Nos. 09-3764, 09-3765, 10-1682 ____________________________________________________ IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ____________________________________________________ EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Plaintiff–Appellant, JANET BOOT et al., Plaintiffs–Interveners, and REMCEY JEUNENNE PEEPLES & MONIKA STARKE, Plaintiffs–Interveners–Appellants, v. CRST VAN EXPEDITED, INC., Defendant–Appellee. ____________________________________________________ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa Civil Action No. 07-cv-95-LRR Hon. Linda R. Reade, U.S.D.J., presiding ____________________________________________________ PETITION OF APPELLANT EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION FOR REHEARING AND SUGGESTION FOR REHEARING EN BANC ____________________________________________________ P. DAVID LOPEZ General Counsel LORRAINE C. DAVIS Acting Associate General Counsel CAROLYN L. WHEELER Assistant General Counsel SUSAN R. OXFORD Attorney EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION Office of General Counsel 131 M Street, N.E. Washington, D.C. 20507 (202) 663-4791 susan.oxford@eeoc.gov SUGGESTION FOR REHEARING EN BANC This decision by a divided panel of this Court addresses two questions of exceptional importance—the presuit requirements for EEOC enforcement actions, and the determination of supervisor status. First, the panel misconstrued the steps that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires EEOC to take before resorting to court to redress unlawful workplace discrimination. The panel’s requirement that EEOC identify every potential victim before filing suit is unsupported by the language of Title VII and conflicts with the decisions of every other court of appeals that has addressed this question. See, e.g., EEOC v. Keco Indus., 748 F.2d 1097 (6th Cir. 1984); EEOC v. Am. Nat’l Bank, 652 F.2d 1176 (4th Cir. 1981); see also EEOC v. Rhone-Poulenc, Inc., 876 F.2d 16 (3d Cir. 1989) (Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)). The panel’s unprecedented imposition of this new requirement will impede EEOC’s ability to enforce Title VII and other civil rights laws in workplaces with the most widespread discrimination.<1> The majority’s affirmance of dismissal rather than requiring a stay of the action also means significant discrimination will go unremedied, despite EEOC’s efforts to fulfill its statutory presuit obligations. Second, in rejecting EEOC’s claim that CRST is liable for trainer harassment of female trainees during over-the-road training, the panel misapplied this Court’s supervisor test to the unique circumstances of this case. See Joens v. John Morrell & Co., 354 F.3d 938, 940 (8th Cir. 2004). The panel’s decision also conflicts with the Supreme Court’s application of supervisor liability to the facts in Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S. 775 (1998). This error impacts EEOC’s ability to seek relief for dozens of female trainees. In EEOC’s view, both issues present questions of exceptional importance. Accordingly, EEOC respectfully requests panel rehearing or rehearing en banc. See generally Fed. R. App. P. 35(a), (b) (standards for rehearing en banc). STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES 1. Whether EEOC is barred from seeking judicial relief for individuals victimized by workplace discrimination solely because EEOC did not identify them during the investigative phase of its administrative process. 2. Whether the standard for employer liability for supervisor harassment applies to these facts, where CRST trainers not only have the unfettered ability to direct trainees’ daily activities but also significantly influence whether trainees are hired as drivers by CRST. INTRODUCTION Congress authorized EEOC “to prevent any person from engaging in any unlawful employment practice” as defined by Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e- 5(a). EEOC exercised that authority here by filing this lawsuit against CRST advancing a single claim—that CRST violated Title VII by failing to maintain a workplace free of sexual harassment. In support of this single legal claim, EEOC offered evidence that dozens of CRST female long-haul truck drivers and trainees were sexually harassed— some repeatedly—by their male over-the-road trainers and co-drivers.