(concurring in part and dissenting in part):
The decision we make today is likely to be as pervasive in its effect as any we have been called upon to make in recent years. For that reason and because the prevailing opinion puts this circuit in direct conflict with the Fifth,1 I find it appropriate to set forth my views in some detail..
While I concur in the grant of relief to six of the plaintiffs, I dissent from the majority opinion insofar as it upholds the Company’s educational and testing requirements and denies relief to four Negro employees on that basis.
The case presents the broad question of the use of allegedly objective employment criteria resulting in the denial to Negroes of jobs for which they are potentially qualified.2 This is not the first time the federal courts of our circuit have been exposed to this problem. In what has become a leading case, Judge Butzner of our court, sitting as a district judge by designation, authoritatively dealt with the question of the denial of jobs to blacks because of a seniority system built upon a pattern of past discrimination. Quarles v. Philip Morris, Inc., 279 F.Supp. 505 (E.D.Va. 1968). Today we are faced with an analogous issue, namely, the denial of jobs to Negroes who cannot meet educational requirements or pass standardized tests, but who quite possibly have the ability to perform the jobs in question. On this issue hangs the vitality of the employment provisions (Title VII) of the 1964 Civil Rights Act: whether the *1238Act shall remain a potent tool for equalization of employment opportunity or shall be reduced to mellifluous but hollow rhetoric.
The pattern of racial discrimination in employment parallels that which we have witnessed in other areas. Overt bias, when prohibited, has ofttimes been supplanted by more cunning devices designed to impart the appearance of neutrality, but to operate with the same invidious effect as before. Illustrative is the use of the Grandfather Clause in voter registration — a scheme that was condemned by the Supreme Court without dissent over a half century ago. Guinn v. United States, 238 U.S. 347, 35 S.Ct. 926, 59 L.Ed. 1340 (1915).3 Another illustration is the resort to pupil transfer plans to nullify rezoning which would otherwise serve to desegregate school districts. Again, the illusory even-handedness did not shield the artifice from attack; the Supreme Court unanimously repudiated the plan. Goss v. Bd. of Education, 373 U.S. 683, 83 S.Ct. 1405, 10 L.Ed.2d 632 (1963). It is long recognized constitutional doctrine that “sophisticated as well as simple-minded modes of discrimination” are prohibited. Lane v. Wilson, 307 U.S. 268, 275, 59 S.Ct. 872, 876, 83 L.Ed. 1281 (1938) (Frankfurter, J.). We should approach enforcement of the Civil Rights Act in the same spirit.4
In 1964 Congress sought to equalize employment opportunity in the private sector. Title VII, § 703(a) of the 1964 Civil Rights Act provides':
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer—
(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin; or
(2) to limit, segregate, or classify his employees in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a).
The statute is unambiguous. Overt racial discrimination in hiring and promotion is banned. So too, the statute interdicts practices that are fair in form but discriminatory in substance. Thus it has become well settled that “objective” or “neutral” standards that favor whites but do not serve business needs are indubitably unlawful employment practices. The critical inquiry is business necessity and if it cannot be shown that an employment practice which excludes blacks stems from legitimate needs the practice must end. Quarles v. Philip Morris, supra; Local 189 v. United States, 416 F.2d 980 (5th Cir., July 28, 1969); Local 53 of International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers v. Vogler, 407 F.2d 1047 (5th Cir., 1969). For example, a requirement that all applicants for employment shall have attended a particular type of school would seem racially neutral. But what if it develops that the specified schools were open only to whites, and if, moreover, they taught nothing of particular significance to the employer’s needs? No one can doubt that the requirement would be invalid. It is the position of *1239the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission (EEOC) that educational or test requirements which are irrelevant to job qualifications and which put blacks at a disadvantage are similarly forbidden.
I
Use of Non-Job-Belated Educational and Testing Standards
The Dan River plant of the Duke Power Company is organized into five departments: (1) Operations; (2) Maintenance; (3) Laboratory and Test; (4) Coal Handling; and (5) Labor. There is also a miscellaneous category which includes watchmen. Until 1965 blacks were routinely relegated to the all-Negro Labor Department as part of a policy of overt discrimination.
