Thursday, July 31, 2014

Three Employers Face Class Action Lawsuits from the Same Law Firm

 Despite all of the FCRA-related class action suits taking place, it appears large companies are not taking an appropriate course of action to ensure they are in compliance. One has to wonder whether, whether it is simply a lack of attention to detail (That would be a surprise) or simply HR/Legal/Compliance not staying current. The latest three companies in question are Panera, LLC, American Multi-Cinema, Inc. (AMC), and Nine West Holdings. Two of these class action suits involve the same plaintiff, and all three are from the same Florida law firm. In each of these cases, the plaintiff applied for employment online. Each of these companies allegedly failed to provide a valid, compliant consent form before initiating pre-employment background checks.

An employer’s obligation before obtaining background information is as follows (from the co-published FTC/EEOC guide):

·         Tell the applicant or employee you might use the information for decisions about his or her employment. This notice must be in writing and in stand-alone format. The notice can’t be in an employment application. You can include minor additional information in the notice (like a brief description of the nature of consumer reports), but only if it does not confuse or detract from the notice.

·         If you are asking a company to provide an “investigative report” – a report based on personal interviews concerning a person’s character, general reputation, personal characteristics, and lifestyle – you must also tell the applicant or employee of his or her right to a description of the nature and scope of the investigation.

·         Get the applicant’s or employee’s written permission to do the background check. This can be part of the document you use to notify the person that you will get the report. If you want the authorization to allow you to get background reports throughout the person’s employment, make sure you say so clearly and conspicuously.

You can find the FTC/EEOC guidance as a whole here.

Panera allegedly violated the FCRA by not providing a consent form specifically for a consumer report. The plaintiff also alleged that the bakery-café chain included extraneous information that detracted from the notice. American Multi-Cinema, Inc. (AMC) allegedly did not have a stand-alone consent form for online application for employment. And finally, Nine West Holdings allegedly had consent language that was part of a web page that contained a number of links to Nine West information on the website.

The main takeaways from these alleged violations is:

·         Your consent, AKA disclosure and authorization, must be a stand-alone (not part of the application) form.
·         The consent form cannot contain extraneous information
·         The purpose of the consent must be clearly stated (i.e. employment screening)

The lawsuit demonstrates that violations of the FCRA can create large potential liability.  Potential class members, including employees and prospective employees, may be entitled to statutory damages of up to $1,000 for each violation in the case of willful non-compliance. Class action lawsuits also create exposure for large awards of attorney’s fees and the potential exposure to punitive damages.


If you have any doubts about your company’s FCRA compliance, PLEASE act before you wind up on the wrong end of a class-action lawsuit.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Louisville: The Latest City to "Ban the Box"

Add Louisville to the list of cities who have “banned the box”. The Louisville Metro Council passed the new law earlier this month. This means that city employers cannot include a section on the application that asks the applicants to reveal if they have been previously convicted. Louisville joins over 50 cities/counties who have some form of the ban-the-box policy.

These ordinances serve to discourage employers from denying a qualified job-seeker based solely on a prior conviction. This particular law pertains to jobs for the City as well as vendor/contractors who do business with the City. The law pushes back the inquiry into the applicant’s criminal history until later in the hiring process. For more on Louisville’s new ordinance, visit NELP.org.


We are seeing more and more of these policies. Half of the states in the U.S. now have at least one city with a ban-the-box policy. Expect more soon. We will keep you up-to-speed. 

Friday, March 21, 2014

Latest Class Action - Canon Solutions America Inc.

Canon Solutions America Inc. is the latest company to come under compliance fire for an alleged failure to follow FCRA guidelines. Anya McPherson, the individual responsible for the class action, claims that Canon Solutions America fired her without offering her a chance to dispute the results of a background check. McPherson also claims that the charge was more than a decade old and that the conviction was expunged. To make matters more complicated for Canon, the plaintiff also stated that she did not receive a copy of her report, and did not receive a summary of her rights under the FCRA.
Due to the high frequency of cases being brought against employers for FCRA violations, I decided to include a ‘refresher’ for FCRA compliance. 

