On Feb. 4, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a subpoena request to obtain records from Nike about its DEI programming, a move the company called an “unusual escalation.” What’s happening? The EEOC filed the request in the Eastern District of Missouri Court, and claims that white workers could have been discriminated against as a result of Nike’s DEI initiatives. Among the documents the EEOC is requesting are criteria considered before layoffs, how the company used race and ethnicity data, and “information about 16 programs” related to mentoring, leadership, and career development. According to the EEOC, Nike allegedly has not fully complied with their previous requests for documents, but Nike claims otherwise. Part of the anti-DEI strategy. This is the latest instance of federal agencies investigating a company over its DEI practices, dating back to President Trump’s first days back in office. On Jan 30, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) issued a warning to roughly 40 law firms that participated in a diversity certification program, according to Bloomberg Law. The FTC claimed that the certifications could indicate “anticompetitive collusion,” a move that Stephen Calkins, a law professor at Wayne State University, told the publication is “untested legal territory.” For more on the subpoena request, and the Trump administration’s broader anti-DEI strategy, keep reading here.—KP |