Ninth Circuit Orders Release of EEO-1 Reports by DOL
On July 30, 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in a panel decision affirmed the District Court’s Order in Center for Investigative Reporting v. DOL compelling the DOL to disclose federal contractors’ EEO-1 reports in response to a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) request.
The underlying FOIA request was sent to the DOL’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (“OFCCP”) in 2022 seeking consolidated EEO-1 reports for all federal contractors filed between 2016 and 2020. DOL disclosed the EEO-1 report of non-objecting contractors but withheld from disclosure 16,755 EEO reports from 4,141 objection contractors.
In its Opinion, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the District Order’s finding that EEO-1 reports are not exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemption 4, which protects trade secrets and confidential commercial or financial information. Specifically, the Ninth Circuit found that EEO-1 report data is not “commercial” because workforce-compensation data is not designed to be bought and sold, nor does it reveal basic commercial operations, such as sales statistics, profits and losses, or inventories. The Court held that DOL failed to establish that EEO-1 reports describe an exchange of goods or services or the making of a profit.
While the Ninth Circuit Order is limited to compelling the release of 2016-2020 reports in response to CIR’s FOIA request, DOL also relied on Exemption 4 to withhold the production of federal contractors’ 2021 consolidated EEO-1 reports in response to FOIA requests issued by the University of Utah and As You Sow.
DOL has not issued a comment, and it is not known at this time whether the DOL will appeal this determination. FortneyScott will continue to monitor this and related cases.


















