2026-05-15T21:28:09.409Z / 《华盛顿邮报》
联邦民权监督机构拟停止收集种族与性别数据
美国平等就业机会委员会提议终止一项民权时代启动的、从私营企业收集人口统计信息的项目。
2026年5月15日 美国东部时间下午5:28 昨日美国东部时间下午5:28
作者:梅里尔·科恩菲尔德
负责推动全社会多元化的联邦顶级机构正提议缩减其核心的人口数据收集举措,这一举措已实施数十年。
美国平等就业机会委员会(EEOC)正考虑不再从美国大型企业收集种族、性别和国籍等人口统计信息,这与该机构始于20世纪60年代民权时代的做法背道而驰,而该数据收集曾是该机构根除职场歧视工作的关键。平等就业机会委员会还希望废除针对学徒项目、工会、州和地方政府以及学校的数据报告规则,以及其他保护劳动者的民权法律中的报告要求,包括保护孕妇和残障劳动者的相关规定。
平等就业机会委员会已于周四向白宫通报了这项提议,该提议将在审核后公开。目前尚不清楚该提议将对今年的数据收集工作产生何种影响。这一举措将与本届政府终止多元化项目、弱化一类关键歧视案件处理优先级的努力保持一致。
这项数据收集工作依据《民权法案》第七篇已开展了60年。联邦政府的EEO-1报告从拥有100名及以上员工的企业以及某些联邦承包商处收集人口统计和职业类别数据。收集工作通常于5月启动。在乔·拜登总统任期内,平等就业机会委员会曾起诉涉嫌未遵守联邦报告要求的雇主。
关注平等就业机会委员会工作的人士对此次重新考虑数据收集的举动并不意外。根据联邦合同数据,一份为期五年的收集合同已于去年到期且未续签。一些代表雇主的律师已建议客户像往常一样收集数据,以遵守法律规定。
“雇主应继续将收集此类信息作为最佳实践,因为《民权法案》第七篇的义务并未消失,差别影响理论也未失效,”赛法特肖律师事务所合伙人克里斯蒂·基利说道,“该数据收集的优先级已被降低,但法律条文仍有相关规定。”
此次举措紧随本届政府弱化“差别影响”法律概念下案件处理优先级的行动之后。差别影响理论基于这样一种假设:职场中的种族失衡是歧视导致的。
取消数据收集将完成传统基金会《2025计划》列出的目标之一,该计划是特朗普第二届政府的施政蓝图,其中提到了该数据可被用于支持歧视指控。
“按种族或族裔对员工进行粗略分类,无法认识到美国劳动力的多样性,还会将个人强行归入无法完全反映其种族和族裔背景的类别中,”《2025计划》作者乔纳森·贝里写道,他目前担任劳工部副总法律顾问。
贝里曾在4月初与特朗普任命的平等就业机会委员会主席安德里亚·卢卡斯共同出席一场网络研讨会,两人在会上阐述了本届政府在就业法律案件中的优先事项。卢卡斯去年12月曾发布一则引发热议的公开呼吁,称认为自己遭受歧视的白人男性可联系该委员会。她在一场就业律师论坛上表示,差别影响案件在该机构的工作总量中占比很小,平等就业机会委员会将继续聚焦于故意歧视行为。
“总统希望他的执法机构专注于我认为最违背道德的歧视类型,即故意歧视,而非无意歧视,至少是《民权法案》第七篇中差别影响理论所定义的无意歧视,”卢卡斯说道。
卢卡斯还提到了她所在的平等就业机会委员会起诉一家公司的女性静修活动排除男性参与的案件。
前平等就业机会委员会主席珍妮·杨表示,该数据此前曾帮助该执法机构识别可能存在歧视的模式,例如劳动力市场中的合格人才未在企业员工队伍中得到充分代表的情况。
杨和其他往届平等就业机会委员会领导人于周五发表声明,反对这项拟议的变更,并认为这将削弱联邦政府执行反歧视法律的能力。
“EEO-1数据极具价值,尤其是在招聘和晋升调查方面,”杨说道,“这一举措将消除我们了解问题所在的重要证据和事实。”
民权与就业律师克里斯汀·韦伯表示,取消企业报告要求的决定与平等就业机会委员会近期的其他工作相悖,该委员会此前一直在针对性地收集律师事务所的数据。平等就业机会委员会最近还在一场法庭诉讼中胜诉,得以在针对宾夕法尼亚大学反犹太主义的调查中索要该校犹太学生的相关信息。
“他们完全清楚平等就业机会委员会需要此类数据来履行反歧视法律的执法职责,”韦伯说道,“因为如果你想证明行为模式、决策模式,数据是必不可少的要素。”
朱利安·马克为本报道撰稿。
Federal civil rights watchdog wants to stop tracking data on race and sex
2026-05-15T21:28:09.409Z / The Washington Post
Federal civil rights watchdog wants to stop tracking data on race and sex
The EEOC has proposed ending a civil-rights-era program collecting demographic information from private companies.