The era of outrightly acknowledged bias at Duke Power is admittedly at an end. However, plaintiffs contend that administration of certain “objective” transfer criteria have accomplished substantially the same result. It was not until August 1966 that any Negro was promoted out of the Labor Department. Altogether, as of this date, three blacks have advanced from that department. They were the only ones that could measure up to the Company’s requisites for transfer.5
In 1955 the Company first imposed its educational requirement: a high school diploma (or successful completion of equivalency [“GED”] tests) would be necessary to progress from any of the outside departments (Labor, Coal Handling, Watchmen) to any of the inside departments (Operations, Maintenance, Laboratory and Test) or from Labor to the two other outside classifications. In 1965 the Company provided that in lieu of a high school diploma or equivalent, employees could satisfy the transfer standards by passing two “general intelligence” tests, the 12 minute “Wonder-lie” test and the 30 minute “Bennett Mechanical AA” test. It is uncontro-verted that all of these requirements are equivalent.
A. The Necessity for Job-Belatedness
Whites fare overwhelmingly better than blacks on all the criteria,6 as evidenced by the relatively small promotion rate from the Labor Department since 1965. Therefore, the EEOC contends that use of the standards as conditions for transfer, unless they have significant relation to performance on the job, is improper. The requirements, to with*1240stand attack, must be shown to appraise accurately those characteristics (and only those) necessary for the job or jobs an employee will be expected to perform. In other words, the standards must be “job-related.”
Plaintiffs and the Commission are not asking, as the majority implies, that blacks be accorded favored treatment in order to remedy centuries of past discrimination. That many members of the long disfavored group find themselves ill equipped for certain employments is a burden which the 1964 Civil Rights Act does not seek to lift. The argument is only that educational and cultural differences caused by that history of deprivation may not be fastened on as a test for employment when they are irrelevant to the issue of whether the job can be adequately performed.
Duke Power, on the other hand, maintains that its selection standards are unimpeachable since in its view the tests (and therefore also the equivalent educational standard) are protected by § 703(h) of Title VII.
Section 703(h) provides, in pertinent part:
-x- * * nor shall it be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to give and to act upon the results of any professionally developed ability test provided that such test, its administration or action upon the results is not designed, intended or used to discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin.
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h).
The Company asserts that its tests are “professionally developed ability tests” and thus do not have to be job-related. The District Court agreed and rejected the construction put upon § 703(h) by the EEOC. The majority here adopts this view.
In its Guidelines on Employment Testing Procedures7 8the Commission has held that a test- can be a “professionally developed ability test” only if it
fairly measures the knowledge or skils required by the particular job or class of jobs which the applicant seeks, or which fairly affords the employer a chance to measure the applicant’s ability to perform a particular job or class of jobs. The fact that a test was prepared by an individual or organization claiming expertise in test preparation does not, without more, justify its use within the meaning of Title VII.»
In rejecting the Commission Guidelines the District Court erred and the majority repeats the error. Under' settled doctrine the Commission’s interpretation should be accepted. The Supreme Court has held that
[w]hen faced with a problem of statutory construction, this Court shows great deference to the interpretation given the statute by the officers or agency charged with its administration. “To sustain the Commission’s application of this statutory term, we need not find that its construction is the only reasonable one, or even that it is the result we would have reached had the question arisen in the first instance in judicial proceedings.” Unemployment Compensation Commission of Territory of Alaska v. Aragon, 329 U.S. 143, 153, 67 S.Ct. 245, 250, 91 L.Ed. 136. See also, e. g., Gray v. Powell, 314 U.S. 402, 62 S.Ct. 326, 86 L.Ed. 301; Universal Battery Co. v. United States, 281 U.S. 580, 583, 50 S.Ct. 422, 74 L.Ed. 1051. “Particularly is this respect due when the administrative practice at stake ‘involves a contemporaneous construction of a statute by the men charged with *1241the responsibility of setting its machinery in motion; of making the parts work efficiently and smoothly while they are yet untried and new.’ ” Power Reactor Development Co. v. Electricians, 367 U.S. 396, 408, 81 S.Ct. 1529, 1535, 6 L.Ed.2d 924.
Udall v. Tallman, 380 U.S. 1, 16, 85 S.Ct. 792, 13 L.Ed.2d 616 (1965).
In the Tallman case, the Court found that a construction of an Executive Order made by the Secretary of the Interior was not unreasonable. Accordingly, it followed the Secretary’s interpretation.
