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Executive Order 11375

Executive Order 11375, signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson on October 13, 1967, banned discrimination on the basis of sex in hiring and employment in both the United States federal workforce and on the part of government contractors.

Executive Order 11375
Amending Executive Order No. 11246, Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity
President Johnson in Oval Office
TypeExecutive order
Executive Order number11375
Signed byLyndon B. Johnson on October 13, 1967
Summary
Banned discrimination on the basis of sex in hiring and employment in both the United States federal workforce and on the part of government contractors

Background edit

During the legislative effort to enact the Civil Rights Act of 1964, "sex" was not among the categories the bill initially covered. In the House of Representatives, Southern opponents of the legislation, led by Reprensentative Howard Smith of Virginia, proposed adding "sex" to the original list (race, color, religion, or national origin). Smith had supported women's rights for decades, but others thought that the amendment would make the bill unacceptable its more moderate supporters and then lead to its defeat. Civil rights groups and even the American Association of University Women opposed the addition, but a coalition of conservative opponents of civil rights legislation and liberal civil rights advocates voted to include "sex." The bill thus eventually passed with the word.

Authorities charged with responsibility for enforcing the Civil Rights Act focused on racial discrimination and belittled sex-based discrimination. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), charged with enforcing the 1964 act, even decided in 1965 that segregated job advertising, "Help Wanted Male" and "Help Wanted Female," was permissible because it served "the convenience of readers".[1] Advocates frustrated with the acceptance of sex bias for women's rights founded the National Organization for Women (NOW) in June 1966.[2]

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., the head of the EEOC, counseled patience and pointed out that because of the way the word "sex" had been inserted into the legislation, the EEOC had no legislative history or testimony before Congressional committees to guide it through "a number of very serious problems of interpretation, implementation and jurisdiction."[3] NOW and other women's advocacy groups and the President's Citizens Advisory Group on the Status of Women urged President Lyndon Johnson to bring government policy with respect to sex discrimination into line with other forms of bias prevention. Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson lent support as well.[4][5]

On the day that Johnson signed Executive Order 11375, John W. Macy. Jr., chairman of the Civil Service Commission, noted that women generated about a third of the complaints his agency received about unfair employment practices, although they represented a modest proportion of the federal workforce. He said women held 658 of the 23,000 jobs paying $18,000 annually, 74 of the 5,000 paying $20,000, 41 of the 2,300 paying $22,000, and 36 of the 17,000 paying $25,000.[5]

Provisions edit

This Executive Order added the category "sex" to the anti-discrimination provisions covered in Johnson's earlier Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965, which addressed discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, or national origin. It went far beyond earlier civil rights legislation. Unlike the Equal Pay Act of 1963, it applied to those working in administrative, executive, and professional positions. Unlike the Civil Rights Act's Title VII, it did not exclude teaching personnel.[6]

The order provided that the Civil Service Commission (CSC) would be able to hear complaints of sex-based discrimination from employees of the federal government one month after the order was issued. As of one year after its issuance, it authorized the Bureau of Labor to investigate and address similar complaints from those employed by government contractors.[5]

Enforcement edit

Lobbying of members of Congress on the part of women's groups, notably the Women's Equity Action League (WEAL), prompted a variety of government agencies to undertake their enforcement obligations.[4]

When the Labor Department issued details rules as provided for in this Executive Order on June 9, 1970, it defined contractors as any business enterprise with a government contract valued at $50,000 or more and 50 or more employees. Its Office of Federal Contract Compliance (OFCC) would oversee enforcement.[7] Labor's rules included a ban on advertising job openings under the headings "male" and "female" unless the applicant's sex was "a bona fide job qualification" and it banned restricting specific jobs or limiting seniority on the basis of sex. The rules had been recommended by the President's Task Force on Women's Rights and Responsibilities in December 1969.[8]

Despite the primary role given to Labor in the Executive Order, each agency of the federal government that entered into contracts had responsibility for compliance with OFCC regulations on the part of those who held its contracts. Labor designated the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare as the compliance agency for institutions of higher learning. After HEW gathered statistics and discovered disparities in men's and women's wages and patterns of promotion in higher education, it established a special division devoted to investigating complaints against colleges and universities, the Office of Civil Rights[4][9] and was assigning field staff as early as July 1968.[7] Discrimination in higher education was sufficiently highlighted that Congress addressed it in the Education Amendments of 1972, the landmark legislation known as Title IX.