<2> EEOC further claimed that CRST was liable under Title VII for this on-going harassment because it took only minimal, legally insufficient steps to remedy the harassment and to prevent future occurrences despite its awareness of the frequency (one harassment complaint a week over the course of several years) and disturbing nature of many of the incidents (including sexual propositioning, sexual assault, and rape). See slip op. at 54 (Murphy, J., dissenting). EEOC contended CRST was liable for the harassment of trainees under the “supervisor harassment” standard in Faragher, 524 U.S. at 807. As the dissent noted, during mandatory, month-long over-the-road training, “trainees were often confined in a truck for 28 consecutive days with their trainer” who “controlled almost all of a trainee’s day to day activities, including when she was permitted to drive, when she could stop to use the bathroom, and when she could use the truck’s satellite device to communicate with the outside world.” Slip op. at 57. In addition, CRST invested trainers with “authority to evaluate their [trainees’] progress” and relied on the trainers’ pass/fail evaluations of their trainees “almost exclusively in deciding whether to promote a particular trainee” to full driver status. Id. at 57-58 (Murphy, J., dissenting). Before filing suit, EEOC undertook the presuit steps outlined in Title VII. Title VII directs EEOC to receive and investigate charges of unlawful conduct. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(b). If EEOC “determines … there is reasonable cause to believe that the charge is true,” Title VII requires EEOC to “endeavor to eliminate any such alleged unlawful employment practice by informal methods of conference, conciliation, and persuasion.” Id. But if EEOC is “unable to secure from the respondent a conciliation agreement acceptable to the Commission,” Title VII authorizes EEOC to file an enforcement action in court. Id. at § 2000e-5(f)(1). In this case, Monika Starke filed a charge in December 2005 alleging she was sexually harassed by two CRST male trainers. EEOC’s investigator asked CRST whether “any other individual has complained to any supervisor or manager” about sexual harassment and, if so, how CRST responded and for any documentation. See VII-Apx.1914 (EEOC Request for Information #3). At the time, CRST knew that at least 40 women had complained to its human resources department (HR) during the specified ten-month period, A-317 (Addendum); see XIX-Apx.5037-38, but CRST provided EEOC only two names. VII-Apx.1916 (CRST response). Later, EEOC asked CRST if any other women had filed sexual harassment charges against it, and CRST provided about a dozen charges. Ultimately, EEOC concluded that CRST had violated Title VII by subjecting Starke and “a class of employees and prospective employees to sexual harassment.” VII-Apx.1905-06 (reasonable cause finding). EEOC invited CRST to conciliate and outlined a process for identifying additional harassment victims so they could be given relief. CRST declined EEOC’s invitation to conciliate, not because of the proposed method of identifying victims or because of EEOC’s intent to seek relief for those victims, but because CRST could not reach a settlement agreement with Charging Party Monika Starke, who was privately represented. VII-Apx.1908 (e-mail from CRST counsel to EEOC investigator). CRST’s decision left EEOC “unable to secure from” CRST “a conciliation agreement acceptable to the Commission,” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1), and provided the statutory predicate for this EEOC enforcement action. During discovery, CRST provided the information EEOC had sought during the administrative investigation—the names of 182 women who had complained to it about sexual harassment. IV-Apx.1116, 1123. CRST then filed seven summary judgment motions arguing, inter alia, that CRST trainers are not “supervisors” and, for various women, challenging the severity of the harassment alleged and whether CRST had notice and responded effectively. In a series of decisions, the district court held that CRST’s male trainers were not supervisors and that EEOC had not established actionable workplace harassment with respect to more than half of the 150 women EEOC had identified as claimants. At that point, EEOC’s claim for relief for the remaining 67 victims presented issues for resolution by a jury. None of CRST’s motions had challenged EEOC’s satisfaction of presuit requirements. See R.197, 