out of sexual
assault or harassment may only be made with the voluntary consent of
employees or independent contractors after such disputes arise,
subject to certain exceptions. See Order, section 6. Contracting
agencies must require contractors to incorporate this same
requirement into subcontracts where the estimated value of the
supplies acquired and services required exceeds $1 million, subject
to certain exceptions. See id. This Guidance does not address this
arbitration requirement.
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[[Page 58719]]
Finally, the Order requires that, in developing the Guidance and
proposing to amend the FAR, the Secretary and the FAR Council minimize,
to the extent practicable, the burden of complying with the Order for
Federal contractors and subcontractors and in particular for small
entities, including small businesses and small nonprofit organizations.
See Order, section 4(e). The intent of the Order is to minimize
additional compliance burdens and to increase economy and efficiency in
Federal contracting by helping more contractors and subcontractors come
into compliance with workplace protections, not by denying them
contracts. Toward that end, the Order provides that ALCAs and the
Department will be available for consultation with contractors
regarding the Order's requirements, see Order, sections 2(a)(vi),
2(b)(iii), 3(c), and that contracting officers (and contractors for
their subcontractors) will take into account any remedial actions and
other mitigating factors when making a responsibility determination.
II. Preaward Disclosure Requirements
This section of the Guidance discusses who must disclose Labor Laws
decisions during the preaward period, what types of Labor Law decisions
must be disclosed, and what particular categories of information must
be disclosed for each decision. This section of the Guidance also
defines the meaning of the different types of Labor Law decisions:
``administrative merits determination,'' ``civil judgment,'' and
``arbitral award or decision.''
During the preaward process, the Order requires contracting
agencies to include provisions in solicitations for all covered
procurement contracts (defined below) that will require prospective
contractors to disclose certain information about Labor Law violations.
See Order, section 2(a). The solicitation provisions require all
prospective contractors bidding on covered contracts to make an initial
representation regarding whether there have been any Labor Law
decisions rendered against them within the preceding 3 years. See FAR
22.2004-1(a) and 22.2007(a); FAR 52.222-57; FAR 52.212-3(s) (commercial
items). Later, only a subset of these prospective contractors--those
for whom a responsibility determination is being performed--must make a
more detailed disclosure about each Labor Law decision. See id.
22.2004-1(a). These disclosure requirements are phased in during the
first year of the Order's effect. Section VIII below contains a
description of the phases of implementation.
The Order and the final FAR rule also contain requirements for
postaward disclosure, see Order, section 2(b); FAR 22.2004-1(a), and
for disclosure by subcontractors, see Order, section 2(a)(iv); FAR
22.2004-1(b) and 52.222-58. These requirements are discussed below in
sections IV and V, respectively.
A. Covered Contracts
The Order applies to contracting activities by executive agencies.
See Order, section 1. The term ``executive agency'' is defined under
the FAR as ``an executive department, a military department, or any
independent establishment within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 101, 102, and
104(1), respectively, and any wholly owned Government corporation
within the meaning of 31 U.S.C. 9101.'' FAR 2.101. This Guidance
generally uses the term ``contracting agencies'' to refer to executive
agencies that are engaged in contracting.
The Order requires prime contractors to make disclosures for
procurement contracts with contracting agencies for goods and services,
including construction, only where the estimated value of the supplies
acquired and services required exceeds $500,000.\101\ See Order,
section 2(a)(i). For purposes of this Guidance, these contracts are
referred to as ``covered procurement contracts.'' As used in this
Guidance, the term ``contract'' has the same meaning as it has under
the FAR. See FAR 2.101. Thus, the term ``contract'' means a procurement
contract and does not include grants and cooperative agreements (which
are not subject to the Order's requirements).
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\101\ See FAR 1.108(c) (explaining computation of dollar
thresholds under the FAR).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Order and the FAR rule also apply to certain subcontracts. The
definition of covered subcontracts and the specific disclosure rules
associated with subcontractors are discussed in detail in section V of
this Guidance. This Guidance uses the term ``covered contracts'' to
include both covered procurement contracts and covered subcontracts.
The Order's disclosure requirements apply to contracts and
subcontracts for commercial items that otherwise satisfy the Order's
criteria. See FAR 52.212-3(s); 52.244-6. The coverage for commercially
available off-the-shelf (COTS) items is more limited: Contracts for
COTS items are covered procurement contracts if they otherwise satisfy
the Order's criteria, but subcontracts for COTS items are not covered
by the Order and therefore are not covered subcontracts. See id. FAR
22-2004-1(b) (exempting only subcontracts for COTS items).
In this Guidance, references to ``contractors'' include entities
that hold covered procurement contracts as well as prospective
contractors, or ``offerors,'' meaning any entity that bids for a
covered procurement contract. Similarly, references to
``subcontractors'' include entities that hold covered subcontracts as
well as prospective subcontractors, or ``offerors,'' meaning any entity
that bids for a covered subcontract. The term ``entity'' is properly
understood to include both organizations and individuals that apply for
and receive covered contracts.
B. Labor Law Decisions
The Order creates disclosure requirements for contractors and
subcontractors performing or bidding on covered contracts. Under the
Order, contractors and subcontractors must disclose Labor Law decisions
that have been ``rendered against [them] within the preceding 3-year
period.'' See Order, sections 2(a)(i), 2(a)(iv)(A).
The 3-Year Disclosure Period
The FAR provides for a phase-in of the 3-year disclosure period
prior to October 25, 2018. Accordingly, the contract clauses require
disclosure of Labor Law decisions rendered against the offeror ``during
the period beginning on October 25, 2015 to the date of the offer, or
for three years preceding the date of the offer, whichever period is
shorter.'' FAR 52.222-57(c) (covering contractor disclosures); 52.222-
58(b) (covering subcontractor disclosures). The phase-in is also
discussed below in section VIII of this Guidance.
The ``preceding 3-year period'' refers to the 3 years preceding the
date of the offer (i.e., the contract bid or proposal). Contractors and
subcontractors must disclose Labor Law decisions rendered during this
3-year disclosure period even if the underlying conduct that violated
the Labor Laws occurred more than 3 years prior to the date of the
[[Page 58720]]
disclosure. For example, if an employer failed to pay overtime due to
workers in 2014, and the Department's Wage and Hour Division (WHD)
makes a determination in 2016 that the employer violated the FLSA, then
the employer must disclose the FLSA determination when bidding on a
contract in 2018, even though the conduct underlying the violation
occurred more than 3 years prior to the date of the employer's bid.
Additionally, contractors and subcontractors must disclose Labor
Law decisions whether or not the underlying conduct occurred in the
performance of work on a covered contract. Accordingly, a contractor or
subcontractor must disclose a Labor Law decision even if it was not
performing or bidding on a covered contract at the time. For example,
if the Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) determines that an employer violated a safety standard and the
employer later (within 3 years of the determination) bids for the first
time on a covered contract, the employer must disclose the OSHA
citation even though it was not a contractor or bidding on a covered
contract at the time when it received the determination.
Covered Labor Laws and Equivalent State Laws
Labor Law decisions that must be disclosed include those issued for
violations of the 14 Federal laws and Executive orders specified in the
Order. These laws are listed in section 2 of the Order and the list is
included above in section I(C) of this Guidance. In addition,
contractors and subcontractors must disclose violations of State laws
that the Department identifies as equivalent to those 14 Federal laws.
See Order, section 2(a)(i)(O).
The Department has determined that OSHA-approved State Plans are
equivalent State laws for the purposes of the Order. The OSH Act
permits certain States to administer OSHA-approved State occupational
safety-and-health plans in lieu of Federal enforcement of the OSH Act.
Section 18 of the OSH Act encourages States to develop and operate
their own job safety-and-health programs, and OSHA approves and
monitors State Plans and provides up to 50 percent of an approved
plan's operating costs. OSHA-approved State Plans are described and
listed in 29 CFR part 1952, and further information about such plans
can be found at https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/osp/. Labor Law
decisions finding violations under an OSHA-approved State Plan are
therefore subject to the Order's disclosure requirements.
In future guidance, the Department will identify additional
equivalent State laws. Until this subsequent guidance and a subsequent
FAR amendment are published, contractors and subcontractors are not
required to disclose violations of State laws other than the OSHA-
approved State Plans.
1. Defining ``Administrative Merits Determination''
Enforcement agencies issue notices, findings, and other documents
when they determine that any of the Labor Laws have been violated. For
purposes of this Guidance, ``enforcement agency'' means any agency that
administers the Federal Labor Laws: The Department and its agencies--
OSHA, WHD, and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
(OFCCP); and the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
(OSHRC).\102\ Enforcement agencies also include the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB). ``Enforcement agency'' does not include a Federal agency that,
in its capacity as a contracting agency, undertakes an investigation of
a violation of the Federal Labor Laws.\103\ For purposes of this
Guidance, ``enforcement agency'' also includes a State agency
designated to administer an OSHA-approved State Plan, but only to the
extent that the State agency is acting in its capacity as administrator
of such plan. And once the Department's second guidance (to be
published at a later date) identifying the State laws that are
equivalent to the Federal Labor Laws is finalized, and a corresponding
FAR amendment is published, ``enforcement agency'' will also include
any State agency that enforces those identified equivalent State laws.
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\102\ OSHRC is an independent Federal agency that provides
administrative trial and appellate review in contests of OSH Act
citations or penalties.
\103\ For example, contracting agencies may investigate
violations of the DBA relating to contracts that they administer,
but that does not make them enforcement agencies for purposes of the
Order.
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For purposes of the Order, the term ``administrative merits
determination'' means any of the following notices or findings--whether
final or subject to appeal or further review--issued by an enforcement
agency following an investigation that indicates that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of the Labor Laws:
(a) From the Department's Wage and Hour Division:
A WH-56 ``Summary of Unpaid Wages'' form;
a letter indicating that an investigation disclosed a
violation of the FLSA or a violation of the FMLA, SCA, DBA, or
Executive Order 13658;
a WH-103 ``Employment of Minors Contrary to The Fair Labor
Standards Act'' notice;
a letter, notice, or other document assessing civil
monetary penalties;
a letter that recites violations concerning the payment of
subminimum wages to workers with disabilities under section 14(c) of
the FLSA or revokes a certificate that authorized the payment of
subminimum wages;
a WH-561 ``Citation and Notification of Penalty'' for
violations under the OSH Act's field sanitation or temporary labor camp
standards;
an order of reference filed with an administrative law
judge.
(b) from the Department's Occupational Safety and Health
Administration or any State agency designated to administer an OSHA-
approved State Plan:
A citation;
an imminent danger notice;
a notice of failure to abate; or
any State equivalent;
(c) from the Department's Office of Federal Contract Compliance
Programs:
A show cause notice for failure to comply with the
requirements of Executive Order 11246, section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act, the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance
Act of 1972, or the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act
of 1974;
(d) from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission:
A letter of determination that reasonable cause exists to
believe that an unlawful employment practice has occurred or is
occurring;
(e) from the National Labor Relations Board:
A complaint issued by any Regional Director;
(f) a complaint filed by or on behalf of an enforcement agency with
a Federal or State court, an administrative law judge or other
administrative judge alleging that the contractor or subcontractor
violated any provision of the Labor Laws; or
(g) any order or finding from any administrative law judge or other
administrative judge, the Department's Administrative Review Board, the
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission or State equivalent,
or the National Labor Relations Board that the contractor or
subcontractor violated any provision of the Labor Laws.
The above definition provides seven categories of documents,
notices, and findings from enforcement agencies that
[[Page 58721]]
constitute the administrative merits determinations that must be
disclosed under the Order. The list is an exhaustive one, meaning that
if a document does not fall within one of categories (a) through (g)
above, the Department does not consider it to be an ``administrative
merits determination'' for purposes of the Order.
In addition, the Department will publish at a later date a second
proposed guidance that identifies an eighth category of administrative
merits determinations: The documents, notices, and findings issued by
State enforcement agencies when they find violations of the State laws
equivalent to the Federal Labor Laws.
Categories (a) through (e) in the definition list types of
administrative merits determinations that are issued by specific
enforcement agencies. Categories (f) and (g) describe types of
administrative merits determinations that are common to multiple
enforcement agencies. Category (f) is necessary because it is possible
that an enforcement agency will not have issued a notice or finding
following its investigation that falls within categories (a) through
(e) prior to filing a complaint in court.
Administrative merits determinations are issued following an
investigation by the relevant enforcement agency. Administrative merits
determinations are not limited to notices and findings issued following
adversarial or adjudicative proceedings such as a hearing, nor are they
limited to notices and findings that are final and unappealable. Thus,
an administrative merits determination still must be disclosed under
the Order even if the contractor is challenging it or can still
challenge it. The Department recognizes that contractors may dispute an
administrative merits determination. As set forth below, when
contractors disclose administrative merits determinations, they may
also submit any additional information that they believe may be helpful
in assessing the violations at issue (including the fact that the
determination has been challenged). Additionally, contractors have the
opportunity to provide information regarding any mitigating factors.
This information will be carefully considered. See below section
III(B).
Certain ``complaints'' issued by enforcement agencies are included
in the definition of ``administrative merits determination.'' The
complaints issued by enforcement agencies included in the definition
are not akin to complaints filed by private parties to initiate
lawsuits in Federal or State courts. Each complaint included in the
definition represents a finding by an enforcement agency following a
full investigation that a Labor Law was violated; in contrast, a
complaint filed by a private party in a Federal or State court
represents allegations made by that plaintiff and not any enforcement
agency. Employee complaints made to enforcement agencies (such as a
complaint for failure to pay overtime wages filed with WHD or a charge
of discrimination filed with the EEOC) are not administrative merits
determinations.
2. Defining ``Civil Judgment''
For purposes of the Order, the term ``civil judgment'' means any
judgment or order entered by any Federal or State court in which the
court determined that the contractor violated any provision of the
Labor Laws, or enjoined or restrained the contractor from violating any
provision of the Labor Laws. Civil judgment includes a judgment or
order that is not final or is subject to appeal.
A civil judgment could be the result of an action filed in court by
or on behalf of an enforcement agency or, for those Labor Laws that
establish a private right of action, by a private party or parties. The
judgment or order in which the court determined that a violation
occurred may be the result of a jury trial, a bench trial, or a motion
for judgment as a matter of law, such as a summary judgment motion.
Even a decision granting partial summary judgment may be a civil
judgment if, for example, the decision finds a violation of the Labor
Laws but leaves resolution of the amount of damages for later in the
proceedings. Likewise, a preliminary injunction (but not a temporary
restraining order) can be a civil judgment if the order enjoins or
restrains a violation of the Labor Laws. Civil judgments include
consent judgments and default judgments to the extent that there is a
determination in the judgment that any of the Labor Laws have been
violated, or the judgment enjoins or restrains the contractor from
violating any provision of the Labor Laws. A private settlement where
the lawsuit is dismissed by the court without any judgment being
entered is not a civil judgment. An accepted offer of judgment pursuant
to the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68 is also not a civil judgment
for the purposes of the Order.
Civil judgments do not include judgments or orders issued by an
administrative law judge or other administrative tribunals, such as
those identified in the definition of administrative merits
determination. Such judgments and orders may be administrative merits
determinations. If, however, a Federal or State court issues a judgment
or order affirming an administrative merits determination, then the
court's decision is a civil judgment.
Civil judgments include a judgment or order finding that a
contractor violated any of the Labor Laws even if the order or decision
is subject to further review in the same proceeding, is not final, can
be appealed, or has been appealed. As set forth below, when contractors
disclose civil judgments, they may also submit any additional
information that they believe may be helpful in assessing the
violations at issue--including the fact that the civil judgment has
been appealed. Additionally, contractors have the opportunity to
provide information regarding any mitigating factors.
3. Defining ``Arbitral Award or Decision''
For purposes of the Order, the term ``arbitral award or decision''
means any award or order by an arbitrator or arbitral panel in which
the arbitrator or arbitral panel determined that the contractor
violated any provision of the Labor Laws, or enjoined or restrained the
contractor from violating any provision of the Labor Laws. Arbitral
award or decision includes an arbitral award or decision regardless of
whether it is issued by one arbitrator or a panel of arbitrators and
even if the arbitral proceedings were private or confidential.