Guidelines of the EEOC are entitled to similar consideration. The Fifth Circuit agrees. In Weeks v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 408 F.2d 228 (5th Cir., 1969), that court, in deciding a Title VII sex discrimination case, accorded “considerable weight” to the EEOC guideline which construed the relevant statutory provision. In a more recent case the same court noted the rejection of the EEOC’s position by the lower court in the present case and specifically disapproved of the decision here under review.9 Local 189 v. United States, 416 F.2d 980 (July 28, 1969, 5 Cir.). We should do the same.
Other courts have reached similar results. Granting relief from the effects of a departmental and seniority structure, Judge Butzner found in Quarles that “[t]he restrictions do not result from lack of merit or qualification.” 279 F.Supp. at 513. The Eighth Circuit has held that “it is essential that journeymen’s examinations be objective in nature, that they be designed to test the ability of the applicant to do that work usually required of a journeyman * * * ” United States v. Local 36, Sheet Metal Workers, 416 F.2d 123 (8th Cir. 1969). Accord, Dobbins v. Local 212, IBEW, 292 F.Supp. 413 (S.D.Ohio 1968).
Not only is the Commission’s interpretation of § 703(h) not unreasonable, but it makes eminent common sense. The Company would have us hold that any test authored by a professional test designer is “professionally developed” and automatically merits the court’s blessing. But, what is professionally developed for one purpose is not necessarily so for another. A professionally developed typing test, for example, could not be considered professionally developed to test teachers. Similarly, a test that is adequately designed to determine academic ability, such as a college entrance examination, may be grossly wide of the mark when used in hiring a machine operator. Moreover, the Commission’s is the only construction compatible with the purpose to end discrimination and to give effect to § 703(a). Although certainly not so intended, my brethren’s resolution of the issue contains a built-in invitation to evade the mandate of the statute. To continue his discriminatory practices an employer need only choose any test that favors whites and is irrelevant to actual job qualifications. In this very case, the Company's oft-reiterated but totally unsubstantiated claim of business need has been deemed sufficient to sustain its employment standards. The record furnishes no supporting evidence, only the defendant’s ipse dixit.
It would be enough to rest our decision on the reasonableness of the EEOC’s position. A deeper look, however, at the legislative history of § 703 (h) provides powerful additional support for its construction.
Congressional discussion of employment testing came in the swath of the *1242famous decision of an Illinois Fair Employment Practices Commission hearing examiner, Myart v. Motorola.10 That case went to the extreme of suggesting that standardized tests on which whites performed better than Negroes could never be used. The decision was generally taken to mean that such tests could never be justified even if the needs of the business required them.
Understandably, there was an outcry in Congress that Title VII might produce a Motorola decision. Senators Clark and Case moved to counter that speculation. In their interpretive memorandum they announced that
[t]here is no requirement in Title VII that employers abandon bona fide qualification tests where, because of differences in background and education, members of some groups are able to perform better on these tests than members of other groups. An. employer may set his qualifications as high as he likes, he may test to determine which applicants have these qualifications, and he may hire, assign, and promote on the basis of test performance.11
Read against the context of the Motorola controversy, the import of the Clark-Case statement plainly appears: employers were not to be prohibited from using tests that determine qualifications. “Qualification” implies qualification for something. A reasonable interpretation of what the Senators meant, in light of the events, was that nothing in the Act prevents employers from requiring that applicants be fit for the job. Tests for that purpose may be as difficult as an employer may desire.
Senator Tower, however, was not satisfied that a Motorola decision was beyond the purview of Title VII as written. He introduced an amendment which had the object of preventing the feared result. His amendment provided that a test, administered to all applicants without regard to race, would be permissible “if * * * in the case of any individual who is an employee of such employer, such test is designed to determine or predict whether such individual is suitable or trainable with respect to his employment [or promotion or transfer] in the particular business or enterprise involved * * (Emphasis added.) 12 It was emphatically represented by the author that the amendment was “not an effort to weaken the bill”13 and “would not legalize discriminatory tests” 14 but was offered to stave off an apprehended Motorola ruling that might “invalidate tests * * * to determine the professional competence or ability or trainability or suitability of a person to do a job.” (Emphasis added.)15 It is highly noteworthy that Senator Tower’s exertions were not on behalf of tests unrelated to job qualifications, but his aim was to make sure that job-*1243related tests would be permitted. He squarely disavowed any broader aim.
