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  3. FISCAL YEAR 2007 REPORT OF THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION ON ITS ADMINISTRATION OF THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. section 552 AND THE PRIVACY ACT (PA), 5 U.S.C. section 552(a)

FISCAL YEAR 2007 REPORT OF THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION ON ITS ADMINISTRATION OF THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. section 552 AND THE PRIVACY ACT (PA), 5 U.S.C. section 552(a)

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission


I. Basic Information Regarding Report

  1. Name, title, address and telephone number of person to be contacted with questions about the report

    Stephanie D. Garner
    Assistant Legal Counsel/FOIA Public Liaison
    EEOC
    Office of Legal Counsel
    1801 L Street, NW, 6th floor
    Washington, DC 20507
    (202) 663-4640
    (202) 663-7026 (TTY)
    (202) 663-4639 (fax)
    FOIA@eeoc.gov (e-mail)

  2. Electronic address for report on the World Wide Web

    http://www.eeoc.gov/foia/index.html

  3. How to obtain a copy of the report in paper form

    A paper copy of the report may be requested by submitting a written request to:

    Stephanie D. Garner
    Assistant Legal Counsel/FOIA Public Liaison
    EEOC
    Office of Legal Counsel
    1801 L Street, NW, 6th floor
    Washington, DC 20507
    (202) 663-4640
    (202) 663-7026 (TTY)
    (202) 663-4639 (fax)
    FOIA@eeoc.gov (e-mail)

II. How To Make A FOIA Request

FOIA requests should be made in accordance with the Commission's regulations at 29 C.F.R. 1610.7.   The regulations can be accessed on the World Wide Web at:  http://www.eeoc.gov/foia/1610.html

  1. Names, address, and telephone numbers of all individual agency components and offices that receive FOIA requests

    See 29 C.F.R. 1610.4 and the agency's FOIA web page at https://www.eeoc.gov/foia/contact-us for the EEOC FOIA contacts.

  2. Brief description of the agency's response time ranges

    The average response time ranges were 10-25 working days.

  3. Brief description of why some requests are not granted

    The majority of fiscal year 2007 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests received by the Commission were for materials contained in the Commission's investigative case files that involved charges of discrimination filed pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §2000e, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§621-633, the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. §206(d), and the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§12101-213. Sections 706(b) and 709(e) of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§2000e-5(b) and 8(e), and §107 of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. §12117, prohibit Commission employees from making public Title VII or ADA charges, conciliation materials, required reports and case file information. In certain instances, parties to the charge are entitled to access to the disclosable portions of the charge file. Examples of non-disclosable material in charge files are discussed in detail in Section XII: Report on FOIA Executive Order Implementation.

III. Definitions Used in the Report

  1. FOIA/PA request -- Freedom of Information Act/Privacy Act request. A FOIA request is generally a request for access to records concerning a third party, an organization, or a particular topic of interest. A Privacy Act request is a request for records concerning oneself; such requests are also treated as FOIA requests.
  2. Initial Request -- a request to a federal agency for access to records under the Freedom of Information Act.
  3. Appeal -- a request to a federal agency asking that it review at a higher administrative level a full denial or partial denial of access to records under the Freedom of Information Act, or any other FOIA determination (e.g., a matter pertaining to fees).

  4. Processed Request or Appeal -- a request or appeal for which an agency has taken a final action on the request or the appeal in all respects.
  5. Multi-track processing -- a system in which simple requests requiring relatively minimal review are placed in one processing track and more voluminous and complex requests are placed in one or more other tracks. Requests in each track are processed on a first-in/first-out basis. A requester who has an urgent need for records may request expedited processing (see below).
  6. Expedited processing -- an agency will process a FOIA request on an expedited basis when a requester has shown an exceptional need or urgency for the records which warrants prioritization of his or her request over other requests that were made earlier.
  7. Simple request -- a FOIA request that an agency using multi-track processing places in its fastest (non-expedited) track based on the volume and/or simplicity of records requested.
  8. Complex request -- a FOIA request that an agency using multi-track processing places in a slower track based on the volume and/or complexity of records requested.
  9. Grant -- an agency decision to disclose all records in full in response to a FOIA request.
  10. Partial grant -- an agency decision to disclose a record in part in response to a FOIA request, deleting information determined to be exempt under one or more of the FOIA’s exemptions; or a decision to disclose some records in their entirety, but to withhold others in whole or in part.
  11. Denial -- an agency decision not to release any part of a record or records in response to a FOIA request because all the information in the requested record is determined by the agency to be exempt under one or more of the FOIA’s exemptions, or for some procedural reason (e.g., because no record is located in response to the request).
  12. Time limits -- the time period in the Freedom of Information Act for an agency to respond to a FOIA request (ordinarily 20 working days from proper receipt of a “perfected” FOIA request).
  13. “Perfected” request -- a FOIA request for records which adequately describes the records sought, which has been received by the FOIA office of the agency or agency component in possession of the records, and for which there is no remaining question about the payment of applicable fees.
  14. Exemption 3 statute -- a separate federal statute prohibiting the disclosure of a certain type of information and authorizing its withholding under FOIA subsection (b)(3).
  15. Median number -- the middle, not average, number. For example, of 3, 7, and 14, the median number is 7.
  16. Average number -- the number obtained by dividing the sum of a group of numbers by the quantity of numbers in the group. For example, of 3, 7, and 14, the average number is 8.

