| NOVEMBER
2004 :: BIG BUSINESS
Double
Jeopardy
As
Background Checks Proliferate,
Ex-Cons Get Locked Out of Jobs
By
Ann Zimmerman and Kortney Stringer
Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal
While Peter
Demain was serving a six-year sentence for drug possession, he did
such a good job working in the prison kitchen that he quickly rose
to head baker. After his release, he filled out 25 job applications
at bagel shops, coffee houses, grocery stores and bakeries. All
turned him down. Some even asked him to leave the premises immediately
after learning of his conviction.
It's never been
easy for someone with a criminal history to find work, but it is
becoming increasingly difficult. More businesses are using criminal-background
checks to guard against negligent-hiring lawsuits, theft of company
assets and even terrorism. About 80% of big companies in the U.S.
now do such checks, up from 56% in 1996, according to a January
survey of personnel executives.
This past summer,
Wal-Mart Stores, the nation's largest corporate employer, with more
than 1.2 million workers, began conducting criminal-background checks
on all applicants in its U.S. stores. Wal-Mart's former policy was
to order background checks only for certain personnel, including
loss-prevention and pharmacy employees.
Wal-Mart had
come under fire for two separate incidents in South Carolina in
which its employees were accused of sexually assaulting young female
shoppers. Both of the accused employees had prior criminal convictions
for sexually related offenses. A spokesman for Wal-Mart says the
company was unaware of the criminal records of the two employees
in question.
Driven Back
to Crime?
Yet as they
rely on background checks to screen workers, companies risk imposing
unfair barriers to rehabilitated criminals. For society, the implications
are huge: If former offenders can't find legitimate jobs, they may
be driven back to crime.
"Forty-six
million people in this country have been convicted of something
sometime in their lives, and our economy would collapse if none
of them could get jobs," says Lewis Maltby, president of the
National WorkRights Institute, a nonprofit human-rights organization.
That figure includes everybody in the FBI criminal-records database,
which includes people convicted of relatively minor misdemeanors.
The explosion
in background checks is occurring in part because technological
advances have made them faster and cheaper. Businesses commonly
pay $25 to $100 per search, and the price is dropping. Earlier this
year, SecurTest, an applicant-screening company, began offering
background checks using its own proprietary system that culls public
criminal records. The service, which costs about $10 per applicant,
focuses mainly on felony-type convictions.
Bottom line:
It's now affordable for businesses to do checks for the very sorts
of entry-level jobs in which rehabilitated criminals are encouraged
to seek employment.
How businesses
use the background checks may be just as important as whether they
do. Prisoner advocates are most bothered by "zero-tolerance"
policies that bar companies from hiring anyone with a criminal record
of any sort.
"The question
that should be asked is, is there a legitimate connection between
the crime and employment conditions?" says Gil Kline, spokesman
for Sentencing Project, an advocacy group on criminal-justice policy.
Wal-Mart says
that people with a criminal record could still be offered a job.
It will all depend on the nature of the crime, how long ago it occurred,
and the type of job being filled, the company says.
That's the right
way to use background checks, some experts say. But with plenty
of jobless workers to choose from in today's economy, they fear
companies will be tempted to reject anyone with a criminal record,
despite a federal law that prohibits making a person's criminal
history an absolute bar to hiring.
Such scrutiny
has tempted some applicants to lie. When Jeffrey Calwise first got
out of prison for unarmed robbery, he disclosed his criminal history
on work applications. But after numerous rejections, he decided
to fib. The Detroit resident got a factory job making $6.50 an hour,
but was later fired after the company performed a background check
and discovered his criminal record.
Then, Mr. Calwise
decided to begin writing "will discuss at interview" on
applications that asked about whether he'd been convicted of a crime.
That didn't work, either: He got some interviews, but his explanation
didn't get him any jobs.
"I'm fairly
intelligent, so it has to be my background," says Mr. Calwise,
a 40-year-old who is currently in a drug-treatment program and serving
probation at a halfway house for a conviction on drug possession.
Mistaken
Identity
The U.S. Fair
Credit Reporting Act requires employers to give job seekers a copy
of their background report if they are rejected due to a criminal
offense. The law also permits applicants to challenge the reports.
But companies can always cite different reasons for rejecting someone.
Another loophole: Employers aren't required to give a person a copy
of the report if they conduct the search themselves, such as by
mining publicly available court records.
Even law-abiding
job seekers can find themselves unemployable if a background check
is flawed. Glitches in criminal-database searches can supply an
employer with erroneous information on an applicant.
Ron Peterson,
who used to work as an insulation technician in California, has
applied for more than 50 jobs since being laid off by MCI a year
ago but hasn't ever been called in for an interview. After watching
a news show on background checks, he decided to buy one on himself.
One report claimed a Ronald Peterson with the same birth date but
a different middle initial had pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in
Arizona. Mr. Peterson wonders if that's a factor in his protracted
job search.
"I wouldn't
hire me from what these reports said," Mr. Peterson says.
Under what
circumstances, if any, should a criminal conviction disqualify someone
for a job? Write
to us.
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