Victoria Lipnic
Victoria Ann Lipnic is an American lawyer and public figure. She served in multiple senior United States government positions. She was Commissioner of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission She served as Chair of the EEOC under President Donald J. Trump from 2017 – 2019. Prior to her appointments to the EEOC, she was Assistant Secretary of Labor under President George W. Bush. The United States Senate confirmed her unanimously to each of these positions.
Early life
Lipnic was born and raised in Carrolltown, Pennsylvania, where her late father Ed Lipnic was a teacher and long-serving mayor.Lipnic has a bachelor's degree in Political Science and History from Allegheny College and a JD degree from George Mason University School of Law. In 2016, Allegheny College conferred upon her the honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters.
Career
In March 2002, Lipnic joined the U.S. Department of Labor as Assistant Secretary for Employment Standards. The Employment Standards Administration was the largest agency of the DOL with more than 4,000 employees around the country and a $5 billion budget. ESA consisted of the Wage and Hour Division, the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, the Office of Labor Management Standards, and the Office of Worker’s Compensation Programs. She was responsible for administering and enforcing some of the Nation’s most significant Federal labor and employment laws including the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act, migrant farm worker provisions, worker’s compensation benefits to certain employees injured on the job, including the Black Lung program, the non-discrimination and equal employment opportunity by federal contractors and sub-contractors; and the laws ensuring the fiscal responsibility and democracy in most labor organizations. As Assistant Secretary she oversaw revisions to the Family and Medical Leave Act regulations to include the first-ever military family leave provisions and had OFCCP issue the first ever regulatory standards to address compensation discrimination.Before joining the EEOC in 2010, Lipnic was counsel at the international law firm of Seyfarth Shaw LLP in Washington, D.C. In November 2016, it was widely speculated that Lipnic might become U.S. Secretary of Labor in the Trump Administration. President Trump eventually nominated businessman Andrew Puzder, who later withdrew his nomination, due to lack of votes in the Senate to confirm him. President Trump named Lipnic Acting Chair of the EEOC on January 25, 2017.
At the EEOC, Lipnic was known for her bipartisan leadership, independent thinking, being the swing vote, and as a champion for preventing sexual harassment in the workplace. She co-chaired the EEOC’s Select Task Force on the Study of Harassment in the Workplace and co-authored its Report, along with fellow Commissioner Chai R. Feldblum. Their report was hailed as prescient as they issued it in June 2016, 16 months before the major press reporting, in the fall of 2017, about sexual harassment that launched the #MeToo movement. As leader of the EEOC during #MeToo, she doubled-down on the agency’s enforcement of harassment cases launched new anti-harassment training, known as “Respectful Workplaces,” as part of the agency’s education and outreach efforts, reconvened the Select Task Force, and held a public Commission meeting about further ways to prevent harassment at work. She testified before Congress about recommendations from the Select Task Force when Congress was looking to revise its internal policies and procedures on preventing harassment and again on the topic before the Bi-Partisan Congressional Women’s Caucus.