Please be sure to take into consideration the following:

1) Before Obtaining A Consumer Report

If you intend to use a consumer report for employment purposes, you must provide written disclosure of your intent to perform a background check as a condition of employment. You must also get permission from the applicant. This comes in the form of a written consent form. Once you have obtained consent from the applicant, you can move forward with the background check. The Disclosure and Consent should be kept as separate clearly defined documents or ‘pages’ if you will.

2) Pre-Adverse Action

Adverse Action basically means that you may or intend to deny the applicant employment based on the information you obtained from the background check. If based on your review of the background you plan to pass on the applicant based on this info, you must send the applicant a pre-adverse action letter. 

The Pre-Adverse Action letter must include the following re notification:

The name, address, and phone number of the Credit Reporting Agency (CRA)
The fact that the CRA didn't make the adverse decision and cannot give reasons for the decision
His/her right to a free copy of the consumer report within 60 days
His/her right to contact the CRA to dispute the accuracy of the report
Summary of Rights including any State specific requirements


3) Adverse Action

After you have given the applicant 5 days to dispute the report, you may take Adverse Action against the applicant. You must notify them of your final decision to deny employment based upon their consumer report, through use of an Adverse Action Letter, which also must contain all of the above notification provisions mentioned above under pre adverse.

The FTC and EEOC also co-published guidance on the proper procedure for background screening, which can be found here

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

FTC and EEOC Co-Publish Background Screening Compliance Guide

On March 10, 2014, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) co-published two guides to help employers and applicants understand how to implement a legally compliant background screening program. The two documents are titled Background Checks: What Employers Need to Know and Background Checks: What Job Applicants and Employees Should Know. The FTC is in charge of enforcing the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), a federal law that regulates collection, dissemination, and the use of consumer information. The EEOC enforces Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination by employers on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

Both agencies stress that employers get permission from applicants before getting background reports, and must not unlawfully discriminate in the use background checks. The agencies are both tasked with regulating background screening, so they decided to work together on this guidance. The objective of the guidance is that both sides (employers and job applicants) fully comprehend their rights as well as their obligations.

The first guide, Background Checks: What Employers Need to Know, contains instruction for employers on several steps of the background screening process. Both agencies include compliance information at each stage of the process. There is instruction on what to do before you get background information, how to use background information, and the disposal of background information.

The second short guide, Background Checks: What Job Applicants and Employees Should Know, serves to educate applicants and employees on their rights and how to handle a breach of their rights by an employer. The guidance is written in plain terms so as clearly understood by consumers. There is also contact information should an applicant/employee feel their rights have been violated.

You can find the full guide for employers here.


You can find the full guide for applicants and employees here

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Assessment of the Effects of EEOC's 2012 Background Screening Guidance

In December of 2012, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights held a briefing to assess the effects of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s 2012 Guidance. This briefing was held to discuss the impact that their guidance had on background screening for both black/Hispanic applicants and employers. Record of this briefing was just released as a 346-page report. I have taken the time to summarize the main points discussed in the report.

The briefing consisted of 17 speakers from diverse backgrounds. While some of the speakers were pro-EEOC Guidance, many speakers took issue with the 2012 Guidance in some way or another.

The speakers are as follows: 

Alfred Blumstein, Professor of Urban Systems, Carnegie Mellon University
Carol Miaskoff, Acting Associate Legal Counsel, EEOC
Don Livingston, Parter, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld
Garen Dodge, Partner, Jackson Lewis LLP
Glenn E. Martin, Vice President of Development and Public Affairs and Director of the David Rothenberg Center for Public Policy at the Fortune Society
Harry Holzer, Professor of Public Policy, Georgetown University
Jeffrey Sedgwick, Co-Founder, Keswick Advisors
Jonathan Segal, Partner, Duane Morris LLP, Legislative Director, Society for Human Resource Management
Julie Payne, Sr. Vice President and General Counsel of G4S Secure Solutions USA
Lucia Bone, Founder of Sue Weaver C.A.U.S.E. (Consumer Awareness of Unsafe Service Employment)
Montserrat Miller, Partner, Arnall Golden Gregory; Counsel, National Association of Professional Background Screeners (NAPBS)
Nick Fishman, Co-Founder, Chief Marketing Officer and Executive Vice President, EmployeeScreenIQ
Richard Larson, President, Winning Work Teams, Inc.
Richard Mellor, VP, Loss Prevention, National Retail Federation
Roberta Meyers, Director of Legal Action Center’s National Helping Individuals with Criminal Records Reenter through Employment Network, Also Known as H.I.R.E
Todd McCracken, President, National Small Business Association
William Dombi, VP, National Association for Home Care and Hospice