4/30/09, at 5 n.2. The district court observed, in one of its decisions, that CRST had not complained “that the EEOC failed to conciliate the allegations of Ms. Starke or anyone else.” See id. CRST thereafter promptly sought an order to show cause challenging the adequacy of EEOC’s presuit efforts. See R.222 (motion filed 5/11/09). The district court granted CRST’s application and dismissed EEOC’s lawsuit on that basis. R.263. The court characterized its action as a “remedy” for EEOC’s failure to satisfy its Title VII presuit obligations to investigate, issue a reasonable cause finding, and offer CRST a meaningful opportunity to conciliate before filing suit. Id. at 36-38. Panel Decision A divided panel of this Court affirmed, stating: “The present record confirms that the EEOC wholly failed to satisfy its statutory pre-suit obligations as to these 67 women, thus we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the EEOC’s suit.” Slip op. at 24. The majority relied on three district court decisions—EEOC v. Dillard’s, Inc., 2011 WL 2784516 (S.D. Cal. July 14, 2011), EEOC v. Jillian’s of Indianapolis, 279 F. Supp. 2d 974 (S.D. Ind. 2003), and EEOC v. Outback Steak House of Fla., 520 F. Supp. 2d 1250 (D. Colo. 2007)—in concluding that, because EEOC had not identified each victim or investigated her individual allegations, CRST had “no meaningful opportunity to conciliate.” Slip op. at 18-23 (citation omitted). In dissent, Judge Murphy noted that the majority’s rule that “EEOC must complete its presuit duties for each individual alleged victim of discrimination when pursuing a class claim” imposes a “new requirement” that is not found in Title VII or this Court’s prior cases and is inconsistent with decisions from other circuits, including the district court cases on which the majority relied. Slip op. at 54-56. Judge Murphy further noted that since EEOC asked CRST during the investigation whether other women had complained and CRST furnished only two names even though it knew “many women had reported harassment by trainers or codrivers during long haul trips,” the rule announced by the majority “in effect rewards CRST for withholding information from the Commission.” Id. at 54. Judge Murphy also noted that the majority’s rule “punishes the EEOC for employer recalcitrance and weakens [EEOC’s] ability to enforce Title VII effectively,” thereby frustrating the goal underlying the 1972 amendments to Title VII, i.e., “to strengthen the EEOC’s enforcement powers.” Id. at 56. Judge Murphy observed that this case illustrates the “undesirable effects” of the majority’s ruling, because “even though the EEOC made substantial efforts to investigate and conciliate prior to filing its lawsuit,” the panel affirmed dismissal of “scores of women claimants with apparent trial worthy claims.” Id. at 56-57. The majority also affirmed the district court’s ruling that CRST’s trainers (“Lead Drivers”) were not “supervisors.” The panel reasoned that under this Court’s precedent, trainers were more like “team leaders” than “supervisors” because they could only dictate “minor aspects of the trainees’ work experience, such as scheduling rest stops during the team drive” and issue “non-binding” recommendations on whether trainees passed their 28-day over-the-road training. Slip op. at 35-37. Judge Murphy disagreed, noting that EEOC demonstrated trainers could exert a level of control over trainees similar to the supervisors’ “unchecked authority” over their subordinates in Faragher. Id. at 57. Judge Murphy was also persuaded that CRST’s reliance on trainers’ pass/fail evaluations of trainees and the practical reality created by the confined space of a truck over long periods on the road weighed in support of finding CRST’s trainers to be supervisors. Id. at 58-59. ARGUMENT I. The Panel Majority’s Decision Departs from Longstanding Legal Standards Governing EEOC Presuit Requirements and, if Left Standing, Will Impede EEOC’s Ability to Enforce Title VII. The panel’s decision should be reconsidered for three reasons: (1) the panel’s novel rule is unsupported by the text of the statute or judicial precedent; (2) the panel misunderstood a critical fact—that CRST misled EEOC’s investigator about the extent of harassment in the company; and (3) the panel’s decision, if allowed to stand, will undermine efforts to eradicate widespread discrimination. First, the panel’s decision finds no support