Mr. Jerome Patterson, a package delivery driver for the United Parcel Service, filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission challenging UPS’ “no-beard” policy. UPS had, and still maintains, an express policy that employees in public contact positions cannot wear beards. Mr. Patterson suffers from pseu-dofolliculitis barbare (“PFB”), a skin condition, both painful and disfiguring, which affects approximately twenty-five percent of the black male population. The sole treatment for his condition is to refrain from shaving. Mr. Patterson supplied documentation of his condition to his superiors from both UPS medical personnel and outside physicians. The medical evidence stated that growing a beard was necessary in order to alleviate his condition. Nevertheless, pursuant to UPS’ express “no beard policy,” Mr. Patterson’s supervisors told him that he would be transferred to a nonpublic contact position at a lower salary if he did not shave. The EEOC investigated the claim filed by Mr. Patterson, and brought suit under Section 706(f)(1) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (Title VII). This suit was brought on behalf of Mr. Patterson and other similarly situated black males. Mr. Patterson settled with UPS and is no longer involved in the case.
At a hearing in the district court, the EEOC submitted an affidavit by Theo-dis Hall. Mr. Hall alleged that he was denied employment at UPS because he refused to shave (due to PFB). The affidavit also alleged, after being subsequently hired by UPS in 1981, that he was not given a public contact position because of his beard. The district court rejected the affidavit because it was not submitted more than seventy-two hours before the hearing as required by Local Rule 908(d) (Colo.R.Pro.). The court also held that the affidavit did not show that Mr. Hall was “a presently aggrieved person” under Title VII because the 1977 allegation was too *374 remote in time and the 1981 allegation didn’t clearly state that Mr. Hall was adversely affected by the “no beard” policy.
After rejecting Mr. Hall as an aggrieved party, the court concluded that the EEOC lacked standing because it could not present an actual injured party to the court. As a result, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of UPS. Because the district court erroneously concluded that the EEOC must proceed on behalf of an actual injured party when challenging a discriminatory employment policy under Title VII, we reverse.
Under the broad remedial powers granted by Congress under Title VII, the EEOC has standing by itself to challenge a policy that represents ongoing discrimination. Therefore, the fact that the original plaintiff, Jerome Patterson, settled his claim with UPS did not moot the EEOC’s claim. Likewise, the EEOC’s failure to produce an additional party within the seventy-two-hour time limit is irrelevant. Under Title VII, the EEOC need not produce an injured party when seeking to challenge an allegedly discriminatory policy that may affect unidentifiable members of a known class. This class presumably includes members of the population afflicted within PFB who are potential UPS applicants seeking public contact positions and who may be discouraged from applying because of the “no beard” rule.
At the behest of Jerome Patterson, an identified plaintiff, the EEOC properly brought this suit under section 706. The fact that a particular plaintiff settles his or her claim does not require the EEOC, in a case of ongoing discrimination, to abandon suit under section 706 and reinitiate the same suit under section 707 as a commissioner’s charge. 1 The district court mistakenly assumed that “having elected to proceed under Section 706, rather than through a Commissioner’s charge under Section 707, this action cannot now be maintained.” EEOC v. UPS, No. 84-C-1436 (D.Colo.1985). Once the EEOC has properly sued pursuant to a specific individual’s complaint, it may proceed under section 706, although the original plaintiff is no longer a party.
The 1972 amendments to Title VII were designed to increase the EEOC’s arsenal of available weapons to challenge discriminatory practices. The EEOC’s mandate is to protect the public generally from ongoing discriminatory practices. In
General Telephone Co. v. EEOC,
In the case before us, the district court mischaracterized the nature of this dispute. The district court found that there was no Art. Ill case and controversy; therefore, it mistakenly held that the EEOC lacked standing to sue without an actual injured party before the court. The idea that the EEOC might not have standing to do what it is legally required to do was put to rest in
General Telephone.
The Supreme Court did “no more than follow a straightforward reading of the statute, which
*375
seems to ... authorize the EEOC
to sue in its own name to enforce federal law
by obtaining appropriate relief for those persons injured by discriminatory practices forbidden by the Act.”
