Friday, August 13, 2010

Using Credit Scores and Criminal Records to reject employment is now Discrimination...so sayeth the EEOC




Using Credit Scores and Criminal Records to reject employment is now Discrimination...so sayeth the EEOC

If you own a business that deals in precious metals, or any else of value, you may be using discrimination if you only hire someone with a clean criminal record. If you own a business where money is handled, I hope you don't use a credit check to verify your employee doesn't have any civil claims. That is discrimination as well. This is what our politically correct society has become.

CNS News reports:

Companies using criminal records or bad credit reports to screen out job applicants might run afoul of anti-discrimination laws as the government steps up scrutiny of hiring policies that can hurt blacks and Hispanics.
 
A blanket refusal to hire workers based on criminal records or credit problems can be illegal if it has a disparate impact on racial minorities, according to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The agency enforces the nation's employment discrimination laws.
 
"Our sense is that the problem is snowballing because of the technology allowing these checks to be done with a fair amount of ease," said Carol Miaskoff, assistant legal counsel at the EEOC.
 
With millions of adults having criminal records -- anything from underage drinking to homicide -- a growing number of job seekers are having a rough time finding work. And more companies are trying to screen out people with bankruptcies, court judgments or other credit problems just as those numbers have swollen during the recession.
 
Just ask Adrienne Hudson, a single mother who says she was fired from her new job as a bus driver at First Transit in Oakland, Calif., when the company found out she had been convicted seven years earlier for welfare fraud.
 
Hudson, 44, is fighting back with a lawsuit alleging the company's hiring practice discriminates against black and Latino job seekers, who have arrest and conviction rates far greater than whites. A spokesman for First Transit said the company does not comment on pending litigation.
 
"People make mistakes," said Hudson, who is black, "but when they correct their mistake, they should not be punished again outside of the court system."
 
Justice Department statistics show that 38 percent of the U.S. prison population is black, compared with about 12 percent of the general population. In 2008, African-Americans were about six times more likely to be incarcerated than whites. The incarceration rate for Latinos was 2.3 times higher than whites.
 
If criminal histories are taken into account, the EEOC says employers must also consider the nature of the job, the seriousness of the offense and how long ago it occurred. For example, it may make sense to disqualify a bank employee with a past conviction for embezzlement, but not necessarily for a DUI.
 
Most companies tend to be more nuanced when they look at credit reports, weeding out those applicants with bad credit only if they seek senior positions or jobs dealing with money. But if the screening process weeds out more black and Hispanic applicants than whites, an employer needs to show how the credit information is related to the job.

Yes, because only blacks and Hispanics have criminal records huh EEOC? Notice how it's always based around race. I'm sorry, but if a person applies for a position inside my company and you are found to have a criminal record, I'd refuse to hire that person as well. Their skin color means zip. I base it on the content of their character and a CRIMINAL record shows what type content a person has.

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