in the language of Title VII. Title VII requires EEOC only to investigate a charge, issue a cause finding, and offer the respondent an opportunity to conciliate before filing suit. EEOC undertook all these administrative steps here before filing this “class” lawsuit alleging CRST was liable for sexual harassment of women trainees and co- drivers. Courts, including this Court, have long held that EEOC can bring a civil suit on any discrimination “stated in the charge or developed during a reasonable investigation of the charge, so long as the additional allegations of discrimination are included in the reasonable cause determination and subject to a conciliation proceeding.” See, e.g., EEOC v. Delight Wholesale, 973 F.2d 664, 668-69 (8th Cir. 1992); see also EEOC v. Gen. Elec. Co., 532 F.2d 359, 364-70 (4th Cir. 1976). From the outset of EEOC’s investigation here, EEOC considered whether other women had experienced the same form of discrimination as Starke, asking CRST whether anyone else had complained of sexual harassment, internally or externally. See slip op. at 54-55 (Murphy, J., dissenting). Although CRST disclosed to EEOC only a fraction of the sexual harassment complaints its HR Department had documented, EEOC received enough information to conclude CRST had violated Title VII by subjecting Starke and “a class of employees (i.e., female drivers) and prospective employees (i.e., female trainees) to sexual harassment.” Id. at 55. EEOC so notified CRST and invited CRST to conciliate that finding. EEOC specifically suggested a method for identifying additional victims so they could be provided monetary relief, and a successful conciliation would have led to agreement about such relief and changes in CRST’s anti-harassment practices. But CRST’s decision to discontinue those conciliation discussions left EEOC “unable to secure from [CRST] a conciliation agreement acceptable to the Commission.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1). Thus, EEOC fully satisfied the statutory prerequisites Congress imposed on EEOC before filing suit against CRST on EEOC’s single claim that CRST failed to prevent and remedy sexual harassment of Starke and other female drivers and trainees. CRST’s refusal to conciliate cannot serve to impose an extra-statutory duty on EEOC to persist in fruitless efforts to identify additional victims before resorting to the court to remedy the Title VII violation EEOC had found. The majority’s decision that EEOC could pursue judicial relief only on behalf of discrimination victims EEOC identified during the administrative investigation imposes just such an extra-statutory requirement, with no support in the language of Title VII. Further, it conflicts with the Supreme Court’s decision in General Telephone v. EEOC, 446 U.S. 318, 324 (1980), that “EEOC need look no further than § 706 for its authority to bring suit in its own name for the purpose, among others, of securing relief for a group of aggrieved individuals.”<3> The majority’s decision also conflicts with the decisions of other appeals courts to address this question. These courts have uniformly permitted EEOC to seek judicial relief for multiple victims without first having to identify each potential victim during the administrative process and investigate their individual allegations, so long as the lawsuit asserts the same type of discrimination specified in the reasonable cause finding. See, e.g., EEOC v. Am. Nat’l Bank, 652 F.2d 1176, 1185-86 (4th Cir. 1981) (reversing district court decision, 1979 WL 25, *83 (E.D. Va. 1979), that barred EEOC from seeking relief for 51 claimants identified only in discovery); EEOC v. UPS, 860 F.2d 372, 374 (10th Cir. 1988) (permitting EEOC to challenge allegedly discriminatory policy that may affect unidentified members of a defined class); EEOC v. Rhone-Poulenc, 876 F.2d 16, 17 (3d Cir. 1989) (holding that under ADEA’s comparable conciliation requirement, 29 U.S.C. § 626(b), EEOC need not conciliate individual class members before seeking judicial relief). Accord EEOC v. UPS, 94 F.3d 314, 318 (7th Cir. 1996) (recognizing EEOC’s ability “to bring an action on behalf of a class of unidentified individuals”) (dicta) (cited in slip op. at 19); see also, e.g., Dillard’s, 2011 WL 2784516, at *6 (EEOC “not required to identify every potential class member”) (cited in slip op. at 18-22), denying reconsid., 2012 WL 440887, at *8-9 (S.D. Cal. Feb. 