Join Together Online Article
9/1/04
A growing number of companies are running background checks on job
applicants to see if they have a criminal history. The practice is
making it difficult for drug offenders to find jobs upon their release
from prison, the Wall Street Journal reported Aug. 26.
For instance, Peter Demain, who served a six-year prison sentence for
possession of 21 pounds of marijuana, was turned down by 25 businesses,
among them bagel shops, grocery stores, and coffee houses.
According to a January survey of personnel executives, 80 percent of big
companies run background checks, up from 56 percent in 1996. Among the
companies that conduct background checks are Wal-Mart, General Motors,
Ford Motor, General Electric, Citigroup, IBM, and American International
Group.
Reasons for the trend range from protecting companies from
negligent-hiring lawsuits, preventing theft, and ensuring the applicants
aren't linked to terrorism.
But human-rights groups argue that the background checks are an unfair
barrier for rehabilitated criminals and could drive them back to crime.
Most at risk are blacks and Hispanics, who have a higher incarceration
rate.
"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.
Experts also say that more companies are conducting background checks
because technological advances have made them faster and inexpensive.
Search costs range from $25 to $100 each. |