Could the EEOC use your email system to fish for clients?
Wait — the EEOC is now trying to drum up business through email?
So it would seem. And a lot of businesspeople are up in arms over it — none more than the folks at heavy equipment manufacturer Case New Holland, which has filed suit against the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in a Washington, DC federal court.
We know that many organizations look to increase business through email campaigns. But a federal agency? Give us a break.
Here’s the story:
Back in March, 2011, the EEOC notified Case New Holland that it would be performing a “nation-wide review” of CNH and affiliated businesses under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act.
The EEOC made several different requests for a wide range of CNH records, including hiring, promotion and firing records and a slew of computer data.
CNH provided the material to the EEOC and the investigator in charge of the case, Chetan Patel. The total amount of material was over 600 megabytes of information –more than 66,000 pages’ worth, according to CNH court’s filing.
And then nothing happened for a year an a half.
Mail’s delivered
And then the emails arrived. Here’s how CNH described the situation in its court filing:
On the morning of June 5, 2013, the EEOC commenced a mass email and web-linked inquiry to 1,330 CNH (or affiliate) business email addresses of CNH employees located throughout the United States and Canada. Over 200 recipients of the mass email were CNH (or affiliate) managers or others who, arguably, have the authority to bind CNH in a court of law.The EEOC delivered [the] emails at about 8 a.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, meaning that well over 1,000 CNH employees were greeted on a Wednesday morning, immediately after they logged into their business computers, with an email inquiry from the United States government about their employer, of which their employer had no prior notice whatsoever.
Questionable questionnaire
“At any point during the application process, did anyone … make any comments about your age?”“At any point during the application process, did anyone … make any comments about the age of applicants/employees?”“At any point during the application process, did anyone … make any other age-related comments?”
A “federal investigation” of one’s employer is alarming. It suggests wrongdoing (when none exists). It causes employees to become concerned about their employment livelihood. …A “federal investigation” by business (or any) email prompts employees, impulsively, to question what other information the government already possesses about them … [They question] whether the federal government is on a misssion to collect data on them, and excitedly speculate about the purpose of the collection efforts.
CNH wants the federal court to: declare the agency violated the Administrative Procedures Act and the U.S. Constitution; grant a permanent injunction prohibiting the EEOC and Patel from sending emails to its employees; grant a permanent injunction ordering the defendants to turn over all information gathered through the email blast; grant a permanent injunction prohibiting the defendants from disclosing any of the information they gathered to a third party; and grant a permanent injunction prohibiting them from utilizing the information they gathered “in any subsequent lawsuit the EEOC may commence against CNH.” The company also is asking for attorney’s fees and costs.