[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 41, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 41CFR60-1.20]

[Page 101-103]
 
           TITLE 41--PUBLIC CONTRACTS AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
 
                           DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 60 1_OBLIGATIONS OF CONTRACTORS AND SUBCONTRACTORS--Table of Contents
 
Subpart B_General Enforcement; Compliance Review and Complaint Procedure
 
Sec. 60-1.20  Compliance evaluations.


    (a) OFCCP may conduct compliance evaluations to determine if the 
contractor maintains nondiscriminatory hiring and employment practices 
and is taking affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed 
and that employees are placed, trained, upgraded, promoted, and 
otherwise treated during employment without regard to race, color, 
religion, sex, or national origin. A compliance evaluation may consist 
of any one or any combination of the following investigative procedures:
    (1) Compliance review. A comprehensive analysis and evaluation of 
the hiring and employment practices of the contractor, the written 
affirmative action program, and the results of the affirmative action 
efforts undertaken by the contractor. A compliance review may proceed in 
three stages:
    (i) A desk audit of the written AAP and supporting documentation to 
determine whether all elements required by the regulations in this part 
are included, whether the AAP meets agency standards of reasonableness, 
and whether the AAP and supporting documentation satisfy agency 
standards of acceptability. The desk audit is conducted at OFCCP 
offices, except in the case of preaward reviews. In a preaward review, 
the desk audit normally is conducted at the contractor's establishment.
    (ii) An on-site review, conducted at the contractor's establishment 
to investigate unresolved problem areas identified in the AAP and 
supporting documentation during the desk audit, to verify that the 
contractor has implemented the AAP and has complied with those 
regulatory obligations not required to be included in the AAP, and to 
examine potential instances or issues of discrimination. An on-site 
review normally will involve an examination of the contractor's 
personnel and employment policies, inspection and copying of documents 
related to employment actions, and interviews with employees, 
supervisors, managers, hiring officials; and
    (iii) Where necessary, an off-site analysis of information supplied 
by the contractor or otherwise gathered during or pursuant to the on-
site review.
    (2) Off-site review of records. An analysis and evaluation of the 
AAP (or any part thereof) and supporting documentation, and other 
documents related to the contractor's personnel policies and employment 
actions that may be relevant to a determination of whether the 
contractor has complied

[[Page 102]]

with the requirements of the Executive Order and regulations;
    (3) Compliance check. A visit to the establishment to ascertain 
whether data and other information previously submitted by the 
contractor are complete and accurate; whether the contractor has 
maintained records consistent with Sec. 60-1.12; and/or whether the 
contractor has developed an AAP consistent with Sec. 60-1.40; or
    (4) Focused review. An on-site review restricted to one or more 
components of the contractor's organization or one or more aspects of 
the contractor's employment practices.
    (b) Where deficiencies are found to exist, reasonable efforts shall 
be made to secure compliance through conciliation and persuasion. Before 
the contractor can be found to be in compliance with the order, it must 
make a specific commitment, in writing, to correct any such 
deficiencies. The commitment must include the precise action to be taken 
and dates for completion. The time period allotted shall be no longer 
than the minimum period necessary to effect such changes. Upon approval 
of the commitment, the contractor may be considered in compliance, on 
condition that the commitments are faithfully kept. The contractor shall 
be notified that making such commitments does not preclude future 
determinations of noncompliance based on a finding that the commitments 
are not sufficient to achieve compliance.
    (c) [Reserved]
    (d) Preaward compliance evaluations. Each agency shall include in 
the invitation for bids for each formally advertised nonconstruction 
contract or state at the outset of negotiations for each negotiated 
contract, that if the award, when let, should total $10 million or more, 
the prospective contractor and its known first-tier subcontractors with 
subcontracts of $10 million or more shall be subject to a compliance 
evaluation before the award of the contract unless OFCCP has conducted 
an evaluation and found them to be in compliance with the Order within 
the preceding 24 months. The awarding agency will notify OFCCP and 
request appropriate action and findings in accordance with this 
subsection. Within 15 days of the notice OFCCP will inform the awarding 
agency of its intention to conduct a preaward compliance evaluation. If 
OFCCP does not inform the awarding agency within that period of its 
intention to conduct a preaward compliance evaluation, clearance shall 
be presumed and the awarding agency is authorized to proceed with the 
award. If OFCCP informs the awarding agency of its intention to conduct 
a preaward compliance evaluation, OFCCP shall be allowed an additional 
20 days after the date that it so informs the awarding agency to provide 
its conclusions. If OFCCP does not provide the awarding agency with its 
conclusions within that period, clearance shall be presumed and the 
awarding agency is authorized to proceed with the award.
    (e) Submission of Documents; Standard Affirmative Action Formats. 
Each prime contractor or subcontractor with 50 or more employees and a 
contract of $50,000 or more is required to develop a written affirmative 
action program for each of its establishments (Sec. 60-1.40). If a 
contractor fails to submit an affirmative action program and supporting 
documents, including the workforce analysis, within 30 days of a 
request, the enforcement procedures specified in Sec. 60-1.26(b) shall 
be applicable. Contractors may reach agreement with OFCCP on nationwide 
AAP formats or on frequency of updating statistics.
    (f) Confidentiality and relevancy of information. If the contractor 
is concerned with the confidentiality of such information as lists of 
employee names, reasons for termination, or pay data, then alphabetic or 
numeric coding or the use of an index of pay and pay ranges, consistent 
with the ranges assigned to each job group, are acceptable for purposes 
of the compliance evaluation. The contractor must provide full access to 
all relevant data on-site as required by Sec. 60-1.43. Where necessary, 
the compliance officer may take information made available during the 
on-site evaluation off-site for further analysis. An off-site analysis 
should be conducted where issues have arisen concerning deficiencies or 
an apparent violation which, in the judgment of the compliance officer, 
should be more thoroughly analyzed off-site

[[Page 103]]

before a determination of compliance is made. The contractor must 
provide all data determined by the compliance officer to be necessary 
for off-site analysis. Such data may only be coded if the contractor 
makes the key to the code available to the compliance officer. If the 
contractor believes that particular information which is to be taken 
off-site is not relevant to compliance with the Executive Order, the 
contractor may request a ruling by the OFCCP District/Area Director. The 
OFCCP District/Area Director shall issue a ruling within 10 days. The 
contractor may appeal that ruling to the OFCCP Regional Director within 
10 days. The Regional Director shall issue a final ruling within 10 
days. Pending a final ruling, the information in question must be made 
available to the compliance officer off-site, but shall be considered a 
part of the investigatory file and subject to the provisions of 
paragraph (g) of this section. The agency shall take all necessary 
precautions to safeguard the confidentiality of such information until a 
final determination is made. Such information may not be copied by OFCCP 
and access to the information shall be limited to the compliance officer 
and personnel involved in the determination of relevancy. Data 
determined to be not relevant to the investigation will be returned to 
the contractor immediately.
    (g) Public access to information. The disclosure of information 
obtained from a contractor will be evaluated pursuant to the public 
inspection and copying provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, 5 
U.S.C. 552, and the Department of Labor's implementing regulations at 29 
CFR Part 70.

[43 FR 49240, Oct. 20, 1978; 43 FR 51400, Nov. 3, 1978, as amended at 62 
FR 44189, Aug. 19, 1997]