EEOC’s Planned Initiatives
The EEOC’s Acting Chair Andrea Lucas, who has served as an EEOC commissioner since 2020, announced some initiatives they are focusing on that may impact the workplace.
- Anti-American Bias – Lucas announced in February, “The EEOC is putting employers and other covered entities on notice: if you are part of the pipeline contributing to our immigration crisis or abusing our legal immigration system via illegal preferences against American workers, you must stop. The law applies to you, and you are not above the law. The EEOC is here to protect all workers from unlawful national origin discrimination, including American workers.”2
- Antisemitism in Campus Workplaces – Promising to hold colleges and accountable for having created hostile work environments for Jewish colleagues, Lucas said in March, Jewish professors and staff “have the right not to be discriminated against or harassed on the basis of religion, national origin, or race.”3 This affirms one of her previously stated priorities of “protecting workers from religious bias and harassment”.4
- The LEAD Initiative (Leadership for the Employment of Americans with Disabilities) – This EEOC initiative aims to address “the declining number of employees with targeted disabilities in the federal workforce. The goal…is to significantly increase the population of individuals with severe disabilities employed by the federal government.”5 The EEOC continues to broaden its definition of what constitutes a disability. Under the EEOC’s new plan, the agency is focusing on areas of job qualification standards and inflexible leave policies to better protect disabled employees.
Another initiative to watch for this year is the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) that went into effect in 2023, and it requires a covered employer to provide a “reasonable accommodation” to a qualified employee’s or applicant’s known limitations related to, affected by, or arising out of childbirth or related medical conditions, unless the accommodation will cause the employer an “undue hardship" workers, staffing agencies, independent contractors and the on‑demand economy are all changing the dynamic of the employer / employee relationship.
Just because a policyholder’s staff are not on the payroll as permanent, full-time employees, this doesn’t mean an insured is absolved of responsibility for ensuring fair treatment under the law. In 2023, there were 188 charges for PWFA. In 2024, there were 2,729 charges filed.