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Departments — November/December 2006

New Regulations — Internet Job Applications for Contractors

The new regs define 'Internet applicant' and change record-keeping rules for federal contractors who accept Internet job applications

D. Albert Brannen
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Jennifer B. Sandberg
ATTORNEY AT LAW

D. Albert Brannen and Jennifer B. Sandberg are attorneys at Atlanta-based Fisher & Phillips LLP, a nationwide firm representing employees in labor and employment law, employee benefits and business immigration matters.
Website: www.laborlawyers.com

Federal contractors subject to affirmative-action requirements and to whom potential job applicants send employment applications or résumés electronically need to know about some new regulations by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs that took effect earlier this year.

OFCCP's new regs for federal contractors specifically define "Internet applicants" (see related sidebar) and amend record-keeping rules for Internet-based job applications.

New Record-keeping

New recordkeeping rules for internal databases require contractors to keep:

> each résumé added to the database and the date when it was added,

> the position for which each search of the database was made,

> the substance of the search criteria used for all searches and

> the date of all searches.

For external databases, contractors must keep:

> the job position for which each search of the database was made,

> the substance of search criteria used for all searches,

> the date of all searches, and

> the résumés of job seekers who met the basic qualifications of the position and who were considered by the contractor for the job.

Contractors with more than 150 employees and government contracts of at least $150,000 must maintain these employment records for at least two years from the date when the record was created or the personnel action was taken, whichever occurred later.

Contractors with less than 150 employees or no government contracts of more than $150,000 must keep the records for one year.

Reevaluating Processes

To meet these new regs, contractors should re-evaluate their existing recruitment and selection processes, including:

> how basic qualifications for positions are established, before they begin recruiting for those jobs,

> how and when in the process to solicit the required demographic information,

> how to evaluate expressions of interest for the basic qualifications,

> how to structure and conduct job searches when using the internal or external databases and

> how to store the required documentation.

Here's how contractors an ease the burden of these new regulations:

> establish and strictly follow a protocol for accepting applications or expressions of interest for a particular position,

> set the basic job qualifications narrowly,

> use data management techniques, such as random sampling or absolute numerical limits, to reduce the number of individuals who meet the basic qualifications that the employer must consider.

For example, the contractor may decide to review only the first 50 résumés based on some neutral ordering of that first 50-alphabetically by name or by date of submission,

> exclude candidates where the expression of interest is lacking. For example, by setting salary requirements, contractors can exclude applicants whose demands are outside the desired range; or by defining the location or type of work, contractors can exclude applicants who indicate they would not be willing to work in such locations or do that type of work.

> exclude all unsolicited résumés.

Of course, these policies or procedures must be in place in advance and applied consistently to avoid running afoul of these regulations.

The new regs do not change the process for handling traditional job applicants: individuals who were at least minimally qualified for the job opening, applied and were considered for the job. This definition remains alive and well for any employer who does not accept an electronic expression of interest for a job, who posts the opening only in hard-copy form, like a newspaper ad, and accepts only hard-copy (non-Internet) applications.

NEW DEFINITIONS

"Internet applicants" are individuals:

> who express interest in employment through the Internet or related electronic data technologies (i.e., e-mail, résumé databases, job banks, electronic scanning technologies, applicant tracking systems, applicant screening services),

> whom the contractor considers for employment in a specific position,

> whose "expression of interest" in the job indicates that they possess the basic qualifications for the position and

> who at no point in the selection process before receiving an offer of employment remove themselves from further consideration or indicate they are no longer interested in the position.

An "expression of interest" in employment includes:

> all expressions of interest, regardless of the means or manner in which the expression of interest is made, if the contractor considers expressions of interest made through the Internet or related electronic data technologies in the recruiting or selection process for a particular position.

"Basic qualifications" are:

> qualifications that either the contractor advertises or posts on its Web site to potential applicants or for which the contractor establishes criteria in advance by making and maintaining a record of such qualifications for the position before considering any expression of interest for that particular position.


 

 
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