Arbitral award or decision also includes an arbitral award or
decision finding that a contractor violated any of the Labor Laws even
if the award or decision is subject to further review in the same
proceeding, is not final, or is subject to being confirmed, modified,
or vacated by a court. As set forth below, when contractors disclose
arbitral awards or decisions, they may also submit any additional
information that they believe may be helpful in assessing the
violations at issue (including the fact that they have sought to have
the award or decision vacated or modified). Additionally, contractors
have the opportunity to provide information regarding any mitigating
factors.
4. Successive Labor Law Decisions Arising From the Same Underlying
Violation
If a contractor appeals or challenges a Labor Law decision, there
may be successive decisions that arise from the same underlying
violation. For example, if a contractor receives an OSHA
[[Page 58722]]
citation and appeals that citation, it may receive an order from an
administrative law judge (ALJ) upholding or vacating that citation.
Similarly, if a contractor receives an adverse decision from the
Department's Administrative Review Board (ARB) and challenges the
decision in Federal court, it may receive a court judgment concerning
that decision.
Whether successive Labor Law decisions must be disclosed depends on
the nature of the most recent decision at the time of disclosure. Where
the most recent Labor Law decision finds no violation--or otherwise
reverses or vacates all prior findings of a violation--then the
contractor does not need to disclose any of the decisions. Where the
most recent decision has reinstated an initial finding of a violation,
however, then the latest decision reinstating the finding must be
disclosed. Thus, in the first example above, if the ALJ reverses the
OSHA citation, the contractor need not disclose either the initial
citation or the ALJ's order. But if the violation is later reinstated
by the full OSHRC or by a Federal court of appeals, the contractor must
disclose the OSHRC or appellate court decision.
Where the most recent Labor Law decision upholds or affirms any
finding of violation, the contractor should disclose only the Labor Law
decision that is the most recent at the time of disclosure. Thus, in
the second example above, if the Federal court affirms the ARB's
decision, or modifies it but does not vacate it in its entirety, the
contractor should disclose the more recent court order and need not
disclose the original ARB decision.
Where the most recent Labor Law decision does not affirm or vacate
the violation, but instead remands it for further proceedings, the
underlying violation must still be disclosed. For example, an ALJ may
grant a pre-trial motion for summary decision upholding an OSHA
citation, and then OSHRC may reverse the ALJ decision and remand it
because the OSHRC believes that a full trial was necessary to determine
whether to uphold the citation. In that case, the OSHRC has not
completely reversed or vacated the original OSHA citation, so the
contractor still must disclose the original OSHA citation.
Similarly, if the contractor appeals or challenges only part of a
Labor Law decision, the contractor should continue to disclose the
original Labor Law decision even if a successive Labor Law decision has
been issued. For example, if, within the preceding 3-year period, a
district court finds a contractor liable for Title VII and FLSA
violations, and the contractor appeals only the Title VII judgment to
the court of appeals, it must continue to disclose the district court
decision (containing the finding of an FLSA violation) even if a
subsequent court of appeals decision vacates the Title VII violation.
If the contractor disclosed a Labor Law decision before being
awarded a covered contract, and a successive decision arising from the
same underlying violation is rendered during the performance of the
contract and affirms that the contractor committed the violation, the
successive decision is a Labor Law decision within the meaning of this
Guidance. Therefore, the contractor must disclose the most recent
decision when it updates its disclosures during performance of the
contract. See FAR 22.2004-3(a).
C. Information That Must Be Disclosed
The following sections provide guidance on the information that
must be disclosed during the preaward stage of the contracting process.
Section 22.2004 of the FAR sets forth the specific requirements for
what must be disclosed at each stage, and how such information is to be
reported. The process by which subcontractors make disclosures is
discussed in section V(A) below.
1. Initial Representation
When a contractor bids on a solicitation for a covered procurement
contract, it must disclose whether any Labor Law decisions have been
rendered against it ``during the period beginning on October 25, 2015
to the date of the offer, or for three years preceding the date of the
offer, whichever period is shorter.'' FAR 52.222-57(c). At this stage,
the contractor must represent to the best of its knowledge and belief
whether it has or has not had such a decision rendered against it,
without providing further information. See FAR 52.222-57(c).
2. Required Disclosures
If a contractor reaches the stage in the process at which a
responsibility determination is initiated, and that contractor
responded affirmatively at the initial representation stage, the
contracting officer will require additional information about that
contractor's Labor Law violation(s). See FAR 52.222-57(d)(1).\104\ For
each administrative merits determination, civil judgment, or arbitral
award or decision that must be disclosed, the contractor must provide:
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\104\ In addition to the information that the Order instructs
the contracting officer to request, contracting officers also have a
general duty to obtain such additional information as may be
necessary to be satisfied that a prospective contractor has a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics. See FAR 9.105-
1(a).
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The Labor Law that was violated;
the case number, inspection number, charge number, docket
number, or other unique identification number;
the date that the determination, judgment, award, or
decision was rendered; and
the name of the court, arbitrator(s), agency, board, or
commission that rendered it.
See FAR 52.222-57(d)(1)(i). The contractor must disclose this
information in the System for Award Management (SAM) unless an
exception from SAM registration applies. See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(1)(i),
(iii).
With regard to the second element of information listed above, the
contractor should provide the inspection number for OSH Act citations,
the case number for NLRB proceedings, the charge number for EEOC
proceedings, the investigation or case number for WHD investigations,
the case number for investigations by OFCCP, the case number for
determinations by administrative tribunals, and the case number for
court proceedings.
3. Opportunity To Provide Additional Relevant Information, Including
Mitigating Factors
The contractor may also provide additional information that it
believes will demonstrate its responsibility. See FAR 52.222-
57(d)(1)(iii). The contractor must disclose this additional information
in SAM unless an exception from SAM registration applies. See id.
22.2004-2(b)(1)(i) and (iii), 52.222-57(d)(1)(iv). The additional
information may include mitigating factors and remedial measures, such
as information about steps taken to correct the violations at issue,
the negotiation or execution of a settlement agreement or labor
compliance agreement, or other steps taken to achieve compliance with
the Labor Laws. See id. 22.2004-2(b)(1)(ii). The contractor may also
provide any other information that they believe may be relevant,
including that it is challenging or appealing an adverse Labor Law
decision. The information that the contractor submits will be carefully
considered during an ALCA's assessment of the contractor's record of
compliance.
The additional relevant information provided by the contractor will
not be made public unless the contractor determines that it wants the
information
[[Page 58723]]
to be made public. Id. 22.2004-2(b)(1)(ii). However, where a contractor
enters into a labor compliance agreement, the entry will be noted in
the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System
(FAPIIS), available at www.fapiis.gov/, by the ALCA and the fact that a
labor compliance agreement has been agreed to will be public
information. Id. 22.2004-2(b)(9).
Mitigating circumstances are discussed in more depth below in
section III(B)(1) and labor compliance agreements are discussed in
section III(C).
4. Preaward Updates to Representations
Contractors have a duty to provide an update to the contracting
officer prior to the date of an award if the contractor's initial
representation is no longer accurate. In some procurements, a period of
time may pass between the date of the contractor's offer on the
contract and the date of the award. If, during this time, a new Labor
Law decision is rendered or the contractor otherwise learns that its
representation is no longer accurate, the contractor must notify the
contracting officer of an update to its representation. See FAR 52.222-
57(e). This means that if the contractor made an initial representation
that it had no Labor Law decisions to disclose, and since the time of
the offer a new decision is rendered, the contractor must notify the
contracting officer. The reverse is also true: If, for example, an
offeror made an initial representation that it has a Labor Law decision
to disclose, and since the time of the offer that Labor Law decision
has been vacated by the enforcement agency or a court, the contractor
must notify the contracting officer.
III. Preaward Assessment and Advice
For every procurement contract, the agency's contracting officer
must consider whether a contractor has a satisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics and then make an affirmative
determination of responsibility before making the award. The
contracting officer considers relevant responsibility-related
information from a number of sources, including members of the
procurement team who are subject-area experts. In determining whether
the contractor's history of Labor Law compliance reflects a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, the contracting
officer considers the analysis and advice provided by the ALCA, using
this section of the Guidance, as required by the Order and the
implementing FAR rule. As discussed in section V(A) below, contractors
will make the same determination for each of their subcontractors
performing a covered subcontract, considering analysis and advice
provided by the Department regarding any Labor Law decisions disclosed
by the subcontractor.
This section of the Guidance explains the three-step process by
which ALCAs assess a contractor's record of Labor Law compliance and
provide preaward advice to contracting officers. Section III(A)
explains the first step: Classifying the Labor Law violations. At this
stage, an ALCA reviews all of the contractor's violations to determine
if any are ``serious,'' ``repeated,'' ``willful,'' or ``pervasive.''
Section III(B) discusses the second step: Weighing the Labor Law
violations. At this point, the ALCA analyzes any serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive violations in light of the totality of the
circumstances, including any mitigating factors that are present.
Section III(C) discusses the third step: The ALCA provides advice to
the contracting officer regarding the contractor's record of Labor Law
compliance and whether a labor compliance agreement or other action is
warranted.
In the first step of the assessment process, the ``classification''
step, an ALCA reviews each of the contractor's Labor Law violations to
determine which, if any, are serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive. Section III(A) of the Guidance defines these four terms. All
violations of Federal laws are a serious matter; but, for purposes of
the Order, certain Labor Law violations are classified as serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. As explained below, the
classification of a violation as serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive does not automatically result in a finding that a contractor
lacks integrity and business ethics. Rather, this subset of all Labor
Law violations represents those that may bear on an assessment of a
contractor's integrity and business ethics; violations that fall
outside this subset are less likely to have a significant impact. Thus,
although the Order requires contractors to disclose all Labor Law
decisions from the relevant time period, only those decisions involving
violations classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive
are considered as part of the weighing step and factor into the ALCA's
written analysis and advice.
In the second step of the assessment process, the ``weighing''
step, the ALCA analyzes the contractor's serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive violations of Labor Laws in light of the totality of
the circumstances, including, among other factors, the severity of the
violation(s), the size of the contractor, and any mitigating factors.
During the assessment process, the ALCA considers whether the
contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance--in other
words, whether the contractor's history of Labor Law compliance and any
adoption by the contractor of preventative compliance measures indicate
that the contracting officer could find the contractor to have a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics despite the
violations. The contractor's timely remediation of violations of Labor
Laws is generally the most important factor weighing in favor of a
conclusion that a contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. The ALCA also considers factors that weigh against a
conclusion that the contractor has a satisfactory record. For example,
as explained more fully below, pervasive violations and violations of
particular gravity, among others, may support such a conclusion. See
Section III(B).
In the third step of the assessment process, the ALCA provides
written advice and analysis to the contracting officer regarding the
contractor's record of Labor Law compliance. The ALCA recommends
whether the contractor's record supports a finding of a satisfactory
record of integrity and business ethics. In cases where the ALCA
concludes that a contractor has an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, the ALCA will recommend the negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement or other appropriate action such as notification
of the agency suspending and debarring official. If the ALCA concludes
that a labor compliance agreement is warranted, the ALCA will recommend
whether the agreement should be negotiated before or after the award.
The written analysis supporting the advice describes the ALCA's
classification and weighing of the contractor's Labor Law violations
and includes the rationale for the recommendation. See Section III(C).
While the ALCA provides written analysis and advice, the
contracting officer has the ultimate responsibility and discretion to
determine whether the contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics and is a responsible source. See FAR 22.2004-
2(b)(4).
A. Classifying Labor Law Violations
In the first step of the preaward assessment and advice process,
the ALCA reviews all of the contractor's violations to determine if any
should be classified as ``serious,'' ``repeated,'' ``willful,'' and/or
``pervasive.'' As part of this process, the ALCA monitors SAM
[[Page 58724]]
and FAPIIS for new and updated contractor disclosures of Labor Law
decision information. See FAR 22.2004-1(c)(5). See also section
II(C)(2), above, for a discussion of the information the contractor
must disclose.
Criteria for Classifying Violations
The Order directs the Department to assist agencies in determining
whether administrative merits determinations, arbitral awards or
decisions, or civil judgments (i.e., Labor Law decisions) were issued
for serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive violations of the Labor
Laws. Order, section 4(b)(i). It specifies that the definitions of
these terms should ``incorporate existing statutory standards for
assessing whether a violation is serious, repeated, or willful'' where
they are available. Id. The Order also provides some guidelines for
developing standards where none are provided by statute. See id.
The sections below list criteria under which violations of the
Labor Laws are considered serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive.
These criteria include, for example, whether an agency applied a
particular designation (e.g., ``repeated'' under the OSH Act) to a
violation, whether particular thresholds were met (e.g., $10,000 in
back wages), or whether other specific facts are present (e.g., whether
punitive damages were awarded). A single violation may satisfy the
criteria for more than one classification; for example a single
violation may be both serious and repeated. Multiple violations may
together be classified as pervasive.
ALCAs classify violations based on information that is readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law decisions themselves. ALCAs do not
second-guess or re-litigate enforcement actions or the decisions of
reviewing officials, courts, and arbitrators. While ALCAs and
contracting officers may seek additional information from the
enforcement agencies to provide context, they generally rely on the
information contained in the Labor Law decisions to determine whether
violations are serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive under the
definitions provided in this Guidance.
Effect of Reversal or Vacatur of Basis for Classification
If a Labor Law decision or portion thereof that would otherwise
cause a violation to be classified as serious, repeated, willful, and/
or pervasive has been reversed or vacated, the violation should not be
classified as such under the Order. For example, if an OSH Act
violation was originally designated by OSHA as ``serious'' but is later
re-designated as ``other-than-serious,'' the violation should not be
classified as a serious violation under the Order. Likewise, if a prior
Labor Law decision that would otherwise cause a subsequent violation to
be classified as a repeated violation is reversed or vacated, the
subsequent violation should not be classified as a repeated violation.
1. Serious Violations
Of the Federal Labor Laws, only the OSH Act provides a statutory
standard for what constitutes a ``serious'' violation, and this
standard also applies to OSHA-approved State Plans. The other Federal
Labor Laws do not have statutory standards for what constitutes a
serious violation. According to the Order, where no statutory standards
exist, the Department's Guidance for ``serious'' violations must take
into account
the number of employees affected, the degree of risk posed or actual
harm done by the violation to the health, safety, or well-being of a
worker, the amount of damages incurred or fines or penalties
assessed with regard to the violation, and other considerations as
the Secretary finds appropriate.
Order, section 4(b)(i)(B)(1).
Accordingly, a violation is ``serious'' for purposes of the Order
under the following circumstances:
a. For OSH Act or OSHA-approved State Plan violations that are
enforced through citations or equivalent State documents, a violation
is serious if a citation, or equivalent State document, was designated
as serious or an equivalent State designation.
b. For all other violations of the Labor Laws, a violation is
serious if it is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that
the violation involved any one of the following:
i. The violation affected at least 10 workers, and the affected
workers made up 25 percent or more of the contractor's workforce at the
worksite or 25 percent or more of the contractor's workforce overall;
ii. Fines and penalties of at least $5,000 or back wages of at
least $10,000 were due;
iii. The contractor's conduct caused or contributed to the death or
serious injury of one or more workers;
iv. The contractor employed a minor who was too young to be legally
employed or in violation of a Hazardous Occupations Order;
v. The contractor was issued a notice of failure to abate an OSH
Act or OSHA-approved State Plan violation; or the contractor was issued
an imminent danger notice or an equivalent State notice under the OSH
Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan.
vi. The contractor retaliated against one or more workers for
exercising any right protected by any of the Labor Laws;
vii. The contractor engaged in a pattern or practice of
discrimination or systemic discrimination;
viii. The contractor interfered with the enforcement agency's
investigation; or
ix. The contractor breached the material terms of any agreement or
settlement entered into with an enforcement agency, or violated any
court order, any administrative order by an enforcement agency, or any
arbitral award.