Objective of EEOC Guidance

The EEOC claimed the 2012 Guidance is in response to a disparate impact background screening has had on racial minorities. In other words, minorities have been experiencing difficulties while seeking employment due to a past criminal conviction. The objective of the EEOC is to give minorities an equal chance to re-integrate into society.

The Guidance:

Puts employers on notice that categorical exclusions for people with certain arrest and conviction records may violate Title VII
Emphasizes its earlier recommendation that job applications not ask about criminal records, and if they do ask, that they limit inquiries to conviction records for which exclusion would be job-related with business necessity
Offers a series of examples of common policies and practices that violate Title VII 
Informs local and state governments that barring people with certain criminal records from jobs or occupational licenses also could violate Title VII.  

Advocates of the EEOC Guidance made several arguments for its most recent list of best practices:

There are over 65 million individuals with criminal records in this country
By age 35, one-third of all young black men have been incarcerated at some point. 
A person should not be haunted many years later by a mistake they made at a young age.
Criminal Records have a more negative impact on employment for minorities.
Recidivism probability declines with time clean after an arrest or conviction.
Recidivism is less probable if an individual gains employment.

Speaker Glenn E. Martin presented a study that showed that black applicants with a criminal record were twice as likely to be denied a job as white applicants. He also reported that black and Latino applicants with clean backgrounds fared no better than white applicants just released from prison.

Harry Holzer made several compelling points:

“The prevalence of arrests and convictions among less-educated American men substantially reduces employer willingness to hire them later in life and worsens their employment outcomes more generally, in ways that generate clear “disparate impacts” on minority (especially black) men.

The very high costs of previous criminal histories on employment are borne not only by the offenders themselves, but also by their families and children, their communities, and the US economy more broadly; accordingly having some successful policy efforts to improve employment outcomes for this population are in the nation’s interest.

The EEOC Guidance should be viewed as one of several potentially effective legal and policy efforts to reduce the many barriers to employment among men with criminal records and thus to improve their employment outcomes.”

The Other Side of the Argument

Many speakers stressed that employers should not be restricted in their use of background checks due to:

The reality of recidivism
The prevalence of violent and/or theft-related offenses among inmates. 
OSHA rules that require employers to provide a safe workplace. 
Federal, state and local laws and licensing requirements that restrict individuals with certain convictions from employment in selected occupations. 
State laws that put employers at risk for hiring mistakes. 
Employer desire to protect business assets.  

Major Concerns 

Many speakers took issue with at least some part of the 2012 Guidance. The concerns that were echoed by the majority were:

The Guidance is unclear. It is written in a way that is confusing to small business owners.
The Guidance is vague about the act of conducting an individualized assessment.
A conflict may arise when a state law mandates a background check, but taking adverse action based on that background check may result in a class action.
The EEOC’s strategic enforcement plan to create class claims from individual claims encourages investigators to conduct overbroad inquiries.
The EEOC’s restriction on the use of criminal background checks will have disastrous effects on public safety.
The guidance results in more risk to the employer. For instance, an employer may feel pressure to hire an employee with a criminal record against his better judgment, resulting in a negligent hiring law suit. 

The EEOC aims to give minorities a fair chance to obtain a job after a conviction. They argue that the struggle to re-integrate into society has a profound effect on not only the individuals involved, but the economy as a whole. Frankly, nobody wants an individual to be perpetually unemployed because of a single mistake they made. But according to those opposed to the guidance as it stands, here lies the dilemma. 