Senators Case and Humphrey opposed the amendment as redundant.16 Reiterating the message of the Clark-Case memorandum, Senator Case declared that “[t]he Motorola case could not happen under the bill the Senate is now considering.” 17 Senator Case also feared that some of the language in the amendment would be susceptible to misinterpretation.18 The amendment was defeated.19
Two days later Senator Tower offered § 703(h) in its present form, stating that it had been agreed to in principle “[b]ut the language was not drawn as carefully as it should have been.”20 The new amendment was acceptable to the proponents of the bill and it passed.21
What does this history denote? It reveals that because of the Motorola case there was serious concern that tests that select for job qualifications — job-related tests — might be deemed invalid under Title VII. Senators Clark, Case and Humphrey thought the fear illusory, but Senator Tower expended great effort to insure against the possibility. At the same time he gave assurance that he did not mean to weaken the Act. His first proposed amendment contained language which contemplated that tests were to be job-related. According to his own formulation tests had to be of such character as to determine whether “an individual is suitable with respect to his employment.” At no time was there a clash of opinion over this principle but the amendment was opposed by proponents of the bill for other reasons and was rejected. The' final amendment, which was acceptable to all sides could hardly have required less of a job relation than the first.22 Since job-relatedness was never in dispute there is no room for the inference that the bill in its enacted form embodied a compromise on this point. The conclusion is inescapable that the Commission’s construction of § 703(h) is well supported by the legislative history.23
*1244Manifestly, then, so far as Duke Power relies on § 703(h) for the proposition that its tests (or other requirements) need not be job-related, it must fail.
B. The District Court’s Finding and the Evidence Supporting It.
There can be no serious question that Duke Power’s criteria are not job-related. The District Court expressly found that they were not,24 and that finding is the only one consistent with the evidence.
To insure that a criterion is suitably fitted to a job or jobs, an employer is called upon to demonstrate that the standard was adopted after sufficient study and evaluation. It is not enough that officials think or hope that a requirement will work. In the District Court, Dr. Richard Barrett was qualified as an expert witness for plaintiff on the “use of tests and other selection procedures for selection in promotion and employment.” He testified as to what sound business practice would dictate: First, a careful job analysis should be made, detailing the tasks involved in a job and the precise skills that are necessary. Then, on the basis of this analysis, selection procedures may be chosen that are adapted to the relevant abilities. Then, the most important step is to validate the chosen procedures, that is, to test their results with actual performance.
The EEOC concurs. The Guidelines detail methods to be used to develop, study, and validate employment criteria.25
Compare with the above what Duke Power has done and what it has failed to do. Company officials say that the high school requirement was adopted because they thought it would be helpful. Indeed, a company executive candidly admitted that
there is nothing magic about it, and it doesn’t work all the time, because you can have a man who graduated from High School, who is certainly incompetent to go on up, but we felt this was a reasonable requirement * * *.
Duke Power offered the testimony of Dr. Dannie Moffie, an expert “psychologist in the field of industrial and personnel testing.” Dr. Moffie agreed that a professionally developed test “should be reliable and * * * should be valid.” The question of validity, he said, is whether “the test measures what it has been set up to measure.” Dr. Moffie *1245never asserted that the Bennett and Wonderlic tests had been validated for job-relatedness. In fact, he testified that a job-related validity study was begun at the Dan River plant in 1966 but has not yet been completed. What this expert did claim was that the tests had been validated for their express purpose of determining “whether or not a person has the intelligence level and the mechanical ability level that is characteristic of the High School graduate. According to Dr. Moffie,
when [the tests] function as a substitute or in lieu of a High School education, then the assumption is that the test then, — the High School education is the kind of training and ability and judgment that a person needs to have, in order to do the jobs that we are talking about here * * *.
It is precisely this assumption that is totally unsubstantiated. The tests stand, and fall, with the high school requirement. The testimony does establish that the tests are the equivalent or a suitable substitute for a high school education, but there is an utter failure to establish that they sufficiently measure the capacity of the employee to perform any of the jobs in the inside departments. This is a fatal omission and should mark the end of the story.