9, 2012); Dinkins v. Charoen Pokphand USA, 133 F. Supp. 2d 1237, 1245-46 (M.D. Ala. 2001) (applying this principle to a class sexual harassment claim). EEOC v. Keco Industries, 748 F.2d 1097 (6th Cir. 1984), is particularly apposite. While investigating a single woman’s charge, EEOC found Keco had discriminated against women as a class and sued seeking relief for the class. Id. at 1098. The Sixth Circuit reversed the district court’s dismissal of the class claim, holding that EEOC had investigated, found cause, and conciliated the “class” allegations and that the district court had erred in examining the sufficiency of that investigation and conciliation. Id. at 1100-02. The Sixth Circuit also held that EEOC’s class-wide findings and conciliation had reasonably grown out of the initial individual charge, stating “the class-based claim is basically the same as Ms. Grimes’ claim; only the number of [claimants] has changed.” Id. at 1102. So too here. The two district court decisions the panel majority cited extensively (slip op. at 18-22) do not support its ruling. As Judge Murphy correctly noted (id. at 56), neither decision barred EEOC from seeking judicial relief for individuals unknown to EEOC during its investigation. Rather, those district courts simply limited EEOC’s lawsuit to the same geographic scope as EEOC’s preceding investigation and conciliation efforts, a factor not at issue here. See Dillard’s, 2011 WL 2784516, at *6-8 (permitting local class without having identified every class member); Jillian’s, 279 F. Supp. 2d at 979-80, 982-83 (same); see also Outback Steak House, 520 F. Supp. 2d at 1255-69 (allowing suit for three-state region). Thus, contrary to the majority’s apparent belief, see slip op. at 18-22, the decisions the majority cited actually permitted EEOC to do what the majority now prohibits EEOC from doing here: identify additional victims of the same form of discrimination, within the same geographic scope of EEOC’s investigation, after EEOC’s lawsuit is filed. As the dissent correctly noted, in this critical sense, the majority’s decision is unquestionably “unprecedented.” Slip op. at 54. Second, the panel’s decision ignores the critical fact that EEOC asked CRST, at the very outset of the investigation, whether “any other individual has complained to any [CRST] supervisor or manager” about sexual harassment over a specified ten-month period, and CRST withheld the vast majority of the names it already knew. Despite the record evidence on this point, see pp.4-5, supra, the majority wrongly stated (slip op. at 6) that “EEOC’s initial request for information … did not seek information relating to other potential victims” and “CRST … furnished the EEOC with all of the information that the EEOC demanded in the request for information.” See also id. at 21 (again omitting mention of EEOC’s early request for names of other women who complained to CRST of harassment). It is particularly inappropriate to fault EEOC for not identifying victims during the investigation when CRST knowingly withheld that information. Third, the panel’s decision will undermine EEOC’s future enforcement efforts. In this case, EEOC completed its investigation, engaged in conciliation, and filed this lawsuit not knowing what CRST knew—that CRST had received and processed over a hundred complaints from female drivers of sexual harassment by their male trainers and co-drivers. Slip op. at 54 (Murphy, J., dissenting). As the dissent correctly noted, “[t]he majority’s new requirement that the EEOC separately investigate and conciliate each alleged victim of discrimination” permits employers to “avoid disclosure to the EEOC of complaining workers while the Commission is conducting its investigation and conciliation, then reveal the names during court ordered discovery, and seek dismissal of the entire case on the ground of inadequate presuit efforts by the EEOC.” Id. at 56. Such a result, as the dissent observed, “rewards CRST for withholding information from the Commission” during EEOC’s investigation and “punishes the EEOC for employer recalcitrance and weakens its ability to enforce Title VII effectively,” thereby frustrating “the underlying goal of the 1972 amendments intended to strengthen the EEOC’s enforcement powers.” Id. at 54, 56 (citing Gen. Tel., 446 U.S. at 325). The majority’s rule all but encourages employers to lie to EEOC during investigations with the