This definition is an exhaustive list of the classification
criteria for use in designating Labor Law violations as serious under
the Order. Further guidance for applying these criteria is included
below:
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations and Equivalent State Documents
Section 17(k) of the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 666(k), defines a violation
as serious, in relevant part, ``if there is a substantial probability
that [the hazard created by the violation could result in] death or
serious physical harm . . . unless the employer did not, and could not
with the exercise of reasonable diligence know'' of the existence of
the violation. This standard is used by enforcement agencies to
classify OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan violations that are
enforced through citations or equivalent State documents. In light of
this clear statutory definition and the Order's directive to
incorporate statutory standards where they exist, OSH Act violations
that are enforced through citations are considered serious under the
Order if--and only if--the relevant enforcement agency designated the
citation or equivalent State document as such.\105\
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\105\ The relevant enforcement agency will either be OSHA, a
State Plan agency, or WHD, which enforces violations of the OSH
Act's field sanitation and temporary labor camp standards in States
that do not have a State Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OSH Act also includes prohibitions that are not enforced
through citations or equivalent State documents. Under the
classification process in the Order, such violations are considered
``serious'' if they meet any of the other criteria for serious
violations listed below in subsections (b)(i) through (b)(ix) and
listed above in category (b). For example, the OSH Act
[[Page 58725]]
prohibits retaliating against workers for exercising any right under
the Act. 29 U.S.C. 660(c). OSH Act retaliation violations are enforced
through complaints in Federal court, not through citations; and OSHA
does not make any designation for them (serious or otherwise). As with
retaliation under any of the Labor Laws, such a violation should be
classified as ``serious,'' even though OSHA has not designated it as
``serious.'' See Section III(A)(1)(b)(vi).
b. Other Violations of the Labor Laws
For violations of the Labor Laws other than OSH Act or OSHA-
Approved State Plan violations that are enforced through citations and
equivalent State documents, violations are serious if they meet any one
of the following criteria:
i. Violation Affects at Least 10 Workers Comprising at Least 25 Percent
of the Contractor's Workforce at the Worksite or Overall
Consistent with the Order's directive to consider the number of
employees affected, a violation is serious if it affected at least 10
workers who together made up 25 percent or more of the contractor's
workforce at the worksite or 25 percent or more of the contractor's
workforce overall.
For purposes of this 25 percent threshold, ``workforce'' means all
individuals on the contractor's payroll at the time of the violation,
whether full-time or part-time. It does not include workers of another
entity, unless the underlying violation of the Labor Laws includes a
finding that the contractor is a joint employer of the workers that the
other entity employs at the worksite. For example, assuming no joint
employer relationships exist, if a contractor employs 40 workers at a
worksite, then a violation is serious if it affects at least 10 of the
contractor's workers at the site, even if other companies also employ
an additional 40 workers at the same site.
For purposes of this 25 percent threshold, ``worksite'' means the
physical location or group of locations where the workers affected by
the violations work and where the contractor conducts its business. For
example, if the contractor conducts its business at a single building,
or a single office within an office building, that building or office
will be the worksite. However, if the contractor conducts business
activities in several offices in one building, or in several buildings
in one campus or industrial park, the worksite consists of all of the
offices or buildings in which the business is conducted. On the other
hand, if a contractor has two office buildings in different parts of
the same city, or in different cities, then those office buildings are
considered to be separate worksites. For violations that affect workers
with no fixed worksite, such as construction workers, transportation
workers, workers who perform services at various customers' locations,
and workers who regularly telework, the worksite is the site to which
they are assigned as their home base, from which their work is
assigned, or to which they report.
For purposes of this 25 percent threshold, ``affected workers''
means the workers who were individually impacted by the violation. For
example, affected workers include workers who were not paid wages due;
were denied leave or benefits; were denied a job, a promotion, or other
benefits due to discrimination; or were harmed by an unlawful policy.
ii. Fines, Penalties, and Back Wages
Consistent with the Order's directive to take into account ``the
amount of damages incurred or fines or penalties assessed,'' a
violation is serious if $5,000 or more in fines and penalties, or
$10,000 or more in back wages, were due.
``Fines and penalties'' are monetary penalties imposed by a
government agency. They do not include back wages, compensatory
damages, liquidated damages, or punitive damages. For purposes of
determining whether the $10,000 back wages threshold is met,
compensatory damages, liquidated damages under the FLSA,\106\ and
statutory damages under MSPA should be included as back wages.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Liquidated damages under the FLSA are included in the
calculation of back wages because they are compensatory in nature,
intended to serve as a substitute for ``damages too obscure and
difficult of proof for estimate other than by liquidated damages.''
Overnight Motor Transp. Co. v. Missel, 316 U.S. 572, 583-84 (1942).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The threshold amounts for back wages, fines, and penalties are
measured by the amount ``due.'' This will usually be the amount
originally assessed by an enforcement agency or found due by a court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel. However, if the original amount is later
reduced by an enforcement agency, arbitrator, arbitral panel, or court,
the reduced amount is used. For example, if the Department files a
civil complaint in an FLSA case seeking $15,000 in back wages but a
court awards only $8,000, then the violation will not be serious under
this criterion because the $8,000 figure falls below the $10,000
threshold for back wages. Similarly, if an administrative merits
determination assesses $6,000 in civil monetary penalties against a
contractor but later the enforcement agency and contractor reach a
settlement for the reduced amount of $4,000, then the underlying
violation is not serious because the settlement amount fell below the
$5,000 threshold for fines and penalties. In contrast, if, for example,
the contractor files for bankruptcy and cannot pay the full amount, or
simply refuses to pay such that the full penalty is never collected,
the original assessed amount is the amount that matters for classifying
the violation under this criterion.
When considering whether these thresholds are met, the total fines
and penalties or the total back wages resulting from the Labor Law
violation should be considered. Thus, for example, where a wage-and-
hour violation affected multiple workers, the back wages due to each
worker involved in the claim must be added together to see if the
cumulative amount meets the $10,000 back-wage threshold. Similarly, in
cases where multiple provisions of a Labor Law have been violated, the
fines, penalties, and back wages due should not be parsed and
separately attributed to each provision violated. For example, if the
Department's FLSA investigation discloses violations of the FLSA's
minimum wage and overtime provisions and back wages are due for both
violations, the total back wages due determines whether the $10,000
threshold is met. Likewise, if an investigation discloses six
violations of the same MSPA provision or violations of six different
MSPA provisions and each violation results in civil monetary penalties
of $1,000, the MSPA violation is serious because the penalties total
$6,000.
This criterion only applies if the Labor Law decision includes an
amount of back wages or fines or penalties. Thus, for example, if an
enforcement agency issues an administrative merits determination that
does not include an amount of fines or penalties assessed or of back
wages due, then an ALCA cannot classify the violation as serious using
this criterion until the amount has been determined. For example, if
the EEOC files a complaint in Federal court seeking back wages but does
not specify the amount, then this criterion cannot be the basis for
classifying the violation as serious, though the violation could be
serious under one of the other listed criteria.
iii. Any Violations That Cause or Contribute to Death or Serious Injury
Consistent with the Order's directive to consider ``the degree of
risk posed or
[[Page 58726]]
actual harm done by the violation to health, safety, or well-being of a
worker,'' any violation of the Labor Laws that causes or contributes to
the death or serious injury of one or more workers is serious under the
Order. For the purpose of this classification criterion, ``serious
injury'' means an injury that requires the care of a medical
professional beyond first-aid treatment or results in more than five
days of missed work.
iv. Employment of Minors Who Are Too Young To Be Legally Employed or in
Violation of a Hazardous Occupations Order
Consistent with the Order's directive to consider ``the degree of
risk posed or actual harm done by the violation to health, safety, or
well-being of a worker,'' any violation of the FLSA's child labor
provisions where the minor is too young to be legally employed or is
employed in violation of any of the Secretary's Hazardous Occupations
Orders is a serious violation. Such violations do not include
situations where minors are permitted to perform the work at issue but
have performed the work outside the hours permitted by law. Rather, it
refers to minors who, by virtue of their age, are legally prohibited
from being employed or are not permitted to be employed to perform the
work at all. Thus, serious violations include, for example: The
employment of any minor under the age of 18 to perform a hazardous non-
agricultural job, any minor under the age of 16 to perform a hazardous
farm job, or any minor under the age of 14 to perform non-farm work
where he or she does not meet a statutory exception otherwise
permitting the work. This reflects the particularly serious dangers
that can result from the prohibited employment of underage minors.
Conversely, it is not a serious violation for the purposes of the Order
where the contractor has employed a 14 or 15 year-old minor in excess
of 3 hours outside school hours on a school day, in a non-hazardous,
non-agricultural job in which the child is otherwise permitted to
work--even though the work violates the FLSA's child labor provisions.
v. Notices of Failure To Abate and Imminent Danger Notices
Under the OSH Act and OSHA-approved State Plans, enforcement
agencies may issue notices of failure to abate and imminent danger
notices. Notices of failure to abate are issued when an employer has
failed to remedy a violative condition despite having received a
citation, unless that citation is being contested. See 29 CFR 1903.18.
A notice of failure to abate a violation is a serious violation because
failing to correct a hazard after receiving formal notification of the
need to do so represents a serious disregard of the law.
Imminent danger notices are issued when ``a danger exists which
could reasonably be expected to cause death or serious physical harm
immediately or before the imminence of such danger can be eliminated
through the enforcement procedures otherwise provided by [the OSH
Act].'' 29 U.S.C. 662(a). Because such notices are issued only for
violations that imminently threaten to cause death or serious physical
harm, imminent danger notices are by definition issued only for serious
violations of the OSH Act, and thus constitute serious violations under
the Order.
vi. Retaliation
Consistent with the Order's directive to consider ``the degree of
risk posed or actual harm done by the violation to health, safety, or
well-being of a worker,'' a violation involving retaliation is a
serious violation. For these purposes, retaliation means that the
contractor has engaged in an adverse employment action against one or
more workers for exercising any right protected by the Labor Laws. An
adverse employment action means conduct that may dissuade a reasonable
worker from engaging in protected activity under the Labor Laws, such
as a discharge, refusal to hire, suspension, demotion, unlawful
harassment, or threats.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ See Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 548 U.S.
53, 68 (2006) (holding that for purposes of Title VII, retaliation
requires that ``a reasonable employee would have found the
challenged action materially adverse, which in this context means it
well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or
supporting a charge of discrimination'') (internal citations
omitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Examples of retaliation include, but are not limited to,
disciplining workers for attempting to organize a union; firing or
demoting workers who take leave under the FMLA; and threatening workers
with adverse consequences--such as termination or referral to
immigration or criminal authorities--for reporting potential violations
of Labor Laws, testifying in enforcement matters, or otherwise
exercising any right protected by the Labor Laws. These are serious
violations because they both reflect a disregard by the contractor for
its obligations under the Labor Laws and undermine the effectiveness of
the Labor Laws by making workers reluctant to exercise their rights for
fear of retaliation.
vii. Pattern or Practice of Discrimination or Systemic Discrimination
Consistent with the Order's directive to consider ``the degree of
risk posed or actual harm done by the violation to health, safety, or
well-being of a worker,'' a violation is serious if the contractor
engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination or systemic
discrimination. This criterion is generally expected to apply to
violations of Executive Order 11246, section 503 of the Rehabilitation
Act, VEVRAA, Title VII, section 6(d) of the FLSA (the Equal Pay Act),
the ADA, and the ADEA.
A pattern or practice of discrimination involves intentional
discrimination against a protected group of applicants or employees
that reflects the employer's standard operating procedure, the regular
rather than the unusual practice,\108\ and not discrimination that
occurs in an isolated fashion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters v. United States, 431 U.S.
324, 336 (1977).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Systemic discrimination involves a pattern or practice, policy, or
class case where the discrimination has a broad impact on an industry,
profession, company, or geographic area. Examples include policies and
practices that effectuate discriminatory hiring barriers; restrictions
on access to higher level jobs in violation of any applicable anti-
discrimination law; unlawful pre-employment inquiries regarding
disabilities; and discriminatory placement or assignments that are made
to comply with customer preferences.
Systemic discrimination also includes policies and practices that
are seemingly neutral but may cause a disparate impact on protected
groups. Examples include pre-employment tests used for selection
purposes; height, weight or lifting requirements or restrictions;
compensation practices and policies; and performance evaluation
policies and practices. Systemic discrimination cases may be, but need
not be, the subject of class action litigation.
viii. Interference With Investigations
Labor Law violations in which the contractor engaged in
interference with the enforcement agency's investigation also are
serious under the Order. Interference can take a number of forms, but
for purposes of this criterion it is limited to violations involving
the following circumstances:
(1) A civil judgment was issued holding the contractor in contempt
for failing to provide information or physical access to an enforcement
agency in the course of an investigation; or
[[Page 58727]]
(2) It is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that
the contractor--
(a) Falsified, knowingly made a false statement in, or destroyed
records to frustrate an investigation under the Labor Laws;
(b) Knowingly made false representations to an investigator; or
(c) Took or threatened to take adverse actions against workers (for
example, termination, reduction in salary or benefits, or referral to
immigration or criminal authorities) for cooperating with or speaking
to government investigators or for otherwise complying with an agency's
investigation (for example, threatening workers if they do not return
back wages received as the result of an investigation).
Like retaliation, interference with investigations is intentional
conduct that frustrates the enforcement of the Labor Laws and therefore
is a serious violation.
ix. Material Breaches and Violations of Settlements, Labor Compliance
Agreements, or Orders
Labor Law violations involving a breach of the material terms of
any settlement, labor compliance agreement, court or administrative
order, or arbitral award are serious violations under the Order. Such
violations are serious because contractors are expected to comply with
orders by a court or administrative agency and to adhere to the terms
of any agreements or settlements into which it enters. A contractor's
failure to do so may indicate that it will similarly disregard its
contractual obligations to, or agreements with, a contracting agency,
which could result in delays, increased costs, and other adverse
consequences. A contractor will not, however, be found to have
committed a serious violation if the agreement, settlement, award, or
order in question has been stayed, reversed, or vacated.
c. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected examples of serious violations, see
Appendix A.
2. Repeated Violations
The Order provides that the standard for repeated should
``incorporate existing statutory standards'' to the extent such
standards exist. Order, section 4(b)(i)(A). It further provides that,
where no statutory standards exist, the standards for repeated should
take into account ``whether the entity has had one or more additional
violations of the same or a substantially similar requirement in the
past 3 years.'' Id. section 4(b)(i)(B)(2). None of the Labor Laws
contains an explicit statutory definition of the term ``repeated.''
Accordingly, a violation is ``repeated'' under the Order if:
a. For a violation of the OSH Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan
that was enforced through a citation or an equivalent State document,
the citation at issue was designated as ``repeated,'' ``repeat,'' or
any equivalent State designation and the prior violation that formed
the basis for the repeated violation became a final order of the OSHRC
or equivalent State agency no more than 3 years before the repeated
violation;
b. For all other Labor Law violations, the contractor has committed
a violation that is the same as or substantially similar to a prior
violation of the Labor Laws that was the subject of a separate
investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts, and
became uncontested or adjudicated within the previous 3 years. The
following is an exhaustive list of violations that are substantially
similar to each other for these purposes:
1. For the FLSA:
i. Any two violations of the FLSA's child labor provisions; or
ii. Any two violations of the FLSA's provision requiring break time
for nursing mothers.
2. For the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order 13658:
i. Any two violations of these statutes' minimum wage, subminimum
wage, overtime, or prevailing wages provisions, even if they arise
under different statutes.
3. For the FMLA:
i. Any two violations of the FMLA's notice requirements; or
ii. Any two violations of the FMLA other than its notice
requirements.
4. For the MSPA:
i. Any two violations of the MSPA's requirements pertaining to
wages, supplies, and working arrangements;
ii. Any two violations of the MSPA's requirements related to health
and safety;
iii. Any two violations of the MSPA's disclosure and recordkeeping
requirements; or
iv. Any two violations related to the MSPA's registration
requirements.