C. The Alleged Business Justification.
But on the majority’s theory, there can be business justification in the absence of job-relatedness. The Company’s promotion policy has always been to give on-the-job training — the next senior man is promoted if, after he tries out on the job, he is found qualified. The Company claims that ten years before the start of this suit it found that, its business having become increasingly complex, employees in the advanced departments “did not have an intelligence level high enough to enable them to progress” in the ordinary line of promotion. It is asserted that in order to ameliorate this situation and to “upgrade the quality of its work force” the Company adopted the high school requirement, and later the alternative tests, as conditions for entry into the desirable inside departments. On these claims the majority grounds its determination of business need.
In fairness to the majority and to the Company, the thrust of this factual presentation is to suggest an argument that does not necessarily disavow job-relatedness. Rather, the rule would be that the jobs for which the tests must be fitted may be jobs that employees will eventually, rather than immediately, be expected to fill. However, the plaintiffs and the Commission have neither addressed nor rejected that proposition. Rather, it is their contention, supported by the testing and finding below, that Duke Power has not shown that its educational and testing requirements are related to any job.26
Distilled to its essence, the underpinning upon which my brethren posit their *1246argument is their expressed belief in the good faith of Duke Power. For them, the crucial inquiry is not whether the Company can establish business need, but whether it has a bad motive or has designed its tests with the conscious purpose to discriminate against blacks. Thus the majority stresses that the standards were adopted in 1955 when overt discrimination was the general rule, and hence the new policy was obviously not meant to accomplish that end. But this is no answer.
A man who is turned down for a job does not care whether it was because the employer did not like his skin color or because, although the employer professed impartiality, procedures were used which had the effect of discriminating against the applicant’s race. Likewise irrelevant to Title VII is the state of mind of an employer whose policy, in practice, effects discrimination. The law will not tolerate unnecessarily harsh treatment of Negroes even though an employer does not plan this result. The use of criteria that are not backed .by valid and corroborated business needs cannot be allowed, regardless of subjective intent. There can be no legitimate business purpose apart from business need; and where no business need is shown, claims to business purpose evaporate.27
It may be accepted as true that Duke Power did not develop its transfer procedures in order to evade Title VII, since in 1955 this enactement could not be foreseen. However, by continuing to utilize them at the present time, it is now evading the Act. And by countenancing the practice, this court opens the door to wholesale evasion. We may be sure that there will be many who will seek to pass through that door.
The Company’s claim to business justification is further attenuated by imbalance in the application of the standards. Even if we view the standards as oriented toward future jobs, the fact remains that of those that might apply for such positions in the inside departments, only the outsiders must meet the questioned criteria in order to qualify. Intra-departmental progression remains the same. Also there is apparently no restriction on transfer from any of the inside departments to the other two inside departments. An employee with no more than a fifth grade education who has not taken the tests may try out for new inside jobs and transfer to a vacancy in another department if he is already in an inside department. In spite of Duke Power’s vaunted faith in the necessity of a high school education or its equivalent, such an employee may, without any test, advance as far as his actual talents permit and qualify for higher pay.
The fact that Duke Power has not consistently relied on its standards, especially when viewed in light of the fact that the exempted inside group was constituted when racial discrimination was in vogue, belies the claim to business justification.
In short, Duke Power has not demonstrated how the exigencies of its business warrant its transfer standards. The realities of the Duke Power experience reveal that what the majority seizes upon as business need is in fact no more than the Company’s bald assertion. The majority opinion’s measure of “genuine business purpose” must be very low in*1247deed, for, after all is said and done, Duke Power has offered no reason for allowing it to continue its racially discriminatory procedures.
II
Discriminatory Application of Standards
As described above, the Company’s criteria unfairly apply only to outsiders seeking entrance to the inside departments. This policy disadvantages those who were not favored with the the lax criteria used for whites before 1955. As I will show, this when juxtaposed with the history and racial composition of the Dan River plant, is itself sufficient to constitute a violation of Title VII.
It is true, as the majority points out, that the uneven-handed administration of transfer procedures works against some whites as well as blacks. It is also true that unlike the Constitution, Title VII does not prohibit arbitrary classifications generally. Its focus is on racial and other specified types of discrimination. Thus, when an employer capriciously favors the inside employees, to the detriment of those employed in the outside departments, this is not automatically an unlawful employment practice if whites as well as blacks are in the disadvantaged class.
