In 2003, 32% of external hires came from
the Internet in 2003, with more than two-thirds
of those coming through a company's Web site, according
to Gerry Crispin and Mark Mehler, principals of
CareerXroads,
a consulting company in Kendall Park, N.J. that
publishes an annual guide to job boards. The rapid
growth of Internet recruiting in the late 1990s
and technological ease of sending resumes challenged
employers to manage their record keeping in these
areas.
To demonstrate compliance with federal discrimination
law, covered employers must track applicants' race,
gender, and ethnicity. The existing record keeping
guidance regarding race, gender, and ethnicity set
forth under the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection
Procedures (UGESP), which was issued in the 1970s
with follow-ups in 1979 and 1980, did not adequately
address electronic recruitment issues.
In July 2000, the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), along
with the Departments of Labor and Justice and the
Office of Personnel Management, began to consider
whether supplemental information about the definition
of "applicant" should be provided. After three years,
and several delays, the proposed guidelines were
announced and published in the March 4 Federal Register.
According to the proposal, three conditions must
be met for an individual to be considered an applicant
when using the Internet or other electronic means
(e.g., e-mail, third party job banks, and applicant
tracking systems):
- The employer has acted to fill a particular position;
- The individual has followed the employer's standard
procedures for submitting applications; and
- The individual has indicated an interest in the
particular position.
In 1979, the agencies clarified the UGESP by defining
"applicant" broadly as "a person who has indicated
an interest in being considered for hiring, promotion,
or other employment opportunities." This definition
proved insufficient, especially with the advent
of electronic recruiting. In May 2003, the Society
for Human Resource Management (SHRM) issued a public
policy statement stating that the definition "has
resulted in various, ever-changing and inconsistent
interpretations."
While some in the human resource community call
the proposed guidelines a good first step in clarifying
the term �applicant', criticism has already surfaced
from the employer community. Chief among them is
that the proposal is limited to electronic recruiting
and it does not limit the definition to candidates
who meet an employer's minimum qualifications for
open positions. Other critiques question why the
same definition could not apply to paper applications
and why the proposed guidelines do not provide a
new definition for "applicant" generally.
Members of the public may file written comments
on the proposal on or before May 3, 2004. Written
comments about the proposed guidance should be sent
to Frances M. Hart, Executive Officer, Executive
Secretariat, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
10th Floor, 1801 L Street, NW., Washington, DC 20507.
The Executive Secretariat will accept comments by
fax at (202) 663-4114; only comments of six pages
or fewer will be accepted. For further information
contact Carol Miaskoff, Office of Legal Counsel,
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission at
(202) 663- 4637.
The full text of the proposed definition can be
found in the March 4 Federal Register, or
online here.
Questions and answers about the proposed definition
are available on EEOC's
Web site.
Corinne Marasco is editor of ChemHR and an
associate editor at Chemical & Engineering News
specializing in human resource and workplace management
issues.