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The U.S. Senate’s Appropriations Committee has advanced for a full Senate vote an appropriations package that includes $105,997,600 in funds for the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP).
If the full Senate votes to approve the budget bill as drafted by the Senate Appropriations Committee and leaves in the amounts allocated to OFCCP, the next legislative step is for the House of Representatives and the Senate to reconcile the different funding bills.
It’s hard to predict where this will land. On the one hand, we’ve seen an increase in activity by OFCCP in the last month.
The $105,997,600 funding in the Senate Appropriation Committee’s bill is quite similar to the funding that Congress approved for OFCCP in prior years:
This is odd considering OFCCP’s narrowed mission and significantly smaller headcount after the rescission of Executive Order 11246. That said, there is essentially no discussion in the Senate’s bill justifying the requested appropriation to OFCCP, which suggests that not a lot of thought went into determining the amount. The Department of Labor’s budget request for FY2026 did not seek any funding for OFCCP, proposing instead to relocate VEVRAA enforcement to the Department of Labor’s Veterans’ Employment Training Service and Section 503 enforcement to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Although the Committee is sending this package to the Senate floor, it does not mean that OFCCP will be allocated these funds. We won’t know what OFCCP’s FY2026 funding will be until both houses of Congress pass a final budget. If OFCCP does get funded at $105,997,600, the Agency seemingly would have the resources to have a role in enforcing Executive Order 14173—the ban of federal contractor unlawful DEI programs.