IV. Exemption 3 Statutes

The exemption 3 statutes relied on by the Commission in FY 2007 were §§706(b) and 709(e) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 2000e-5(b) and 8(e), and §107 of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. §12117. These sections prohibit Commission employees from making public Title VII or ADA charges, conciliation materials, required reports and case file information.

The Commission’s use of exemption 3 has been upheld by the courts. The landmark case supporting the Commission’s position is EEOC v. Associated Dry Goods Corp., 449 U.S. 590 (1981). There was no litigation involving the Commission’s use of this exemption in FY 2007.

V. Initial FOIA/PA Access Requests

  1. Number of initial requests (total of the numbers in lines one and two, minus the number in line three, should equal the number in four)
    1. Number of requests pending as of end of preceding fiscal year 1,6931
    2. Number of requests received during current fiscal year 14,602
    3. Number of requests processed during current fiscal year 14,879
    4. Number of requests pending as of end of current fiscal year 1,416
      (This line has also been entered on line VII.B.1.)
  2. Disposition of initial requests
    1. Number of total grants 800
    2. Number of partial grants 9,643
    3. Number of denials 1,571
    4. Number of times each exemption was used (counting each exemption once per request)
      1. Exemption 1  0
      2. Exemption 2  8
      3. Exemption 3  1,760
      4. Exemption 4  15
      5. Exemption 5  9,223
      6. Exemption 6  566
      7. Exemption 7(A)  732
      8. Exemption 7(B)  3
      9. Exemption 7(C)  2,108
      10. Exemption 7(D)  88
      11. Exemption 7(E)  10
      12. Exemption 7(F) 0
      13. Exemption 8  0
      14. Exemption 9  0
    5. Other reasons for nondisclosure (total) 2,865
      1. no records 651
      2. referrals 402
      3. request withdrawn 369
      4. fee-related reason 110
      5. records not reasonably described 14
      6. not a proper FOIA request for some other reason 210
      7. not an agency record 92
      8. duplicate request 132
      9. Others 885
        1. records destroyed 239
        2. request converted to section 832 300
        3. records lost 346

VI. Appeals

  1. Number of appeals
    1. Number of appeals received during current fiscal year 277
    2. Number of appeals processed during current fiscal year 291
  2. Disposition of appeals
    1. Number Completely Upheld 96
    2. Number Partially Reversed 117
    3. Number Completely Reversed 30
    4. Number of times each exemption was used (counting each exemption once per request)
      1. Exemption 1 0
      2. Exemption 2 0
      3. Exemption 3 51
      4. Exemption 4 0
      5. Exemption 5 155
      6. Exemption 6 16
      7. Exemption 7(A) 45
      8. Exemption 7(B) 0
      9. Exemption 7(C) 83
      10. Exemption 7(D) 8
      11. Exemption 7(E) 0
      12. Exemption 7(F) 0
      13. Exemption 8 0
      14. Exemption 9 0
    5. Other reasons for nondisclosure (total) 48
      1. no records 4
      2. referrals 1
      3. request withdrawn 9
      4. fee-related reason 0
      5. records not reasonably described 0
      6. not a proper FOIA request for some other reason 6
      7. not an agency record 0
      8. duplicate request 0
      9. other 28 (remanded to the field office for processing)

