I don't support Trump or this whole EO nonsense, but it is a fact that veterans were often put forward by HR for jobs they were not qualified for. In fact, for high level jobs, in some cases (like technical jobs) it was nearly impossible for managers to hire someone qualified, because they couldn't make it past the point where HR would weed out anyone who wasn't a veteran or other person they deemed preferable due to reasons having nothing to do with qualifications. I doubt Trump and his minions will fix that at all (looks like there is now a preference for MAGA, which will certainly be worse), but it doesn't change the fact that this was a common occurrence. |
Hater gonna hate. |
... nor employees of contractors. The EO Trump removed actually prohibited that. But he stupidly thought it required that. LOL. |
Come off it. You're hiding behind semantics. You're not persuading anyone. Employees were legally required to report hiring data on minorities to the Federal government. There was an entire bureaucracy around AA. And as someone who worked in Federal contracting, over the last four years there was definitely, unquestionably, a push to emphasize DEI across contracting and hiring much more explicitly than before. |
You cannot legally prevent someone from resigning (hello, slavery and indentured servitude are still illegal - so far). What a joke these bully losers are. |
Nothing you said allows or requires discriminatory hiring and you know it as well as I do. It is NOT semantics. It is law. |
Calm down. PP said “reassign” not “resign.” |
Please. Anyone who deals with federal hiring knows there was a finger on the scale for DEI hires. |
I'm not hiding anything and when it comes to law semantics matter -- entirely. The disinformation you are spreading is that these EO or laws required preferential treatment in hiring or quotas. They didn't. Show me the actual text of a law or EO that allowed or required mandatory hiring quotas or preferences in hiring employees based on race, gender, or national origin. [spoiler alert: the EO that Trump just revoked did neither, and in fact prohibited it]. For those who care to understand, affirmative action here actually meant taking affirmative action to make sure that your job opening information reaches a broad audience (i.e., you don't only publish in a newspaper of 100% homogenous town or exclusively recruit on campuses that are homogenous), and that you track applicant and hiring data to periodically make sure that you are reaching a broad pool of applicants and that your data does not suggest a pattern of discrimination; you form "goals" based on what your data shows and track progress toward goals, but you many not ever make a decision based on discriminatory criteria, even to meat those goals. If you don't meet your goals, there is no penalty, you need to review what you are doing in hiring to make sure your goals are still valid and if so that you are not missing your goals due to discrimination. An Affirmative Action Plan, essentially is a record of where you posted jobs, and list of applicants and hires. Very boring documents, and something HR has to do anyway. The difference now is they don't have to turn that data over to the government, and they won't be audited on it. There were resources out there that made compliance easy, like posting job openings in certain government data bases. Those may go away, except for the ones exclusive to veterans, which is probably less of a big deal now that most hiring is on line -- but when the government first centralized job data bases like this it was novel. Personally, I think it is much ado about nothing, except for the disinformation being spread about what had actually changed based on this particular EO. |
I deal with federal hiring and that was never my experience. Federal contracting, absolutely. The small businesses with the veteran female Pacific Islander owner. Which was official policy, and everyone would tell you about the fraud that happened. There was never anything remotely comparable in federal hiring. I'm not saying this didn't happen anywhere, anytime, but I rated candidates, I know how the process went, and there was no room where this could have happened. |
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Our DEI head is a white conservative veteran. He was wounded in service and was open about how the pain from that event impacted his life. I don’t know if he’s a Trumper, but for reasons, we know he’s conservative.
He is currently on admin leave b/c of DEI hate and I feel for him. He’s one of the nicest ppl. Pushed to improve accessibility improvements for the disabled. Provided a helpful space to process divergent views with management. Processed RA requests. |
As if reality/facts matter to the MAGA losers. They would rather die than give up their faux narrative. |
There wasn't. You are making this up. |
Not my prior post, but I saw this at my agency where it seemed that oftentimes clearly less qualified individuals were moved into high-level roles. The only explanation I could conceive of was the optics of not have a proportional percentage of minorities in executive roles relative to their numbers in the general employee population - it just wouldn't look good to have the top ranks be all Caucasian males and females while other demographics disproportionally populated lower grade positions. And, I believe those klnds of measures were tracked and reported, although to whom I do not know, by the agency EEO office. There must have been a reason, but the only obvious one was to be able to presume that minorities should always be present at high grade levels, without regard to other bases for selecting candidates. |
When you take a racist job whose sole purpose is to categorize people into racial groups and hire and promote based on that, you should be persona non grata. |