The
Obama administration should reconsider its proposal to impose oppressive new
regulations governing the employment of veterans and people with disabilities
on federal contractors, officials with the Associated General Contractors of America argued during a meeting with the administration. Association
officials said federal employment and compliance enforcement data indicate
there is no justification for the costly new rules.
“As the data makes clear, veterans and the disabled are already extremely well represented in the construction industry,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer, following a meeting today with the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). “These new rules offer a very costly fix for a problem that, according to the government’s own data, doesn’t appear to exist.”
“As the data makes clear, veterans and the disabled are already extremely well represented in the construction industry,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer, following a meeting today with the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). “These new rules offer a very costly fix for a problem that, according to the government’s own data, doesn’t appear to exist.”
The
proposed new rules allegedly address “higher unemployment” rates among veterans
and the disabled community, according to the Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP). Yet federal employment data shows that the annual
average unemployment rate for all veterans in 2012 was 7 percent, lower than
the 7.9 percent rate for nonveterans, while a higher share of employed veterans
than nonveterans work in the construction industry. In addition, people with
disabilities are as likely to be employed by construction firms as people without
disabilities according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Association
officials also noted that an analysis conducted by the
Center for Corporate Equality of OFCCP’s own enforcement data found almost no
indication that veterans or the disabled are being discriminated against by
federal contractors. The report, which was based on an exhaustive study of
federal compliance reviews and complaint investigations, found that only 0.02
percent of all federal contractors could be seriously suspected of having
discriminated against veterans or people with disabilities.
Given
the lack of data justifying the need for the rules, and the fact that they will
cost significantly more
than OFCCP officials suggest, Sandherr urged the Obama administration to
reconsider finalizing the new employment mandates for federal contractors. He
said the administration should instead re-open the record to determine whether
the rules are needed.
“The
fact federal officials are sitting down and listening to groups like ours is a
hopeful sign the administration is ready to ask tough questions about whether
there is any justification to move forward with these new mandates,” Sandherr
said. “So far, all available federal data makes it clear that there is simply
no need for these new regulations.”
No comments:
Post a Comment