Id.
at 324-25,
In
General Telephone
the Supreme Court relied on the legislative history of the 1972 amendments to Title VII. It is clear from the amendments that “Congress sought to implement the public interest as well as to bring about more effective enforcement of private rights.”
Id.
at 326,
The Court’s decision in
General Telephone
was clearly intended to reinforce the EEOC’s broad powers under Title VII to police ongoing discrimination. “Given the clear purpose of Title VII, the EEOC’s jurisdiction over enforcement, and the remedies available,
the EEOC need look no further than § 706 for its authority to bring suit in its own name
for the purpose,
among others,
of securing relief for a group of aggrieved individuals.”
Id.
at 324,
The 1972 amendments were added to Title VII to destroy the apparent limits placed on the Commission’s ability to proceed with suit prior to 1972. “Under the procedural structure created by the 1972 amendments, the EEOC does not function simply as a vehicle for conducting litigation on behalf of private parties; it is a Federal administrative agency charged with the responsibility of investigating claims of employment discrimination____”
Id.
at 326-27, n. 8,
Title VII, by way of its 1972 amendments, gives the EEOC standing to sue to protect the public interest in freedom from employment discrimination. In its discussion of the 1972 amendments, the
General Telephone
Court explained that “ ‘the EEOC ... has the authority to institute exactly the same actions that the Department of Justice does under pattern or practice.’” 18 Cong. Rec. 4080 (1972). The Court further noted that “the Department of Justice [brings] its suits in the name of the United States and without obtaining certification under Rule 23 — it does not sue as a representative of the persons aggrieved — and we must assume Congress’ familiarity with the procedure. It is clear that with the 1972 amendments Congress intended the EEOC to proceed in the same manner.”
Id.
In this case the defendants’ briefs focus on the “specific individuals” language in the
General Telephone
opinion,
e.g.,
“[w]hen the EEOC acts, albeit at the behest of and for the benefit of specific individuals, it acts also to vindicate the public interest in preventing employment discrimination.”
Id.
at 326,
This court has addressed a similar issue in
EEOC v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.,
The issue of whether or not an individual claimant’s settlement moots the EEOC’s right of action was squarely addressed by the Ninth Circuit in
EEOC v. Goodyear Aerospace Corp.,
Even though the employee in
Goodyear
settled her claim, the court held that the EEOC’s right of action survived. “The EEOC’s right of action is independent of the employee’s private action rights.”
Id.
at 1542 (citing
General Telephone).
In fact, two circuits have held that res judica-ta principles do not bar the EEOC from bringing an action against an employer even after its employees have settled their private claim.
New Orleans S.S. Ass’n v. EEOC,
The First Circuit, in a similar case,
United States v. Massachusetts Maritime Academy,
*377 The First Circuit found neither mootness nor standing to be problematic. The Court believed that “the dominant statutory purpose is to address and cure discriminatory practices uncovered as a result of the individual complaint, not simply to provide private relief for a particular complainant.” Id. at 151-52.
In the present case the Court below held that since the complainant settled, the EEOC lacked standing to continue in its role of policing discrimination. The court in Massachusetts Maritime also held that
the Attorney General made a certification which was sufficient when suit was brought. That was all the statute calls for. [The complainant’s] subsequent abandonment of interest in entering the Academy, and questions about her qualifications, did not remove the Attorney General’s right to proceed. This right continues until discrimination and the effects of past discrimination are erased.
Id. at 152 (emphasis added).
Precisely the same reasoning applies to the facts in this case. The EEOC’s right to proceed endures until the alleged discrimination is eradicated.
REVERSED.
Notes
. While section 707 is available to start EEOC action without a specific complainant, once a section 706 action commenced, it is unnecessary to abandon that proceeding to seek a new action under section 707. Section 706(f)(1) provides in relevant part:
If within thirty days after a charge is filed with the Commission or within thirty days after expiration of any period of reference under subsection (c) or (d), the Commission has been unable to secure from the respondent a conciliation agreement acceptable to the Commission, the Commission may bring a civil action against any respondent not a government, governmental agency, or political subdivision named in the charge.
