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2018 - How to Comply with the New EEO-1 Reporting Changes

Date2018-02-15

Deadline2018-02-15

VenueAurora, USA - United States USA - United States

KeywordsEeo compliance; Eeo laws; Eeo laws regulations

Websitehttp://bit.ly/2Bj7t3N

Topics/Call fo Papers

OVERVIEW
On August 29, 2017, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a memorandum informing the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) of OMB's decision to initiate a review and immediate stay of the EEOC's collection of aggregate W-2 pay and hours-worked data on the EEO-1 report. At the same time, OMB expressly permitted the EEOC to continue collecting EEO-1 data identifying the race, ethnicity, and sex of workers, by job categories.
As a result of the stay on the 2017 EEO-1 reporting cycle, the EEO-1 will not collect data about pay and hours worked from employers. But, for the 2017 EEO-1 reporting cycle, the EEO-1 will collect data on the race, ethnicity, and sex of workers, by job category, from private employers with 100 employees or more and federal contractors with 50 employees or more and $50,000 in contract(s).
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
In order for companies to be in compliance with Federal reporting regulations all employers in the private sector with 100 or more employees, and some federal contractors with 50 or more employees, must annually file the EEO-1 Report, with the Joint Reporting Committee (a joint committee consisting of the EEOC and the OFCCP) by September 30. The current EEO-1 Report requires covered private sector employers to provide workforce profiles by race, ethnicity, sex, and job category. This webinar will help employers to avoid costly and potentially damaging litigation.
AREAS COVERED
• Who must file EEO-1 Report: Step-by-step basics of filing the form
• Understand the race, ethnicity, job categories
• How to classify managers and supervisors
• Practical strategies for complying with confidentiality requirements
• Practical suggestions on how to legally survey and classify your employees
• What federal contractors can't ignore
• Collecting employee information when your organization has multiple employment locations
• EEOC's and OFCCP's change in enforcement: What employers need to be aware of?
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
• Who must file EEO-1 Report
• Step-by-step basics of filing the form
• Understand the race, ethnicity, job categories
• Practical strategies for complying with confidentiality requirements
• Practical suggestions on how to legally survey and classify your employees
• What federal contractors can't ignore
• Which methods of collecting data from your workers are the most affordable and legally compliant
• Collecting employee information when your organization has multiple employment locations
• EEOC's and OFCCP's change in enforcement: What employers need to be aware of
WHO WILL BENEFIT
• All employers in the private sector with 100 or more employees
• Federal contractors with 50 or more employees,
• HR professionals
• Financial Officers
• In-House Counsel
• Affirmative Action/EEO Officers
• Federal Contractors
For more detail please click on this below link:
https://goo.gl/UTM8mn
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Last modified: 2018-01-22 21:41:50