The opposition claims if an employer takes a chance on an applicant with a prior conviction, employees and clients are potentially put at risk. By treating minorities with prior convictions as a protected class, are we putting co-workers and customers at risk? Who is correct, the EEOC or those who spoke out against the Guidance? 

We do not have the answer, but we do feel a certain responsibility to help companies comply with the EEOC’s 2012 Guidance. Our clients can rest assured that we will provide as much information as possible to help them maintain compliance. Some of the concerns that were voiced by several speakers have not yet been answered, but we will keep an eye on any potential developments/changes the EEOC might make. 

You can find the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights’ entire report here. Comments? Concerns?

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Litigation Brought Against Whole Foods for FCRA Violations

                  

On February 7, 2014, litigation was brought against Whole Foods for the use of invalid authorization forms in the background screening process. The lawsuit claims the “defendant obtained consumer reports on the plaintiff and similarly situated persons without having obtained factually valid FCRA authorization forms”. 

The online application process included a form labeled “Consent”. Whole Foods allegedly had a section in this form that states “I hereby release the company, my former employers and all other persons, corporations, partnerships and associations from any and all claims, demands or liabilities arising out of or in any way related to such investigation or disclosure.” The form also included other paragraphs that should not be part of a consent form. 

The plaintiff claims that a valid consent form was used, but not until after Whole Foods had already implemented a background check.

The invalid consent forms were allegedly used on thousands of applicants. Should this class action suit be successful, Whole Foods may be paying upwards of $1000 to each class member for the violation. 

FCRA Violations:

1) A consent form, which informs the consumer that a background check may be obtained as a condition of employment, must be signed by the applicant. The consent form, which consists of the required disclosures and requested authorization, cannot include any extraneous information. Including a section in the form about the releasing of liability for companies receiving or providing information for the background check is definitely not legal.

2) When the plaintiff allegedly received the valid consent form is also an FCRA violation. An applicant must sign a valid consent form BEFORE the background check is run, NOT after

$1000 per applicant is not something many companies can afford. Precaution should be taken to insure the consent form utilized does not include anything other than the disclosures and requested authorization. Also, get authorization BEFORE you run the background check on the applicant. As always, you should discuss this topic with your in house counsel.

If you have any comments or questions about FCRA compliance, please let us know.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

New California Law in Effect: Senate Bill 530

Attention: California Employers

Hundreds of new laws went into effect in California at the beginning of the year. One in particular, Senate Bill 530, has a profound effect on employers and their hiring practices.

The law states “No employer, whether a public agency or private individual or corporation, shall ask an applicant for employment to disclose, through any written form or verbally, information concerning an arrest or detention that did not result in conviction, or information concerning a referral to, and participation in, any pretrial or post-trial diversion program, or concerning a conviction that has been judicially dismissed or ordered sealed pursuant to law”.

Basically, if it did not result in a conviction, you (employers) cannot ask the applicant about it. This applies to diversion programs as well. A satisfactorily completed deferral program is not classified as a conviction. Upon completion of diversion programs, records are often expunged. If the conviction has been expunged, you cannot ask about it. Seeing a pattern? DO NOT ask or seek out information pertaining to charges that did not result in a conviction or have been sealed by the courts.

It also states that you cannot use another source to get information on dismissed criminal charges. As a consumer reporting agency, we focus on reporting convictions. Prior to this law coming into effect, we already refrained from including anything other than charges that resulted in a conviction. This new law is aimed at employers in California who are inquiring about charges that were dismissed and things of that nature.

The law seeks to protect ex-offenders from being discriminated against in the hiring process. If an employer breaks this law, the applicant can bring action against that person to recover actual damages or $200 (whichever is greater) as well as reasonable attorney’s fees. The intentional violation of this law will allow the applicant to treble actual damages or $500 (whichever is greater) plus reasonable attorney’s fees. This intentional violation is also a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $500.

As an employer, you are not privy to information regarding an applicant’s arrests that did not result in a conviction. The law is meant to give someone with a criminal record a second chance. Breaking this law can result in civil penalties. You, as an employer, are responsible for being aware of this new law. Intentionally ignoring the new law can result in misdemeanor criminal charges.

Here is the entire bill.