This case is among the first in another round of litigation growing out of the apparent inability of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to cope with the volume of complaints before it. It has already been determined by the overwhelming weight of authority that under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,1 the Commission may not defeat jurisdiction of the federal courts in a civil suit under Title VII by (1) a statement that it has been unable to determine whether reasonable cause exists to believe that there has been a violation of the Act,2 or (2) a failure to attempt to achieve voluntary compliance with the anti-discriminatory provisions of the Act.3 We are here called upon to decide whether an actual finding, that there is “no reasonable cause” to believe that a violation of Title VII has occurred, will defeat jurisdiction.4 *1138We hold that it does not and’ reverse the judgment of the district court.
On or about June 19, 1967 plaintiff-appellant William J. Beverly applied for a job with defendant-appellee Lone Star Lead Construction Co. (Lone Star); he was told by Lone Star that there were no available jobs and that there were “no applications.” A week later he filed a charge with the EEOC alleging unlawful discrimination in violation of Title VII in that he had been denied employment because he was a Negro. By decision of April 7, 1969, the EEOC found that “reasonable cause does not exist to believe that the Respondent is in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act as alleged.” On May 19, 1969, the Commission issued to appellant a “Notice of Right to Sue Within 30 Days” which stated: “Pursuant to Section 706(e) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,5 you are hereby notified that you may within thirty (30) days of receipt of this communication institute a civil action in the appropriate Federal District Court.”
Appellant then brought this suit on June 11, 1969, alleging in his complaint that Lone Star had no Negro employees and had hired white employees subsequent to his thwarted attempt to make application. The district court granted Lone Star’s motion for summary judgment and ruled that “a finding of reasonable cause is a jurisdictional prerequisite to suit in the federal district court.”
Because we feel that we face a situation not contemplated by Congress6 and are unable to find satisfactory assistance in the history of this hotly contested legislation,7 our disposition of this case is based upon our view of the broad purposes of Title VII.fWe are convinced that Congress did not intend to make the EEOC final arbiter of complainants’ rights.
The enforcement powers of the Commission are non-existent. Its efforts are only supplementary to those the plaintiff must employ himself. To hold that an administrative failure by an agency lacking enforcement power itself, can deprive the plaintiff of his right to sue, the main weapon of the Title VII arsenal, would exalt form over substance.8
This point has been so often asserted by this and other courts,9 most recently by *1139this circuit in Miller v. International Paper Co., supra, that discussion is not necessary.
Nonetheless, the EEOC was intended to, and does, play an important role in the legislative scheme.10 Potential litigants are absolutely required to take a step which affords them at least an opportunity to reach a more amicable conciliation out of court.11
It seems clear, therefore, that the requirement of resort to the Commission was designed to give a discriminator opportunity to respond to persuasion rather than coercion, to soft words rather than the big stick of injunction; that the requirement was not designed to serve as a screen to prevent frivolous complaints from reaching the courts.12
We do not think the parties should be allowed to bypass this requirement.13 It is our interpretation of Title VII that there exists an absolute right in each complainant to bring a civil action in federal court. This right, however, is subject to one important proviso: The complainant must comply with the minimum jurisdictional requirements necessary to allow the opportunity for conciliation to mature. The purpose of the Act would indeed be frustrated if the Commission could be avoided entirely or if a party’s right to proceed in federal court could be erased by a quasi-judicial determination of the EEOC.
