Yup...right on schedule

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 14, 2006 - 7:08am.
Critics say the agency was weakened by a reorganization last year that downsized several district offices, created offices in Las Vegas and Mobile, Ala., and redeployed some staff members, including managers, to enforcement, litigation, mediation and customer service positions. Inzeo responded by saying the agency is spending money on frontline staff members rather than on more supervisors and managers.

Actually, critics say this is a continuation of a political strategy begun under Ronald Reagan. But I'm just a critic, what would I know?

EEOC Is Hobbled, Groups Contend
Case Backlog Grows as Its Staff Is Slashed, Critics Say
By Christopher Lee
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 14, 2006; A21

With a shrinking workforce and a flagging budget, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is falling behind in enforcing federal civil rights laws in the workplace, labor union officials and civil rights advocates said yesterday.

The EEOC is expected to have a backlog of 47,516 charges of employment discrimination next fiscal year, up from an estimated 39,061 this year and 33,562 in 2005, say officials with the American Federation of Government Employees, citing federal figures. The agency logged 75,428 complaints in 2005 and more than 79,000 the previous year.

At the same time, President Bush's 2007 budget request for the agency is $323 million, $4 million less than it received this budget year. The agency's full-time staff, which numbers 2,343 employees, has shrunk by more than 19 percent since 2001, according to the Office of Personnel Management. A partial hiring freeze has kept the agency from filling many openings.

"The EEOC is in a state of crisis and is systematically being weakened from within to justify its elimination," Andrea E. Brooks, a national vice president for the government employees federation, said in a statement.

Nicholas M. Inzeo, director of the EEOC's Office of Field Programs, acknowledged that funding has been tight and that the agency has had to trim its staff as Bush and Congress have directed more money to national defense and homeland security.

"These are tight times for all agencies. It means that the belt gets tighter, and we understand that," Inzeo said. "We believe very strongly in what we do. And with the resources that we have, we can do a lot. We try to make every penny count."

 

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Submitted by GDAWG on June 14, 2006 - 7:23am.

Just plain BAD folks!

Submitted by Ourstorian on June 16, 2006 - 10:00am.

Tomass Clarence began the job of sabotaging the agency when he was chairboy of the EEOC (1982-1990). That, and bootlicking, is how he got his nominations from G.H.W. Bush to the U.S. Court of Appeals (1990) and the White Supremacist Court (1991).