NYC Bar Association The Association of the Bar of the City of New York
Reports / Publications / Press Releases / Forms > Press Room > 2005
Home
Press Releases
  Press Room
Association in the News
FAQ's



Media Advisory
October 20, 2005
Contact: Matt Kovary
(212) 382-6713

BAR ASSOCIATION URGES U.S. LABOR SECRETARY
TO RESCIND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION WAIVER

Dubs Waiver “Strikingly Counterproductive”

The New York City Bar Association, in a letter to U.S. Labor Secretary Elaine L. Chao, strongly argues that the Labor Department’s recent waiver of Executive Order 11246 – whose affirmative action provisions have provided employment opportunities for minorities, women and Vietnam-era veterans for 40 years – “is strikingly counterproductive” to the government’s efforts to provide relief to residents of the Gulf Coast region. “The Association calls upon you to immediately rescind the exemption from affirmative action requirements for federal contracts for Katrina-related relief activities.”

In September, immediately after President Bush signed the executive order allowing federally paid contractors to pay substandard wages to construction workers helping to rebuild the hurricane-ravaged area, the Labor Department waived most federal affirmative action laws for contractors. The stated reason was that preparation of an affirmative action plan would present an obstacle to the speedy accomplishment of hurricane relief.

The New York City Bar Association contradicts this reasoning, arguing that Executive Order 11246 is carefully tailored so that compliance will not burden contractors. “Contractors earning federal dollars in Katrina-related activities have both the means and the time to ensure compliance with legal obligations that have been in place for decades.”

The New York City Bar Association maintains that this is one of the worse times imaginable to exempt new contractors from their obligation to make special efforts to provide opportunities to people of color, women, Vietnam-era veterans and individuals with disabilities:

“Beyond serving no useful purpose, the waiver threatens to exacerbate the striking racial and economic disparities that became apparent in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Employment for returning residents is, together with housing and health care, among the most urgent needs … Without jobs, families who have lost virtually all their possessions, whose homes were uninsurable, and who now have little or no savings, will be entirely dependent on public assistance or short-term charity. To bypass affirmative action plans in these circumstances is among the most counterproductive actions that federal officials can take.”

About the Association
The Association of the Bar of the City of New York (www.nycbar.org) was founded in 1870, and since then has been dedicated to maintaining the high ethical standards of the profession, promoting reform of the law, and providing service to the profession and the public.

back to top



© 2007 The Association of the Bar of the City of New York. All rights reserved.
42 West 44th Street New York, NY 10036
(212) 382-6600