Background Checks and Your Privacy
by Kit Fremin
If you are faced with the
possibility of having to undergo a background check as a
prerequisite for obtaining a new job you may be wondering how your
right to privacy conflicts with your employer’s right to know more
about you; especially with regard to any possible criminal history
and past job performance. As a person whose company has performed
tens of thousands of background checks I would like to present some
facts of which you may not be aware.
Fact #1:
Virtually all criminal records are public. If you commit a
crime or even if you don’t and you are charged with a crime, the
record of that is available to the public. Courts have records of
all crimes or suspected crimes that made it to court. Some police
departments make their arrest logs available.
“What about the presumption of
innocence?” you may ask. That is still in effect, but nevertheless
the charges brought against you are public record. In fact anyone
can go down to the local courthouse and request to see your record,
and they don’t even have to be a citizen. About half of the
country’s criminal records are available online in some form or
another, often on fee or subscription sites.
Juvenile records are the exception
to this rule and are generally sealed unless the person was tried as
an adult for a major crime.
If you have a minor crime in your
past try to get it expunged from the record. Technically an employer
can’t deny you employment if you had a minor criminal record in your
past where you were found not guilty. Like the old saying, “You
can’t un-ring a bell.” Once they see a criminal record it tends to
stick in their minds. Getting a record expunged is relatively
simple and usually doesn’t require an attorney. There are internet
companies that specialize in expungement.
Fact # 2: There is no magic
government database that
lists all of your previous employment and education. A surprising
amount of otherwise smart people ask me, “Can you get a list of
someone’s previous employment and verify it?” The simple answer is
No. there is no database with your employment listed. Remember,
background checkers are verifiers. You have to give us the info, we
then verify it.
Fact # 3: Employers can get credit
info on you. Employers
can order a Credit Report which is a specially designed credit
report specifically for employment purposes. It is exactly the same
as a regular credit report with two important exceptions; It doesn’t
show your credit account numbers and it doesn’t tell your age or
date of birth. The good news for you is that you are notified
whenever one of these reports is ordered on you.
Most credit bureaus require a
separate consent form signed by you to enable the employer to order
a credit report. This is to prevent having the consent text buried
in the fine print of and employee background check consent form and
having the report ordered without your express permission.
Fact #4: Employers can ask your
date of birth for the
purpose of obtaining your criminal history, because criminal records
are searched by name and date of birth. What they may not do
is discriminate based on your age. There are still people out there
that think that if a potential employer asks for their date of birth
that they can automatically sue for age discrimination. No, you
have to be discriminated against first. Most recent legislation has
set the bar much higher for age discrimination lawsuits. You have
to show a pattern of age discrimination by the employer, which is
vastly more difficult to prove.
Throughout the 14+ years that I
have been doing background checks I have had many, many arguments
with people and attorneys (a little joke here) who say that an
employer may not ask for age or date of birth. They are wrong,
Period. Saying, “Show me the law.” usually works against their
argument, but for the really hard cases I always ask them if, at
their business, the human resource people are blindfolded when they
conduct an interview. “Why would they be?” they ask. To which I
reply, “God forbid that they could tell the applicant’s sex, race,
religion, national origin, etc, all things that an employer may not
discriminate against.
Another word about discrimination:
While the above is true, some legal discrimination does occur. (How
many old, fat lifeguards have you seen at the beach, for example?)
The acronym is BFOQ which stands for Bona Fide Occupational
Qualification which basically means that if a church wants to hire a
pastor, they can require that he be of that faith or if a clothing
designer wants to hire a model to model women’s clothes he/she can
hire a woman. Likewise there can be physical ability requirements.
Remember that an employer can
legally not hire you because you smell bad or your mommy dresses you
funny. My point is; don’t give someone an excuse not to hire you.
Be at your best and be well prepared.
Fact # 5: Employers have a right
to see your SS#.
Technically they are allowed to see it at the time of hiring, not
necessarily when you are applying. It’s a fine distinction, but an
important one.
Fact # 6: You have the right to
see the background check report
especially if you were denied the
job based on the results of the background check. If my company,
BCI, did your report and an error was made, we want to know about
the errors and so should your employer. FYI; federal law requires
background check companies like ours to reinvestigate any claim (in
writing) by you, the applicant, within five days of the report being
issued. My company, BCI has extended that guarantee to 30 days.
Fact # 7: Employers can ask
previous employers anything they want.
When verifying your previous
employment the new employer can ask anything they want about your
work habits, character, initiative, conduct or anything else thy
want to know. The previous employer doesn’t have to answer any of
those questions of course, and in fact, most don’t.
Mom and Pop employers are most
often guilty of this. When asking the questions they are not doing
anything illegal, in fact, they are probably smart.
Conversely, when answering the
questions, we recommend that previous employers stick to
documentable facts and not express their opinion. Here is an
example that really happened: We asked the previous employer what
they could tell us about applicant’s competency and character. The
previous employer responded that the applicant was slothful and was
always late for work and didn’t care about his job. A better answer
would have been, “We have a company rule that if you are late three
times that you are written up. He was written up three times in one
year. That can be documented and does not contain the respondent’s
opinion. You can’t sue someone for telling the truth. Well, you
can, but you won’t win.
Kit Fremin is
the owner and founder of Background Check International. Since 1994
BCI has served clients as varied as: the LA Times, Department of
Defense, Mars, Inc., the UN, the NTSB and Calvary Chapels
nationwide. His website is:
www.bcint.com and he can be e-mailed at
kit@bcint.com.
©2009
Background Check International
BCI has been conducting background checks since 1994 and we can get
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