Home / Full timeline / The Labor Department withdraws its support of Chicago’s voluntary equal hiring plan for federal construction projects and replaces it with the now-standard formula known as the Philadelphia Plan.
The Labor Department withdraws its support of Chicago’s voluntary equal hiring plan for federal construction projects and replaces it with the now-standard formula known as the Philadelphia Plan.
1971 (Jun 4)
Arthur A. Fletcher, Assistant Secretary of Labor, announced that the Labor Department was withdrawing its support of Chicago's voluntary equal hiring plan for federal construction projects and would impose mandatory racial quotas on federally assisted projects throughout the city. Chicago's voluntary plan failed after being in operation for eighteen months. The plan called for the hiring and training of some 4,000 minority group members. But by June 4, 1971, only 885 Blacks and Hispanic-Americans were enrolled for training, and only a few had obtained membership in the city's construction unions. The Labor Department said it would replace the Chicago plan with the now-standard formula known as the Philadelphia Plan, under which a certain number of minority group members should be employed on federal projects exceeding $500,000.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.