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EEOC

American  

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

One study from 2007 showed the U.S. losing $64 billion each year due solely to workplace unfairness, and if adjusted to today’s dollars, that number could equal $123 billion per year — nearly 300 times the EEOC’s annual budget.

From Salon

“In some cases, it’s been a direct 180,” Christopher DeGroff, a partner who represents employers at the law firm Seyfarth Shaw, said of the EEOC’s shift in focus since the Biden administration.

From The Wall Street Journal

The EEOC’s systemwide CSU investigation has not yet involved a subpoena for other Cal State campuses.

From Los Angeles Times

Legal sanctions, combined with the requirement that all employers of 100 or more employees had to file an annual hiring report with the EEOC, led many major firms and state and local governments to take positive steps to ensure that hiring was done in a fair and non-discriminatory manner.

From Salon

Maximizing potential through equal opportunity is what federal civil rights laws, and the EEOC, were created to achieve 60 years ago.

From Slate