Be our Friend    

   
Text Size
Login Newsletter Sign-up

Keyword Search HCX for your Favorite Author / Content

Convicts as a Protected Class?

Digg it!Share in FacebookTweet it!
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

criminal background checksEEOC Thinks Background Checks Can Discriminate Against Blacks, Hispanics

Washington, DC - Attorneys at the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) believe new technology that makes it easier for employers to check the criminal and credit histories of applicants is also makes it harder for blacks and Hispanics to find jobs. Members of the Project 21 black leadership network fault this position, noting that it unjustly interferes with the ability of employers to build a trusted and coherent workforce.

"Background and credit checks are legitimate hiring and recruitment tools," said Project 21 member Horace Cooper, a former visiting assistant professor of law at the George Mason University School of Law. "There is no federal law making a refusal to hire convicted felons a crime, and felon status is not a protected class under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. Especially in the midst of a recession, suits like these -- which charge racial discrimination -- falsely serve to only make hiring decisions unnecessarily harder and lessen the impact of real allegations of racism."

Adrienne Hudson filed a lawsuit against First Transit after she was fired from a bus driver position with the company. She alleges her firing was due to her prior conviction for welfare fraud, and that First Transit discriminates against blacks and Hispanics when it does background checks because these minority groups have higher rates of arrest and convictions than whites. First Transit representatives would not comment.

The AP reports the EEOC believes background checks can have a disparate impact on blacks and Hispanics, and quotes EEOC assistant legal counsel Carol Miaskoff saying "the problem is snowballing because of the technology" that is making it easier to do such checks.

Last fall, the EEOC filed a class-action lawsuit against the Freeman Companies event-planning company that claimed the company's background checks discriminated against blacks, Hispanics and men.

"Once again, the liberal legal theory of 'disparate impact' is trotted out. This time, it is by the bean-counters at EEOC. They are now arguing that if an employer conducts background checks on employees they are, in effect, discriminating against black and Latino applicants. But shouldn't employers have the right to set standards for those they seek to employ and reject those who have criminal records?" said Project 21 member Joe Hicks, host of "The Hicks File" at PJTV.com. "Americans strongly believe in the concept of redemption, but there must be consequences for illegal behavior. To claim otherwise suggests that employers should ignore employment standards and simply hire people based on some ideological concept of 'social justice.' The notion that criminal background checks disadvantage blacks and Latinos is based in the reality that blacks are 38 percent of the prison population but only 12 percent of the general population. This shouldn't be used as an argument for eliminating employment standards, but a reason to understand and combat the dysfunction and violent criminality that's an all-too-real part of poor black urban life.

Project 21, a leading voice of black conservatives since 1992, is sponsored by the National Center for Public Policy Research (http://www.nationalcenter.org).


For Release: August 13, 2010
Contact: David Almasi at (202) 543-4110 x11 or (703) 568-4727 or dalmasi@nationalcenter.org
or  or Judy Kent at (703) 759-7476 or jkent@nationalcenter.org

//.





Comments:

blog comments powered by Disqus
Author of this article: nationalcenter.org
More articles :

» No, Entrepreneurs Like Steve Jobs Do Not Create Jobs By Inventing Products Like The iPhone

A billionaire named Nick Hanauer recently wrote in which he .As both political parties try to blame each other for our economic mess, this argument has been repeated so often that it's now regarded as fact. And it is frequently and passionately...

» The 5 Hardest Jobs to Fill in 2012

While you're planning your expansion, you're going to find that talent is in short supply, especially in these five areas.The year flew by mostly because it was a very, very busy one.Although the economy continues to face many challenges, the...

» A Brave New World - Does Where You Live Impact Your Ability To Be Hired?

Back in 2010 I signed up for after a in which a few colleagues convinced me I should give it a try. If you're not familiar with the tool, it allows users to record their location, which are called "check ins." These check ins can earn users points...

» Be the HR Survey!

How many pages is your employee handbook? Count them…go on…then come back in an hour when you’re done.  The one I’m looking at is 106 pages*…God Almighty!  First of all, I understand the importance of covering our bases to the Nth...

» DOJ sues company for discrimination during hiring process

Justice Department Files Lawsuit Alleging Immigration-Related Employment Discrimination by Farmland Foods Inc. in MissouriWASHINGTON - The Justice Department today filed a lawsuit against Farmland Foods Inc., a major producer of pork products in...