Ninth Circuit Holds that the EEOC Has Broad Access to Personal Information, Including Social Security Numbers
Time 3 Minute Read

As reported in the Hunton Employment & Labor Law Perspectives Blog:

On October 27, 2015, the Ninth Circuit held in EEOC v. McLane Co., Inc. that the EEOC has broad subpoena powers to obtain nationwide private personnel information, including Social Security numbers (“SSNs”), in connection with its investigation of a sex discrimination charge.

Damiana Ochoa, a former employee of a McLane subsidiary in Arizona, filed a charge with the EEOC alleging sex discrimination (based on pregnancy), claiming that when she tried to return to work after taking maternity leave, the company informed her that she could not return to work until she passed a physical capability strength test. Ochoa alleged that the company requires all new employees and all employees returning from medical leave to take the test and acknowledged that she failed this test three times. Based on her failure to pass the test, the company terminated Ochoa’s employment.

The EEOC broadened its investigation beyond Ochoa’s claims to all company facilities nationwide. The company provided certain information to the EEOC about the test and the individuals who had been required to take it, but refused to comply with an administrative subpoena that asked for “pedigree information” (such as each test taker’s name, SSN, last known address and phone number), and for the test takers who were ultimately terminated, the reasons for termination. In lieu of providing SSNs, the company provided an “employee ID number” created solely for purposes of responding to the EEOC’s investigation. In response, the EEOC filed a subpoena enforcement action. The district court sided with the company and did not require the company to turn over the pedigree information or the reason for termination information.

In a unanimous ruling, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit reversed the district court’s ruling and held that the company had to provide all of the pedigree information requested by the EEOC. The Court reasoned that the EEOC has broad investigatory powers which are not constrained by strict relevancy requirements. Citing EEOC v. Shell Oil Co., 466 U.S. 54, 68-69 (1984), the Court found that the relevance standard that applies in this context “encompasses ‘virtually any material that might cast light on the allegations against the employer’” and, accordingly, the company should produce the pedigree information because it is relevant to the EEOC’s investigation, particularly since the EEOC should be able to contact and speak to other employees and applicants to learn more about their experiences.

Although the company argued that it is trying to protect its employee’s privacy interests, the Court found that SSNs are protected from public disclosure by 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-8(e). As for the reason for termination, the Court remanded the issue back to the district court to consider the company’s undue burden arguments.

The Ninth Circuit’s ruling demonstrates how much leeway certain courts are willing to provide the EEOC with respect to its broad investigatory powers, including the production of highly confidential personnel information such as SSNs. Here, the Court’s stated reasons for why the pedigree information is relevant – so that the EEOC could contact other test takers – does not support the production of SSNs. While Judge Smith’s concurrence highlighted data privacy concerns and the government’s attempts in protecting such information, his concurrence notes that “we, as a court, are not in a position in this case to weigh the concerns present in any particular data gathering and storage protocol.”

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