On the other hand, it cannot be ignored that while this practice does not constitute forthright racial discrimination, the policy disfavoring the outside employees has primary impact on blacks. This effect is possible only because a history of overt bias caused the departments to become so imbalanced in the first place. The result is that in 1969, four years after the passage of Title VII, Dan River looks substantially like it did before 1965. The Labor Department is all black; the rest is virtually lily-white.
There no longer is room for doubt that a neutral superstructure built upon racial patterns that were discrimina-torily erected in the past comes within the Title VII ban. Judge Butzner put the point to rest when he rejected an employer contention that “the present consequences of past discrimination are outside the coverage of the act.” In his words, “[i]t is also apparent that Congress did not intend to freeze an entire generation of Negro employees into discriminatory patterns that existed before the act.” Quarles v. Philip Morris, Inc., 279 P.Supp. 505, 515-516 (E.D. Va.1968).
A remedy for this kind of wrong is not without precedent. The “freezing” principle (more properly, the anti-freezing principle), developed by the Fifth Circuit in voting cases is analogous. In those cases a pattern and practice of discrimination excluded almost all eligible Negroes from the voting lists but enrolled the vast majority of whites. Faced with judicial attack, the authorities found that they could no longer avowedly employ discriminatory practices. They invented and put into effect instead new, unquestionably even-handed, but onerous voting requirements which had the effect of excluding new applicants of both races, but, as was to be expected, primarily affected Negroes, who in the main were the unlisted ones. As the Fifth Circuit explained the principle,
[t]he term “freezing” is used in two senses. It may be said that when illegal discrimination or other practices have worked inequality on a class of citizens and the court puts an end to such a practice but a new and more onerous standard is adopted before the disadvantaged class may enjoy their rights, already fully enjoyed by the rest of the citizens this amounts to “freezing” the privileged status for those who acquired it during the period of discrimination and “freezing out” the group discriminated against.
United States v. Duke, 332 F.2d 759, 768 (5th Cir. 1964). Accordingly, the new voting requirements were struck down. This remedial measure was approved by the Supreme Court in Louisiana v. United States, 380 U.S. 145, 85 S.Ct. 817, 13 L.Ed.2d 709 (1965).
*1248Applying similar reasoning to the Title VII employment context, the Fifth Circuit invalidated the nepotism policy of an all-white union, which restricted new members to relatives of old ones. Although the policy of course discriminated against whites as well as others, it was prohibited since it enshrined the white membership and effectively forever denied membership status to Negroes or Mexican-Amerieans. Local 53 of International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers v. Vogler, 407 F.2d 1047 (5th Cir. 1969).28
Title VII bars “freeze-outs” as well as pure discrimination, where the “freeze” is achieved by requirements that are arbitrary and have no real business justification. Thus Duke Power’s discrimination against all those who did not benefit from the pre-1955 rule for whites operates as an illegal “freeze-out” of blacks from the inside departments.
Ill
Conclusion
Beside the violation found by the majority, Duke Power is guilty of an unlawful employment practice in two other ways. First, it has used non-job-related transfer standards which have the effect of excluding blacks. Second, it has implemented those same standards in a discriminatory fashion so as to freeze blacks out of the inside departments.
This case deals with no mere abstract legal question. It confronts us with one of the most vexing problems touching racial justice and tests the integrity and credibility of the legislative and judicial process. We should approach our task of enforcing Title VII with full realization of what is at stake.
For all of the above reasons, the judgment of the District Court should be reversed with directions to grant relief to all of the plaintiffs.
. Local 189 v. United States, 416 F.2d 980 (5th Cir., July 28, 1969), discussed at note 8, infra.
. See generally Cooper and Sobel, Seniority and Testing Under Fair Employment Laws, A General Approach to Objective Criteria of Hiring and Promotion, 82 Harv.L.Rev. 1598 (June 1969) [hereinafter cited as Cooper and Sobel] ; Note, Legal Implications of the Use of Standardized Ability Tests in Employment and Education, 68 Col.L.Rev. 691 (April 1968).
. The opinion was unanimous save for Mr. Justice McReynolds, who took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.