5. For the NLRA:
i. Any two violations of the same numbered subsection of section
8(a) of the NLRA.
6. For Title VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
the ADA, the ADEA, section 6(d) of the FLSA (known as the Equal Pay
Act, 29 U.S.C. 206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965,
the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972, and the
Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974:
i. Any two violations, even if they arise under different statutes,
if both violations involve:
1. the same protected status, and
2. at least one of the following elements in common:
a. the same employment practice, or,
b. the same worksite.
7. For all of the Labor Laws, including those listed above, even if
the violations arise under different statutes:
i. Any two violations involving retaliation;
ii. Any two failures to keep records required under the Labor Laws;
or
iii. Any two failures to post notices required under the Labor
Laws.
Further guidance for applying these criteria is included below:
a. OSH Act and OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The terms ``repeated'' and ``repeat'' have well-established
meanings under the OSH Act with regard to violations that are enforced
through citations. Such violations are ``repeated'' ``if, at the time
of the alleged repeated violation, there was [an Occupational Safety
and Health Review Commission] final order against the same employer for
a substantially similar violation.'' Potlatch Corp., 7 O.S.H. Cas.
(BNA) 1061 (O.S.H.R.C. 1979). This term is generally defined similarly
under OSHA-approved State Plans.\109\
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\109\ See generally ``What Constitutes `Repeated' or `Willful'
Violation for Purposes of State Occupational Safety and Health
Acts,'' 17 A.L.R.6th 715 (originally published in 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As such, under the OSH Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan, if a
citation or equivalent State document designates a violation as
``repeated,'' ``repeat,'' or any equivalent State designation, the
violation will be repeated for purposes of the Order provided that the
prior violation became a final order of OSHRC or the equivalent State
agency within 3 years of the repeated violation. Even though, under
current OSHA policy, repeated violations take into account a 5-year
period, the 3-year timeframe conforms to the Order's direction that the
standards for repeated violations should take into account ``whether
the entity has had one or more additional violations of the same or a
substantially similar requirement in the past 3 years.'' Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(2).
b. All Other Violations
For all Labor Law violations other than OSH Act and OSHA-approved
State Plan violations enforced through
[[Page 58728]]
citations or equivalent State documents, a violation is repeated if it
is the same as, or substantially similar to, a prior violation of the
Labor Laws by the contractor that was the subject of a separate
investigation or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts, and
became uncontested or adjudicated within the previous 3 years. These
terms are explained in greater detail below.
i. Prior Violation Must Have Been Uncontested or Adjudicated
For a violation to be classified as ``repeated,'' a prior violation
must be either uncontested or adjudicated. Only the prior violation
need be uncontested or adjudicated when determining whether a violation
is repeated. The subsequent violation--the one to be classified as
``repeated''--does not need to have been uncontested or adjudicated.
These terms are explained below.
An uncontested violation is a violation that is reflected in:
(2) A Labor Law decision that the contractor has not contested or
challenged within the time limit provided in the Labor Law decision or
otherwise required by law; or
(3) A Labor Law decision following which the contractor agrees to
at least some of the relief sought by the agency in its enforcement
action.
An adjudicated violation is one that is reflected in:
(1) a civil judgment;
(2) an arbitral award or decision; or
(3) an administrative merits determination that constitutes a final
agency order by an administrative adjudicative authority following a
proceeding in which the contractor had an opportunity to present
evidence or arguments on its behalf.
As used in the above definition of an adjudicated violation,
``administrative adjudicative authority'' means an administrative body
empowered to hear adversary proceedings, such as the ARB, the OSHRC, or
the NLRB. ALJs are also administrative adjudicative authorities;
however, their decisions will only constitute adjudicated violations if
they are adopted as final agency orders. This typically will occur, for
example, if the party subject to an adverse decision by an ALJ does not
file a timely appeal to the agency's administrative appellate body,
such as those referenced above.
For an ALCA to classify a subsequent violation as ``repeated,'' the
prior violation must be uncontested or adjudicated before the date of
the Labor Law decision for the subsequent violation.
An example illustrating the above principles follows:
When WHD sends a contractor a letter finding that the contractor
violated the DBA, if the contractor wishes to contest the violation, it
must request a hearing in writing within 30 days. 29 CFR 5.11(b)(2). If
the contractor timely requests a hearing, then the matter may proceed
to a hearing before an ALJ, id. 5.11(b)(3), and, if necessary, the
contractor may appeal to the ARB, id. 6.34. While these proceedings are
pending, WHD's letter, by itself, cannot be a prior violation because
it is neither uncontested nor adjudicated. Thus, if the contractor,
during the pendency of those proceedings, receives a second letter from
WHD finding that the contractor committed a substantially similar
violation, the second violation would not be classified as repeated.
However, once the ARB renders its decision, representing a final order
of the Department of Labor, the first violation is considered
adjudicated. If, after the ARB decision, the contractor receives a
second letter about a second substantially similar violation, that
second violation would be classified as a repeated violation under the
Order, regardless of whether the second violation is uncontested or
adjudicated.
The first letter may also become ``uncontested'' if the contractor
agrees in a settlement to pay some or all of the back wages due. Thus,
if the contractor agrees to such a settlement at any time after
receiving the first letter, and the contractor subsequently receives a
second letter from WHD finding that the contractor committed a second,
substantially similar violation, then the second violation would be
classified as repeated, regardless of whether the second violation is
uncontested or adjudicated.
This framework is intended to ensure that violations will only be
classified as repeated when the contractor has had the opportunity--
even if not exercised--to present facts or arguments in its defense
before an adjudicative authority concerning the prior violation.
ii. 3-Year Look-Back Period
For a violation to be classified as ``repeated,'' the prior
violation must have become uncontested or adjudicated no more than 3
years prior to the date of the repeated violation--the 3-year look-back
period. The ``date'' of the repeated violation is the date of the
relevant civil judgment, arbitral award or decision, or administrative
merits determination (e.g. Labor Law decision) is issued.\110\ For
example, if the contractor's offer is dated March 1, 2019, then the
contractor must disclose all Labor Law decisions within the 3-year
disclosure period prior to the date of the offer, between March 1,
2016, and March 1, 2019. However, if one of the contractor's disclosed
decisions is dated June 8, 2018, then the 3-year look-back period for
determining whether that violation identified in the decision should be
classified as repeated extends back to June 8, 2015.
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\110\ This means that the 3-year timeframe for determining
whether a violation is repeated (the 3-year look-back period) is
different from the 3-year timeframe within which all Labor Law
decisions must be disclosed under the Order (the 3-year disclosure
period), which is the 3 years prior to the date of the contractor's
offer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The relevant date for determining whether a prior violation falls
within the 3-year look-back period is the date that the prior violation
becomes uncontested or adjudicated. A prior violation becomes
uncontested either on the date on which any time period to contest the
violation has expired, or on the date of the contractor's agreement to
at least some of the relief sought by the agency in its enforcement
action (e.g., the date a settlement agreement is signed), whichever is
applicable. A prior violation becomes adjudicated on the date on which
the violation first becomes a civil judgment, arbitral award or
decision, or a final agency order by an administrative adjudicative
authority following a proceeding in which the contractor had an
opportunity to present evidence or arguments on its behalf. Thus, for a
violation that is the subject of successive adjudications, the dates of
subsequent appellate decisions are not relevant.
For example, if OFCCP issues a show cause notice to a contractor on
January 1, 2017, and the contractor contests the violation, resulting
in an ALJ determination on January 1, 2018, an ARB determination on
January 1, 2019, a civil judgment by a district court on January 1,
2020, and a civil judgment by a court of appeals on January 1, 2021,
then the relevant date of the prior violation would be the January 1,
2019 date of the ARB order. This date is the relevant date because this
is the date on which the violation becomes a final agency order by the
ARB, and therefore first becomes an adjudicated violation--even though
it is later adjudicated again in the civil judgments of the district
court and court of appeals. That ARB order could therefore serve as a
prior violation for any subsequent substantially similar violation for
which a Labor Law decision is issued after January 1, 2019 and prior to
January 1, 2022.
[[Page 58729]]
iii. Separate Investigations or Proceedings
The prior violation must be the subject of a separate investigation
or proceeding arising from a separate set of facts. Thus, for example,
if one investigation discloses that a contractor violated the FLSA and
the OSH Act, or committed multiple violations of any one of the Labor
Laws, such violations would not be ``repeated'' simply because of the
other violations found in the same investigation.
iv. Prior Violation Must Be Committed by the Same Legal Entity
The prior violation must have been committed by the contractor,
considered on a company-wide basis. Thus, a prior violation by any
establishment of a multi-establishment company can render subsequent
violations repeated, provided the other relevant criteria are
satisfied, as long as the violation was committed by the same legal
entity.\111\ As discussed below, the relative size of the contractor as
compared to the number of violations may be a mitigating factor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ However, as noted below, as to the anti-discrimination
Labor Laws specifically, whether a violation was committed at the
same worksite as a prior violation is one factor that can affect
whether the two violations are substantially similar to each other.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
v. Substantially Similar Violations
The prior violation must be the same as or substantially similar to
the violation designated as repeated. Substantially similar does not
mean ``exactly the same.'' United States v. Washam, 312 F.3d 926, 930-
31 (8th Cir. 2002). Rather, two things may be substantially similar
where they share ```essential elements in common.''' Alameda Mall, L.P.
v. Shoe Show, Inc., 649 F.3d 389, 392-93 (5th Cir. 2011) (quoting the
dictionary definition of the term).
Whether violations fall under the same Labor Law is not necessarily
determinative of whether the requirements underlying those violations
are substantially similar. Rather, as set forth in greater details
below, whether a violation is substantially similar to a past violation
turns on the nature of the violation and underlying obligation itself.
The following definitions outline when, under the Order, a violation
will be substantially similar to a prior violation (with the exception
of OSH Act and OSHA State Plan violations enforced through a citation,
which are addressed above):
FLSA
Any two violations of the FLSA's child labor provisions are
substantially similar to each other. This reflects the treatment of
such violations as ``repeated'' for purposes of civil monetary
penalties in 29 CFR 579.2. Additionally, any two violations of the
FLSA's provision requiring break time for nursing mothers are
substantially similar to each other.
FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order 13658
Any violations of the minimum wage, subminimum wage, overtime, or
prevailing wage requirements of the FLSA, DBA, SCA, and Executive Order
13658 are substantially similar to each other, even if the violations
arise under different statutes.\112\
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\112\ This treatment is consistent with the FLSA's regulations,
which treat any two minimum wage or overtime violations as
``repeated.'' See 29 CFR 578.3(b). This regulatory provision
recognizes that two failures to pay wages mandated by law are
substantially similar, even if they involve different specific
obligations.
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FMLA
Any two FMLA violations are substantially similar to each other
under the Order, with the exception of violations of the notice
requirements. Thus, denial of leave, retaliation, discrimination,
failure to reinstate an employee to the same or an equivalent position,
and failure to maintain group health insurance are all substantially
similar, given that each violation involves either denying FMLA leave
or penalizing an employee who takes leave. Conversely, any two
instances of failure to provide notice--such as failure to provide
general notice via a poster or a failure to notify individual employees
regarding their eligibility status, rights, and responsibilities--are
substantially similar to each other, but not to other violations of the
FMLA.
MSPA
For violations of the MSPA, multiple violations of the statute's
requirements pertaining to wages, supplies, and working arrangements
(including, for example, failure to pay wages when due, prohibitions
against requiring workers to purchase goods or services solely from
particular contractors, employers, or associations, and violating the
terms of any working arrangements) are substantially similar to each
other for purposes of the Order. Likewise, violations of any of the
MSPA's requirements related to health and safety, including both
housing and transportation health and safety, are substantially similar
to each other. Violations of the statute's disclosure and recordkeeping
requirements are also substantially similar to each other. Finally,
multiple violations related to the MSPA's registration requirements are
substantially similar to each other.
NLRA
For NLRA violations, any two violations of the same numbered
subsection of section 8(a) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. 158(a), are
substantially similar. For example, any two violations of section
8(a)(3), which prohibits employers from discriminating against
employees for engaging in or refusing to engage in union activities,
are substantially similar. Likewise, any two violations of section
8(a)(2), which prohibits employers from dominating or assisting labor
unions through financial support or otherwise, are substantially
similar to each other.
The Anti-Discrimination Labor Laws
For purposes of the anti-discrimination Labor Laws,\113\ violations
are substantially similar if they involve both of the following
elements, even if they arise under different statutes:
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\113\ Title VII, section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
the ADA, the ADEA, section 6(d) of the FLSA (known as the Equal Pay
Act, 29 U.S.C. 206(d)), Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965,
the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1972, and
the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) the same protected status, and
(2) at least one of the following elements in common:
a. the same employment practice, e.g., hiring, firing, harassment,
compensation, or,
b. the same worksite.
With regard to the first element, violations are considered to
involve the ``same'' protected status as long as the same status is
present in both violations, even if other protected statuses may be
involved as well. For example, if the first violation involves
discrimination on the basis of national origin and the second violation
involves discrimination on the basis of national origin and race, the
violations are substantially similar because they involve the same
protected status, namely, discrimination on the basis of national
origin. Additionally, in this context, violations involving
discrimination on the bases of sex, pregnancy, gender identity
(including transgender status), and sex stereotyping are considered to
involve the ``same'' protected status for the purpose of determining
whether violations are substantially similar under the Order.
For the purpose of determining whether violations involve the same
[[Page 58730]]
worksite, the definition of ``worksite'' set forth in the discussion of
the 25 percent criterion for a serious violation should be used, see
Section III(A)(1)(b)(i), except that any two company-wide violations
are also considered to involve the same worksite.
All of the Labor Laws
For all of the Labor Laws, including those referenced above, any
two violations involving retaliation are substantially similar.
Likewise, any two failures to keep records required under the Labor
Laws are substantially similar. And, any two failures to post notices
required under the Labor Laws are substantially similar.
c. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected examples of repeated violations,
see Appendix B.
3. Willful Violations
The Order provides that the standard for what constitutes a
``willful'' violation should ``incorporate existing statutory
standards'' to the extent such standards exist. Order, section
4(b)(i)(A). The Order further provides that, where no statutory
standards exist, the standard for willful should take into account
``whether the entity knew of, showed reckless disregard for, or acted
with plain indifference to the matter of whether its conduct was
prohibited by the requirements of the [Labor Laws].'' Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(3).
Accordingly, a violation is ``willful'' under the Order if:
a. For purposes of OSH Act or OSHA-approved State Plan violations
that are enforced through citations or equivalent State documents, the
citation or equivalent State document was designated as willful or any
equivalent State designation (e.g., ``knowing'');
b. For purposes of the minimum wage, overtime, and child labor
provisions of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 206-207, 212, the administrative
merits determination sought or assessed back wages for greater than 2
years or sought or assessed civil monetary penalties for a willful
violation, or there was a civil judgment or arbitral award or decision
finding that the contractor's violation was willful;
c. For purposes of the ADEA, the enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded liquidated damages;
d. For purposes of Title VII or the ADA, the enforcement agency,
court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded punitive
damages for a violation where the contractor engaged in a
discriminatory practice with malice or reckless indifference to the
federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual; or
e. For purposes of any other violations of the Labor Laws, it is
readily ascertainable from the findings of the relevant enforcement
agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel that the contractor knew
that its conduct was prohibited by any of the Labor Laws or showed
reckless disregard for, or acted with plain indifference to, whether
its conduct was prohibited by one or more requirements of the Labor
Laws.
In the above definition, the Department incorporates existing
standards, statutory or otherwise, from the Labor Laws that are
indicative of willfulness as defined under the Order.
