|
This report examines most of the federal programs that would be
considered to be affirmative action. It may be useful, therefore, to
consider one or more taxonomies of those efforts. Figures 1 and 2 offer
two possible matrices. In Figure 1, the horizontal dimension arrays
various policy devices from the most flexible to the most pointed, while
the vertical dimension arrays different spheres of activity--from those
most closely to those less closely related to the federal government. (46)
In this array, examples of the eight categories of policies include:
Outreach & Hortatory Efforts:
- Various statutes encourage recipients of Federal funds to use
minority-owned and women-owned banks.
- DOL's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP), for
example, offers a periodic award for contractors with superior
affirmative-action practices, such as innovative recruitment or
training strategies.
Disclosure of Data:
- The Small Business Act (§502) requires SBA to monitor and report on
agency contracting with small disadvantaged businesses (SDBs). This
reporting serves hortatory purposes and creates a competitive dynamic
among agencies.
- Last year, the Administration announced plans to publish the rates
at which financial institutions made federally guaranteed loans to
women- and minority-owned firms. This reporting can leverage public
and intra-industry pressures to expand such lending.
Affirmative Action Plan Requirements:
- E.O. 11246 requires Federal contractors to maintain affirmative
action plans; since the Nixon Administration, such plans must in
certain circumstances contain flexible goals and timetables.
- The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) requires certain chartered
financial institutions to conduct and record efforts to reach out to
undeserved communities.
Targeted Training & Investment Efforts:
- The Foreign Service maintains a minority internship program designed
to increase minority participation in the Foreign Service.
- EPA maintains a Mentor/Protegé program to encourage prime
contractors to develop relationships with small and disadvantaged
businesses (SDBs).
Goals:
- The Small Business Act requires each agency to set goals for
contracting with small businesses and SDBs; the SBA coordinates the
effort. Additionally, Congress has, in several instances, legislated
specific goals for certain agencies. (As described in section 9 of
this Report, these goals are all flexible -- they are not quotas or
numerical straight jackets.)
- In response to dramatic imbalances in the numbers of women and
minority entrepreneurs participating in its programs, SBA now sets
management goals to increase diverse participation in its core §7(a)
loan guarantee program.
Market Advantages:
- In upcoming FCC auctions of certain licenses for personal
communication services and interactive video, the Commission had
planned to offer a 25 percent discount for women- and minority-owned
businesses; this effort was temporarily suspended by the Commission in
light of Adarand.
- Under its "§1207" authority, the Defense Department is
permitted to provide a 10 percent bid price preference, and to employ
reduced-competition systems as a means of meeting its SDB contracting
goals. Last year's procurement reform legislation extended this
authority to non-DOD agencies as well.
- The Surface Transportation Assistance Act, and now the Intermodal
Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA), authorizes use of
"subcontractor compensation" bonuses to prime contractors
who use SDBs; The payment is intended as rough compensation for the
prime contractor's expense in mentoring and technical assistance.
"Soft" Set-Asides:
- ISTEA requires that 10 percent of contracts be allocated to
disadvantaged business enterprises (DBEs), except to the extent
that the Secretary determines otherwise.
- The Airport & Airway Improvement Act requires the same.
"Hard" Set-Asides:
- The Omnibus Diplomatic Security & Antiterrorism Act requires
that a minimum of 10 percent of funds appropriated for diplomatic
security projects be allocated to minority business enterprises.
- Certain small education grant programs target minorities in graduate
education. (47)
Obviously, there is no single best way to think about these efforts. For
example, in Figure 2, one could categorize efforts based on their
programmatic objectives, perhaps distinguishing programs focused on
education and training (as more "investment-oriented"), from
programs focused on employment and contracting (as more "income-oriented"),from
programs focused on the assignment of scarce assets, such as bank charters
and spectrum licenses (as more "result" or
"reward-oriented"). There are obviously elements of
"opportunity" and "result" present across the board,
but the scale has some heuristic appeal.
Next page > Part
6: Compliance > Outline,
About,
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
Footnotes,
Appendix
A, Appendix
B, Appendix
B Footnotes, Adarand
Part of a collection of etexts on women's
history produced by Jone
Johnson Lewis. Editing and formatting © 1999-2003 Jone Johnson Lewis.
|