Uncle Sam (via the EEOC) Wants You! (To Mediate)


The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (the EEOC) has, for the past several years, made a concerted effort to convince employers to mediate discrimination charges before they are referred to investigation.  The EEOC reports that 70 percent of mediated charges are successfully resolved.  Most employers decide whether to mediate charges on a case-by-case basis, usually refusing when emotions run high or the evidence is particularly strong in the company’s favor, agreeing when there is exposure or some compelling reason to settle.  Citing a number of benefits, which are discussed below, the EEOC is trying to encourage more employers to make mediation a standard operating procedure through the Universal Agreement to Mediate (UAM) program.

Employers may agree to a local, regional or national UAM.  Local UAMs exist between the employer and a particular EEOC office (e.g., Chicago) to mediate charges filed in the field office’s geographic jurisdiction.  Regional and national UAMs are agreements to mediate all the company’s eligible charges in a multistate region, or on a nationwide basis.  The EEOC reports that more than 200 companies have signed regional or national UAMs, and over 1,500 companies have signed local UAMs.  Indeed, McDonald’s USA, LLC just signed a regional UAM in August 2010.

Benefits of a UAM

Drawbacks of a UAM

Companies need to assess how many charges they receive and whether they are amenable to the EEOC’s mediation program.  This program will benefit companies that have a high charge volume; those that wish to explore settlement before the costs escalate, but without appearing overly interested in doing so; or those that have had success with mediation in a particular EEOC field office.


© 2025 Vedder Price
National Law Review, Volume , Number 328