Further guidance for applying these criteria is included below:
a. OSH Act or OSHA-Approved State Plan Violations Enforced Through
Citations or Equivalent State Documents
The term ``willful'' has a well-established meaning under the OSH
Act that is consistent with the standard provided in the Order. Under
the OSH Act, a violation that is enforced through a citation or
equivalent State document will be designated as willful where an
employer has demonstrated either an intentional disregard for the
requirements of the OSH Act or a plain indifference to its
requirements. See A.E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Sec'y of Labor, 295 F.3d
1341, 1351-52 (D.C. Cir. 2002). For example, if an employer knows that
specific steps must be taken to address a hazard, but substitutes its
own judgment for the requirements of the legal standard, the violation
will be designated as willful. OSHA-approved State Plans generally use
this term in a similar way.\114\ As such, as noted above, under the OSH
Act or an OSHA-approved State Plan, if a citation or equivalent State
document designates a violation as ``willful'' or an equivalent State
designation (e.g., ``knowing''), the violation will be willful for
purposes of the Order.
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\114\ See generally Randy Sutton, ``What Constitutes `Repeated'
or `Willful' Violation for Purposes of State Occupational Safety and
Health Acts,'' 17 A.L.R.6th 715 (originally published in 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Violations of the Minimum Wage, Overtime, and Child Labor Provisions
of the FLSA
The term ``willful'' has a well-established meaning under the FLSA
that is consistent with the standard provided in the Order. Under the
minimum wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of the FLSA, 29
U.S.C. 206-207, 212, a violation is willful where the employer knew
that its conduct was prohibited by the FLSA or showed reckless
disregard for the FLSA's requirements. See 29 CFR 578.3(c)(1), 579.2;
McLaughlin v. Richland Shoe Co., 486 U.S. 128, 133 (1988). For example,
an employer that requires workers to ``clock out'' after 40 hours in a
workweek and then continue working ``off the clock'' or pays workers
for 40 hours by check and then pays them in cash at a straight-time
rate for hours worked over 40 commits a willful violation of the FLSA's
overtime requirements. These actions show knowledge of the FLSA's
requirements to pay time-and-a-half for hours worked over 40 and an
attempt to evade that requirement by concealing records of the workers'
actual hours worked.
Under the minimum wage and overtime provisions of the FLSA, willful
violations are grounds for administrative assessments of back wages for
greater than 2 years, and for the assessment of civil monetary
penalties. See 29 U.S.C. 216(e)(2); cf. 29 U.S.C. 255(a). Additionally,
under the FLSA's child labor provisions, willful violations are also
grounds for increased civil monetary penalties. See 29 U.S.C.
216(e)(1)(A)(ii); 29 CFR 579.5(c). Accordingly, administrative
assessments of back wages for greater than 2 years and assessments of
civil monetary penalties for willful violations are understood to
reflect a finding of willfulness and therefore will be considered
indicative of willfulness under the Order.\115\ Courts and arbitrators
must also make findings of willfulness in order to extend the statute
of limitations beyond 2 years under the FLSA's minimum wage and
overtime provisions, or to affirm assessments of civil monetary
penalties of the FLSA's minimum wage, overtime, or child labor
provisions. See 29 U.S.C. 216(e)(1)(A)(ii), 216(e)(2), 216(e)(3)(C),
255(a). Thus, any civil judgment or arbitral award or decision finding
that the contractor committed a willful FLSA violation will be
classified as a willful violation under the Order.
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\115\ Civil monetary penalties may be assessed under the FLSA's
minimum wage and overtime provisions for violations that are either
repeated or willful, and civil monetary penalties may be assessed
for child labor violations even in the absence of a repeated or
willful violation. Only civil monetary penalties involving willful
violations will constitute willful violations under the Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Violations of the ADEA
The term ``willful'' also has a well-established meaning under the
ADEA that is consistent with the standard provided in the Order. Under
the ADEA,
[[Page 58731]]
a violation is willful when the employer knew or showed reckless
disregard for the matter of whether its conduct was prohibited by the
ADEA. See Trans World Airlines v. Thurston, 469 U.S. 111, 126 (1985).
Willful violations are required for liquidated damages to be assessed
or awarded under the ADEA. See 29 U.S.C. 626(b). Accordingly, any
violation of the ADEA in which the enforcement agency, court,
arbitrator, or arbitral panel assessed or awarded liquidated damages is
understood to reflect a finding of willfulness and therefore will be
considered indicative of a willful violation under the Order.
d. Title VII and the ADA
Violations of Title VII or the ADA are ``willful'' under the Order
if the enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral panel
assessed or awarded punitive damages for a violation where the
contractor engaged in a discriminatory practice with malice or reckless
indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved
individual. Punitive damages are appropriate in cases under Title VII
or the ADA where the employer engaged in intentional discrimination
with ``malice or reckless indifference to the federally protected
rights of an aggrieved individual.'' 42 U.S.C. 1981a(b)(1). This
standard is analogous to the standard for willful violations in the
Order. An employer acts with malice or reckless indifference if a
managerial agent of the employer, acting within the scope of
employment, makes a decision that was in the face of a perceived risk
of violating Federal law, and the employer cannot prove that the
manager's action was contrary to the employer's good faith efforts to
comply with Federal law. See Kolstad v. American Dental Ass'n, 527 U.S.
526, 536, 545 (1999). For example, if a manager received a complaint of
sexual harassment but failed to report it or investigate it--and the
employer's anti-harassment policy was ineffective in protecting the
employees' rights or the employer did not engage in good faith efforts
to educate its managerial staff about sexual harassment--then the
violation would warrant punitive damages and qualify as ``willful''
under the Order. See, e.g., EEOC v. Mgmt. Hospitality of Racine, Inc.,
666 F.3d 422, 438-39 (7th Cir. 2012).
e. Any Other Violations of the Labor Laws
For any violations of Labor Laws other than violations discussed
above in subsections (a) through (d), a violation is willful for
purposes of the Order if it is readily ascertainable from the findings
of the relevant enforcement agency, court, arbitrator, or arbitral
panel that the contractor knew that its conduct was prohibited by the
Labor Laws or showed reckless disregard for, or acted with plain
indifference to, whether its conduct was prohibited by Labor Laws.\116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ Nothing in this guidance is intended to affect the
terminology or operation of FAR part 22.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A contractor need not act with malice for a violation to be
classified as willful; rather, the focus is on whether it is readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that, based on all of the
facts and circumstances discussed in the findings, the contractor acted
with knowledge of or reckless disregard for its legal requirements. The
Labor Law decision need not include the specific words ``knowledge,''
``reckless disregard,'' or ``plain indifference''; however, it must be
readily ascertainable from the factual findings or legal conclusions
contained in the decision that the violation meets one of these
conditions, as described further below.
Knowledge
The first circumstance where willfulness will be found is where it
is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that the
contractor knew that its conduct was prohibited by law, yet engaged in
the conduct anyway. Knowledge can be inferred from the factual findings
or legal conclusions contained in the Labor Law decision. Thus,
willfulness will typically be found where it is readily ascertainable
from the Labor Law decision that a contractor was previously advised by
responsible government officials that its conduct was not lawful, but
engaged in the conduct anyway. Repeated violations may also be willful
to the extent that the prior proceeding demonstrates that the
contractor was put on notice of its legal obligations, only to later
commit the same or a substantially similar violation. If it is readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that a contractor has a
written policy or manual that describes a legal requirement, and then
knowingly violates that requirement, the violation is also likely to be
willful.
For example, if it is readily ascertainable from the Labor Law
decision that a contractor was warned by an official from the
Department that the housing it was providing to migrant agricultural
workers did not comply with required safety and health standards, and
that the contractor then failed to make the required repairs or
corrections, such findings demonstrate that the contractor engaged in a
willful violation of MSPA. Likewise, if the Labor Law decision
indicates that a contractor's employee handbook states that it provides
unpaid leave to employees with serious health conditions as required by
the FMLA, but the contractor refuses to grant FMLA leave or erects
unnecessary hurdles to employees requesting such leave, that violation
would also likely be willful. Certain acts, by their nature, are
willful, such as conduct that demonstrates an attempt to evade
statutory responsibilities, including the falsification of records,
fraud or intentional misrepresentation in the application for a
required certificate, payment of wages ``off the books,'' or
``kickbacks'' of wages from workers back to the contractor.
Reckless Disregard or Plain Indifference
The second type of willful violation is where it is readily
ascertainable from the Labor Law decision that a contractor acted with
reckless disregard or plain indifference toward the Labor Laws'
requirements. These terms refer to circumstances where a contractor
failed to make sufficient efforts to learn or understand whether it was
complying with the law. Although merely inadvertent or negligent
conduct would not meet this standard, ignorance of the law is not a
defense to a willful violation. The adequacy of a contractor's inquiry
is evaluated in light of all of the facts and circumstances, including
the complexity of the legal issue and the sophistication of the
contractor. In other words, the more obvious the violation, and the
longer the contractor has been in business, the more likely it will be
that a violation will be found willful. Reckless disregard or plain
indifference may also be shown where a contractor was aware of plainly
obvious violations and failed to take an appropriate action. For
example, an employer who employs a 13-year-old child in an obviously
dangerous occupation, such as operating a forklift, is acting in
reckless disregard for the law even if it cannot be shown that the
employer actually knew that doing so was in violation of one of the
Secretary's Hazardous Occupation Orders related to child labor.
Reckless disregard or plain indifference will also be found if a
contractor acted with purposeful lack of attention to its legal
requirements, such as if management-level officials are made aware of a
health or safety requirement but make little or no effort to
communicate that requirement to lower-level supervisors and employees.
[[Page 58732]]
f. Table of Examples
For a table containing selected examples of willful violations, see
Appendix C.
4. Pervasive Violations
The Order provides that, where no statutory standards exist, the
standard for pervasive violations should take into account ``the number
of violations of a requirement or the aggregate number of violations of
requirements in relation to the size of the entity.'' Order, section
4(b)(i)(B)(4). No statutory standards for ``pervasive'' exist under the
Labor Laws.
Violations are ``pervasive'' if they reflect a basic disregard by
the contractor for the Labor Laws as demonstrated by a pattern of
serious and/or willful violations, continuing violations, or numerous
violations. Violations must be multiple to be pervasive, although
having multiple violations does not necessarily mean the violations are
pervasive. The number of violations necessarily depends on the size of
the contractor, because larger employers, by virtue of their size, are
more likely to have multiple violations. To be pervasive, the
violations need not be of the same or similar requirements of the Labor
Laws. Pervasive violations may exist where the contractor commits
multiple violations of the same Labor Law, regardless of their
similarity, or violations of more than one of the Labor Laws. This
classification is intended to identify those contractors whose numerous
violations of Labor Laws indicate that they may view sanctions for
their violations as merely part of the ``cost of doing business,'' an
attitude that is inconsistent with the level of responsibility required
by the FAR.
Pervasive violations differ from repeated violations in a number of
ways. First, unlike repeated violations, pervasive violations need not
be substantially similar, or even similar at all, as long as each
violation involves one of the Labor Laws. Additionally, pervasive
violations, unlike repeated violations, may arise in the same
proceeding or investigation. For example, a small tools manufacturer
with about 50 employees in a single location that does not have a
process for identifying and eliminating serious safety-and-health
hazards may be cited multiple times for serious violations under the
OSH Act--once for improper storage of hazardous materials, once for
failure to provide employees with protective equipment, once for
inadequate safeguards on heavy machinery, once for lack of fall
protection, once for insufficient ventilation, once for unsafe noise
exposure, and once for inadequate emergency exits. While these
violations are sufficiently different that they would not be designated
as repeated violations by OSHA and would therefore not be repeated
violations under the Order, such a high number of serious workplace
safety violations relative to the size of a small company with only a
single location would likely demonstrate a basic disregard by the
company for workers' safety and health, particularly if the company
lacked a process for identifying and eliminating serious safety-and-
health hazards. As such, these violations would likely be considered
pervasive.
In addition, violations across multiple Labor Laws--especially when
they are serious, repeated, or willful--are an indication of pervasive
violations that warrant careful examination by the ALCA. For example, a
medium-sized company with about 1,000 employees that provides
janitorial services at Federal facilities may be found to have violated
the SCA for failure to pay workers their required wages, Title VII for
discrimination in hiring on the basis of national origin, the NLRA for
demoting workers who are seeking to organize a union, and the FMLA for
denying workers unpaid leave for serious health conditions. While these
violations are substantively different from each other, a medium-sized
company that violates so many Labor Laws is demonstrating a basic
disregard for its legal obligations to its workers and is likely
committing pervasive violations.
Whereas a repeated violation may be found anytime a contractor
commits two or more substantially similar violations, there is no
specific numeric threshold for pervasive violations. The number of
violations that will result in a classification of pervasive will
depend on the size of the contractor, as well as the nature and
severity of the violations themselves.
A series of repeated violations may, however, become pervasive,
particularly if it demonstrates that a contractor, despite knowledge of
its violations, fails to make efforts to change its practices and
continues to violate the law. For example, if WHD issued several
administrative merits determinations over the course of 3 years finding
that a contractor illegally employed underage workers, and despite
receiving these notices, the contractor failed to make efforts to
change its child labor practices and continued to violate the FLSA's
child labor provisions, the series of violations would likely be
considered pervasive.
For smaller companies, a smaller number of violations may be
sufficient for a finding of pervasiveness, while for large companies,
pervasive violations will typically require either a greater number of
violations or violations affecting a significant number or percentage
of a company's workforce. For example, if OFCCP finds that a large
contractor with 50,000 employees that provides food services at Federal
agencies nationwide used pre-employment screening tests for most jobs
at the company's facilities that resulted in Hispanic workers being
hired at a significantly lower rate than non-Hispanic workers over a 5-
year period, and in addition, WHD finds that the company failed to
comply with the SCA's requirements to pay its workers prevailing wages
at many of its locations, such violations would likely be pervasive,
notwithstanding the large size of the contractor, because the
contractor's numerous serious violations spanned most of its locations
and affected many of its workers. In contrast, had the company only
engaged in these prohibited practices with respect to some of its
hiring at only one a few of its locations, such violations might not
necessarily be considered pervasive.
Similarly, if a large company with 5,000 employees that provides
uniform services to Federal agencies in several States is cited 10
times for serious OSHA violations affecting most of its inspected
locations over the span of a year, and a number of the citations
involve the failure to abate extremely dangerous conditions--and as a
result the company is placed on OSHA's Severe Violator Enforcement
Program--such violations would likely be pervasive because the sheer
number of violations over such a short period of time is evidence that
the company is ignoring persistent threats to workers' safety, fails to
treat safety as a serious problem, and is acting in disregard of its
legal obligations. In contrast, if the violations affected only a few
of the company's facilities, or if the company had acted quickly to
abate any violations, the violations might not necessarily be
considered pervasive.
An additional relevant factor in determining whether violations are
pervasive is the involvement of higher-level management officials. When
Labor Laws are violated with either the explicit or implicit approval
of higher-level management, such approval signals that future
violations will be tolerated or condoned, and may dissuade workers from
reporting violations or raising complaints. Thus, to the extent that
higher-level management officials were involved in
[[Page 58733]]
violations themselves (such as discrimination in hiring by an
executive, or a decision by an executive to cut back on required safety
procedures that led to violations of the OSH Act) or knew of violations
and failed to take appropriate actions (such as ignoring reports or
complaints by workers), the violations are more likely to be deemed
pervasive. By using the term ``higher-level management,'' the
Department agrees that a violation is unlikely to be pervasive for this
reason where the manager involved is a low-level manager (such as a
first-line supervisor) acting contrary to a strong company policy, and
the company responds with appropriate remedial action.
For example, if the vice president of a construction company
directs a foreman not to hire Native American workers, and as a result
the company is later found to have committed numerous Title VII
violations against job applicants, such violations are likely to be
pervasive. Likewise, if the chief safety officer at a chemical plant
fields complaints from many workers about several unsafe working
conditions but then fails to take action to remedy the unsafe
conditions, such violations are also likely to be pervasive because the
known dangerous working conditions were disregarded by a high-level
company official despite being reported by many workers at the plant.
Such behavior reflects a basic disregard for worker health and safety.
For a table containing additional examples of pervasive violations,
see Appendix D.