VII. Compliance With Time Limits/Status of Pending Requests

  1. Median
    1. Ordinary requests
      1. number of requests processed 14,359
      2. median number of days to process 18
    2. Complex requests
      1. number of requests processed 0
      2. median number of days to process 0
    3. Requests accorded expedited processing
      1. number of requests processed 520
      2. median number of days to process 8
  2. Status of pending requests
    1. Number of requests pending as of end of current fiscal year 1,416
      (Enter this number from line V.A.4)
    2. Median number of days that such requests were pending as of that date 9

VIII. Comparison With Previous Year (Optional)

  1. Comparison of number of requests received 14,602 in FY07 vs. 16,875 in FY 06, a 13.5% decrease
  2. Comparison of numbers of requests processed 14,879 in FY 07 vs. 16,936 in FY 06, a 12.1% decrease
  3. Comparison of median number of days requests were pending as of end of fiscal year 9 in FY 07 vs. 10 in FY 06, a 10% decrease
  4. Other statistics significant to agency 814 requests for expedited processing received and 520 requests for expedited processing granted
  5. Other

IX. Costs/FOIA Staffing

  1. Staffing levels.
    1. Number of full-time FOIA personnel 3
    2. Number of personnel with part-time or occasional FOIA duties (in total work-years) 37.57
    3. Total number of personnel (in work-years) 40.57
  2. Total costs (including staff and all resources).
    1. FOIA processing (including appeals) $2,492,130.00
    2. Litigation-related activities (estimated) $0.00
    3. Total costs $2,492,130.00
    4. Comparison with previous year (optional) $2,525,537.00 (-10.1%)

X. Fees

  1. Total amount of fees collected by agency for processing requests $36,487.79
  2. Percentage of total costs 1.46%

XI. FOIA /PA Regulations

EEOC FOIA regulations can be accessed on the World Wide Web at:
https://www.eeoc.gov/foia

EEOC PA regulations can be accessed on the World Wide Web at:
https://www.eeoc.gov/privacy-act

XII. Report on FOIA Executive Order Implementation

The Commission did not supplement/modify its report in fiscal 2007.

The exemptions authorize federal agencies to withhold information covering: (1) classified national defense and foreign relations information, (2) internal agency rules and practices, (3) information that is prohibited from disclosure by another federal law, (4) trade secrets and other confidential business information, (5) inter-agency or intra-agency communications that are protected by legal privileges, (6) information whose disclosure would invade someone's personal privacy, (7) information compiled for law enforcement purposes, (8) information relating to the supervision of financial institutions, and (9) certain geological information. The three exclusions, which are not used by the Commission, pertain to especially sensitive law enforcement and national security matters. Even if information may be withheld under the FOIA, the EEOC still may disclose it as a matter of administrative discretion if disclosure is not prohibited by any law and would not cause any foreseeable harm. A summary of the exemptions follows:

EXEMPTION 1 - Exemption 1 allows for the withholding of national security information concerning the national defense or foreign policy that has been properly classified in accordance with the substantive and procedural requirements of the current national security classification executive order, Executive Order 12958, signed by President Bush on March 25, 2003. EEOC does not use this exemption.

EXEMPTION 2 - Exemption 2 exempts records from mandatory disclosure that are "related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency." Examples of information routinely withheld under Exemption 2 are rules relating to parking facilities, regulation of lunch hours, performance standards, sick leave policy, and similar types of information. Use of this exemption has increased with recent concerns regarding homeland security. EEOC very rarely uses this exemption.

EXEMPTION 3 - Exemption 3(a) allows for the withholding of information prohibited from disclosure by another statute. EEOC routinely uses this exemption to deny access to Title VII and ADA charge files when the requester is not a party to the charge and to withhold EEO survey reports. Sections 706(b) and 709(e) of Title VII and Section 107 of the ADA specifically prohibit disclosure of Title VII and ADA charge files and EEO survey reports to third parties prior to the institution of a proceeding under Title VII involving such charge, record or information. Commission employees who disclose such information are subject to fine and/or imprisonment. Exemption 3(b) prohibits agencies from releasing any proposal submitted by a contractor in response to a competitive contract. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 3 includes, but is not limited to:

  1. Description of supplementation/modification of Agency Improvement Plan
  2. Report on agency implementation of its plan, including its performance in meeting milestones, with respect to each improvement area

    The Commission’s Fiscal Year 2005 Agency Improvement Plan (Plan) contained six areas selected for review and six areas identified for improvement. Information concerning established time milestones only refers to static time milestones. Several of the time milestones require continual review and revision. The Plan is attached to this report, and a link to the website is provided at section XII.G., infra.

