How to Get DEI Incentive Compensation Right

NEWSLETTER VOLUME 1.26

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November 01, 2023

Editor's Note

How to Get DEI Incentive Compensation Right

 

When it's important to make changes, Boards often tie executive compensation to progress toward specific goals. Most organizations are created to maximize profits, subject only to legal restrictions or requirements. And there are lots of those, including employment laws. But tying leadership's pay to company performance toward those goals is a time-honored method of giving people incentive to make it happen.

 

With the Supreme Court's decision outlawing affirmative action in college admissions, the employment lawyers are sounding the alarm on all DEI initiatives—even though college admissions and employment decisions are different and governed by different laws.

 

Lawyers are professional worriers and for good reason. There are lots of people who currently believe that any policy or practice that gives any consideration of race or gender is "reverse discrimination" against white men.

 

First, there is no such thing as "reverse discrimination" in employment; there is only discrimination. And the law is that we can't take race or gender into consideration in specific hiring or other employment decisions. That's because we hire people based on their qualifications rather than who they are, where they come from, who they love, or what they look like.

 

White men have exactly as much protection under the law as everybody else. There's a whole amendment to the United States Constitution about everybody having equal protection under the law. (It's the Fourteenth Amendment in case you don't have your Constitution handy.)

 

That said, how it works in theory and how it works in practice can be complex and often involve competing legal rights and interests. And that's what has the lawyers concerned.

 

Most incentive compensation that is tied to DEI initiatives involves broad goals to improve overall diversity in hiring, promotion, and retention. It encourages the recruitment, consideration, and hiring of qualified applicants to increase the overall diversity of the organization's workforce.

 

There have been numerous studies that diversity of people, backgrounds, perspectives, experience, and thought is good for business. That's because having new ideas promotes innovation. And having a workforce that looks like our world expands potential clients and broadens the reach for the products and services the organization provides.

 

Equal opportunity is still the law and will be. And discrimination against anyone is still illegal.

 

But tying progress in DEI and ESG to executive compensation is not discrimination against anyone. It's promoting the policies behind the law and is also good business.

 

While advising caution, this article does a great job of explaining how to create an effective incentive compensation policy tied to DEI goals. The short version is: keep the goals broad and the plan focused on addressing historic discrimination and improving business.

I would add, avoid quotas and track your data on demographics and business performance to show how improving diversity makes your organization money. Because that's position that nobody can realistically argue with.

 

- Heather Bussing

Caution Advised: Use of DEI Performance Goals in Incentive Compensation

by Joshua Agen

at Foley & Lardner

Recent court decisions have ruled that certain race-based college admissions programs violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. While these decisions do not apply directly to private employers, some observers expect them nevertheless to encourage more scrutiny of affirmative action policies or practices in the private sector.

Discrimination and Incentive Compensation

One area in which this heightened scrutiny could be focused is incentive compensation programs, which in recent years have increasingly included elements relating to environmental, social and governance (ESG), and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). Employees, job applicants, politicians, shareholders and activist groups may view these elements as instances of “reverse discrimination” and seek to bring claims on that basis.

Legal Requirements

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 generally prohibits employers from discriminating on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Some states and local jurisdictions have enacted additional prohibitions against discrimination by employers.

The Supreme Court has held that Title VII does not prohibit certain types of affirmative action, and the EEOC has published regulations intended to address the use of affirmative action and employer use of affirmative action plans under Title VII. See 29 C.F.R. Part 1608. Under these regulations, employers engaging in race-conscious or gender-conscious employment decisions must:

  • Maintain a written plan.
  • Conduct a reasonable self-analysis of the relevant employment practice that provides a reasonable basis to conclude that the practice has had an adverse effect on previously excluded groups or groups whose opportunities have been artificially limited.
  • Have reasonable action in the plan that is narrowly tailored to solve the problem identified without placing unnecessary restrictions on the entire workforce.
  • Not maintain the plan any longer than necessary to achieve the plan’s objective.

Past judicial decisions in this area have focused on, among other things, any connections between compensation decisions and the achievement of DEI goals (including good faith efforts goals). Because incentive compensation programs inherently involve compensation decisions, companies should be careful about using a structure under which achievement of DEI goals affects the amount of compensation earned.

Programs that encourage efforts toward broader initiatives, such as investing time in outreach to more diverse candidate pools, will likely involve less risk of liability than programs involving goals that impact individual employment decisions or that tie performance ratings and compensation decisions to numerical or otherwise objective outcomes. A program that ties compensation to maintaining a quota, such as a number of positions that will be filled by diverse candidates, may be more problematic than a program that ties compensation to an executive’s efforts in seeking out a broad group of candidates for leadership training.

Next Steps

To minimize the possibility of claims of unlawful discrimination relating to their incentive compensation programs, employers should consider reviewing their programs to ensure they do not violate the restrictions of Title VII or other applicable law.

A potential action plan for beginning such a review is below:

  1. Identify all incentive compensation programs that have included or that could in the future include non-financial performance measures. Common examples include annual bonuses with strategic or personal goal components.
  2. Categorize the performance measures that have been or could be used under the programs. A typical example would be performance measures relating to diversity in hiring or promotion.
  3. Identify any overlap between those performance measures and the Title VII and other protected classifications (e.g., race, color, religion, sex or national origin).
  4. Determine the extent to which there are quantitative goals attached to the overlapping performance measures. A common example would be a goal for increasing diverse representation in specific roles within the company.
  5. Publicly-traded companies should review their disclosure in their proxy statements, ESG reports and other public-facing documents for any statements that could be seen as connecting performance goals under incentive compensation programs and protected classifications in a problematic way.

Employers should work with their legal advisors to ensure that they have identified all relevant legal requirements and to structure their review of their incentive compensation programs to maintain attorney-client privilege to the extent possible.

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