Though OFCC regulations required the creation of "goals and timetables" for affirmative actions to remedy past discriminatory employment practices, government officials hesitated to apply them to sex as they did to race. Secretary of Labor James Hodgson told a group of ten advocates for women on July 25, 1970 that "employment problems of women are different".[10] He allowed that sex-based discrimination was "subtle and more pervasive than against any other minority group.[11] In response, women's groups mounted demonstrations in more than a dozen cities.[10] On July 31, Hodgson attempted to clarify his remarks, endorsing in principle the idea of "goals and timetables" for relieving sex discrimination, but saying that the procedures for establishing them with respect to other forms of discrimination were "not sufficient to meet the more difficult and elusive problem of sex discrimination."[12] He explained that: "The work force pattern of women and racial minorities differs in significant respects. Many women do not seek employment. Practically all adult males do. Many occupations sought after by all racial groups have not been sought by women in significant numbers."[11] He promised "immediate consultations" within two weeks with interested parties.[11] Advisory committees were set to meet in May 1971.[12]

Under the authority and direction of this Executive Order, the Civil Service Commission established the Federal Women's Program to implement programs to ensure women's employment and advancement in the federal workforce.[13]

This Executive Order provided the basis for the federal government's investigation of the hiring practices than 2,000 colleges and universities, following complaints in the spring of 1970 against 150 institutions by the WEAL and NOW. A government official said about a dozen had been denied funds for failing to comply with requests for employment records and that all but three eventually complied. Dr. Bernice Sandler of the Equity Action League commented: "After all, there are no Federal laws dealing with sex discrimination. That's why we are forcing the issue by filing complaints under the terms of the executive order." She said her organization had filed complaints against the California state system, Columbia University and others, and that investigations were active at Harvard University, Loyola of Chicago, George Washington University, and others.[9][14] She explained that she had come upon the Executive Order accidentally:[15]

I was reading the 1965 Executive order and happened to see an asterisk. Since I am an academic person, I read the footnote and saw that the order was amended in 1968 [sic] to include women. A eureka-like alarm went off in my head and within months we filed charges against the University of Maryland.

By the late 1970s, the Carter administration was using the rules established under Executive Order 11375 against large businesses like Uniroyal, which had sex-segregated manufacturing facilities. Most companies went to court to obstruct the government's attempts to monitor and regulate their hiring practices and decisions. Only General Dynamics and United Airlines negotiated settlements.[16]

Notes edit

  1. ^ New York Times: John Herbers, "Help Wanted: Picking the Sex for the Job," September 28, 1965, accessed March 25, 2012
  2. ^ "The Founding of NOW 2012-03-22 at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 25, 2012
  3. ^ New York Times: Edith Evans Asbury, "Protest Proposed on Women's Jobs," October 13, 1965, accessed March 25, 2012
  4. ^ a b c Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations, The Evolution of a Problematic Partnership: The Feds and Higher Ed (The Federal Role in the Federal System: The Dynamics of Growth, vol. 6, 1981), 41-2, available online, accessed March 24, 2012
  5. ^ a b c New York Times: Max Frankel, "Johnson Signs Order to Protect Women in U.S. Jobs from Bias," October 14, 1967, accessed March 24, 2012
  6. ^ Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations, The Evolution of a Problematic Partnership: The Feds and Higher Ed (The Federal Role in the Federal System: The Dynamics of Growth, vol. 6, 1981), 46n47, available online, accessed March 25, 2012
  7. ^ a b Pauli Murray, "Economic and Educational Inequality Based on Sex: An Overview," Valparaiso University Law Review, vol. 5, no. 2 (1971), 237-280, 272
  8. ^ New York Times: Robert B. Semple, Jr., "Tighter Rules on Job Prejudice Against Women Issued by U.S.," June 10, 1970, accessed March 24, 2012
  9. ^ a b New York Times: Richard D. Lyons, "Women Forcing Colleges To Give Job Data to U.S.," November 8, 1970, accessed March 24, 2012
  10. ^ a b Murray, "Economic and Educational Inequality," 274
  11. ^ a b c New York Times: "Federal Contracts to Set Job Equality for Women," August 1, 1970, accessed March 25, 2012
  12. ^ a b Murray "Economic and Educational Inequality," 275
  13. ^ Helene S. Markoff, "The Federal Women's Program," Public Administration Review, vol. 32, no. 2 (March–April, 1972), 145
  14. ^ Murray, "Economic and Educational Inequality," 272-3
  15. ^ New York Times: Nancy Hicks, "Women on College Faculties are Pressing for Equal Pay and Better Positions in Academic Hierarchy," November 21, 1971, accessed March 24, 2012
  16. ^ New York Times: Janet Battaile, "Business Resisting U.S. on Job-Bias Issue," May 26, 1978, accessed March 24, 2012

