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Detailed Summary of Health Reform Legislation

Client Alert | 1 min read | 04.09.10

Congress has enacted, and the President signed into law on March 23rd the Patient Protection and Affordable Coverage Act of 2010. On March 30th, Congress passed and the President signed amendments to the Act in the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010. Our comprehensive title by title summary of the reform legislation is now available.
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This summary was prepared by Crowell & Moring attorneys Christine Rinn, Arthur Lerner, John Brennan, Beth Newsom, David O'Brien, Michael Paddock, Robert Roth, Barbara Ryland, Kathleen Stratton, Chandra Westergaard, Kristina Pisanelli, Amy Lee, Matt Fornataro, Kathryn Almar, Jacinta Alves and Elliot Golding.

Insights

Client Alert | 3 min read | 06.12.26

DOJ Guidance Backs Away From Disparate Impact Liability

On June 9, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) issued a formal opinion concluding that the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission’s (EEOC) existing interpretations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) disparate-impact liability, including the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (UGESP), are unconstitutional. According to the opinion, EEOC’s prior interpretations contemplate liability based on disproportionately adverse effects alone, without regard to an employer’s likely intent, rather than treating disparate impact as an evidentiary mechanism to “smoke out” intentional discrimination. DOJ found that this approach functions as a “qualified racial-proportionality mandate” that places “a racial thumb on the scales, often requiring employers to evaluate the racial outcomes of their policies, and to make decisions based on (because of) those racial outcomes.” The opinion fulfills one mandate of Executive Order 14281, which rejected disparate-impact liability insofar as it “creates a near insurmountable presumption that unlawful discrimination exists wherever there are any differences in outcomes among different [demographic groups].”...