[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 41, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 41CFR61-250.11]

[Page 238-241]
 
           TITLE 41--PUBLIC CONTRACTS AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
 
 CHAPTER 61--OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR VETERANS' EMPLOYMENT 
                AND TRAINING SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 61-250_ANNUAL REPORT FROM FEDERAL CONTRACTORS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 61-250.11  On what form must the data required by this part be 
submitted?

    (a) Data items required in paragraph (a) of the contract clause set 
forth in Sec. 61-250.10 must be reported for each

[[Page 239]]

hiring location on the VETS-100 form. This form is mailed annually to 
those contractors who are included in the VETS-100 data base. The form, 
and instructions for preparing it, are also set forth as follows:

 The Vets-100 Report Form is Reprinted as Appendix A to 41 CFR Part 61-
                                   250

    This report is to be completed by all nonexempt contractors and 
subcontractors with contracts (or subcontracts) for the furnishing of 
supplies and services or the use of real or persona1 property (including 
construction) for $25,000 or more. Reports must be completed for each 
hiring location in any State, as defined in 41 CFR 61-250.2(b).
    All multi-establishment employers, i.e., those doing business at 
more than one hiring location, must file: (1) a report covering the 
principal or headquarters office; (2) a separate report for each hiring 
location employing 50 or more persons; and (3) either (i) a separate 
report for each hiring location employing fewer than 50 persons, or (ii) 
consolidated reports, by State, covering the hiring locations within the 
State that have fewer than 50 employees. Each consolidated report must 
also list the names and addresses of all hiring locations covered by the 
report.

                           How to Prepare Form

    Shaded areas designate optional information. Answers to questions in 
all other areas of the form are mandatory.
    Contractors should determine the period covered by the report (``the 
reporting period'') by selecting an ending date for the report. The 
ending date may fall either: (1) At the end of any pay period during the 
period July 1 through August 31 of the year the report is due; or (2) On 
December 31, if the contractor has previous written approval from the 
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to use that date for purposes of 
submitting the Employer Information Report EEO-1, Standard Form 100 
(EEO-1 Report). The report must cover the twelve consecutive months 
preceding the selected ending date.

                         Company Identification

    Parent Company. Please provide the company name, address, and 
employer identification number (EIN) of the headquarters office of the 
multi-hiring location company that owns the hiring location for which 
this report is filed. The EIN is mandatory; the Dun and Bradstreet I.D. 
number (DUNS) is mandatory if available; and the North American 
Industrial Classification System (NAICS) also must be reported if 
available.
    Hiring Location For Which This Report Is Filed. Please provide the 
name, address, and EIN for each hiring location for which this report is 
filed. The EIN is mandatory; the NAICS and the DUNS also must be 
reported if available.

          Information on Employees (Veterans and non-veterans)

    Counting veterans: Some veterans will fall into more than one of the 
protected veteran categories. For example, a veteran may be both a 
special disabled veteran and a Vietnam era veteran. In such cases the 
veteran must be counted in each category.
    Data on Current Employees: The payroll period for this data is the 
period that ends on the date the contractor selects as the ending date 
for the entire report, according to the instructions above in ``How to 
Prepare Form.'' The data must include all permanent full-time and part-
time employees who were employed as of the ending date of the selected 
payroll period, except those employees specifically excluded as 
indicated in 41 CFR 61-250.2(b)(2). Employees must be counted by veteran 
status (columns L, M, and N--special disabled veterans, Vietnam-era, or 
other protected veterans as defined below) for each of the nine 
occupational categories. Entries in the Total line of columns L, M, and 
N are optional.
    Data on New Hires: Report on the Total line in columns O through R 
the number of regular full-time and part-time employees, by veteran 
status (columns O, P, and Q) and total employees (column R), who were 
included in the payroll for the first time during the reporting period. 
Entries in lines 1 through 9 (shaded area) of columns O through R are 
optional.