Sources edit

  • Patricia G. Zelman, Women, Work, and National Policy: The Kennedy-Johnson Years (Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press, 1982)

External links edit

executive, order, 11375, signed, president, lyndon, johnson, october, 1967, banned, discrimination, basis, hiring, employment, both, united, states, federal, workforce, part, government, contractors, amending, executive, order, 11246, relating, equal, employme. Executive Order 11375 signed by President Lyndon B Johnson on October 13 1967 banned discrimination on the basis of sex in hiring and employment in both the United States federal workforce and on the part of government contractors Executive Order 11375Amending Executive Order No 11246 Relating to Equal Employment OpportunityPresident Johnson in Oval OfficeTypeExecutive orderExecutive Order number11375Signed byLyndon B Johnson on October 13 1967SummaryBanned discrimination on the basis of sex in hiring and employment in both the United States federal workforce and on the part of government contractors Contents 1 Background 2 Provisions 3 Enforcement 4 Notes 5 Sources 6 External linksBackground editDuring the legislative effort to enact the Civil Rights Act of 1964 sex was not among the categories the bill initially covered In the House of Representatives Southern opponents of the legislation led by Reprensentative Howard Smith of Virginia proposed adding sex to the original list race color religion or national origin Smith had supported women s rights for decades but others thought that the amendment would make the bill unacceptable its more moderate supporters and then lead to its defeat Civil rights groups and even the American Association of University Women opposed the addition but a coalition of conservative opponents of civil rights legislation and liberal civil rights advocates voted to include sex The bill thus eventually passed with the word Authorities charged with responsibility for enforcing the Civil Rights Act focused on racial discrimination and belittled sex based discrimination The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission EEOC charged with enforcing the 1964 act even decided in 1965 that segregated job advertising Help Wanted Male and Help Wanted Female was permissible because it served the convenience of readers 1 Advocates frustrated with the acceptance of sex bias for women s rights founded the National Organization for Women NOW in June 1966 2 Franklin D Roosevelt Jr the head of the EEOC counseled patience and pointed out that because of the way the word sex had been inserted into the legislation the EEOC had no legislative history or testimony before Congressional committees to guide it through a number of very serious problems of interpretation implementation and jurisdiction 3 NOW and other women s advocacy groups and the President s Citizens Advisory Group on the Status of Women urged President Lyndon Johnson to bring government policy with respect to sex discrimination into line with other forms of bias prevention Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson lent support as well 4 5 On the day that Johnson signed Executive Order 11375 John W Macy Jr chairman of the Civil Service Commission noted that women generated about a third of the complaints his agency received about unfair employment practices although they represented a modest proportion of the federal workforce He said women held 658 of the 23 000 jobs paying 18 000 annually 74 of the 5 000 paying 20 000 41 of the 2 300 paying 22 000 and 36 of the 17 000 paying 25 000 5 Provisions editThis Executive Order added the category sex to the anti discrimination provisions covered in Johnson s earlier Executive Order 11246 of September 24 1965 which addressed discrimination on the basis of race color religion or national origin It went far beyond earlier civil rights legislation Unlike the Equal Pay Act of 1963 it applied to those working in administrative executive and professional positions Unlike the Civil Rights Act s Title VII it did not exclude teaching personnel 6 The order provided that the Civil Service Commission CSC would be able to hear complaints of sex based discrimination from employees of the federal government one month after the order was issued As of one year after its issuance it authorized the Bureau of Labor to investigate and address similar complaints from those employed by government contractors 5 Enforcement editLobbying of members of Congress on the part of women s groups notably the Women s Equity Action League WEAL prompted a variety of government agencies to undertake their enforcement obligations 4 When the Labor Department issued details rules as provided for in this Executive Order on June 9 1970 it defined contractors as any business enterprise with a government contract valued at 50 000 or more and 50 or more employees Its Office of Federal Contract Compliance OFCC would oversee enforcement 7 Labor s rules included a ban on advertising job openings under the headings male and female unless the applicant s sex was a bona fide job qualification and it banned restricting specific jobs or limiting seniority on the basis of sex The rules had been recommended by the President s Task Force on Women s Rights and Responsibilities in December 1969 8 Despite the primary role given to Labor in the Executive Order each agency of the federal government that entered into contracts had responsibility for compliance with OFCC regulations on the part of those who held its contracts Labor designated the Department of Health Education and Welfare as the compliance agency for institutions of higher learning After HEW gathered statistics and discovered disparities in men s and women s wages and patterns of promotion in higher education it established a special division devoted to investigating complaints