By Cassie Alfheim, Evan Szarenski
On August 18, 2022, OFCCP released Directive 2022-01 Revision 1 - Advancing Pay Equity Through Compensation Analysis. The revised Directive comes on the heels of several months of discussion and debate regarding Directive 2022-01, entitled “Pay Equity Audits,” and its implications for producing attorney-client privileged materials to the agency.
As we outlined in our blog post in March when Directive 2022-01 was originally released, a directive is sub-regulatory and does not have the ability to impose new standards or requirements on the federal contractor or subcontractor community. In this light, the revised Directive simply outlines OFCCP’s procedures for evaluating contractors’ internal compensation analyses.
One of the most obvious revisions to the Directive is the name itself and the language used regarding compensation analyses. At this summer’s National Industry Liaison Group (NILG) conference, representatives from OFCCP backed away from the nomenclature of “Pay Equity Audits” and emphasized this term was not illustrative of any new obligations for federal contractors. Director Yang notes in an accompanying OFCCP blog post today:
“[A]lthough the original Directive used the phrase “pay equity audit” to refer to contractors’ obligations under 41 CFR 60-2.17(b)(3), this revised Directive instead uses the term “compensation analysis” to avoid any confusion regarding the nature of a contractor’s obligations.”
Further, Director Yang mentions three things federal contractors and subcontractors should know about the revised Directive:
While the initial directive gave some clarification regarding honoring privilege for pay analyses done outside of 60-2.17(b)(3), the federal contractor community remained anxious about producing comprehensive privileged pay analyses during an OFCCP compliance review. Today’s revised Directive outlines several options for federal contractors and subcontractors in this situation state:
If a federal contractor or subcontractor does not provide its full analysis, the data it does provide must demonstrate the following:
OFCCP also recommends (but does not require) providing the following information, as applicable, in an effort to help the agency understand how the contractor evaluates its existing compensation systems.
In addition to the above changes, the Directive also includes a new discussion about the action-oriented programs under 41 CFR 60-2.17(c). Arguably, this discussion attempts to place new obligations on federal contractors. Specifically, the directive states OFCCP will require the following documentation for every problem area identified under 2.17(b):
Note, however, that the data that OFCCP says it will require under 2.17(b) does not include the problem areas identified. Consequently, it appears that contractors can avoid the detailed reporting under 2.17(c) by not explicitly identifying any problem areas in the documentation submitted to OFCCP.
DCI will continue monitoring OFCCP’s implementation of this directive and will provide any updates.