B. Weighing Labor Law Violations and Mitigating Factors
As discussed above, an ALCA's assessment of a contractor's Labor
Law violations involves a three-step process: (1) Classifying
violations to determine whether any are serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive; (2) weighing any serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations in light of the totality of the circumstances,
including any mitigating factors that the contractor has identified;
and then (3) providing the contracting officer with written analysis
and advice regarding the contractor's record of Labor Law compliance.
In analyzing a contractor's record during the weighing process, an ALCA
does not need to give equal weight to two violations that receive the
same classification. Some violations may have more significant
consequences on a contractor's workforce or more potential to disrupt
contractor performance than others.
In the weighing process, the ALCA considers many factors as a part
of an analysis of whether the contractor has a satisfactory record of
Labor Law compliance--in other words, whether the contractor's history
of Labor Law compliance and any adoption by the contractor of
preventative compliance measures indicate that the contracting officer
could find the contractor to have a satisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics. In considering the totality of the circumstances,
the ALCA considers information about a contractor's violations obtained
from enforcement agencies, as well as potentially mitigating
information about those violations that a contractor has provided for
review. In addition, although ALCAs review contractors' disclosed
decisions, ALCAs will also consider Labor Law decisions that should
have been disclosed by contractors under the Order, but were not. Such
undisclosed decisions may be brought to the attention of an ALCA by the
contracting officer, workers or their representatives, an enforcement
agency, or any other source.
The weighing process is not mechanistic, and this Guidance cannot
account for all of the possible circumstances or facts related to a
contractor's record of Labor Law compliance. However, there are certain
factors that in many cases will help inform an ALCA's analysis and
advice. These factors, when present, will weigh for or against a
conclusion that a contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance. See Appendix E.
1. Mitigating Factors That Weigh in Favor of a Satisfactory Record of
Labor Law Compliance
Mitigating factors weigh in favor of a conclusion that a contractor
has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. The list of factors
below includes ones that an ALCA may be able to identify with
information obtained from enforcement agencies. It also includes
factors that an ALCA will not be able to identify unless the contractor
provides the relevant information when given the opportunity to do so
by the contracting officer. To ensure that all mitigating factors are
considered by the ALCA, the contractor should avail itself of the
opportunity to provide all the information it believes demonstrates a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.
Generally, the most important mitigating factor will be the extent
to which the contractor has remediated the violation(s) and taken steps
that will prevent recurrence in the future. Other mitigating factors
include where the contractor has only a single disclosed violation;
where the number of violations is low relative to the size of the
contractor; where the contractor has implemented a safety-and-health
management program, a collectively-bargained grievance procedure, or
other compliance program; where a violation resulted from a recent
legal or regulatory change; where the findings in the relevant Labor
Law decision support the contractor's defense that it acted in good
faith or had reasonable grounds for believing that it was not violating
the law; and where the contractor has maintained a long period of
compliance following any violations.
None of these mitigating factors are necessarily determinative. Nor
is this an exhaustive list. In some cases, depending on the
circumstances, several mitigating factors may need to be present in
order for an ALCA to conclude that a contractor has a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance. In other cases, the presence of only
one of these factors may be sufficient to support such a conclusion.
a. Remedial Measures
As noted above, the extent to which a contractor has remediated a
Labor Law violation will typically be the most important factor that
can mitigate the effect of a violation. Remedial measures can include
measures taken to correct an unlawful practice, make affected employees
whole, or otherwise comply with a contractor's obligations under the
Labor Laws. Remedial measures also may include the implementation of
new procedures and practices, or other actions, in order to promote
future compliance. Contractors may take remedial measures voluntarily,
through a settlement agreement with an enforcement agency or private
parties, or pursuant to a court order. Remedial measures may also be
taken as a result of labor compliance agreements, which are discussed
in section III(C) below.
Where a contractor institutes remedial measures, this may indicate
that a contractor has recognized the need to address a violation and
has taken steps to bring itself into compliance with the law. The
timeliness with which a contractor agrees to, initiates, or completes
the implementation of remedial measures may be relevant to the weight
that an ALCA gives to this factor. Similarly, failure to remediate a
violation may demonstrate disregard for legal obligations, which in
turn may raise concerns about a contractor's commitment or ability to
comply with the law during future contract performance.
[[Page 58734]]
b. Only One Violation
While a contracting officer is not precluded from making a
determination of nonresponsibility based on a single violation in the
circumstances where merited, the Order provides that, in most cases, a
single violation of a Labor Law may not necessarily give rise to a
determination of lack of responsibility, depending on the nature of the
violation. Order, section 4(a)(i). Thus, when considering mitigating
factors, an ALCA may generally consider the existence of only a single
violation during the 3-year disclosure period as weighing in favor of a
conclusion that the contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance.
c. Low Number of Violations Relative to Size
Larger contractors, by virtue of their size, are more likely to
have multiple violations than smaller ones. When assessing contractors
with multiple violations, the size of the contractor is considered.
d. Safety-and-Health Programs, Grievance Procedures, or Other
Compliance Programs
Contractors can help to assure future compliance by implementing a
safety-and-health management program such as OSHA's 1989 Safety and
Health Program Management guidelines or any updates to those
guidelines,\117\ grievance procedures (including collectively-bargained
ones), monitoring arrangements negotiated as part of either a
settlement agreement or labor compliance agreement, or other similar
compliance programs. Such programs and procedures can foster a
corporate culture in which workers are encouraged to raise legitimate
concerns about Labor Law violations without the fear of repercussions;
as a result, they may also prompt workers to report violations that
would, under other circumstances, go unreported. Therefore,
implementation or prior existence of such a program is a mitigating
factor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ In addition, there are two voluntary industry consensus
standards that, if implemented, should be considered as mitigating
factors for violations involving workplace safety and health: The
ANSI/AIHA Z10--2005 Occupational Safety and Health Management
Systems (ANSI/AIHA, 2005), and the OHSAS 18001--2007 Occupational
Health and Safety Management Systems (OHSAS Project Group, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Recent Legal or Regulatory Change
To the extent that the Labor Law violations can be traced to a
recent legal or regulatory change, this may be a mitigating factor.
This may be a case where a new agency or court interpretation of an
existing statute is applied retroactively and a contractor's pre-change
conduct is found to be a violation. For example, where prior agency or
court decisions suggested that a practice was lawful, but the Labor Law
decision finds otherwise, this may be a mitigating factor.
f. Good Faith and Reasonable Grounds
It may be a mitigating factor where the findings in the relevant
Labor Law decision support the contractor's defense that it had
reasonable grounds for believing that it was not violating the law. For
example, if a contractor acts in reliance on advice from a responsible
official from the relevant enforcement agency, or an authoritative
administrative or judicial ruling on a similar case, such reliance will
typically demonstrate good faith and reasonable grounds. This
mitigating factor also applies where a violation otherwise resulted
from the conduct of a government official. For example, a DBA violation
may be mitigated where the contracting agency failed to include the
relevant contract clause and wage determination in a contract.
g. Significant Period of Compliance Following Violations
If, following one or more violations within the 3-year disclosure
period, the contractor maintains a steady period of compliance with the
Labor Laws, such compliance may mitigate the existence of prior
violations (e.g., violations were reported from 2\1/2\ years ago and
there have been none since). This is a stronger mitigating factor where
the contractor has a recent Labor Law decision that it must disclose,
but the underlying conduct took place significantly before the 3-year
disclosure period and the contractor has had no subsequent violations.
2. Factors That Weigh Against a Satisfactory Record of Labor Law
Compliance
There are also factors that weigh against a conclusion that a
contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance. The list
of factors below is not exhaustive. Nor are any of these factors
necessarily determinative. An ALCA reviews these factors as part of an
evaluation of the totality of the circumstances. In some cases, several
factors may need to be present in order for an ALCA to conclude that a
contractor has an unsatisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.
Depending on the facts of the case, even where multiple factors are
present, they may be outweighed by mitigating circumstances.
a. Pervasive Violations
As described in section III(A)(4) above, pervasive violations are
violations that demonstrate a basic disregard for the Labor Laws. Such
disregard of legal obligations creates a heightened danger that the
contractor may, in turn, disregard its contractual obligations as well.
Additionally, such contractors are more likely to violate the Labor
Laws in the future, and those violations--and any enforcement
proceedings or litigation that may ensue--may imperil their ability to
meet their obligations under a contract. Accordingly, where an ALCA has
classified violations as pervasive (in the classification step
described above in section III(A)), this weighs strongly against a
satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance.
b. Violations That Meet Two or More of the Categories Discussed Above
(Serious, Repeated, and Willful)
A violation that falls into two or more of the categories is also,
as a general matter, more likely to be probative of the contractor's
disregard for legal obligations and unsatisfactory working conditions
than a violation that falls into only one of those categories.
Accordingly, where an ALCA has classified a violation as both repeated
and willful, for example, the violation will tend to weigh more
strongly against a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance than a
similar violation that is repeated or willful, but not both.
c. Violations of Particular Gravity
In analyzing a contractor's record, an ALCA does not need to give
equal weight to two violations that have received the same
classification. Labor Law violations of particular gravity include, but
are not limited to, violations related to the death of an employee;
violations involving a termination of employment for exercising a right
protected under the Labor Laws; violations that detrimentally impact
the working conditions of all or nearly all of the workforce at a
worksite; and violations where the amount of back wages, penalties, and
other damages awarded is greater than $100,000.
d. Violations for Which Injunctive Relief Is Granted
Both preliminary and permanent injunctions are rarely granted by
courts and require a showing of compelling circumstances, including
irreparable harm to workers and a threat to the
[[Page 58735]]
public interest. Accordingly, where a court grants injunctive relief to
remedy a violation that is already classified as serious, repeated,
willful, and/or pervasive, the ALCA should take this into account as a
factor that increases the significance of that violation to the
contractor's overall record of Labor Law compliance.
e. Violations That Are Reflected in Final Orders
To the extent that the judgment, determination, or order finding a
Labor Law violation is final (because appeals and opportunities for
further review have been exhausted or were not pursued), the violation
should be given greater weight than a similar violation that is not yet
final. While a violation that is not final should be given lesser
weight, it will still be considered as relevant to a contractor's
record of Labor Law compliance.
C. Advice Regarding a Contractor's Record of Labor Law Compliance
As discussed above, an ALCA's assessment of a contractor's Labor
Law violations involves a three-step process: (1) Classifying
violations to determine whether any are serious, repeated, willful,
and/or pervasive; (2) weighing any serious, repeated, willful, and/or
pervasive violations in light of the totality of the circumstances,
including any mitigating factors that the contractor has identified;
and then (3) providing the contracting officer with written analysis
and advice regarding the contractor's record of Labor Law compliance.
The ALCA determines what advice and analysis to give to the
contracting officer through the classification and weighing steps. In
providing advice, the ALCA carefully considers the contractor's record
of Labor Law compliance and makes a recommendation regarding whether it
could support a finding, by the contracting officer, that the
contractor has a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics.
See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(3)-(4). As a part of this analysis, the ALCA
considers whether a labor compliance agreement is warranted to ensure
the contractor's compliance with the Labor Laws during future contract
performance--and, if so, the timing of the negotiations. Id.
Labor compliance agreements are negotiated by the contractor and
the relevant enforcement agency/agencies. These agreements may include
enhanced remedial measures intended to prevent future violations and
increase compliance with Labor Laws. Examples of enhanced remedial
measures include, but are not limited to, specific changes in the
contractor's business policies and operations, adoption of a safety-
and-health management system, assessment by outside consultants,
internal compliance audits or external compliance monitoring, and
enterprise-wide applicability of remedial measures. A contractor may
enter into a labor compliance agreement while at the same time
continuing to contest an underlying Labor Law violation.
A labor compliance agreement is warranted where the contractor has
serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive Labor Law violations that
are not outweighed by mitigating factors and the ALCA identifies
conduct or policies that could be addressed through preventative
actions. Where this is the case, the contractor's history of Labor Law
violations demonstrates a risk to the contracting agency of violations
during contract performance, but these risks may be mitigated through
the implementation of appropriate enhanced compliance measures. A labor
compliance agreement also may be warranted where the contractor
presently has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, but there
are also clear risk factors present, and a labor compliance agreement
would reduce these risk factors and demonstrate steps to maintain Labor
Law compliance during contract performance.
When an ALCA recommends a labor compliance agreement, the ALCA has
three options regarding the timing of negotiations: (1) The contractor
must commit, after award, to negotiate an agreement; (2) the contractor
must commit, before award, to negotiate an agreement; or (3) the
contractor must enter into an agreement before award. FAR 22.2004-
2(b)(3)(ii)-(iv).
1. ALCA Recommendation
The ALCA's advice to the contracting officer must include one of
the following recommendations: The contractor's record of Labor Law
compliance--
(i) Supports a finding, by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics;
(ii) Supports a finding, by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, but the
prospective contractor needs to commit, after award, to negotiating a
labor compliance agreement or another acceptable remedial action;
(iii) Could support a finding, by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, only if the
prospective contractor commits, prior to award, to negotiating a labor
compliance agreement or another acceptable remedial action;
(iv) Could support a finding, by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, only if the
prospective contractor enters, prior to award, into a labor compliance
agreement; or
(v) Does not support a finding, by the contracting officer, of a
satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, and the agency
suspending and debarring official should be notified in accordance with
agency procedures.
FAR 22.2004-2(b)(3). Additional guidance regarding each
recommendation is provided below.
a. Satisfactory Record
A contractor has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance
where it has no Labor Law violations within the 3-year disclosure
period or has no violations that meet the definitions of serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive. Under these circumstances an ALCA
may recommend that the contractor's record supports a finding, by the
contracting officer, of a satisfactory record of integrity and business
ethics. This recommendation may also be appropriate where the
contractor does have violations that meet the definitions of serious,
repeated, willful, and/or pervasive, but under the totality of the
circumstances the existence of the violations is outweighed by
mitigating factors or other relevant information.
b. Commitment After Award
An ALCA may recommend that a contractor needs to commit, after the
award, to a labor compliance agreement where the contractor presently
has a satisfactory record of Labor Law compliance, but there are also
clear risk factors present, and a labor compliance agreement is
warranted to reduce these risk factors and demonstrate steps to
maintain Labor Law compliance during contract performance. This may be
the case, for example, where the contractor has serious, repeated, and/
or willful violations that have not been fully remediated, and the ALCA
has concerns that the problems related to these violations could affect
future contract performance. This may also be the case where the ALCA
is concerned that the contractor has not fully addressed managerial
issues that could result in violations that would impact performance of
the contract. Another example is where one or more of the contractor's
violations are presently in litigation and may result in final orders
against the contractor in the future. This recommendation is not
appropriate
[[Page 58736]]
where the contractor's violations are already pervasive.
c. Commitment Before Award
An ALCA may recommend that a contractor needs to commit, prior to
the award, to a labor compliance agreement where the contractor's labor
violation history demonstrates an unsatisfactory record of integrity
and business ethics unless further action is taken before the award.
This recommendation may be appropriate, for example, where the
contractor has previously failed to respond or provide adequate
justification for not responding when notified of the need for a labor
compliance agreement. It may also be appropriate where the contractor
has not been previously advised of the need for a labor compliance
agreement, but the labor violation history demonstrates an immediate
need for a commitment to negotiate--for example, where the contractor
has pervasive violations, or, in certain circumstances, multiple
violations of particular gravity.
d. Enter Into Agreement Before Award
An ALCA may also recommend that a contractor must negotiate and
enter into a labor compliance agreement prior to the award. As with the
recommendation described in section (c) above, this recommendation is
appropriate where the contractor's labor violation history demonstrates
an unsatisfactory record of integrity and business ethics unless
further action is taken before the award. Depending on the conduct of
the contractor and severity of violations, the same circumstances
described in section (c) may justify an increased level of concern
about future contract performance. In these circumstances, the ALCA may
conclude that a commitment alone prior to the award is not sufficient
and that the agreement must be fully negotiated and signed before the
award can take place.
e. Notification to Agency Suspending and Debarring Official
Although in many cases, a labor compliance agreement is warranted
to address a contractor's unsatisfactory record of Labor Law
compliance, there are circumstances in which negotiation of a labor
compliance agreement may not be warranted. In these circumstances, an
ALCA should recommend that the contractor's record does not support a
finding of a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics and
that the agency suspending and debarring official should be notified.
