LEGAL BASIS FOR AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
IN EMPLOYMENT
Binghamton University & Research Foundation
Executive Order No. 11246 as amended
prohibits employers doing business
with the Federal government (e.g.,
Binghamton University and the
research Foundation of SUNY) from
discriminating in employment because
of race, color, religion, sex,
national origin, disability, or
Vietnam Era Veterans' status.
The Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP) is
responsible for the enforcement of
Executive Order 11246. OFCCP
compliance reviews and/or pre-award
audits may be triggered by
discrimination complaints or by
federal funding requests (grant
proposals) of one million dollars
or more.
Entities signing federal contracts or
subcontracts totaling $50,000 or
more must agree that they "will not
discriminate against any employee or
applicant for employment because of
race, color, religion, sex, national
origin, disability, or Vietnam Era
Veterans' status," and that they
"will take affirmative action to
ensure that applicants are employed
and that employees are treated during
employment" without regard to these
factors. If there is a failure to
comply with the affirmative action
and nondiscrimination clauses of the
contract, or with the rules and
regulations of the Secretary of
Labor, the contract may be cancelled,
terminated, or suspended in whole or
in part and the employer may be
declared ineligible for further
Government contracts. The suspension
or termination of federal contracts
would severely hamper the daily
operation of the campus and its
sponsored programs.
NON-DISCRIMINATION AND AFFIRMATIVE
ACTION IN THE EXECUTIVE ORDER 11246
EMBODIES TWO CONCEPTS:
Nondiscrimination requires the
elimination of all existing
discriminatory conditions, whether
purposeful or inadvertent. The
University and the Research
Foundation of SUNY must carefully and
systematically examine all of their
employment policies and practices to
ensure that such policies and
practices do not either intentionally
or unintentionally operate to exclude
any persons on grounds of race,
color, religion, sex, national
origin, disability, or Vietnam Era
Veterans' status. The University and
the Research Foundation of SUNY must
also ensure that the practices of
those responsible for the benefits
and conditions of employment,
including all supervisors, are
nondiscriminatory.
Affirmative Action requires the
University and the Research
Foundation of SUNY to do more than
ensure employment neutrality with
regard to the various classes
covered under federal
nondiscrimination laws. As the
phrase implies, affirmative action
requires the campus to make
additional efforts to recruit,
employ, and promote qualified
members of groups formerly excluded,
even if that exclusion cannot be
traced to particular discriminatory
actions on the part of the employer.
The premise of affirmative action is
that unless positive action is
undertaken to overcome the effects of
systemic institutional forms of
exclusion and discrimination, a
benign neutrality in employment
practices will tend to perpetuate
the status quo ante indefinitely.
WHO IS COVERED UNDER EXECUTIVE ORDER
11246?
The nondiscrimination requirements of
the Executive Order apply to all
persons, regardless of race, color,
gender, etc.
The affirmative action requirements
of making additional efforts to
recruit, employ, and promote
qualified members of historically
excluded groups refers specifically
to white women and to men and women
from the following racial/ethnic
categories, as specified by the
Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission: BLACK (Not of Hispanic
Origin), HISPANIC, ASIAN or PACIFIC
ISLANDER, and AMERICAN INDIAN or
ALASKAN NATIVE.
Criteria for qualifying under the
University and Research Foundation
Affirmative Action Programs differ
significantly from criteria for
qualifying under the Chancellor's
Underrepresented Faculty Initiative,
the Clark Fellowship Program, the
Affirmative Action Graduate
Assistantship Program, and the
Educational Opportunity Program.
Questions regarding these latter
programs should be addressed to
offices directly overseeing them.
FEDERAL DEFINITION OF RACIAL/ETHNIC
CATEGORIES:
The concept of race as
used by the Equal Employment
Opportunity commission does not
denote clear-cut scientific
definitions of anthropological
origins. For affirmative action
report purposes, an employee may be
included in the group to which he
or she appears to belong, identifies
with, or is regarded in the
community as belonging. However, no
person should be counted in more
than one race/ethnic category.
THE FIVE RACIAL/ETHNIC CATEGORIES
ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
WHITE (Not of Hispanic Origin)-A
person having origins in any of the
original peoples of Europe, North
Africa, or the Middle East.
BLACK(Not of Hispanic Origin)-A
person having origins in any of the
Black racial groups of Africa.
HISPANIC---A person of Mexican,
Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or
South American or other Spanish
culture or origin, regardless of
race.
ASIAN or PACIFIC ISLANDER-A person
having origins in any of the original
peoples of the Far East, Southeast
Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, or the
Pacific Islands. The area includes,
for example, China, Japan, Korea,
the Philippine Islands, and Samoa.
AMERICAN INDIAN OR ALASKAN
NATIVE-A person having origins in
any of the original peoples of North
America, and who maintain cultural
identification through tribal
affiliation or community recognition.
Please note that for affirmative
action reporting purposes,
individuals with permanent resident
status are to be counted among the
above groups, while individuals
without U.S. Citizenship or permanent
resident status are to be counted as
non-citizens, regardless of their
race/ethnicity.