GILBERT F.
CASELLAS
Tenth Chairman of the EEOC, September 29, 1994 - December 31,
1997
Gilbert F. Casellas was serving President Clinton as General
Counsel of the United States Air Force when the President called
upon him to take the job of Chairman of the U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in July 1994. Drawn by his personal
history to the mission of the EEOC, Chairman Casellas accepted the
challenge and became the first Latino to head the agency.
The Chairman's unprecedented and bi-partisan approach to
improving the Agency's effectiveness resulted in an overhaul of the
private sector charge processing system, emphasizing a more
strategic and systemic approach to civil rights law enforcement;
the adoption of mediation based alternative dispute resolution as
part of processing charges; and a new partnership with the more
than 89 state and local fair employment practices agencies. Under
the Chairman's leadership the backlog dropped from over 111,000
cases to under 80,000 in just one year.
Chairman Casellas' personal intervention in successfully
resolving the agency's historically acrimonious labor-management
disputes and in transforming the agency into a model of
labor-management partnership resulted in a much-needed boost in
employee morale and in receipt of a "Hammer of Reinvention" from
Vice President Gore.
Prior to his government service Chairman Casellas was a partner
in the Philadelphia law firm of Montgomery, McCracken, Walker and
Rhoads. Born and raised in Tampa, Florida, Chairman Casellas
received his B.A. from Yale University and his J.D. from the
University of Pennsylvania School of Law. He served a two-year
clerkship for the Honorable A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
President Clinton named Mr. Casellas as Co-Chair to the U.S.
Census Monitoring Board on June 8, 1999. The Census Monitoring
Board was created as a bi-partisan board to observe and monitor all
aspects of the preparation and implementation of the decennial
census.
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