Wednesday, December 21, 2016

California Amends Law Preventing Use of Juvenile Criminal History for Employment

Assembly Bill 1843 is an amendment to California Labor Code 432.7 that includes additional restrictions on employment-based inquiries into an applicant or employee’s juvenile criminal history. The new bill, effective January 1st of next year, restricts employers from:

  • Asking an applicant to disclose, either in writing or verbally, information concerning or related to an arrest, detention, processing, diversion, supervision, adjudication, or court disposition that occurred while the individual was subject to the process and jurisdiction of juvenile courts/ law.
  • Seeking from any source whatsoever, or using, as a factor in determining any condition of employment (e.g., hiring, promotion, termination, decisions related to a training program, etc.), any record concerning or related to an arrest, detention, processing, diversion, supervision, adjudication, or court disposition that occurred while the individual was subject to the process and jurisdiction of juvenile courts/law.

It is important to note that previous sections of California Labor Code 432.7 allowed employers to look into certain convictions and use them in adverse action decisions if federal law required. The amendment will prevent employers from making decisions based on those preexisting portions of the labor code. This amendment may cause a conflict with preceding federal laws and/or other legal requirements that require specific screening standards for employment. We will keep an eye on this bill as it goes into effect and examine how this conflict will be handled.


You can read Assembly Bill 1843 in full here.

1 comment:

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