May 15, 2026 at 5:28 p.m. EDT Yesterday at 5:28 p.m. EDT
(David Zalubowski/AP)
By Meryl Kornfield
The top federal agency for promoting diversity across society is proposing pulling back on its primary initiative to collect demographic data, one that it has conducted for decades.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is considering no longer collecting demographic information including race, sex and national origin from major American companies, departing from a practice that began during the civil rights era of the 1960s and was critical to the agency’s efforts to root out workplace discrimination. The EEOC also wants to ax data reporting rules for apprenticeship programs, unions, state and local governments, and schools, as well as reporting requirements in other civil rights laws that protect workers, including those who are pregnant or have disabilities.
The EEOC notified the White House on Thursday of its proposal, which will be published publicly after a review. It’s not clear what impact the proposal could have on this year’s data collection. The move would align with the administration’s efforts to end diversity programs and deprioritize a key subset of discrimination cases.
The data collection has taken place for 60 years under a plank of the Civil Rights Act called Title VII. The federal EEO-1 report provides demographic and job category data collected from companies with 100 or more employees, and certain federal contractors. The collection typically begins in May. Under the administration of President Joe Biden, the EEOC sued employers that had allegedly not complied with the federal reporting requirements.
The move to reconsider the data collection was not a surprise to those who follow the EEOC’s work. A five-year contract for the collection expired last year and was not renewed, according to federal contracting data. Some attorneys representing employers have advised their clients that they should collect the data as they usually do to comply with the law.
“Employers should continue to collect the information as a best practice, because Title VII obligations are not going away and disparate impact is not going away,” said Christy Kiely, a partner at the Seyfarth Shaw law firm. “It’s been deprioritized, but it’s still in the statute.”
The move follows the administration’s deprioritization of cases under a legal concept called “disparate impact,” which is based on the assumption that racial imbalances in the workplace are a result of discrimination.
The elimination of data collection would fulfill one of the goals listed in the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, the blueprint of the second Trump administration, which outlined how the data could be used to support discrimination allegations.
“Crudely categorizing employees by race or ethnicity fails to recognize the diversity of the American workforce and forces individuals into categories that do not fully reflect their racial and ethnic heritage,” wrote Project 2025 author Jonathan Berry, who is now solicitor for the Department of Labor.
Berry appeared alongside Trump-appointed EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas in a webinar in early April where the two laid out the administration’s priorities in employment law cases. Lucas — who issued a viral public appeal in December for White men who think they have experienced discrimination to contact her agency — told an audience of employment lawyers that disparate-impact cases made up a minority of the agency’s workload and the EEOC would continue to focus on intentional discrimination.
The president“wants his enforcement agencies to be focused on I think the most morally offensive type of discrimination, which is intentional discrimination, not inadvertent discrimination, at least as defined by disparate impact in Title VII,” Lucas said.
Lucas highlighted a case her EEOC has brought against a company’s women’s retreat that excluded a man from participating.
Jenny Yang, a former EEOC chair, said the data has previously helped show the enforcement agency where patterns of discrimination might exist, such as instances where qualified individuals in the labor pool are not fully represented in companies’ workforces.
Yang and other previous EEOC leaders issued a statement Friday opposing the proposed change and arguing that it would weaken the federal government’s ability to enforce antidiscrimination laws.
“The EEO-1 data was incredibly valuable, particularly in hiring and promotion investigations,” Yang said. “It’s eliminating important evidence and facts to understand where problems exist.”
Christine Webber, a civil rights and employment lawyer, said a decision to rescind reporting requirements for companies would run counter to the EEOC’s other efforts to collect data from law firms that the administration has targeted. The EEOC also recently won a court battle over requesting information about Jewish people at the University of Pennsylvania as part of an investigation into antisemitism.
“They know perfectly well that the EEOC needs data like that to do its job of enforcing the antidiscrimination laws,” Webber said. “Because if you want to show a pattern of conduct, a pattern of decision-making, data is an essential ingredient.”
Julian Mark contributed to this report.
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