                               Definitions

    Hiring location means an establishment as defined at 41 CFR 61-
250.2(b).
    Special disabled veteran means:
    (i) A veteran of the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service who 
is entitled to compensation (or who but for the receipt of military 
retired pay would be entitled to compensation) under laws administered 
by the Department of Veterans Affairs for a disability:
    (A) Rated at 30 percent or more; or
    (B) Rated at 10 or 20 percent in the case of a veteran who has been 
determined under 38 U.S.C. 3106 to have a serious employment handicap; 
or
    (ii) A person who was discharged or released from active duty 
because of a service-connected disability.
    Veteran of the Vietnam era means a veteran:
    (i) who served on active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or 
air service for a period of more than 180 days, and who was discharged 
or released therefrom with other than a dishonorable discharge, if any 
part of such active duty was performed:

[[Page 240]]

    (A) in the Republic of Vietnam between February 28, 1961, and May 7, 
1975; or
    (B) between August 5, 1964 and May 7, 1975 in any other location; or
    (ii) who was discharged or released from active duty in the U.S. 
military, ground, naval or air service for a service-connected 
disability, if any part of such active duty was performed:
    (A) in the Republic of Vietnam between February 28, 1961, and May 7, 
1975; or
    (B) between August 5, 1964, and May 7, 1975, in any other location.
    Other protected veterans means any other veteran who served on 
active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service during a 
war or in a campaign or expedition for which a campaign badge has been 
authorized, other than special disabled veterans or veterans or the 
Vietnam era.

                 Legal Basis for Reporting Requirements

    Title 38, United States Code, Section 4212(d), requires that Federal 
contractors and subcontractors report at least annually on the number of 
current employees in each job category and at each hiring location who 
are special disabled veterans, the number who are veterans of the 
Vietnam era, and the number who are other protected veterans who served 
on active duty during a war or in a campaign or expedition for which a 
campaign badge has been authorized, other than special disabled veterans 
or veterans of the Vietnam era. Also required are the total number of 
new hires during the reporting period, the number of new hires who fall 
into each of the three categories of veterans listed above, and the 
maximum and minimum number of persons employed during the reporting 
period. The regulations implementing these statutory provisions are 
found at 41 CFR part 61-250.

                      Description of Job Categories

    Officials and managers means occupations requiring administrative 
and managerial personnel who set broad policies, exercise overall 
responsibility for execution of these policies, and direct individual 
departments or special phases of a firm's operation. Includes: 
Officials, executives, middle management, plant managers, department 
managers and superintendents, salaried supervisors who are members of 
management, purchasing agents and buyers, railroad conductors and yard 
masters, ship captains and mates (except fishing boats), farm operators 
and managers, and kindred workers.
    Professionals means occupations requiring either college graduation 
or experience of such kind and amount as to provide a background 
comparable to college education. Includes: Accountants and auditors, 
airplane pilots and navigators, architects, artists, chemists, 
designers, dietitians, editors, engineers, lawyers, librarians, 
mathematicians, natural scientists, registered professional nurses, 
personnel and labor relations specialists, physical scientists, 
physicians, social scientists, surveyors, teachers, and kindred workers.
    Technicians means occupations requiring a combination of basic 
scientific knowledge and manual skill which can be obtained through 
about 2 years of post-high school education, such as is offered in many 
technical institutes and junior colleges, or through equivalent on-the-
job training. Includes: Computer programmers and operators, drafters, 
engineering aides, junior engineers, mathematical aides, licensed, 
practical or vocational nurses, photographers, radio operators, 
scientific assistants, technical illustrators, technicians (medical, 
dental, electronic, physical science), and kindred workers.
    Sales means occupations engaging wholly or primarily in direct 
selling. Includes: Advertising agents and sales workers, insurance 
agents and brokers, real estate agents and brokers, stock and bond sales 
workers, demonstrators, sales workers and sales clerks, grocery clerks 
and cashier-checkers, and kindred workers.
    Office and clerical includes all clerical-type work regardless of 
level of difficulty, where the activities are predominantly non-manual 
though some manual work not directly involved with altering or 
transporting the products is included. Includes bookkeepers, cashiers, 
collectors (bills and accounts), messengers and office helpers, office 
machine operators, shipping and receiving clerks, stenographers, typists 
and secretaries, telegraph and telephone operators, legal assistants, 
and kindred workers.
    Craft Workers (skilled) means manual workers of relatively high 
skill level having a thorough and comprehensive knowledge of the 
processes involved in their work. These workers exercise considerable 
independent judgment and usually receive an extensive period of 
training. Includes: The building trades, hourly paid supervisors and 
lead operators who are not members of management, mechanics and 
repairers, skilled machining occupations, compositors and typesetters, 
electricians, engravers, job setters (metal), motion picture 
projectionists, pattern and model makers, stationary engineers, tailors, 
arts occupations, hand painters, coaters, decorative workers, and 
kindred workers.
    Operatives (semiskilled) means workers who operate machine or 
processing equipment or perform other factory-type duties of 
intermediate skill level which can be mastered in a few weeks and 
require only limited training. Includes: Apprentices (auto mechanics, 
plumbers, bricklayers, carpenters, electricians, machinists, mechanics, 
building trades, metalworking trades, printing trades,