This may be the case, for example, where an agreement cannot be
reasonably expected to improve future compliance. This may also be the
case where the contractor has shown a basic disregard for Labor Law,
such as by previously failing to enter into a labor compliance
agreement after being given a reasonable time to do so. Another example
is where the contractor has breached an existing labor compliance
agreement. One more example is where the contractor has previously
entered into a labor compliance agreement and subsequently commits
pervasive violations or multiple violations of particular gravity.
2. ALCA Analysis
The ALCA's recommendation must be accompanied by a written
analysis. See FAR 22.2004-2(b)(4). The written analysis must include
the number of Labor Law violations; their classification as serious,
repeated, willful and/or pervasive; any mitigating factors or remedial
measures; and any additional information that the ALCA finds to be
relevant. See id.
If the ALCA concludes that a labor compliance agreement is
warranted, then the written analysis must include a supporting
rationale for the recommendation and the name of the enforcement agency
or agencies that would execute the agreement. See FAR 22.2004-
2(b)(4)(v), (4)(viii). The rationale should include the ALCA's
explanation for any recommendation regarding when the contractor must
negotiate a labor compliance agreement, i.e., before or after award.
See id. 22.2004-2(b)(4)(v). The ALCA's explanation also should include
a rationale for any recommendation that the contractor must enter into
a labor compliance agreement before award. See id.
If the ALCA recommends that the contractor's record of Labor Law
compliance does not support a finding of a satisfactory record of
integrity and business ethics, the ALCA's analysis must include: The
rationale for the finding, whether the ALCA supports notification to
the suspending and debarring official, and whether the ALCA intends to
make such notification. FAR 22.2004-2(b)(4)(vi)-(vii).
In response to the ALCA's analysis and advice, the contracting
officer takes appropriate action, as described in the FAR rule. See FAR
22.2004-2(b)(5) (listing appropriate actions and procedures). If the
ALCA's assessment indicates that a labor compliance agreement is
warranted, the contracting officer provides written notification to the
contractor prior to the award about the contractor's obligations. See
id. 22.2004-2(b)(7). When the ALCA learns that the contractor has
entered into a labor compliance agreement, the ALCA must make a
notation in FAPIIS. Id. 22.2004-1(c)(6).
IV. Postaward Disclosure Updates and Assessment of Labor Law Violations
After receiving a contract award, contractors must continue to
disclose any new Labor Law decisions or updates to previously disclosed
decisions. See Order, section 2(b); FAR 22.2004-3(a), 52.222-59. The
contactor must make the disclosures in the SAM database at www.sam.gov.
FAR 22.2004-3(a)(1). These disclosures must be made semiannually. Id.
During performance of the contract, the ALCA has the duty to
monitor Labor Law decision information. The ALCA has the duty to
monitor SAM and FAPIIS to review any new or updated contractor
disclosures. FAR 22.2004-3(b)(1). Where a contractor previously agreed
to enter into a labor compliance agreement, the ALCA also has the duty
to verify whether the contractor is making progress toward reaching an
agreement, or has entered into and is meeting the terms of the
agreement. See id. The ALCA also may consider Labor Law decision
information received from sources other than the procurement databases.
Id.
If the ALCA has received information indicating that further
consideration or action may be warranted, then the ALCA shall notify
the contracting officer in accordance with agency procedures. FAR
22.2004-3(b)(1). When this happens, the contracting officer must afford
the contractor the opportunity to provide any additional information
that the contractor may wish to provide for consideration--including
remedial measures or other mitigating factors related to newly-
disclosed decisions, or an explanation for any delay in entering into a
labor compliance agreement. Id. 22.2004-3(b)(2).
A. Semiannual Disclosure Updates
If there are new Labor Law decisions or updates to previously
disclosed Labor Law decisions, the contractor is required to disclose
this information during performance of the contract. See FAR 22.2004-
3(a); 52.222-59(b) (contract clause). Section II(A) above describes the
covered contracts for which the initial preaward disclosure is
required. See also FAR 22.2004-1(a).
Contractors must make these postaward disclosures semiannually in
the SAM database. FAR 22.2004-3(a)(1). The contractor has flexibility
in establishing the date for the semiannual
[[Page 58737]]
update. The contractor may use the six-month anniversary date of
contract award, or the contractor may choose a different date before
that six-month anniversary date. Id. 22.2004-3(a)(2). In either case,
the contractor must continue to update it semiannually. Id.
The types of Labor Law decisions that must be disclosed during the
postaward period are the same as during the preaward period:
Administrative merits determinations, civil judgments, and arbitral
awards or decisions. See FAR 52.222-59(a) (defining ``labor law
decision''). The definition of each of these Labor Law decisions is the
same as applies preaward. See id. See section II(B) above for the
detailed definitions.
Postaward updates should include (a) any new Labor Law decisions
rendered since the last disclosure and (b) updates to previously
disclosed information. As noted above in section II(B)(4) of this
Guidance, contractors must report new Labor Law decisions even if they
arise from a previously-disclosed Labor Law violation. For example, if
a contractor initially disclosed a Federal district court judgment
finding that it violated the FLSA, it must disclose as part of the
periodic updates any subsequent Federal court of appeals decision
affirming that judgment. In a postaward disclosure, contractors may
also submit updated information reflecting the fact that a previously
disclosed Labor Law decision has been vacated, reversed, or otherwise
modified.
In any postaward update, contractors must disclose the same
information about any individual Labor Law decision that must be
disclosed preaward: (a) The Labor Law that was violated; (b) the case
number, inspection number, charge number, docket number, or other
unique identification number; (c) the date the Labor Law decision was
rendered; and (d) the name of the court, arbitrator(s), agency, board,
or commission that rendered the decision. See FAR 52.222-59(b)(1). And,
as with preaward disclosures, the contractor is encouraged to submit
such additional information as the contractor deems necessary,
including mitigating circumstances and remedial measures. See id.
52.222-59(b)(3).
B. ALCA Assessment and Advice
Once the contractor has been given an opportunity to provide
additional information, the ALCA follows the same classification,
weighing, and advice processes that the ALCA follows in the preaward
period, which are described in section III above. The ALCA provides
written analysis and advice to the contracting officer regarding
appropriate actions for the contracting officer's consideration. This
postaward analysis and advice is similar to the preaward process
discussed above in section III(C). The postaward analysis and advice
should include:
(i) Whether any violations should be considered serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive;
(ii) The number and nature of violations (depending on the
nature of the labor law violation, in most cases, a single labor law
violation may not necessarily warrant action);
(iii) Whether there are any mitigating factors;
(iv) Whether the contractor has initiated and implemented, in a
timely manner--
i. Its own remedial measures; or
ii. Other remedial measures entered into through agreement with,
or as a result of, the actions or orders of an enforcement agency,
court, or arbitrator;
(v) Whether a labor compliance agreement or other remedial
measure is --
(A) Warranted and the enforcement agency or agencies that would
execute such agreement with the contractor;
(B) Under negotiation between the contractor and the enforcement
agency;
(C) Established, and whether it is being adhered to; or
(D) Not being negotiated or has not been established, even
though the contractor was notified that one had been recommended,
and the contractor's rationale for not doing so.
(vi) Whether the absence of a labor compliance agreement or
other remedial measure, or noncompliance with a labor compliance
agreement, demonstrates a pattern of conduct or practice that
reflects disregard for the recommendation of an enforcement agency.
(vii) Whether the labor law violation(s) merit consideration by
the agency suspending and debarring official and whether the ALCA
will make such a referral; and
(viii) Any such additional information that the ALCA finds to be
relevant.
FAR 22.2004-3(b)(3). In determining whether a labor compliance
agreement is warranted or whether the Labor Law decisions merit
consideration by the agency suspending and debarring official, the ALCA
should consider the guidance provided above in section III(C).
In response to new information about Labor Law violations, the
contracting officer may take no action and continue the contract, or
may exercise a contract remedy as appropriate. See FAR 22.2004-3(b)(4)
(listing appropriate actions and procedures).
V. Subcontractor Responsibility
In addition to contracts between contractors and contracting
agencies, the Order also applies to certain subcontracts with an
estimated value that exceeds $500,000. FAR 52.222-59(c). The
subcontracts to which the Order applies are described as ``covered
subcontracts'' in this Guidance. As noted above, covered subcontracts
include subcontracts for commercial items, but do not include
subcontracts for commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS) items. See
id. 52.222-59(c)(1)(i) (excluding COTS contracts); 2.101 (defining COTS
items).
Prime contractors working on contracts covered by the Order are
required to consider prospective subcontractors' records of Labor Law
compliance when making responsibility determinations for prospective
subcontractors. FAR 52.222-59(c). This requirement applies to
subcontractors at all tiers. Id. 52.222-59(g).
A. Preaward Subcontractor Disclosures
Prospective subcontractors for a covered subcontract must (like
prime contractors on a covered procurement contract) make an initial
representation to the contractor about compliance with Labor Laws,
followed by a more detailed disclosure. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(3). See
also section II(C)(1), above, describing contractor disclosures. The
prospective subcontractor must make the detailed disclosure to the
Department, id. 52.222-59(c)(3)(ii), by following the procedure at the
``Subcontractor Disclosures'' tab at www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces. The Department, in turn, provides advice to
the subcontractor that the subcontractor then provides to the
contractor to use in the responsibility determination.
1. Initial Representation
In the initial representation to the contractor, prospective
subcontractors must represent whether there have been any Labor Law
decisions rendered against the subcontractor in the period beginning on
October 25, 2015 to the date of the subcontractor's offer, or for three
years preceding the date of the subcontractor's offer, whichever period
is shorter. FAR 52.222-59(c)(3)(i).
2. Detailed Disclosure to the Department
Prospective subcontractors must make a more detailed disclosure to
the Department. FAR 52.222-59(c)(3)(ii). Subcontractors must disclose
the same detailed information that prime contractors themselves must
disclose on a covered procurement contract. See id.; see also Guidance,
section II(C)(1) (describing contractor disclosures). Subcontractors
must disclose all covered Labor Law decisions, and subcontractors also
may provide additional information to the Department that the
subcontractor
[[Page 58738]]
believes will demonstrate its responsibility. Id. 52.222-59(c)(3)(iii).
This may include information on mitigating circumstances and remedial
measures, such as information about steps taken to correct the
violations at issue, the negotiation or execution of a settlement
agreement or labor compliance agreement, or other steps taken to
achieve compliance with the Labor Laws.
3. Providing the Department's Advice to the Contractor
When a prospective subcontractor submits Labor Law violation and
other information to the Department, the Department provides the
subcontractor with advice regarding its record of Labor Law compliance.
FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C). The subcontractor then must provide the
Department's advice to the contractor for the contractor's use in
determining whether the subcontractor is a responsible source. Id.
B. Preaward Department of Labor Advice to the Subcontractor
After receiving a subcontractor's detailed disclosures, the
Department provides advice to the subcontractor about its record of
Labor Law compliance. The advice may include (1) that the subcontractor
has no serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive violations; (2) that
the subcontractor has serious, repeated, willful, or pervasive
violations but that a labor compliance agreement is not warranted
because, for example, the contractor has initiated and implemented its
own remedial measures; (3) that the subcontractor has serious,
repeated, willful, or pervasive violations and a labor compliance
agreement is warranted; (4) that a labor compliance agreement is
warranted and the subcontractor has not entered into such an agreement
in a reasonable period of time; (5) that the subcontractor is not
complying with a labor compliance agreement into which it previously
entered; or (6) that the subcontractor is complying with a labor
compliance agreement into which it previously entered. See FAR 52.222-
59(c)(4)(ii)(C).
In assessing subcontractor Labor Law compliance, the Department
applies the same guidance on classification and weighing of Labor Law
violations included above in sections III(A) and III(B) of this
Guidance. In carrying out the assessment, Department officials and
ALCAs may receive information from an enforcement agency about the
subcontractor's compliance record. This information will be evaluated
objectively and without regard for the enforcement agency's litigation
interests.
C. Preaward Determination of Subcontractor Responsibility
The prime contractor (not the Department) has the duty to make a
determination that its subcontractors are responsible sources. See FAR
9.104-4(a). When assessing a prospective subcontractor's
responsibility, the contractor may find that the prospective
subcontractor has a satisfactory record of integrity and business
ethics with regard to compliance with Labor Laws under certain
specified conditions. These conditions are:
1. The Subcontractor Has No Covered Labor Law Decisions To Disclose
The contractor may find the subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has represented that it has no covered
Labor Law decisions to disclose. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(i).
2. The Department Advises That the Subcontractor Has No Serious,
Repeated, Willful, or Pervasive Violations
The contractor may find the subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has received advice from the Department
that none of the subcontractor's violations are serious, repeated,
willful, or pervasive; and the subcontractor has provided notice of
this advice to the contractor. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(1).
3. The Department Advises That the Subcontractor Has Taken Sufficient
Action To Remediate Violations
The contractor may find the subcontractor to have a satisfactory
record where the subcontractor has received advice from the Department
that it has violations that are serious, repeated, willful, or
pervasive; but the Department also advises that the subcontractor has
taken sufficient action to remediate its violations, such as through
its own remedial measures, by entering into a labor compliance
agreement, or by agreeing to enter into such an agreement; and the
subcontractor has provided notice of this advice to the contractor. See
FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(2).
4. The Department Has Failed To Provide Timely Advice
If the Department does not provide advice to the subcontractor
within 3 business days of the subcontractor's detailed disclosure of
Labor Law decision information, and the Department did not previously
advise the subcontractor that it needed to enter into a labor
compliance agreement, then the contractor may proceed with making a
responsibility determination using available information and business
judgment. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(6).
5. The Subcontractor Contests Negative Advice From the Department
Where the subcontractor contests negative advice from the
Department, the contractor may still find the subcontractor has a
satisfactory record under certain conditions. If the subcontractor
disagrees with negative advice from the Department, then the
subcontractor must provide the contractor with (i) information about
all the Labor Law violations that have been determined by the
Department to be serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive; (ii)
such additional information that the subcontractor deems necessary to
demonstrate its responsibility, including mitigating factors, remedial
measures such as subcontractor actions taken to address the Labor Law
violations, labor compliance agreements, and other steps taken to
achieve compliance with labor laws; (iii) a description of the
Department's advice or proposed labor compliance agreement; and (iv) an
explanation of the basis for the subcontractor's disagreement with the
Department. See FAR 52.222-59(c)(4)(ii)(C)(3). If the contractor
determines that the subcontractor is responsible on the basis of this
representation, or if the contractor determines that due to a
compelling reason the contractor must proceed with the subcontract
award, then the contractor must notify the contracting officer of the
decision and provide the name of the subcontractor and the basis for
the decision (e.g., urgent and compelling circumstances). See id.
52.222-59(c)(5).
D. Semiannual Subcontractor Updates
Subcontractors must update their Labor Law decision disclosures
after a subcontract award in the same manner that prime contractors
must do for a prime contract award. See FAR 22.2004-1(b); 22.2004-4.
Subcontractors must determine, semiannually, whether the Labor Law
disclosures that the subcontractor previously provided to the
Department are current and complete. Id. 52.222-59(d)(1). If the
information is current and complete, no action is required. Id. If the
information is not current and complete, subcontractors must provide
revised information to the Department and then
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make a new representation to the contractor. Id. 52.222-59(d)(1).
If a subcontractor discloses new information about Labor Law
decisions to the Department, the subcontractor must provide to the
contractor any new advice from the Department. See FAR 52.222-59(d)(1).
In addition, the subcontractor must disclose to the contractor if,
during the course of performance of the contract, the Department
notifies the subcontractor that it has not entered into a labor
compliance agreement in a reasonable period or is not meeting the terms
of a labor compliance agreement. Id. 52.222-59(d)(2).
