News Release
NCD
#05–489
May 10, 2005
Contact: Mark S. Quigley
202-272-2004
202-272-2074 TTY
mquigley@ncd.gov
For EEOC
Charles
Robbins
202-663-4900
David Grinberg
202-663-4921
202-663-4494 TTY
For DOJ
CRT
202-514-2008
202-514-1888 TTY
Federal Agencies Jointly Issue Publications on
Making EEO Mediation Accessible to People with Disabilities
WASHINGTON--The U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the National Council on Disability
(NCD), and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) today jointly
released two new publications addressing how to ensure that mediation
of equal employment opportunity disputes is accessible to people
with disabilities. The publications are available on all three
agencies’ Web
sites at http://www.ncd.govwww.eeoc.gov, www.ncd.gov, and www.ada.gov.
“More than ever, employers and employees are turning to
mediation and other forms of alternative dispute resolution to
resolve EEO disputes,” said EEOC Chair Cari M. Dominguez,
who has made expansion of voluntary mediation a top priority. “These
new materials will help ensure that the benefits of mediation can
be available to everyone.”
The documents, entitled Questions and Answers for Mediation Providers:
Mediation and the Americans with Disabilities Act and Questions
and Answers for Parties to Mediation: Mediation and the Americans
with Disabilities Act, address the obligations of all private and
public sector mediation providers, including employers that offer
their employees mediation as a benefit of employment. The documents
are written in a question-and-answer format and discuss topics
such as:
- types of reasonable accommodations that may be necessary
to make mediation accessible to people with disabilities;
- best practices for ensuring that mediation is accessible;
- the confidentiality of medical information
disclosed during mediation; and,
- recommended types of ADA training
for mediators
“These documents will enhance the use of mediation
by people with disabilities to resolve employment disputes and
will highlight the importance of reasonable accommodation in the
alternative dispute resolution process,” according to NCD Chairperson Lex Frieden. “NCD
is pleased to collaborate with EEOC and DOJ to use our experience
and expertise in providing technical assistance on disability issues
in the mediation of employment discrimination disputes.”
Both EEOC and DOJ have successfully used mediation
to further their respective missions and to enhance customer
service. More than 35,000 charges of discrimination have been
resolved through EEOC’s private sector mediation program—the largest
workplace mediation program of its kind in the country—since
it was launched in 1999. In Fiscal Year 2004, EEOC achieved a record
8,086 successful resolutions through the agency’s voluntary
national mediation program, resulting in $112 million in monetary
benefits in addition to non-monetary benefits, such as changes
in employer policies and reasonable accommodations for employees.
Additionally, EEOC and more than 670 employers have agreed to refer
charges filed to mediation as an alternative to traditional investigation
with an option to continue with investigation if mediation does
not resolve the charge. In some cases, EEOC will also refer charges
back to participating employers’ internal alternative dispute
resolution (ADR) programs. In federal sector employment, EEOC has
enhanced the use of ADR by providing agencies with technical assistance
in establishing their own programs and by expanding a Federal Sector
ADR Web page at www.eeoc.gov.
DOJ, through a contract with the Key Bridge Foundation, refers
for mediation complaints it receives under Title II and Title III
of the ADA. An increasing number of people with disabilities and
disability rights organizations are specifically requesting that
DOJ refer their complaints to mediation. Under the contract with
Key Bridge, more than 400 professional mediators, fully trained
in the legal requirements of the ADA, are available nationwide
to mediate these cases. Over 75 percent of the cases in which mediation
has been completed, have been successfully resolved.
“Mediation is an important and effective option for achieving
positive resolutions of ADA complaints,” said R. Alexander
Acosta, Assistant Attorney General for DOJ’s Civil Rights
Division. “Our mediation program continues to be enormously
successful in producing tangible benefits for the participants.”
EEOC enforces Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
which prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities
by private and state and local government employers, and Section
501 of the Rehabilitation Act, which prohibits discrimination against
individuals with disabilities who are federal employees and applicants
for federal employment. EEOC also enforces Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination on
the basis of race, sex, national origin, color, and religion; the
Age Discrimination in Employment Act, which prohibits discrimination
against individuals age 40 and older; and the Equal Pay Act. While
EEOC may investigate and resolve charges under the ADA and Title
VII against state and local government employers, it must refer
litigation of such charges to DOJ.
NCD is an independent federal
agency making recommendations to the President and Congress to
enhance the quality of life for all Americans with disabilities
and their families.
NCD is composed of 15 members appointed by the President and confirmed
by the U.S. Senate. Its purpose is to promote policies, programs,
practices, and procedures that guarantee equal opportunity for
all individuals with disabilities, regardless of the nature or
severity of the disability; and to empower individuals with disabilities
to achieve economic self-sufficiency, independent living, and inclusion
and integration into all aspects of society.
The Civil Rights Division of DOJ is responsible
for litigating cases under Title I of the ADA and Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, against state and local government
employers, and for enforcing Titles II and III of the ADA. Title
II prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability with respect
to all programs and activities carried on by state and local
governments; Title III prohibits discrimination by places of
public accommodation. The Civil Rights Division also coordinates
the Federal Government’s
enforcement of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, which prohibits
discrimination on the basis of disability with respect to federally-funded
and federally-conducted programs and activities.
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