. It is not part of my contention that the defendant in the present case availed himself of “objective” employment procedures deliberately to evade the strictures of Title VII. As will be developed, an employer’s state of mind when be adopts the standards is irrelevant when the effect of his actions is not different from purposeful discrimination. At any rate, it is my view that the majority’s construction of Title VII will invite many employers to seize on such measures as tools for their forbidden designs.
. At oral argument we were told that one other black has since qualified but has not yet been transferred.
. No one seriously questions the fact that, in general, whites register far better on the Company’s alternative requirements than blacks. The reasons are not mysterious.
High School Education. In North Carolina, census statistics show, as of 1960, while 34% of white males had completed high school, only 12% of Negro males had done so. On a gross level, then, use of the high school diploma requirement would favor whites by a ratio of approximately 3 to 1.
Standardised Tests. It is generally known that standardized aptitude tests are designed to predict future ability by testing a cumulation of acquired knowledge.
In other words, an aptitude test is necessarily measuring a student’s background, his environment. It is a test of his cumulative experiences in his home, his community and his school.
Hobson v. Hansen, 269 F.Supp. 401 (D. D.C.1967), aff’d sub nom., Smuck v. Hobson, 408 F.2d 175 (D.C.Cir. 1969) (en banc).
Since for generations blacks have been afforded inadequate educational opportunities and have been culturally segregated from white society, it is no more surprising that their performance on “intelligence” tests is significantly different than whites’ than it is that fewer blacks have high school diplomas. In one instance, for example, it was found that 58% of whites could pass a battery of standardized tests, as compared with only 6% of the blacks. Included among those tests were the Wonderlie and Bennett tests. Decision of EEOC, cited in CCH Empl.Prac.Guide T 1209.25 (Dec. 2, 1966).
For a comprehensive analysis of the impact of standardized tests on blacks, see Cooper and Sobel, 1638-1641.
. Issued September 21, 1966. The Guidelines may be found in CCH Empl.Prac. Guide T 16,904 at 7319.
. The newly appointed chairman of the EEOC, William H. Brown, III, has recently reaffirmed this thesis. In an address on November 26, 1969 he asked representatives of more than forty trade associations to “review selection and testing procedures to make sure they reflect actual job requirements." 72 LRR 413, 416 (12/8/69).
. Judge Wisdom stated that
[The Griggs court] went on to strike down an EEOC interpretation of that provision which would limit the exemption to tests that measure ability “required by the particular job or class of jobs which the applicant seeks.” * * *
When an employer adopts a system that necessarily carries forward the inei-dents of discrimination into the present, bis practice constitutes ongoing discrimination, unless the incidents are limited to those that safety and efficiency require. That appears to be the premise for the Commission’s interpretation of § 703(h). To the extent that Griggs departs from that view, we find it unpersuasive. 416 F.2d at 994.
. Decided on February 26, 1964. Reproduced in 110 Cong.Ree. 5662-64 (1964).
. 110 Cong.Ree. 7213 (1964).
. The amendment was introduced on July 11, 1964. In its entirety it reads:
(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, it shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to give any professionally developed ability test to any individual seeking employment or being considered for promotion or transfer, or to act in reliance upon the results of any such test given to such individual, if—
(1) in the case of any individual who is seeking employment with such employer, such test is designed to determine or predict whether such individual is suitable or trainable with respect to his employment in the particular business or enterprise involved, and such test is given to all individuals seeking similar employment with such employer without regard to the individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, or (2) in the case of an individual who is an employee of such employer, such test is designed to determine or predict whether such individual is suitable or trainable with respect to his promotion or transfer by such employer without regard to the employee’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
HO Cong.Ree. 13492 (1964).
. Id.
. Id. at 13504.
. Id. at 13492.
. Id. at 13503-04.
. Id. at 13503.
. In fact, it appears that Senator Case was concerned that the amendment might be construed the way Duke Power would have us construe the enacted § 703(h).
If this amendment were enacted it could be an absolute bar and would give an absolute right to an employer to state as a fact that he had given a test to all applicants, whether it was a good test or not, so long as it was professionally designed.
Id. at 13504.
. Id. at 13505.
. Id. at 13724.
. Id.
. Indeed, the avowed tightening of language by Senator Tower in the interim, n. 20, supra, was presumably in response to the misgiving expressed by Senator Case that the original amendment could lend itself to the construction that Duke Power now seeks. See n. 16, supra.
