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We have several articles that relate to the importance of Screening
Employees.
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Articles
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CAREER
CHALLENGE
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CAREER CHALLENGE
Background Checks Are Key
By SUSAN VAUGHN, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
Savvy pre-employment screening can shield employers from what Los
Angeles attorney Jamie Johnson calls "nightmare hires":
employees who endanger others, destroy property, disrupt work or
cost their firms financial losses.
"The damage that can be done to a company, particularly a
small company, can be considerable," said Johnson, a partner
in Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison's labor and employment group.
Despite this, an estimated one in five companies fails to check
applicants' backgrounds, according to EMDM, a Georgia-based pre-employment
screening firm. "Don't be impulsive," said David Lewis,
president of OperationsInc.com, a human resources consulting firm.
"You're putting a piece of your company's fate in that applicant's
hands."
Negligent hiring suits are on the rise, according to the ABA Journal,
the journal for the American Bar Assn. These suits, filed after
employees have committed harmful acts, allege that employers didn't
diligently research their workers' backgrounds before hiring them.
And employers are losing negligent hiring suits about 72% of the
time, according to Public Personnel Management, a trade journal.
These lawsuits can cost companies a lot.
A California appeals court last year upheld a $3.8-million award
against Kmart after one of the company's plainclothes security guards
tackled and roughed up a Livermore customer who attempted to return
a purchase, according to Mark McLean, an attorney with Arter &
Hadden in Los Angeles.
Before being hired, the guard had only partially completed Kmart's
employment application and didn't furnish full addresses for his
past residences, according to the court records. Had Kmart checked
the guard's employment history, it would have found he had been
terminated from several jobs.
In another case, a Tallahassee, Fla., furniture company was hit
with a $2.5-million judgment for negligently hiring and retaining
a deliveryman who later used a knife to attack a customer in her
home.
The deliveryman hadn't completed a job application, and the furniture
company hadn't checked his background, according to court records.
If it had, it would have discovered a history of violent crime.
The average settlement is $1.6 million, according to Public Personnel
Management.
Background checks can help shield companies from negligent hiring
lawsuits.
Courts evaluate many factors when assessing negligent hiring cases,
including whether, prior to hiring, an employer could have discovered
that an individual posed a risk. California courts also evaluate
whether an employer made reasonable inquiries into the person's
background.
Experts recommend that companies learn how to detect the most common
misrepresentations, falsifications and omissions that applicants
may make: altering employment dates, inflating salaries, exaggerating
titles and responsibilities, and faking certifications, licenses
and educational credentials.
Companies that don't have individuals on staff who can conduct
skilled background checks should consider outsourcing the job to
companies that specialize in the practice.
"When you start finding inconsistencies, it's often the tip
of the iceberg," Johnson said.
Ivan Gordon, vice president of ATS Professional Services in Jacksonville,
Fla., once investigated an "attorney" who had applied
for a position with a Northern California law firm. "But it
turned out the person had never taken the bar exam or attended law
school," he said.
A contracting firm in the South ended up shelling out $150,000
to outside auditors to correct its financial records after having
hired a controller who, it later turned out, had presented two business
degrees from a diploma mill.
According to Avert Inc., a Fort Collins, Colo.-based background
checker, about 24% of job applicants misrepresent work experience
or education. Twenty percent conceal information such as criminal
convictions that could disqualify them.
But California hirers face a difficult challenge in their pre-employment
screening pursuits.
The state's Civil Code bestows what's called "qualified privilege"
upon former employers to disclose truthful, accurate and documentable
information about their former workers' job performance and characteristics.
But the state's Labor Code forbids those former employers from interfering
with workers' attempts to find employment by giving out false or
misleading references.
Some attorneys say this puts California employers in a minefield.
They can be sued for offering too much or inappropriate information
about former workers, and they can be sued for withholding information.
Many employers, fearing defamation lawsuits, are taking the cautious
path. They're furnishing only what workplace attorneys refer to
as "name, rank and serial number": employment dates, salary
ranges and job titles. And they're instructing their employees to
direct all reference check inquiries to their human resources departments
or to a designated manager.
"The typical knee-jerk reaction from [hiring] employers is
'Why check references because we're not going to get the truth anyway?'
" said Thomas Cunningham, a labor and employment lawyer at
Pingel & Templer in West Des Moines, Iowa.
"I know that's the typical advice that employers' attorneys
give, but I think it's overkill," said Wendy Bliss, attorney,
human resources consultant and author of "Legal, Effective
References: How to Give and Get Them," (Society for Human Resource
Management, July 2001).
"It punishes good employees who can't get positive references
and makes it very difficult for employers trying to avoid making
bad hiring decisions to get to the truth," she said. "We've
hurt each other as employers through these unduly restrictive policies.
The only people helped are those employees with something to hide."
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