NewsEEOC To Furlough Workers For One Day Due To Budget Shortfall

EEOC To Furlough Workers For One Day Due To Budget Shortfall

EEOC employees were notified that they would all have to take one work day’s worth of unpaid leave.

According to the EEOC website, while the furlough is in place, “The agency will ensure that no private sector charging party loses their right to file a timely charge of discrimination or federal complainant loses their right to file an appeal or request for reconsideration. Additionally, the agency will continue to litigate in cases where an extension has not been granted.”

The EEOC continued, “While charges will be accepted, they will not be investigated, Staff will not be available to answer questions from the public, or to respond to correspondence, emails, or faxes from the public; Insofar as the courts grant EEOC’s requests for extensions of time, EEOC will not litigate in the federal courts; Mediations will be cancelled; Federal sector hearings will be cancelled, and federal employees’ appeals of discrimination complaints will not be decided; Outreach and education events will be cancelled; No FOIA requests will be processed.”

According to the letter from the EEOC’s human resources department, “Despite efforts to reduce funding requirements by executing across the board program reductions and implementing a hiring freeze, we currently anticipate expenditures to cover necessary agency operating costs will be in excess of our authorized budget.”

According to The American Federation of Government Employees Council President 216, Rachel Shonfield, the EEOC’s furlough is happening because of Congressional budget freezes. She told USA Today via a statement, “EEOC employees will be forced to lose up to a day’s pay at the end of August unless the agency can scrimp together enough money to make payroll and keep the lights on.”

Shonfield continued, saying that Americans who are facing discrimination would be negatively impacted by the furlough. “Workers facing discrimination on the job are facing longer wait times for appointments because the agency does not have enough front-line staff, and effectively shutting down operations for a day will only make those wait times longer.”

EEOC Chair Charlotte Burrows told USA Today in a statement that she will continue to advocate for funding, but did not address what is causing the agency its budget deficiencies. “I will continue to advocate for funding that will enable the EEOC to meet the public’s increased demand for our services and enforce all of the laws entrusted to us by Congress.”

RELATED CONTENT: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Adds Pronouns, Bathrooms, and Abortion Protections To Law After 25 Years

Source: Black Enterprise

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