hope of benefiting later if EEOC attempts enforcement in court. The Commission further urges reconsideration of the majority’s decision to affirm dismissal rather than stay the action for further conciliation, as permitted by Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1). The district court rejected that option because, in its view, EEOC had “wholly abdicated its role in the administrative process.” R.263 n.24. EEOC’s substantial efforts to conciliate the “class” claim in this case and CRST’s refusal to join in that effort should not leave potential victims of discrimination without a remedy. As the dissent concluded, if EEOC’s presuit efforts were somehow insufficient, dismissal was “far too harsh a sanction to impose on the EEOC.” Slip op. at 57 (quoting EEOC v. Klingler Elec. Corp., 636 F.2d 104, 107 (5th Cir. 1981)). II. The Panel Decision Applies Joens Too Narrowly and Misconstrues Record Facts in Rejecting Faragher’s Liability Rule. EEOC also requests reconsideration of the question whether CRST’s long haul trainers were “supervisors” for purposes of CRST’s liability for sexual harassment under Faragher. The majority’s conclusion that trainers are not supervisors (slip op. at 35-37) fails to appreciate the unique circumstances of a trainee’s over-the-road workplace and conflicts with Supreme Court and other circuits’ application of “supervisor” liability to particular situations. See Faragher, 524 U.S. at 808; e.g., Whitten v. Fred’s, 601 F.3d 231, 244-47 (4th Cir. 2010). The majority misread the record in concluding that “EEOC has adduced no evidence suggesting that a CRST Lead Driver possessed the power to do anything more than assign a trainee to specific tasks already within that trainee’s normal, day-to-day duties.” Slip op. at 36. To the contrary, even CRST’s HR director characterized the lead driver/trainee relationship as “‘really no different than … supervisors’” in other industries and organizations. See slip op. at 58 (Murphy, J., dissenting). Trainers could “reassign [trainees] to significantly different duties” by simply refusing to let them drive the hours or gain the types of driving experiences CRST mandated during these four weeks. See, e.g., V-Apx.1191, 1194-95; V-Apx.1283 (trainers instructed to tell trainees they were the “captain of the ship”). CRST gave trainers instructions, see id., but exercised no contemporaneous oversight to assure compliance with these instructions in the isolated long haul “workplace.” See slip op. at 58 (Murphy, J., dissenting). EEOC demonstrated that some trainers abused their power by depriving their trainees of specific training needed to be a successful long haul truck driver. E.g., XV-Apx.4011. As the dissent noted, CRST’s trainers’ extensive control over trainees’ work experience is like that of the two employees in Faragher, 524 U.S. at 808, whom the Supreme Court assumed “were supervisors where they had been ‘granted virtually unchecked authority over their subordinates, directly controlling and supervising all aspects of [the alleged victim’s] day-to-day activities.’” See slip op. at 57. In applying Joens, the majority (id. at 35-37) failed to recognize that the “practical reality” of CRST’s “workplace”— where two persons share the confined space of its long haul trucks, physically isolated from other CRST managers and employees, for up to 28 consecutive days at a time and where the trainer is able to exercise unchecked control over virtually every aspect of a trainee’s daily life—is unlike any this Court has addressed in its prior decisions. See id. at 58 (Murphy, J., dissenting) (discussing Cheshewalla v. Rand & Son Const., 415 F.3d 847, 851 (8th Cir. 2005); Weyers v. Lear Operations, 359 F.3d 1049, 1057 (8th Cir. 2004)). Further, the majority erroneously stated EEOC offered no evidence that CRST simply “rubber stamped” its trainers’ pass/fail recommendations. Slip op. at 36. To the contrary, EEOC offered the uncontested testimony of CRST Fleet Manager Michael Wuestenberg that if a trainer told CRST at the end of 28 days that the trainee passed, CRST accepted that evaluation without any further review and the student became a co-driver, see XIX-Apx.5184 (cited in EEOC Opening Brief at 6), a circumstance some trainers used to coerce sexual favors from their trainees in exchange for a promise to “pass” them at the end of 28 days. E.g., X-Apx.2598-600; XVII-Apx.4732-33. This Court should