Research


Scope and Content Note

This series consists of incoming and outgoing correspondence, internal memorandums, minutes of internal meetings, reports, manuals, bulletins, training materials, complainant information sheets, staffing related records, and other miscellaneous documents. Collectively, these records document the agency's general policies and positions on a wide variety of legal and operational issues; strategies regarding legal actions and issues; communications with federal and state agencies, including the Governor's office and the state legislature; and other issues that involve and affect both the Office of Counsel and the agency as a whole.

A large portion of this series documents the Division of Human Rights' involvement in a class action suit in which the division was finally ordered to take several measures to clear a massive case backlog that caused discrimination claims to be delayed as long as fourteen years. NOW-New York State and Westchester NOW were plaintiffs in the class action suit, New York State NOW v. Cuomo, later amended to NOW v. Pataki, in which Southern District Judge Robert L. Carter ruled in 1994 that the delays had the effect of violating the constitutional rights of thousands who filed complaints alleging discrimination in employment and housing.

Judge Carter ordered the state to hire staff capable of processing claims within 24-36 months and to spend more money for a special backlog case unit to resolve the backlog cases. Allegedly, many complaints were summarily dismissed with no investigation by the division in efforts to reduce its caseload. Judge Carter subsequently issued a permanent injunction to prohibit intake rules that allowed for summary dismissal of cases.