Testimony of Ron Edwards, Director, Program Research and Surveys Division, Office of Research, Information and Planning, EEOC
Select Task Force Meeting of June 15, 2015 - Workplace Harassment: Examining the Scope of the Problem and Potential Solutions
(Note: This testimony has an
Ron Edwards PowerPoint Presentation , also available in an accessible HTML version.)IMS PROCESS
IMS was initially designed as a system for creating charge related documents and tracking these charges. It has also been utilized for research efforts both by EEOC and academic researchers. Basic data is entered during the initial receipt of the charge. This includes information about the allegations, the charging party and the Respondent. During this initial stage, efforts are also made to link the charge to EEO-1 reports in order to get a consistent identification of the employer. As the investigation proceeds, actions are added to enable the tracking of the charge.
Question: How many charges of harassment did we receive in the private sector over the past five years, broken down by year? (All harassment charges)
Question: How many charges of harassment did we receive on each basis: age, sex, national origin, race, disability, religion, other? Again, over the past five years and then broken by year
EEOC Harassment Charges FY 2010 - FY 2014
The number of harassment charges is provided in Table 1. The table counts charges filed under each category not allegations. A single charge may be counted under multiple categories. Table 1 also provides a breakout of harassment charges associated with a retaliation charge and the underlying statute. Underlying statute is particularly important for charges on the basis of disabilities. More detailed information about those types of harassment charges is also provided below.
FY 2010 | FY 2011 | FY 2012 | FY 2013 | FY 2014 | Cumulative | Rate Of Change | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TOTAL** |
27,356 |
27,270 |
26,777 |
26,756 |
26,820 |
134,979 |
-1.96 |
Race |
8,798 |
9,010 |
8,587 |
8,693 |
9,023 |
44,111 |
2.56 |
Sex |
12,695 |
12,461 |
12,569 |
12,379 |
12,146 |
62,250 |
-4.32 |
National Origin |
3,643 |
4,029 |
3,588 |
3,513 |
3,446 |
18,219 |
-5.41 |
Religion |
1,362 |
1,691 |
1,347 |
1,290 |
1,344 |
7,034 |
-1.32 |
Color |
895 |
961 |
928 |
934 |
1,056 |
4,774 |
17.99 |
Retaliation (ALL Statutes) |
10,288 |
10,759 |
10,733 |
10,966 |
11,518 |
54,264 |
11.96 |
ADEA |
3,780 |
3,660 |
3,787 |
4,023 |
4,157 |
19,407 |
9.97 |
ADA |
4,119 |
4,139 |
4,391 |
4,529 |
4,848 |
22,026 |
17.70 |
EPA |
79 |
52 |
59 |
65 |
112 |
367 |
41.77 |
GINA |
22 |
45 |
36 |
92 |
76 |
271 |
245.45 |
Table 2 provides more detailed information about harassment charges on the basis of a disability. Only those disabilities with a highest number of charges are included here. As discussed below those disabilities that might be considered as behavioral appear to be well represented here.
(For Those Disabilities with the Highest Number of Harassment Charges)
DISABILITY |
FY2010 |
FY2011 |
FY2012 |
FY2013 |
FY2014 |
RATE OF CHANGE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total Harassment Charges* |
4,119 |
4,139 |
4,391 |
4,529 |
4,848 |
22,026 |
Retaliation |
1501 |
1565 |
1744 |
1814 |
2056 |
36.98% |
Other Disability |
880 |
991 |
1172 |
1218 |
1338 |
52.05% |
Regarded As Disabled |
448 |
441 |
442 |
458 |
514 |
14.73% |
Other Anxiety Disorder |
333 |
354 |
384 |
398 |
485 |
45.65% |
Depression |
388 |
402 |
362 |
394 |
437 |
12.63% |
Nonparalytic Orthopedic Impairment |
296 |
291 |
341 |
329 |
359 |
21.28% |
Record Of Disability |
253 |
262 |
258 |
273 |
356 |
40.71% |
Orthopedic/Structural Back Impairment |
333 |
312 |
309 |
304 |
348 |
4.50% |
For those interested in getting more data on charges filed by disability, you may want to visit Cornell's website (https://disabilitystatistics.org/). See Figure 1.

Figure 1
Question 3: Are there any trends? Any hypotheses for why these trends exist?
If we measure trends in terms of simple rates of change from 2010 to 2014, we note that there is a decrease in harassment charges from FY 2010 to FY 2014 (rate of change) overall (1.96 percent) with respect to all charges overall based on Religion ( 1.32 percent), Gender (4.32 percent) and National Origin (5.41 percent). On the other hand, the rate of change increased from 2010 to 2014, for charges based on 2010 to 2014, Race (2.56 percent) Age/ADEA ( 9.97 percent), Retaliation (11.96 percent), Disability or ADA (17.70 percent), Color (17.99 percent) and under the EPA (41.77 percent).
However, these trends do not appear to be simple linear changes. For example, race-based charges of harassment decline from 2011 until 2012 and then display a sharp increase. See Figure 2.

FY 2010 | FY 2011 | FY 2012 | FY 2013 | FY 2014 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Race | 8,798 | 9,010 | 8,587 | 8,693 | 9,023 |
Figure 2
Gender-based harassment charges, on the other hand, show a fairly constant decline. See Figure 3.

FY 2010 | FY 2011 | FY 2012 | FY 2013 | FY 2014 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 12,695 | 12,461 | 12,569 | 12,379 | 12,146 |
Figure 3
Question 4: What percentage of our litigation docket involves harassment claims?
Table 3 shows that the number of cases filed where harassment was an issue dropped after fiscal year 2010 as did the percent of those cases. However, the was an increase in fiscal year 2014.
FISCAL YEAR |
# Harassment Cases Filed |
% Harassment Cases Filed |
---|---|---|
2010 |
99 |
39.60% |
2011 |
88 |
33.70% |
2012 |
22 |
18.00% |
2013 |
27 |
20.60% |
2014 |
35 |
26.30% |
*Includes cases where harassment and/or sexual harassment are alleged. |
Question 5: Have we learned anything about harassment from the researchers with whom we share our data?
Some relevant findings follow.
- People with physical impairments appear to have lower harassment allegation rates than people with behavioral disabilities. - Shaw, L. R., Chan, F., & McMahon, B. T. (2012)
- Women, minorities, and people with behavioral disabilities are more likely to file harassment charges. Educational Services or Public Administration were found to be more likely to file harassment charges than employees who work for other types of business and industry. Companies with 500+ employees were more likely to have harassment lawsuits. - Shaw, L. R., Chan, F., McMahon, B. T., & Kim, J. H. (2012)
- Harassment was the second highest type of injury/issue (under firing) in EEOC age discrimination suits in 2013 - Vincent Roscigno Ohio State University (2014)
- Managerial awareness of disability practices and understanding of how, when, and why they need to be used is low. This may influence experiences of harassment for people with disabilities. - Lisa H. Nishii, PhD & Susanne M. Bruvere, PhD, Cornell University (2015)
Question 6: Do you have any suggestions for further research?
- ORIP'S draft Research and Data Plan proposes that ORIP will produce a demographic profile based on Census data to identify concentrations of immigrant workers and a set of EEO-1 reports for each District to identify the most prevalent industries of workers with broad racial and ethnic profiles believed to be vulnerable to discrimination, such as Hispanic women in crop production. ORIP will also explore the possibility of identifying concentrations of workers with disabilities by industry and geography.