grant panel or en banc review because a proper application of the Joens test to the facts of the CRST “workplace,” in contrast to the workplaces in this Court’s prior decisions, mandates reversal of the district court’s summary judgment decision on this point. CONCLUSION The panel’s unprecedented decision that EEOC did not satisfy Title VII’s presuit requirements is unsupported by the text of Title VII or judicial precedent and conflicts with the only other circuit decisions to have addressed the question. The decision that CRST’s trainers are not “supervisors” is a misapplication of the Joens standard and inconsistent with Faragher. EEOC requests panel rehearing or rehearing en banc to correct these errors. Respectfully submitted, P. DAVID LOPEZ /s/ Susan R. Oxford General Counsel _____________________________ SUSAN R. OXFORD LORRAINE C. DAVIS Attorney for EEOC Acting Associate General Counsel EEOC Office of General Counsel 131 M St., N.E., 5th Floor CAROLYN L. WHEELER Washington, D.C. 20507-0001 Assistant General Counsel (202) 663-4791 susan.oxford@eeoc.gov CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE This rehearing petition complies with the type-volume limitation of Fed. R. App. P. 40(b) because it contains 18 pages, excluding the parts of the brief exempted by Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(7)(B)(iii), the page limited permitted by this Court’s order dated April 4, 2012. This rehearing petition complies with the typeface requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(5) and the type style requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(6) because it has been prepared in a proportionally spaced typeface using Microsoft Word 2007 in Times New Roman 14 point. /s/ Susan R. Oxford _____________________________ SUSAN R. OXFORD Attorney EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION Office of General Counsel 131 M St., N.E., 5th Floor Washington, D.C. 20507-0001 (202) 663-4791 susan.oxford@eeoc.gov Dated: April 9, 2012 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I, Susan R. Oxford, hereby certify that on April 9, 2012, I filed electronically with the Clerk of the Court EEOC’s Rehearing Petition. I further certify that on the same date, by the same means, I served a copy of EEOC’s Rehearing Petition to the following counsel of record, all of whom are ECF users: Counsel for Plaintiff-Intervenors/Appellants: Matthew James Reilly Eells & Tronvold Law Offices, PLC 1921 51st St. NE Cedar Rapids, IA 52402 (319) 393-1020 matt@eells-tronvold.com Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: James T. Malysiak Jenner & Block 353 N. Clark St. Chicago, IL 60654 (312) 923-2813 jmalysiak@jenner.com /s/ Susan R. Oxford _____________________________ SUSAN R. OXFORD Attorney EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION Office of General Counsel 131 M St., N.E., 5th Floor Washington, D.C. 20507-0001 Tel. (202) 663-4791; Fax (202) 663-7090 susan.oxford@eeoc.gov DATED: April 9, 2012 ********************************************************************************** <> <1> The Age Discrimination in Employment Act’s presuit provisions are modeled after those in Title VII. See 29 U.S.C. § 626(b). The Americans with Disabilities Act expressly incorporates Title VII’s procedural provisions, including the presuit requirements at issue in this appeal. See 42 U.S.C. § 12117(a). <2> The panel mistakenly believed EEOC brought suit on behalf of only trainees. See slip op. at 3 (referencing only EEOC claim concerning “New-Driver Training Program”). EEOC investigated, issued a reasonable cause finding, and filed suit on behalf of trainees and co-drivers alike, to redress discrimination by both trainers and team drivers. See, e.g., VIII-Apx.2107, VII-Apx.1905-06, I-Apx.34, 36. <3> In General Telephone, the Supreme Court held EEOC was not required to seek class certification under Rule 23 before pursuing class-wide judicial relief for the company’s female employees in California, Idaho, Montana, and Oregon based on alleged discrimination in maternity leave, access to craft jobs, and promotion to managerial positions. 446 U.S. at 320-21. EEOC had filed suit after investigating several individual charges and concluding discrimination was widespread. See id. at 320. Nothing in the Court’s opinion indicates EEOC identified all potential claimants before filing suit, nor did the Court suggest that was necessary.