The importance of certifying compliance becomes evident.
The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs issued a new Corporate Scheduling Announcement List, identifying the contractors that will be slated for a compliance review in the future. The courtesy CSALs posted by the agency benefit contractors by providing notice that a Scheduling Letter is forthcoming. When a contractor receives a Scheduling Letter, it has only 30 days to submit its affirmative action plans and supporting information. That means time is getting the heads up – and taking advantage of it -- is essential.
According to the methodology released by the OFCCP, this CSAL includes contractors that did not certify compliance in the OFCCP’s Contractor Portal by December 1, 2022. The list includes 500 contractor locations.
Contractors should be mindful that the OFCCP has proposed significant changes to its Scheduling Letter & Itemized Listing – the documents that outline the information and data that must be submitted to the agency during a compliance review. The deadline to comment on this proposal ends today, and the OFCCP is likely to need several months to review the comments before providing its final version to the Office of Management and Budget for approval.
Contractors on this CSAL will not receive their Scheduling Letters before any changes to the Scheduling Letter & Itemized Listing go into effect. If any of the OFCCP’s proposed changes are adopted, the new version will undoubtedly be more burdensome than the current requirements.
For an in-depth discussion on the proposed changes to the Scheduling Letter & Itemized Listing, please join me and colleagues from the National Industry Liaison Group’s Advisory Council for a webinar on January 26.
- Partner
Cara co-chairs Constangy’s practice groups relating to EEO/Contractor Compliance, Reporting, & Analytics and DEI Compliance. Cara advises employers on ways to avoid litigation and has defended employers in cases involving ...
EEO Compliance Dispatch delivers timely insights on equal employment opportunity laws, contractor compliance, workforce analytics, and evolving reporting obligations at the federal and state levels. From developments in pay equity and changing requirements in data reporting, to DEI risk mitigation, Title VII compliance, and shifts in enforcement of Section 503 & VEVRAA, this blog is designed to keep employers informed and ahead of the curve.
Whether you’re a federal contractor navigating audits, an HR professional tackling pay transparency, or in-house counsel tracking state and local reporting requirements, our updates, legal analysis, and compliance strategies are tailored to help you manage risk and support a more inclusive workplace.
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