[[Page 241]]

etc.), operatives, attendants (auto service and parking), blasters, 
chauffeurs, delivery workers, dressmakers and sewers (except factory), 
dryers, furnace workers, heaters (metal), laundry and dry cleaning 
operatives, milliners, mine operatives and laborers, motor operators, 
oilers and greasers (except auto), painters (except construction and 
maintenance), photographic process workers, stationary firefighters, 
truck and tractor drivers, weavers (textile), welders and flamecutters, 
electrical and electronic equipment assemblers, butchers and meat 
cutters, inspectors, testers and graders, handpackers and packagers, and 
kindred workers.
    Laborers (unskilled) means workers in manual occupations which 
generally require no special training to perform elementary duties that 
may be learned in a few days and require the application of little or no 
independent judgment. Includes: garage laborers, car washers and 
greasers, gardeners (except farm) and grounds keepers, stevedores, wood 
choppers, laborers performing lifting, digging, mixing, loading and 
pulling operations, and kindred workers.
    Service Workers means workers in both protective and non-protective 
service occupations. Includes: Attendants (hospital and other 
institutions, professional and personal service, including nurses aides 
and orderlies), barbers, charworkers and cleaners, cooks (except 
household), counter and fountain workers, elevator operators, 
firefighters and fire protection workers, guards, doorkeepers, stewards, 
janitors, police officers and detectives, porters, servers, amusement 
and recreation facilities attendants, guides, ushers, public 
transportation attendants, and kindred workers.

    (b) Contractors and subcontractors that submit computer-generated 
output for more than 10 hiring locations to satisfy their VETS-100 
reporting obligations must submit the output in the form of an 
electronic file. This file must comply with current Department of Labor 
specifications for the layout of these records, along with any other 
specifications established by the Department for the applicable 
reporting year. Contractors and subcontractors that submit VETS-100 
Reports for ten locations or less are exempt from this requirement, but 
are strongly encouraged to submit an electronic file. In these cases, 
state consolidated reports count as one location each.
    (c) Contractors and subcontractors may submit the VETS-100 Report 
via the Internet. The Internet address for the site is http://
vets100.cudenver.edu/vets100login.htm. A company number is required to 
access this site. The number is provided to employers on the VETS-100 
Report form that is mailed annually to those employers who are included 
in the VETS-100 database. Other employers may obtain a company number by 
e-mailing their request to newcompany@vets100.com, or by calling the 
VETS-100 Reporting System at (703) 461-2460.
    (d) VETS or its designee will use all available information to 
distribute the required forms to contractors identified as subject to 
the requirements of this part.
    (e) It is the responsibility of each contractor or subcontractor to 
obtain necessary supplies of the VETS-100 Report form before the annual 
September 30 filing deadline. Contractors and subcontractors who do not 
receive forms should request them in time to meet the deadline. Requests 
for the VETS-100 Report form may be made by mail by contacting: Office 
of the Assistant Secretary for Veterans' Employment and Training, U.S. 
Department of Labor 200 Constitution Avenue, NW,Washington, DC 20210, 
Attn: VETS-100 Report Form Request or on the Internet at http://
vets100.cudenver.edu (OMB No. 1293-0005).

[66 FR 52002, Oct. 11, 2001; 66 FR 56761, Nov. 13, 2001, as amended at 
66 FR 65453, Dec. 19, 2001]