We conclude therefore, that the administrative remedies available from the EEOC must be “exhausted” in the traditional sense of the term, as a prerequisite to federal suit.14 Mondy v. Crown Zellerbach states our position well:
We feel that this problem is properly treated as one of exhaustion of administrative remedies. These plaintiffs have decided to proceed under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and therefore must do everything in their power to achieve their goals through the E.E.O.C. before going to court. But 42 U.S.C.A. § 2000e-5(e) sets out only two requirements for an aggrieved party before he can sue * * * There is nothing more that a person can do, and this Court will not ask that he be responsible for the Commission’s failure to conciliate, as that body’s inaction is beyond the control of the charging party. To bar a party from bringing suit because the E.E.O.C. has shirked its statutory responsibility would indeed be to provide a hollow remedy and to inflict an undeserved penalty upon an innocent person15
To this end, the tenor of the cases has established only two jurisdic*1140tional prerequisites to suit in federal court under Title VII: (1) the filing of a complaint with the EEOC and (2) the receipt of the statutory notice of right to sue.16 Early formulation of the latter requirement used the following language: “he must receive statutory notice from the EEOC that it has been unable to obtain voluntary compliance.”17 Subsequent decisions have made it clear that this language, taken from Section 2000e-5, is not to be interpreted in its narrowest sense; it is not necessary either for the Commission to state in its notice that it has been unable to obtain voluntary compliance or for the Commission to have engaged in any attempt at conciliation whatsoever.18 The sole purpose of this requirement is to provide a formal notification to the claimant that his administrative remedies with the Commission have been exhausted. Significantly, under EEOC regulations, a right to demand and receive such a notice accrues sixty days after the charge is filed regardless of any act or omission by the EEOC.19 Were this regulation not written, we would read it into the Act lest a claimant’s statutory right to sue in federal court become subject to such fortuitous variables as workload, mistakes, or possible lack of diligence of EEOC personnel.20
It is not contended by Lone Star that these conditions have not been met by appellant. Rather, they argue that by the language of section 706, the EEOC is without power to issue the statutory notice because the chain of events leading to the issuance of such notice has not been set in motion by a “reasonable cause” finding.21 The simple answer to this argument is that the contingency that the EEOC will find “no reasonable cause” is not dealt with in the statute. We decline to adopt Lone Star’s proposed construction that the clear import of the Act requires us to treat such a finding as jurisdictional.22
*1141Appellant has done all that is required of him and has utilized the only opportunities afforded by the Act to exhaust his administrative remedies. Considering the obviously remedial purposes of the Act, we do not believe that courts should deny a grievant an opportunity to prove the allegations of his complaint solely on the basis of a conclusion by the EEOC that reasonable cause does not exist, The Commission is neither required nor physically able to conduct an “in depth” investigation in every case; apparently the investigative procedure, in the instant case was performed on an ex parte basis, bereft of all of the advantages which come from an adversary proceeding in a court of law.23 The Commission possesses no power of enforcement; it cannot fix a penalty, issue a citation, or grant a cease and desist order. It seems completely unfair to nullify the grievant’s complaint by a non-reviewable conclusion of the Commission, particularly when he has fully complied with the requirements of the statute. In the circumstances of this case the courts afford the only effective remedy under the present state of the law. Lawsuits and disputes are for the courts. We will not permit the single finding of this investigatory agency to stand as a complete defense which precludes all hope of adversary adjudication or remedial action in the courts. This conclusion is strongly supported by the decision of the Third Circuit in Fekete v. United States Steel Corp.;
[W]e conclude that good reason and fealty to the spirit and purpose of the Act command that we do not require an affirmative finding by the Commission as the passport for judicial review. To engraft more significance onto the Commission’s preliminary finding is to suggest that in this important federal legislation, purposely enacted to protect the rights of aggrieved individuals who believe they have suffered discrimination, it was the intention of Congress to create a Commission completely stripped of power to enforce the Act against an errant employer, but superbly endowed with power to frustrate the prosecution of any claim by the simple expedient of issuing a non-reviewable order saying there is no reasonable cause to believe a violation existed. We cannot accept the hypothesis that Congress intended to entrust the key to judicial relief with an agency given no power to direct the processing of a civil action in court.24
Although this case is one of first impression before this court, the question has already been decided in the complainant’s favor in other circuits and by numerous district courts.25 We adhere *1142generally to the reasoning of these cases, especially Grimm, Fekete, and Flowers.
While of course we are not bound by the decisions of the courts of appeals of the two circuits which have heretofore passed upon precisely the same question, we think it appropriate to say that it would take extremely cogent reasoning to cause us to take a different view on a matter of statutory construction.26
Moreover, this court has, in effect, decided in Miller v. International Paper Co., supra, that a finding of reasonable cause is not a jurisdictional prerequisite to a Title VII action.27 In that opinion we made a detailed investigation of the Act and its history and concluded emphatically that “the action or inaction of the EEOC cannot affect the grievant’s substantive rights under the statute.”28 Realizing that there exists at least a technical distinction between Miller and the instant case, we nonetheless believe our decision here — that a finding of “no reasonable cause” by the Commission does not foreclose complainant's right to sue under Title VII — is logically compelled by Miller.
Further, we are convinced by the analysis of Grimm, supra, that Congress did not give the Commission the authority to take any action affecting the substantive rights of grievants which are not subject to judicial review. Title VII itself implicity recognizes this fact by provisions which (1) assume the existence of the power of courts to make independent de novo rulings29 and (2) afford no binding weight to Commission actions.30 In addition, a host of appellant decisions have adopted a similar narrow view of the Commission’s power.31
Additionally, we note that the interpretation of the Act here propounded is substantially the same as that which the EEOC has argued in its amicus brief and is in accord with the spirit of applicable EEOC regulations. Again, we are certainly not bound by the EEOC’s interpretation of its own enabling statute. The fact that we are in accord does, however, add to our confidence that our interpretation is a correct one which will be administered as indicated.32
The district court’s judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for a trial of appellant’s claim on the merits.
Reversed and remanded.