    1. Affirmative Disclosure under Subsection (a)(2)(D) of the FOIA. The Plan established one milestone to be met in fiscal year 2007 which the agency met. In August 2007, the agency conducted an annual review of agency records to ascertain if any records requested in fiscal year 2007 were suitable for frequently requested records disclosure. No records disclosed by the Commission were identified as frequently requested records as a result of the August 2007 review.
    2. Proactive Disclosure of Information. The Plan did not establish any milestones to be met for fiscal year 2007 under this section.
    3. Overall FOIA Website Improvement. The Plan did not establish any milestones to be met for fiscal year 2007 under this section.
    4. Improvement of FOIA Reference Guide. The Plan did not establish any milestones to be met for fiscal year 2007 under this section.
    5. E-FOIA Automated Processing. The Plan established one milestone to be met for fiscal year 2007 which the agency met. In July 2007, the EEOC published the final Request for Proposal 0701, OMB Circular A-76 Standard Competition for FOIA and EEOC Compliance Manual Section 83 File Disclosure. In October 2007, the agency tender/Most Efficient Organization was selected to be the service provider under the competition.
    6. Backlog Reduction. The Plan established a backlog reduction goal of 5% for fiscal year 2007. EEOC exceeded this goal by completing more than 90% of the identified backlog.
  3. Identification and discussion of any deficiency in meeting plan milestones.

    The Commission met all time milestones established in the Agency Improvement Plan.

  4. Additional narrative statement regarding other executive order-related activities (optional)

    The EEOC has established one FOIA Requester Service Center as required by Section 2 of the Executive Order, allowing for contact via telephone, e-mail, fax, postal mail and tty. The Center is staffed by five EEOC employees, including one FOIA Public Liaison.

  5. Concise descriptions of FOIA exemptions

    The FOIA provides the public access to all federal agency records (or portions of those records), except for those records that are withheld under nine exemptions and three exclusions.

  • Any Title VII or ADA charge file information requested by anyone other than the Charging Party or the Respondent to the charge, such as the charge file or information concerning the existence of charge files.
  • Title VII or ADA information requested by the Charging Party or the Respondent after the time limitation for filing a lawsuit has expired and no lawsuit has been filed.
  • References to other Title VII or ADA charges in the charge file.
  • Information submitted by unsuccessful bidders for contracts with the EEOC.

EXEMPTION 4 - Exemption 4 protects from disclosure information that would reveal “trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person [that is] privileged or confidential.” EEOC uses this exemption on occasion. When the EEOC receives a FOIA request for trade secrets or confidential commercial or financial information, it is required by Executive Order 12600 and its regulations to notify the submitter of the information of the FOIA request and permit the submitter an opportunity to object to disclosure of the record. The requester is advised of the submitter notification.

EXEMPTION 5 - Exemption 5 protects “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency” from disclosure to the public. EEOC routinely uses this exemption to deny access to internal documents that reflect the internal predecisional deliberations, recommendations, analyses, assessments, and opinions of Commission employees. We also use this exemption to deny access to attorney work product information. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 5 includes, but is not limited to:

  • Investigative Memoranda
  • Recommendations, opinions, analysis, and conclusions that are deliberative in nature
  • Predecisional deliberative memorandums analyzing the merits of the case
  • Codes signifying the EEOC's predecisional assessment of the merit of a case
  • Documents that meet the requirements of attorney-client privilege or attorney work product

EXEMPTION 6 - Exemption 6 protects personal privacy interests in records contained in personnel, medical, and similar files when disclosure of such records would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. EEOC routinely uses this exemption to deny access to information such as home addresses, third party names, telephone and social security numbers and medical information contained in personnel files. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 6 includes, but is not limited to:

  • Personnel documents of EEOC employees such as performance appraisals, home addresses and phone numbers, social security numbers, health insurance coverage, and non job-related affiliations
  • Personnel documents of third parties in agency charge files which would result in an invasion of personal privacy.

