Examining the Shutdown’s Impact on the EEOC and Charges of Discrimination



Stephen A. Antonelli, Babst Calland Clements & Zomnir

By the time you are reading this, the federal government will have re-opened, at least temporarily. On Friday, Jan. 25, the president and Congress agreed to end a 35-day partial shutdown of the U.S. government—the longest in history—by passing a continuing resolution that will fund the government through Feb. 15.

Throughout the shutdown, there were numerous news stories concerning the deadlines by which federal courts were expecting to run out of money. As a result, employment litigators and other federal court practitioners questioned whether the shutdown would interfere with their clients’ filing deadlines and how it might affect their practices, generally. Early on, courts were expected to run out of operating funds by Jan. 18. That deadline was later extended to Jan. 25 and then to Feb. 1. Luckily, courts were able to maintain mostly normal operations until the shutdown ended.

Likewise, the shutdown did not affect the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) or the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL). The same cannot be said for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which closed on Dec. 22 and did not reopen until Jan. 28. For the 37 days in between those dates, the EEOC did not process new charges of discrimination and it did not investigate pending charges.

According to the EEOC’s website, during the shutdown, most services were unavailable. Its toll-free phone numbers were unstaffed, its digital portals were inaccessible, and intake interviews were cancelled (unless a charging party was in danger of missing a filing deadline). In other words, unless a deadline was nearing, if parties to a charge of discrimination had questions about the status of a charge, those questions were likely unanswered during the shutdown.

Through a notice posted on its website, the EEOC provided information for potential charging parties as well as to those who had already filed and/or responded to a charge. Once posted, the website was not updated until the shutdown had ended and appropriations were enacted. A summary of the information provided by the EEOC is below.

Information Provided for Potential Charging Parties



The EEOC reminded potential charging parties that, generally, they must file charges of discrimination within 300 days of the incident of alleged discrimination. This deadline is only 180 days in states such as North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi or Arkansas, where there is no state fair employment practice agency. The EEOC clearly noted that the shutdown did not serve to extend these filing deadlines. As a result, it advised charging parties who were within 30 days of an expiring statute of limitations (or those who were unsure of a filing deadline) to immediately begin the process of filing a charge by downloading and submitting a pre-charge inquiry. The EEOC accepted pre-charge inquiries throughout the shutdown, but only via hand delivery, mail or fax because its online portal was not available.

The EEOC also advised potential charging parties who were within 30 days of a filing deadline of how to file a timely charge. Charges must be dated and signed in writing (not typed). They must also include the following: