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A'T'TACHMENT E 2009-DJ-BX-0033 <br /> Congratulations on your recent award. In establishing financial assistance programs, Congress linked the receipt of Federal <br /> funding to <br /> compliance with Federal civil rights laws. The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), Office of Justice Programs (OJP), U.S. Department of <br /> Justice is responsible for ensuring that recipients of financial aid from OJP, its component offices and bureaus, the Office on <br /> Violence Against Women (OVW), and the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) comply with applicable <br /> Federal civil rights statutes and regulations. We at OCR are available to help you and your organization meet the civil rights <br /> requirements that come with Justice Department funding. <br /> Ensuring Access to Federally Assisted Programs <br /> As you know, Federal laws prohibit recipients of financial assistance from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national <br /> origin, <br /> religion, sex, or disability in funded programs or activities, not only in respect to employment practices but also in the delivery <br /> of services or benefits. Federal law also prohibits funded programs or activities from discriminating on the basis of age in the <br /> delivery of services or benefits. <br /> Providing Services to Limited English Proficiency (LEP) Individuals <br /> In accordance with Department of Justice Guidance pertaining to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d, <br /> recipients of Federal financial assistance must take reasonable steps to provide meaningful access to their programs and <br /> activities for persons with limited English proficiency (LEP). For more information on the civil rights responsibilities that <br /> recipients have in providing language services to LEP individuals, please see the website at http://www.lep.gov. <br /> Ensuring Equal Treatment for Faith-Based Organizations <br /> The Department of Justice has published a regulation specifically pertaining to the funding of faith-based organizations. In <br /> general, the <br /> regulation, Participation in Justice Department Programs by Religious Organizations; Providing for Equal Treatment of all ~ <br /> Justice <br /> Department Program Participants, and known as the Equal Treatment Regulation 28 C.F.R. part 38, requires State <br /> Administering Agencies to treat these organizations the same as any other applicant or recipient. The regulation prohibits <br /> State Administering Agencies from making award or grant administration decisions on the basis of an organization's religious <br /> character or affiliation, religious name, or the religious composition of its board of directors. <br /> The regulation also prohibits faith-based organizations from using financial assistance from the Department of Justice to fund <br /> inherently religious activities. While faith-based organizations can engage in non-funded inherently religious activities, they <br /> must be held separately from the Department of Justice funded program, and customers or beneficiaries cannot be compelled <br /> to participate in them. The Equal Treatment Regulation also makes clear that organizations participating in programs funded <br /> by the Department of Justice are not permitted to discriminate in the provision of services on the basis of a beneficiary's <br /> religion. For more information on the regulation, please see OCR's website at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ocr/etfbo.htm. <br /> State Administering Agencies and faith-based organizations should also note that the Safe Streets Act, as amended; the Victims <br /> of Crime Act, as amended; and the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, as amended, contain prohibitions against <br /> discrimination on the basis of religion in employment. Despite these nondiscrimination provisions, the Justice Department has <br /> concluded that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) is reasonably construed, on a case-by-case basis, to require that <br /> its funding agencies permit faith-based organizations applying for funding under the applicable program statutes both to <br /> receive DOJ funds and to continue considering religion when hiring staff, even if the statute that authorizes the funding <br /> program generally forbids considering of religion in employment decisions by grantees. <br /> Questions about the regulation or the application of RFRA to the statutes that prohibit discrimination in employment may be <br /> directed to this Office. <br /> Enforcing Civil Rights Laws <br /> <br /> All recipients of Federal financial assistance, regardless of the particular funding source, the amount of the grant award, or the <br /> <br /> number of employees in the workforce, are subject to the prohibitions against unlawful discrimination. Accordingly, OCR <br /> 1 of 5 <br /> 20A-37 <br /> <br />