When a subcontractor discloses new Department advice or new
information about Labor Law decisions, the contractor must determine
whether action is necessary. See FAR 52.222-59(d)(3). If the contractor
decides to continue the subcontract notwithstanding negative Department
advice, the contractor must notify the contracting officer of the
decision and provide the name of the subcontractor and the basis for
the decision (e.g., urgent and compelling circumstances). Id. 52.222-
59(d)(4).
VI. Preassessment
Prior to bidding on a contract, prospective contractors and
subcontractors are encouraged to voluntarily contact the Department to
request an assessment of their record of Labor Law compliance. The
Department will assess whether any of the prospective contractor's
violations are serious, repeated, willful, and/or pervasive; and
whether a labor compliance agreement may be warranted. If a contractor
that has been assessed by the Department subsequently submits a bid,
and the contracting officer initiates a responsibility determination
for the contractor, the contracting officer and the ALCA may rely on
the Department's assessment that the contractor has a satisfactory
record of Labor Law compliance unless additional Labor Law decisions
have been disclosed.
Contact information and additional guidance regarding the
preassessment program can be found at https://www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces.
VII. Paycheck Transparency
Transparency in the relationships between employers and their
workers is critical to workers' understanding of their legal rights and
to the resolution of workplace disputes. When workers lack information
about how their pay is calculated and their status as employees or
independent contractors, workers are less aware of their rights and
employers are less likely to comply with labor laws. Providing workers
with information about how their pay is calculated each pay period will
enable workers to raise any concerns about pay more quickly, and will
encourage proactive efforts by employers to resolve such concerns.
Similarly, providing workers who are classified as independent
contractors with notice of their status will enable them to better
understand their legal rights, evaluate their status as independent
contractors, and raise any concerns during the course of the working
relationship as opposed to after it ends (which will increase the
likelihood that the employer and the worker will be able to resolve any
concerns more quickly and effectively).
The Order seeks to improve paycheck transparency for covered
workers on Federal contracts by instructing contracting officers to
insert the contract clause at FAR 52.222-60. See Order, section 5; FAR
22.2007(d). This clause requires contractors to provide wage statements
and notice of any independent contractor relationship to their covered
workers, and this clause's requirements flow down and apply to covered
workers of subcontractors regardless of tier. See Order, section 5; FAR
52.222-60.
A. Wage Statement
The Order requires contracting agencies to ensure that, for covered
procurement contracts, provisions in solicitations and clauses in
contracts require contractors to provide most workers under the
contract with a ``document'' each pay period with ``information
concerning that individual's hours worked, overtime hours, pay, and any
additions made to or deductions made from pay.'' Order, section 5(a).
Contracting agencies also must ensure that contractors ``incorporate
this same requirement'' into covered subcontracts at all tiers. Id.
The Order requires that the wage statement be provided to ``all
individuals performing work'' for whom the contractor or subcontractor
is required to maintain wage records under the FLSA, the DBA, or the
SCA. Order, section 5(a).\118\ This means that a wage statement must be
provided to every worker subject to any of those laws regardless of the
classification of the worker as an employee or independent contractor.
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\118\ The Order also requires the provision of a wage-statement
document to all workers for whom records must be retained under any
State laws ``equivalent'' to the FLSA, DBA, or SCA. See Order,
section 5(a). As noted above in section II(B), this Guidance does
not include a list of State laws equivalent to the FLSA, the DBA,
and the SCA. The list of equivalent State laws will be included in
future guidance issued by the Department.
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The Order states that the wage statement provided to workers each
pay period must be a ``document.'' Order, section 5(a). If the
contractor or subcontractor regularly provides documents to its workers
by electronic means, the wage statement may be provided electronically
if the worker can access it through a computer, device, system, or
network provided or made available by the contractor. FAR 52.222-60.
The Order further provides that the wage statement must be issued
every pay period and contain the total number of hours worked in the
pay period and the number of those hours that were overtime hours.
Order, section 5(a). The FAR requires that if the wage statement is not
provided weekly and is instead provided bi-weekly or semi-monthly
(because the pay period is bi-weekly or semi-monthly), then the hours
worked and overtime hours contained in the wage statement must be
broken down to correspond to the period (which will almost always be
weekly) for which overtime is calculated and paid. See FAR 52.222-60.
If the hours worked and overtime hours are aggregated in the wage
statement for the entire pay period as opposed to being broken down by
week, the worker may not be able to understand and evaluate how the
overtime hours were calculated. For example, if the pay period is bi-
weekly and the worker is entitled to overtime pay for hours worked over
40 in a week, then the wage statement must provide the hours worked and
any overtime hours for the first week and the hours worked and any
overtime hours for the second week.
The FAR requires that the wage statement contain the worker's rate
of pay, which provides workers with vital information about how their
gross pay is calculated. See FAR 52.222-60. The rate of pay will most
often be the worker's regular hourly rate of pay. If the worker is not
paid by the hour, the rate of pay information should reflect the basis
of pay by indicating the monetary amount paid on a per day, per week,
per piece, or other basis. The FAR also requires that the wage
statement contain the gross pay and itemize or identify each addition
to or deduction from gross pay. Id. Additions to pay may include
bonuses, awards, and shift differentials. Deductions from pay include
deductions required by law (such as withholding for taxes), voluntary
deductions by the worker (such as contributions to health insurance
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premiums or retirement accounts), and all other deductions or
reductions made from gross pay regardless of the reason. Itemizing the
additions to and deductions from gross pay means that each addition and
deduction must be separately listed and the specific amount added or
deducted must be identified (lump sums are insufficient). Providing a
worker with the gross pay and itemized additions to and deductions from
gross pay allows the worker to understand the net pay received and how
it was calculated.
In sum, the FAR requires that wage statements contain the following
information: (1) Hours worked, (2) overtime hours, (3) rate of pay, (4)
gross pay, and (5) an itemization of each addition to and deduction
from gross pay. FAR 52.222-60.\119\
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\119\ Nothing prohibits the inclusion of more information in the
wage statement (e.g., exempt status notification, overtime pay
rate). Neither the Order nor the FAR preempts State laws or local
ordinances that require more information to be included in the wage
statement.
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As specified in the FAR, if a significant portion of the
contractor's or subcontractor's workforce is not fluent in English, the
wage statement must also be in the language(s) other than English in
which the significant portion(s) of the workforce is fluent. FAR
52.222-60.
The wage statement provided to workers who are exempt from overtime
pay under the FLSA ``need not include a record of hours worked if the
contractor informs the individuals of their exempt status.'' Order,
section 5(a).\120\ To sufficiently inform a worker of exempt status so
that the wage statement need not include hours worked, the contractor
or subcontractor must provide written notice to the worker stating that
the worker is exempt from the FLSA's overtime compensation
requirements; oral notice is not sufficient. See FAR 52.222-60. The
notice can be a stand-alone document or can be included in the offer
letter, employment contract, or position description, or wage
statement--as long as the document is provided to the worker. See
id.\121\ The notice must be provided either before the worker starts
work on the contract or in the worker's first wage statement under the
contract. See id. If during contract performance, the contractor or
subcontractor determines that the worker's status has changed from non-
exempt to exempt, it must provide notice to the worker prior to
providing a wage statement without hours worked information or in the
first wage statement after the change. See id. If the contractor or
subcontractor regularly provides documents to its workers by electronic
means, the document may be provided electronically if the worker can
access it through a computer, device, system, or network provided or
made available by the contractor or subcontractor. Id.
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\120\ Generally, non-exempt workers are entitled to overtime
under the FLSA when they work over 40 hours in a week. See 29 U.S.C.
207(a). However, certain workers (such as nurses, firefighters, and
police officers) may instead be entitled to overtime under terms
other than the 40-hour workweek. See, e.g., 29 U.S.C. 207(j), (k).
Such workers are not exempt from the FLSA's overtime requirements;
wage statements provided to them must contain a record of hours
worked.
\121\ As specified in the FAR, if a significant portion of the
contractor's workforce is not fluent in English, the document
notifying the worker of exempt status must also be in the
language(s) other than English in which the significant portion(s)
of the workforce is fluent. See FAR 52.222-60(e)(1).
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The Department and courts determine whether a worker is exempt from
the FLSA's overtime requirement. The fact that a contractor or
subcontractor has provided a worker with notice that he or she is
exempt does not mean that the worker is correctly classified. The
Department will not consider the notice when determining whether a
worker is exempt. A contractor or subcontractor may not in its exempt-
status notice to a worker indicate or suggest that the Department or
the courts agree with the determination that the worker is exempt. FAR
52.222-60.
The wage-statement requirements ``shall be deemed to be fulfilled''
where a contractor ``is complying with State or local requirements that
the Secretary of Labor has determined are substantially similar to
those required'' by the Order. Order, section 5(a). The Secretary has
determined that the following States and localities have
``substantially similar'' wage-statement requirements as the Order:
Alaska, California, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, New
York, and Oregon. The wage-statement requirements of these States and
the District of Columbia are substantially similar because they require
employers to provide wage statements that include at least the worker's
overtime hours or overtime earnings, total hours, gross pay, and any
additions or deductions from gross pay. Providing a worker in one of
the Substantially Similar Wage Payment States with a wage statement
that complies with the requirements of that State or locality satisfies
the Order's wage-statement requirement. See FAR 52.222-60. In addition,
a contractor satisfies the Order's wage-statement requirement by
adopting the wage-statement requirements of any particular
Substantially Similar Wage Payment State in which the contractor has
workers and providing a wage statement that complies with the
requirements of that State or locality to all of its workers.
The Department maintains on its Web site (https://www.dol.gov/fairpayandsafeworkplaces) a list of the Substantially Similar Wage
Payment States. The Secretary recognizes that States and localities may
change their wage-statement laws so that their requirements may or may
not be substantially similar to the Order's wage-statement requirement.
When the Secretary determines that a State or locality must be added to
or removed from the list of Substantially Similar Wage Payment States,
notice of such changes will be published on the Web site. The
Department may also issue All Agency Memoranda or similar direction to
contracting agencies and the public to communicate updates to the list
of the Substantially Similar Wage Payment States.
B. Independent Contractor Notice
The Order requires contractors who treat individuals performing
work for them (on covered procurement contracts) as independent
contractors to provide each such worker with a document informing him
or her of this independent contractor status. See Order, section 5(b).
Contracting agencies must require that contractors incorporate this
same requirement into covered subcontracts. See FAR 52.222-60.
The FAR requires contractors and subcontractors to provide the
notice informing the worker of status as an independent contractor to
each individual worker treated as an independent contractor. See FAR
52.222-60. The notice must be a ``document''; oral notice of
independent contractor status is not sufficient.\122\ Id. The document
must be separate from any independent contractor agreement entered into
with the individual. Id. If the contractor regularly provides documents
to its workers by electronic means, the document may be provided
electronically if the worker can access it through a computer, device,
system, or network provided or made available by the contractor. See
id. 52.222-60.
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\122\ As specified in the FAR, if a significant portion of the
contractor's or subcontractor's workforce is not fluent in English,
the document notifying the worker of independent contractor status
must also be in the language(s) other than English with which the
significant portion(s) of the workforce is fluent. See FAR 52.222-
60(e)(1).
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The notice must be provided at the time that an independent
contractor relationship is established with the worker or before he or
she performs any work under the contract. See FAR 52.222-60. The notice
must be provided each time a worker begins work on a different covered
contract, regardless of
[[Page 58741]]
whether the worker already performs the same type of work on another
covered contract. See id. If the contractor or subcontractor determines
during performance of a covered contract that a worker's status has
changed from employee to independent contractor, it must provide the
worker with notice of independent contractor status before the worker
performs any work under the contract as an independent contractor. See
id.
Enforcement agencies and courts determine whether a worker is an
independent contractor under applicable laws. A contractor may not in
its notice to a worker indicate or suggest that any enforcement agency
or court agrees with the contractor's determination that the worker is
an independent contractor. See FAR 52.222-60. The fact that a
contractor has provided a worker with notice that he or she is an
independent contractor does not mean that the worker is correctly
classified as an independent contractor. For example, the Department
would not consider the notice when determining whether a worker is an
independent contractor or employee during an investigation regarding
the contractor's compliance with the FLSA. The determination of whether
a worker is an independent contractor under a particular law remains
governed by that law's definition of ``employee'' and that law's
standards for determining which workers are independent contractors and
not employees.
VIII. Effective Date and Phase-In of Requirements
The FAR rule is effective October 25, 2016. However, several of the
requirements are not immediately applicable and are being phased in
over the course of the following year. This phase in of the
requirements is intended to allow the Government, contractors,
subcontractors, and, particularly, small business contractors and
subcontractors to prepare for and adapt to the requirements.
A. General Effect of Solicitation Provisions and Contract Clauses
The Order's prime-contractor disclosure, subcontractor disclosure,
and paycheck-transparency requirements are implemented through
solicitation provisions and contract clauses in covered contracts. See
FAR 22.2007. This means that contractors and subcontractors performing
on contracts awarded prior to the effective date of the rule (or of
specific requirements) will not be required to make the disclosures or
to provide workers with wage statements and independent contractor
notices--even after the effective date of the rule. In other words, the
Order's requirements are not retroactive. Rather, these requirements
only become effective when the solicitation provisions are included in
a new solicitation and the contract clauses are included in a new
contract.
B. Contractor Disclosure
From October 25, 2016 to April 24, 2017, the Order's prime-
contractor disclosure requirements will apply only to solicitations
from contracting agencies with an estimated value of $50 million or
more, and resultant contracts. FAR 22.2007(a) and (c)(1). After April
24, 2017, the requirements will apply to solicitations greater than
$500,000--which is the amount specified in the Order--and resultant
contracts. Id. 22.2007(a) and (c)(2); Order, section 2(a). This also
applies to the commercial items equivalent for prime contractors, at
FAR 52.212-3(s).
C. Subcontractor Disclosure
The subcontractor disclosure provisions described in section V of
this Guidance are not effective for the first year of operation of the
FAR rule implementing the Order. Thus, while the rule overall is
effective on October 25, 2016, the subcontractor disclosure provisions
are not effective until October 25, 2017. See FAR 22.2007(b)-(c),
52.222-59(c)(1). During this first year before the effective date,
prospective subcontractors are encouraged to voluntarily contact the
Department to request an assessment of their record of Labor Law
compliance. See above section VI (Preassessment).
D. Phase-In of 3-Year Disclosure Period
The general rule under the Order is that contractors and
subcontractors must disclose Labor Law decisions that were rendered
against them within the 3-year period prior to the date of the
disclosure. See Sections II(B) and V(A)(1). This 3-year disclosure
period is being phased in during the first years of the implementation
of the Order, so that no contractor or subcontractor need disclose any
Labor Law decisions that were rendered against them prior to October
25, 2015. As the FAR states, contractors and subcontractors must make
disclosures for Labor Law decisions rendered against them during the
period beginning on October 25, 2015 to the date of the offer, or for 3
years preceding the date of the offer, whichever period is shorter. See
FAR 52.222-57(c)(1)-(2); 52.222-58(b). Thus, full implementation of the
3-year disclosure period will be reached as of October 25, 2018.
E. Equivalent State Laws
The Order requires disclosure of violations of the 14 Federal
statutes and Executive orders, and also of violations of equivalent
State laws defined in guidance issued by the Department. Order, section
2(a)(i)(O). As noted above, in section II(B) of this Guidance, the
Department has determined that OSHA-approved State Plans are the only
equivalent State laws for the purpose of the Order at this time.
In future guidance, published in the Federal Register, the
Department will identify additional equivalent State laws. Until this
subsequent guidance and a subsequent FAR amendment are published,
contractors and subcontractors are not required by Order to disclose
violations of State laws other than the OSHA-approved State Plans.
F. Paycheck Transparency Provisions
The paycheck transparency provisions described in section VII of
this Guidance are not effective until January 1, 2017. See FAR
22.2007(d).
Signed this 10th day of August, 2016.
Christopher P. Lu,
Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Labor.
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[FR Doc. 2016-19678 Filed 8-24-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-HL-P