EXEMPTION 7 - Exemption 7 has six sub-parts and is a special exemption that only applies to law enforcement agencies. EEOC is a law enforcement agency. We routinely use certain sub-parts of this exemption. Exemption 7 allows for the withholding of “records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes,” with the limitations discussed below:

EXEMPTION 7(A): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement proceedings.” EEOC routinely uses this exemption to deny access to open charge files and cases in litigation. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 7(A) includes, but is not limited to:

  • Any charge files requested by the Charging Party or the Respondent where the Commission has not terminated all of its proceedings
  • Respondent access to the charge file during the 90-day notice of right to sue period, unless the Charging Party has filed suit on the charge
  • Any charge files involved in cases that the Commission is litigating or considering litigating

EXEMPTION 7(B): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “would deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial adjudication.” EEOC does not use this exemption.

EXEMPTION 7(C): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” EEOC routinely uses this exemption in conjunction with Exemption 6. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 7(C) includes, but is not limited to:

  • Individuals' home addresses and home telephone numbers, if not known to the requester
  • Social Security numbers and other personal information from charge files
  • ADEA and EPA charge files requested by third parties
  • ADEA and EPA charge files requested by the Respondent while the 90 day Notice of the Right to Sue period is pending, unless the Charging Party has already filed suit.

EXEMPTION 7(D): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “could reasonably be expected to disclose the identity of a confidential source, including a State, local, or foreign agency or authority or any private institution which furnished information on a confidential basis, and, in the case of a record or information compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority in the course of a criminal investigation or by an agency conducting a lawful national security intelligence investigation, information furnished by a confidential source.” EEOC uses this exemption to deny access to confidential sources that have provided information during the investigation of allegations of discrimination. Information withheld pursuant to the Exemption 7(D) includes, but is not limited to:

  • Confidential Witness Statements
  • Any references that would identify confidential witnesses. Documents must be marked confidential by the investigator or the Commission

EXEMPTION 7(E): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law.” EEOC very rarely uses this exemption.

EXEMPTION 7(F): Permits the withholding of EEOC records or information that were compiled for law enforcement purposes if the release of such records “could reasonably be expected to endanger the life or physical safety of any individual.” EEOC very rarely uses this exemption.

EXEMPTION 8 - Exemption 8 protects from disclosure matters that are "contained in or related to examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by, on behalf of, or for the use of an agency responsible for the regulation or supervision of financial institutions." EEOC does not use this exemption.

EXEMPTION 9 - Exemption 9 allows for the withholding of "geological and geophysical information and data, including maps, concerning wells." EEOC does not use this exemption.

EXCLUSIONS - The FOIA also contains three specific exclusions regarding criminal records and certain law enforcement records held by the Federal Bureau of Investigations. The EEOC does not maintain or possess any records specifically excluded from coverage.

  • Additional statistics
    1. Ten Oldest Pending FOIA Requests

      January 27, 2006 to July 21, 2006

    2. Consultations
      Calendar Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
      Requests                
      1. Number of consultations Received, Processed and Pending
        Consultations Received From Other Agencies During FY07 Consultations Received From Other Agencies That Were Processed by Your Agency During FY07 (includes those received prior to FY07) Consultations Received From Other Agencies That Were Pending at Your Agency as of October 1, 2007 (includes those received prior to FY07)
        0 0 0
      2. Ten Oldest Pending Consultations received From Other Agencies
  • Attachment: Agency Improvement Plan (in current form)

    The EEOC Report and Plan on Improving Agency Disclosure of Information is attached and can also be accessed on the World Wide Web at: https://www.eeoc.gov/report-and-plan-us-equal-employment-opportunity-commission-required-executive-order-13392-improving


Footnotes

1This figure is 86 less than reported on the FY 2006 report. The EEOC is in the process of converting from a manual FOIA tracking system to an electronic tracking system. As a result of the conversion, our Atlanta, Dallas, Los Angeles and Philadelphia offices reported figures that were different from the figures they submitted for inclusion in the FY 2006 report. All of the offices reconciled the data in the electronic system, but were unable to correct the discrepancies to match the figure submitted for the FY 2006 report.

2Section 83 of the EEOC Compliance Manual provides for access to relevant case files by charging parties, aggrieved persons on whose behalf a charge has been filed, and entities against whom charges have been filed. 29 C.F.R. §1610.17(d). FOIA requests processed by EEOC field offices are subject to review by the Regional Attorneys. FOIA requests that are converted to Section 83 can usually be processed more expeditiously, and some FOIA requesters are amenable to converting their requests to Section 83 for this reason.


This page was last modified on April 15, 2008.