Almost one year ago, the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission launched an initiative to target systemic discrimination by pursuing
pattern and practice cases and class actions.
In February, the agency indicated that racial discrimination
is likely to be a primary focus of that effort by introducing a campaign called
“Eradicating Racism and Colorism from Employment.”
On March 7, the two elements were highlighted when the EEOC
filed a class-action employment discrimination lawsuit against Walgreen Co.,
accusing the drug retailer of racial discrimination.
The EEOC alleges that Walgreen uses race as a factor to place
managers and pharmacists in low-performing stores and in locations in
African-American communities. The company denies the charges.
Although the racism initiative, which emphasizes public
education and outreach, is not directly tied to the Walgreen action, the EEOC is
making an example of the company.
“Certainly it reflects our commitment to looking at race and
color discrimination on a nationwide basis,” said Elizabeth Bille, EEOC special
assistant and counsel, after addressing a Society for Human Resource Management
conference in Washington on March 12.
The EEOC has been intensifying its campaign against racial
discrimination for a while, says Lynn Lieber, an employment lawyer and CEO of
Workplace Answers, a consulting firm.
In April 2006, the EEOC issued guidelines for employers that
warned against subtle forms of bias, such as a boss not inviting minority
workers to an office lunch or a happy hour. This kind of exclusion undermines
networking opportunities. It also urges companies to expand their recruiting
efforts to include nontraditional sources of talent and not to rely solely on
word-of-mouth referrals.
“They were very, very broad,” Lieber says of the EEOC
guidelines. “The EEOC is very serious about race and color.”
It also is intent on promoting class-action cases. Lieber
says courts have become more inclined to certify class actions, a trend that
could cost employers. A national chain, for instance, would want a case to focus
on bias at individual stores rather than having it include every
African-American employee nationwide.
The damage awards in a class action can total billions of
dollars.
“It could really force a company to go under,” Lieber
says.
—Mark
Schoeff Jr.