. The majority argues that congressional action some years after the passage of the 1964 Act supports the Company’s position. This is not legislative history. Even if the import of the action were unequivocal it would not speak for the will of the 88th Congress which passed the statute.
The cited legislative deliberation was occasioned by a bill introduced in May 1968 to modify Title VII. See S. 3465, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. § 6(e) (1968). If adopted it would have amended § 703(h) to embody a job-related standard in express terms. ■ However, the bill was not enacted. One can draw differing and inconsistent conclusions from these events. It could be argued, as the majority does, that the bill’s proponents recognized that § 703(h) as it stands does not contemplate job-relation. It is equally possible that the bill ultimately did not pass because the amendment was thought to be unnecessary. The bill’s adherents might also have thought that the new amendment would represent no change, but offered it to forestall employers, such as Duke Power, from construing § 703(h) incorrectly. The inferences to be drawn from the introduction of the bill and its death are at best ambiguous and inconclusive.
If one must look to subsequent events for elucidation, consideration might be given to the comment of a Senator who was intimately involved in the passage of § 703(h). Senator Humphrey has stated *1244that in his view § 703(h) did not protect tests if they were “irrelevant to the actual job requirements.” Letter to American Psychological Association, quoted in The Ind. Psychologist (Div. 14, Am. Psychological Ass’n Newsletter), August, 1965, at 6, cited in Cooper and Sobel, 1653, n. 67.
. The District Judge said:
The two tests used by the defendant were never intended to accurately measure the ability of an employee to perform the particular job available.
* * * * sis
* * * These qualities are general in nature and are not indicative of a person’s ability to perform a particular task. Nevertheless, they are qualities which the defendant would logically want to find in his employees.
292 F.Supp. 243, 250 (1968).
. The recommended methods were adopted after study by a panel of psychologists. The Commission has the power “to make such technical studies as are appropriate to effectuate the purposes and policies of this subchapter and to make the results of such studies available to the public[.]” 42 U.S.C. 2000e-4(f) (5).
Also see 33 Fed.Reg. 14392 (1968). By order of the Secretary of Labor, detailed minimum standards of evidence of test validity have been issued for federal contractors. That evidence is reviewed by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance to determine whether or not a contractor has violated Executive Order 11,246, 3 C.F.R. 339 (1964-65 comp.), banning racial discrimination.
. The notion that future jobs can be the basis for a test is not inconsistent with the language of the Guidelines which speaks of “the applicant’s ability to perform a particular job or class of jobs.” Of course it would be impermissible for an employer to gear his requirements to jobs the availability of which is only a remote possibility. The office of Federal Contract Compliance administers Executive Order 11,246, 3 C.F.R. 339 (1964-65 comp.) which bans discrimination by government contractors. That agency has recognized this problem and has provided (by order of the Secretary of Labor) that when a hiring test is based on possible promotion to other jobs, promotion must be probable “within a reasonable period of time and in a great majority of cases.” 33 Fed.Reg. 14392, § 2(b) (1) (1968).
In this case, however, the issue is not the propriety of testing for remote positions. We might assume that once an employee joins the line of progression his advance will be inexorable. Nevertheless, the fact remains that Duke Power’s requirements have never been validated for jobs at the end of the ladder, let alone those on the bottom rung.
. As I have noted from the outset of this discussion, the ultimate question under Title VII is whether there are business needs for an employer’s policy. Plaintiffs agree and the majority properly quotes their brief, adding emphasis :
An employer is, of course, permitted to set educational or test requirements that fulfill genuine business needs. * * * [Wjhere business needs can be shown * * * the fact that the test tends to exclude more Negroes than whites does not make it discriminatory.
The statement is correct and certainly does not “concede,” as the majority urges, that the question is only whether Duke Power had a “genuine business purpose and [was] without intent to discriminate against future Negro employees * *
. See also Houston Maritime Ass’n, 168 NLRB 83, 66 LRRM 1337 (1967). A union, after having consistently rejected Negroes for membership, adopted a new “freeze” policy whereby all new applicants were turned down, white and black. The Labor Board found that the union violated the National Labor Relations Act.
[B]y adopting a practice which in operative effect created a preferred class in employment, the result was that the Union’s previous policy of discrimination against Negroes as to job opportunities solely on the basis of race was continued and maintained.
66 LRRM, at 1339.