The Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) issued an opinion on June 9 concluding that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s longstanding guidelines on disparate-impact liability under Title VII are unconstitutional. The opinion, signed by Assistant Attorney General T. Elliot Gaiser and Deputy Assistant Attorney General Joshua Craddock, asserts that the EEOC’s approach pressures employers into race-based decision-making to avoid liability—and that, properly read, Title VII reaches only practices reflecting “a significant likelihood of intentional discrimination.”
In an unusual move, DOJ announced the opinion jointly with the EEOC. OLC opinions are not court rulings, but they are treated as binding within the executive branch – meaning the EEOC and other agencies are now expected to enforce Title VII consistent with this reading.
Disparate-impact liability holds employers responsible for facially neutral practices that disproportionately burden a protected group, even absent discriminatory intent. Its origin is the Supreme Court’s 1971 decision in Griggs v. Duke Power Co., which held that Title VII bars practices “fair in form, but discriminatory in operation” – in that case, a high-school-diploma requirement and an aptitude test that screened out Black applicants without being shown to predict job performance.
In 1978, the EEOC, DOL, DOJ, and the Civil Service Commission jointly adopted the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (29 C.F.R. part 1607), which remain in force and require employers to “validate” any selection procedure producing an adverse impact. The Court refined the framework in Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio (1989), tightening the plaintiff’s burden to identify the specific practice causing a disparity. Congress responded in the Civil Rights Act of 1991, codifying the three-step burden-shifting test at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k): the plaintiff identifies a specific practice causing a disparity; the employer shows the practice is “job related” and “consistent with business necessity”; and the plaintiff may still prevail by identifying an equally effective, less-discriminatory alternative the employer refused to adopt.
Two later decisions – Ricci v. DeStefano (2009) and Texas Department of Housing v. Inclusive Communities (2015) – flagged the “serious constitutional questions” that arise if liability turns on statistical disparity alone, and emphasized that the doctrine needs limiting safeguards to avoid pushing employers toward quotas. Justice Scalia’s Ricci concurrence, that the “war between disparate impact and equal protection” would eventually be waged, is quoted prominently in the new opinion.
Rather than declaring the 1991 statute itself void, OLC deploys constitutional avoidance to reinterpret Title VII narrowly and then finds specific EEOC regulations unlawful. It lays out three limiting principles:
– – 1) A low business-necessity bar. Employers need only show a challenged practice is “rational, convenient, or helpful” to a valid business purpose. Background checks, aptitude and knowledge tests, SAT scores, high-school-graduation requirements, and blind auditions are deemed presumptively job-related. Only “irrational or arbitrary” practices with no plausible job-relatedness can create liability.
– – 2) A robust causation requirement. Plaintiffs must show – at the pleading stage and beyond – that the specific challenged practice itself, not external factors, caused the disparity.
– – 3) A demanding alternative-practice requirement. Plaintiffs must identify a concrete alternative that is both less discriminatory and equally effective, including as to cost and other burdens.
Applying these principles, the opinion concludes that two parts of the EEOC’s framework are independently unlawful: the validation-study requirements in the Uniform Guidelines (which it calls atextual, “labyrinthine,” and improperly burden-shifting), and the Affirmative Action Guidelines (29 C.F.R. part 1608), which it says unconstitutionally encourage racial preferences without an established Title VII violation.
OLC frames the opinion as a response to the Supreme Court’s June 2 per curiam decision in Allen v. Milligan and its companion Louisiana v. Callais, which reread Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to impose liability “only when the circumstances give rise to a strong inference that intentional discrimination occurred.” OLC imports that logic into Title VII.
The opinion is also the latest step in a sequence that began with President Trump’s April 2025 Executive Order 14281, Restoring Equality of Opportunity and Meritocracy, directing agencies to eliminate disparate-impact enforcement. That was followed by the EEOC pausing disparate-impact investigations in 2025 and DOJ’s December 2025 rule rescinding Title VI disparate-impact regulations. EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas, who formally requested the opinion in February, welcomed it as providing “clarity” on the constitutional limits of the doctrine; Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said it would let businesses “hire based on performance.”
Theoretical practical takeaways for employers and their counsel to consider at this early stage.
– – Enforcement posture has shifted, but the statute has not. The 1991 codification of disparate impact remains on the books, and courts – not OLC – decide what Title VII requires. Plaintiffs can still sue in federal court, and the private bar has signaled it will continue bringing disparate-impact claims regardless of EEOC inaction.
– – Expect agency charges to get harder to win. The EEOC is unlikely to pursue impact-only theories, and the validation and affirmative-action regulations are now treated as unenforceable within the agency.
– – Selection tools are on firmer footing – at the federal level. Tests, background checks, and similar screens face a lighter justification standard under this reading. But state and local fair-employment laws (and their own disparate-impact provisions) are unaffected and remain a live source of exposure.
– – DEI-style “voluntary affirmative action” carries fresh risk. The opinion’s hostility to race-conscious “goals and timetables” reinforces the post-SFFA, post-Ames trend against preference programs.
Critics, including former Civil Rights Division attorneys, argue the opinion contradicts Supreme Court precedent and will lead to “a sharp increase in unchecked discrimination.” Because an OLC opinion binds the executive branch but not the judiciary, the doctrine’s ultimate fate will turn on litigation now likely to accelerate – and, eventually, on whether the Supreme Court takes up the question Justice Scalia flagged sixteen years ago.
NOTE: This summary is for informational purposes and is not legal advice. Employers should consult counsel about how these developments interact with applicable federal, state, and local law.