against colleges and universities the Office of Civil Rights 4 9 and was assigning field staff as early as July 1968 7 Discrimination in higher education was sufficiently highlighted that Congress addressed it in the Education Amendments of 1972 the landmark legislation known as Title IX Though OFCC regulations required the creation of goals and timetables for affirmative actions to remedy past discriminatory employment practices government officials hesitated to apply them to sex as they did to race Secretary of Labor James Hodgson told a group of ten advocates for women on July 25 1970 that employment problems of women are different 10 He allowed that sex based discrimination was subtle and more pervasive than against any other minority group 11 In response women s groups mounted demonstrations in more than a dozen cities 10 On July 31 Hodgson attempted to clarify his remarks endorsing in principle the idea of goals and timetables for relieving sex discrimination but saying that the procedures for establishing them with respect to other forms of discrimination were not sufficient to meet the more difficult and elusive problem of sex discrimination 12 He explained that The work force pattern of women and racial minorities differs in significant respects Many women do not seek employment Practically all adult males do Many occupations sought after by all racial groups have not been sought by women in significant numbers 11 He promised immediate consultations within two weeks with interested parties 11 Advisory committees were set to meet in May 1971 12 Under the authority and direction of this Executive Order the Civil Service Commission established the Federal Women s Program to implement programs to ensure women s employment and advancement in the federal workforce 13 This Executive Order provided the basis for the federal government s investigation of the hiring practices than 2 000 colleges and universities following complaints in the spring of 1970 against 150 institutions by the WEAL and NOW A government official said about a dozen had been denied funds for failing to comply with requests for employment records and that all but three eventually complied Dr Bernice Sandler of the Equity Action League commented After all there are no Federal laws dealing with sex discrimination That s why we are forcing the issue by filing complaints under the terms of the executive order She said her organization had filed complaints against the California state system Columbia University and others and that investigations were active at Harvard University Loyola of Chicago George Washington University and others 9 14 She explained that she had come upon the Executive Order accidentally 15 I was reading the 1965 Executive order and happened to see an asterisk Since I am an academic person I read the footnote and saw that the order was amended in 1968 sic to include women A eureka like alarm went off in my head and within months we filed charges against the University of Maryland By the late 1970s the Carter administration was using the rules established under Executive Order 11375 against large businesses like Uniroyal which had sex segregated manufacturing facilities Most companies went to court to obstruct the government s attempts to monitor and regulate their hiring practices and decisions Only General Dynamics and United Airlines negotiated settlements 16 Notes edit New York Times John Herbers Help Wanted Picking the Sex for the Job September 28 1965 accessed March 25 2012 The Founding of NOW Archived 2012 03 22 at the Wayback Machine accessed March 25 2012 New York Times Edith Evans Asbury Protest Proposed on Women s Jobs October 13 1965 accessed March 25 2012 a b c Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations The Evolution of a Problematic Partnership The Feds and Higher Ed The Federal Role in the Federal System The Dynamics of Growth vol 6 1981 41 2 available online accessed March 24 2012 a b c New York Times Max Frankel Johnson Signs Order to Protect Women in U S Jobs from Bias October 14 1967 accessed March 24 2012 Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations The Evolution of a Problematic Partnership The Feds and Higher Ed The Federal Role in the Federal System The Dynamics of Growth vol 6 1981 46n47 available online accessed March 25 2012 a b Pauli Murray Economic and Educational Inequality Based on Sex An Overview Valparaiso University Law Review vol 5 no 2 1971 237 280 272 New York Times Robert B Semple Jr Tighter Rules on Job Prejudice Against Women Issued by U S June 10 1970 accessed March 24 2012 a b New York Times Richard D Lyons Women Forcing Colleges To Give Job Data to U S November 8 1970 accessed March 24 2012 a b Murray Economic and Educational Inequality 274 a b c New York Times Federal Contracts to Set Job Equality for Women August 1 1970 accessed March 25 2012 a b Murray Economic and Educational Inequality 275 Helene S Markoff The Federal Women s Program Public Administration Review vol 32 no 2 March April 1972 145 Murray Economic and Educational Inequality 272 3 New York Times Nancy Hicks Women on College Faculties are Pressing for Equal Pay and Better Positions in Academic Hierarchy November 21 1971 accessed March 24 2012 New York Times Janet Battaile Business Resisting U S on Job Bias Issue May 26 1978 accessed March 24 2012Sources editPatricia G Zelman Women Work and National Policy The Kennedy Johnson Years Ann Arbor Michigan UMI Research Press 1982 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Executive Order 11375 Executive Order 11375 from the U S National Archives and Records Administration website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Executive Order 11375 amp oldid 1033479329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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