OMB Statistical Directive 15 - New (1997)
As Adopted October 30, 1997
(Full Text of Federal Register Notice)
Standards for Maintaining, Collecting, and Presenting
Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity
This classification provides a minimum standard for maintaining, collecting,
and presenting data on race and ethnicity for all Federal reporting purposes.
The categories in this classification are social-political constructs and
should not be interpreted as being scientific or anthropological in nature.
They are not to be used as determinants of eligibility for participation
in any Federal program. The standards have been developed to provide a
common language for uniformity and comparability in the collection and
use of data on race and ethnicity by Federal agencies. The standards
have five categories for data on race: American Indian or Alaska Native,
Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,
and White. There are two categories for data on ethnicity: "Hispanic or
Latino," and "Not Hispanic or Latino."
1. Categories and Definitions
The minimum categories for data on race and ethnicity for Federal statistics,
program administrative reporting, and civil rights compliance reporting
are defined as follows:
-- American Indian or Alaska Native. A person having origins in any of
the original peoples of North and South America (including Central America),
and who maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment.
-- Asian. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the
Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent including, for example,
Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
-- Black or African American. A person having origins in any of the black
racial groups of Africa. Terms such as "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used
in addition to "Black or African American."
-- Hispanic or Latino. A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban,
South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless
of race. The term, "Spanish origin," can be used in addition to "Hispanic
or Latino."
-- Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander. A person having origins in
any of the original peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
-- White. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe,
the Middle East, or North Africa.
Respondents shall be offered the option of selecting one or more racial
designations. Recommended forms for the instruction accompanying
the multiple response question are "Mark one or more" and "Select one or
more."
2. Data Formats
The standards provide two formats that may be used for data on race and
ethnicity. Self-reporting or self-identification using two separate questions
is the preferred method for collecting data on race and ethnicity.
In situations where self-reporting is not practicable or feasible, the
combined format may be used.
In no case shall the provisions of the standards be construed to limit
the collection of data to the categories described above. The collection
of greater detail is encouraged; however, any collection that uses more
detail shall be organized in such a way that the additional categories
can be aggregated into these minimum categories for data on race and ethnicity.
With respect to tabulation, the procedures used by Federal agencies shall
result in the production of as much detailed information on race
and ethnicity as possible. However, Federal agencies shall not present
data on detailed categories if doing so would compromise data quality
or confidentiality standards.
a. Two-question format
To provide flexibility and ensure data quality, separate questions shall
be used wherever feasible for reporting race and ethnicity. When
race and ethnicity are collected separately, ethnicity shall be collected
first. If race and ethnicity are collected separately, the minimum designations
are:
Race:
-- American Indian or Alaska Native
-- Asian
-- Black or African American
-- Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
-- White
Ethnicity:
-- Hispanic or Latino
-- Not Hispanic or Latino
When data on race and ethnicity are collected separately, provision shall
be made to report the number of respondents in each racial category who
are Hispanic or Latino.
When aggregate data are presented, data producers shall provide the number
of respondents who marked (or selected) only one category, separately for
each of the five racial categories. In addition to these numbers, data
producers are strongly encouraged to provide the detailed distributions,
including all possible combinations, of multiple responses to the
race question. If data on multiple responses are collapsed, at a minimum
the total number of respondents reporting "more than one race" shall be
made available.
b. Combined format The combined format may be used, if necessary,
for observer-collected data on race and ethnicity. Both race (including
multiple responses) and ethnicity shall be collected when appropriate and
feasible, although the selection of one category in the combined format
is acceptable. If a combined format is used, there are six minimum categories:
-- American Indian or Alaska Native
-- Asian
-- Black or African American
-- Hispanic or Latino
-- Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
-- White
When aggregate data are presented, data producers shall provide the number
of respondents who marked (or selected) only one category, separately for
each of the six categories. In addition to these numbers, data producers
are strongly encouraged to provide the detailed distributions, including
all possible combinations, of multiple responses. In cases where
data on multiple responses are collapsed, the total number of respondents
reporting "Hispanic or Latino and one or more races" and the total number
of
respondents reporting "more than one race" (regardless of ethnicity)
shall be provided.
3. Use of the Standards for Record Keeping and Reporting
The minimum standard categories shall be used for reporting as follows:
a. Statistical reporting
These standards shall be used at a minimum for all federally sponsored
statistical data collections that include data on race and/or ethnicity,
except when the collection involves a sample of such size that the data
on the smaller categories would be unreliable, or when the collection effort
focuses on a specific racial or ethnic group. Any other variation will
have to be specifically authorized by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) through the information collection clearance process. In those cases
where the data collection is not subject to the information collection
clearance process, a direct request for a variance shall be made to OMB.
b. General program administrative and grant reporting
These standards shall be used for all Federal administrative reporting
or record keeping requirements that include data on race and ethnicity.
Agencies that cannot follow these standards must request a variance
from OMB. Variances will be considered if the agency can demonstrate that
it is not reasonable for the primary reporter to determine racial or ethnic
background in terms of the specified categories, that determination of
racial or ethnic background is not critical to the administration of the
program in question, or that the specific program is directed to only one
or a limited number of racial or ethnic groups.
c. Civil rights and other compliance reporting
These standards shall be used by all Federal agencies in either the separate
or combined format for civil rights and other compliance reporting
from the public and private sectors and all levels of government. Any variation
requiring less detailed data or data which cannot be aggregated into the
basic categories must be specifically approved by OMB for executive agencies.
More detailed reporting which can be aggregated to the basic categories
may be used at the agencies' discretion.
4. Presentation of Data on Race and Ethnicity
Displays of statistical, administrative, and compliance data on race and
ethnicity shall use the categories
listed above. The term "nonwhite" is not acceptable for use in the presentation
of Federal Government data. It shall not be used in any publication or
in the text of any report. In cases where the standard categories are considered
inappropriate for presentation of data on particular programs or for particular
regional areas, the sponsoring agency may use:
a. The designations "Black or African American and Other Races" or "All
Other Races" as collective descriptions of minority races when the most
summary distinction between the majority and minority races is appropriate;
b. The designations "White," "Black or African American," and "All Other
Races" when the distinction among the majority race, the principal minority
race, and other races is appropriate; or
c. The designation of a particular minority race or races, and the inclusion
of "Whites" with "All Other Races" when such a collective description
is appropriate.
In displaying detailed information that represents a combination of race
and ethnicity, the description of the data being displayed shall clearly
indicate that both bases of classification are being used. When the
primary focus of a report is on two or more specific identifiable groups
in the population, one or more of which is racial or ethnic, it is
acceptable to display data for each of the particular groups separately
and to describe data relating to the remainder of the population by an
appropriate collective description.
5. Effective Date
The provisions of these standards are effective immediately for all new
and revised record keeping or reporting requirements that include
racial and/or ethnic information. All existing record keeping or reporting
requirements shall be made consistent with these standards at the time
they are submitted for extension, or not later than January 1, 2003.