Glossary of AAP Terms
Adverse Impact
Adverse impact occurs in a personnel action when the selection rate of a one class of applicants or employees falls below 80% of the selection rate of a complement class. Traditional adverse impact considers the selection rate of a protected class (i.e., race or gender) against the complement non-protected class.Affirmative Action Plan
From the Code of Federal Regulations 41 Section 60-2.10, an Affirmative Action plan is “a set of specific and results-oriented procedures to which a contractor commits himself to apply every good faith effort.”An Affirmative Action plan, prepared annually, consists of statistics and narratives, in the format specified by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP). The statistics look at a period of time, usually 12 months, leading up to the plan date. The Agency performs periodic audits of contractors to review these documents.
Update plans for interim periods are developed to monitor Affirmative Action and measure progress, based on the prior Annual plan's results.
Any Difference Rule
For a protected class in a job group, a placement goal is set when availability exceeds employment by any difference.Applicant
A person considered for a job within an organization. An applicant for the purpose of Affirmative Action reporting should be defined to ensure conformance to the regulations and consistent practices within your organization. This term is typically limited to those who express interest in a particular job opening and who meet minimum qualifications for employment in that position.For more information on the regulatory definition, see: Definition of an Internet Applicant.
Availability
The percentage of a protected class, calculated to be available for employment openings within a job group at a work location. In determining External Availability, data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau are used to compile demographics by occupation and geographic area. Internal Availability is determined by analyzing avenues of promotion within your organization.Census Occupation Codes
Standardized occupation categories, contained in the U.S. census data set. For the accuracy of an AAP, each job within an organization must be matched to a census occupation code.Company Name
The Company Name will appear at the top of all reports printed in balanceAAP. Location names or information can e provided and included, separately.Comparator
A comparator is a member of the non-protected class who has been successful in being hired, promoted, transferred, or not terminated, or who receives a salary above the median. Protected class members who were not successful are then compared to the comparators in a Cohort Analysis.EEO Category
As defined by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), EEO Categories are broad job classifications, based on employer type (e.g., private organization, educational institution). The EEOC compiles job classification schedules, accordingly. EEO Categories are then applied to job groups within your organization, during AAP preparation.Eighty Percent Rule
A placement goal is set when 80% of availability is greater than employment.Employment
The number or percentage of minorities or females among those employed at a work location. Protected class employment percentages are compared to availability percentages in the Utilization Analysis.Errors
In BALANCEaap, Errors are records containing blank, invalid, or duplicate data. Because Errors prevent the records from being included in AAP calculations, they must be corrected before one can proceed.Executive Order 11246
Signed originally by President Lyndon Johnson and since amended, Executive Order 11246 forms the basis for the Affirmative Action obligations of Federal contractors and other covered entities.Establishment (or Facility)
A work location that falls under an organization's umbrella. The location must be accounted for in AAP and EEO-1/VETS reporting, according to specific regulations.Factor Weights
In a weighted analysis, a weight is a statement of how important a factor is to the whole calculation. Factor weighting is used to establish the relative importance of internal and external availability in your organization's hiring practices.Feeder Jobs
Staffed positions within your organization that provide a normal promotion path into a particular job group. A "source' feeder job for the "target" job group comes from a job group that is lower in the hierarchy. Therefore in most cases, a job group should be prevented from being both the source and target for feeders.File Consistency Issues
In balanceAAP, File Consistency Issues are flagged by the system, indicating potential data discrepancies across an employee's set of records. In this case, you may continue with running AAP analyses. However, for most accurate plan results, the issues should be reviewed to ascertain whether they are correct within your data scheme or require editing before proceeding.Placement Goals
If utilization in a job group for a protected class falls below availability to the level defined by the Utilization Rule selected, a placement goal will be set for that group equal to its availability percentage.History Data
History data includes employment and availability numbers from the previous year’s affirmative action plan. Previous year’s employment numbers are needed to determine the number of incumbents for promotion, transfer, and termination impact ratio analyses. Previous year’s availability numbers are needed for the Goal Attainment and Share of Opportunities reports.Job Group
One job or a group of jobs having similar content, compensation or opportunity. UsuallyNarratives
Two narrative reports are required in your affirmative action plan: one for minorities and females and one for the disabled and veterans. The narrative reports describe your organization’s policies and practices with regards to affirmative action.OFCCP
The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs is a part of the U.S. DepartmentPersonnel Actions
Personnel actions monitored in BALANCEaap include applicants, hires, promotions,Plan Name
The Plan NamePromotion Calculations
An alternative to using identified feeder jobs; promotion calculations reflect thePromotion
data for the calculations can be drawn from the current year promotion file or theProtected Class
A category of employees covered by provisions of regulations or statutes. In preparingResearch Lists
Research Lists are audit support tools used to help analyze and explain any adverse impact in the personnel actions or the salary analysis. Research lists include the members of a protected class who were adversely affected (not hired, not promoted, not transferred, terminated, or whose salary is below median), protected class members who were successful, and successful and unsuccessful non-protected class members. BALANCEaap allows you to fill in a comment for each employee or applicant in the research list. You can use these comments to provide explanations or extenuating circumstances, or other relevant information. The comments will print out on the Research List roster. BALANCEaap Desktop User’s Guide Copyright © 2003 by Berkshire Associates Inc. Page 259 Rule of Nines A test for the existence of “small groups” used in the Significance of Incumbency vs. Estimated Availability report. Where small groups exist, the validity of a large sample estimator like standard deviation is in question. The formula is the total number in the group multiplied by the protected class availability multiplied by its complement. The result should be greater than nine to rely on standard deviation as a test of significance. Example: If a job group has 76 employees and the availability for Hispanics is 7.8%, the formula would be 76 x .078 x (1 - .078) = 5.47 In this instance, the validity of standard deviation to measure the significance of any differences between Hispanic availability and employment would be questionable. The use of this rule is infrequent because it is not well-understood and it may establish too high a “small group” threshold. For example, under the Rule of Nines any job group with less than 36 employees will score less than 9. Some statisticians would set a lower absolute threshold. The rule of thumb for non-statisticians is to rely more on common sense than statistics when assessing situations where a placement goal has been set or adverse impact has been calculated.
Salary Analysis
The Salary Analysis is actually a series of analyses that can identify salary inequitiesSalary Grade
Salary grades are groups of jobs with similar compensation structures. Salary gradesDrilldown, BALANCEaap Desktop User’s Guide Copyright © 2003 by Berkshire Associates Inc. Page 260 Salary Growth Rate Salary growth rate is the annual percentage growth rate since the hire date. To compute salary growth rate, the current salary, starting salary,Rollup, and hire date are required. Salary growth rate is computed using the “compound” method, according to the following formula: growth rate = (current salary/starting salary)^(1/y) - 1 (y = number of years since hire date) Sector Reports
Sector or Communication Reports are management tools that can be used to show individual department, division, or cost center heads how they are doing. A plan can be broken into sectors by departments. Sectors can also be defined in terms of other sectors, allowing for “roll-ups” into the total plan level. Sector reports all use the availability calculated for the whole plan, but each sector report calculates its own Job Group Analysis and Work Force Analysis. Thus each sector report has its own Utilization Analysis. Also, if valid department information is present in the personnel actions files, personnel action summaries and the goal attainment report may be printed by sector.