Archive for category Job Hunt

Why have we given employers the right to check our credit?

What on earth does an employee’s credit rating have to do with his or her ability to do a job? This issue has long made me hot under the collar.  Seeing another article about it hasn’t made me any less angry.

Is my employer going to give me a loan?  Are they going to finance my house?  Will I get a bonus if I qualify?

Here’s the link to the article I read.  I want to draw your attention to the second section of the article where it talks about the potential for credit checks to be considered a discriminatory practice.  Go ahead and check it out, I’ll wait here for you.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/bus/stories/DN-perfi_21bus.ART.State.Edition1.3cf45d2.html

In the position I had right before my last layoff, I was a training manager and worked in the Human Resources Department.  As I mentioned, it was 1990.  It’s nearly 20 years later, but we knew back then that using credit reports was potentially discriminatory and that it had nothing to do with a person’s ability to do a job.  Why aren’t we completely up in arms about the use of credit reports in job screening?

When an employee is interviewed for a job, the employer has one obligation and that it to find the best suited candidate.  Credit rating, credit history, or anything else to do with money matters has nothing to do with the employee’s suitability or ability to do the job.  It is a lame excuse and unfounded belief that someone with financial issues will be more likely to embezzle or steal or be distracted from performing well.  I have had the unfortunate experience of working with people who were fired for embezzling or theft (and yes, some received jail time).  We all know a few now very public people who have embezzled, stolen, or used Ponzi type schemes to take money from others.  As we learned from their wealth, these people didn’t have money problems, they had ethical problems.  If employer’s want to sort us out, sort us out by character not because of our financial situation.

Quite frankly, I have always thought our credit history is none of an employer’s business.  I find an employer’s pursuit of our credit history more insulting given the current economic climate.

People often lump people with bad credit into a single category and assume that their credit problem is due to being a deadbeat.  To be sure, there are deadbeats out there.  But the majority of bankruptcy cases in this country are due to excessive medical expenses.  In June, CNN referenced a report that will be in the “The American Journal of Medicine” in August, “Bankruptcies due to medical bills increased by nearly 50 percent in a six-year period, from 46 percent in 2001 to 62 percent in 2007…” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/06/05/bankruptcy.medical.bills/

Any one of us can fall onto hard times due to the economy, layoff, divorce, illness (us or a family member) medical bills, death, or some other financial tragedy (have we forgotten Katrina?).  I’ve read more than one article that suggests that the majority of Americans are one paycheck away from default (feel free to send me stats outside the US).

I have been through two layoffs in my career.  Both times, I was working for financial institutions.  Both times, I was laid off the week before Thanksgiving.  This is a time when few people are changing jobs, so job prospects are dim except for a holiday retail job.  Each layoff, I spent 4 months unemployed which seems trivial compared to the length of time that people have been unemployed in this latest economic downturn.  Four months was enough to cause problems that took me years to get out from under.  The second layoff was my worst.  The economy was down again (1990).  I couldn’t get more than 16 hours a week as holiday labor.  I’d not recovered from the first layoff.  I was living in the Washington DC suburbs, and even though I had a screaming deal on my basement apartment ($400 a month), my monthly unemployment check of $360 didn’t cover it, never mind other living expenses.  By February, my credit was tapped out and I was behind on payments to every creditor. My savings account had been closed, my checking balance was under $1, and I had only $5 cash to my name.  I couldn’t have been more grateful when I got a job offer.

I’ll repeat that, I couldn’t have been more grateful.  Does that sound like an employee who is going to do a poor job for a company?

The practice of checking credit as an employment condition needs to be abolished.  The article referenced that U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn. supports legislation that would prohibit using credit reports for employment purposes.  I called his office, and they said he did indeed support it.  The Bill is HR3149 Equal Employment for All Act.  I’m writing Congressman Cohen to give him my support for this Bill.  If you’d like to write him in support of the bill, here is his address information:

Washington, D.C.

1005 Longworth House

Office Building

Washington, DC 20515

I finished my letter before finishing this post.  All unnecessary barriers to becoming gainfully employed need to be removed.  Employers don’t need our credit history in order to determine our ability to do a job.

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Forty-five Percent of Employers Use Social Networking Sites to Silence and Control Employees & Potential Employees

OK, that’s my title for the article; it’s not the title of the article published by MarketWatch and blogged about by Mashable.

Go ahead check out both of these articles. There’s one specific thing I’d like you to focus on. It’s the statistic that says that 35% of employers discounted a candidate who bad-mouthed their previous employer, co-workers or clients.

Mashable Link – http://mashable.com/2009/08/19/social-media-screening/

MarketWatch Link – http://www.marketwatch.com/story/forty-five-percent-of-employers-use-social-networking-sites-to-research-job-candidates-careerbuilder-survey-finds-2009-08-19?siteid=nbsh

The MarketWatch article gives good advice for cleaning up your public profile. The other 6 reasons that employers rule out a candidate have a lot of validity to them as they could create serious workplace problems. I recommend you heed the advice in MarketWatch, but I’m not happy that you are being pressured with fear to subdue your freedom of speech. Why can’t employees speak freely about a previous employer? Mind you, not everyone speaks freely in a respectful way. It would be better to state facts instead of make judgments (i.e. “I was promised a raise in 6 months and did not receive it even after 12 months had passed” vs. “they are liars and cheats.”) But it sounds like we can’t even state facts. Are our hands really tied?

If employer’s offered a truly great place to work, this wouldn’t be an issue. And because we are silenced out of fear of not being able to be gainfully employed (critical in this economy where options are still slim), that means that we have no way to communicate poor environments to others. The employer can check us out to make sure we are a good fit, but we have no means of being able to check out the employer to see if it is a good fit for us. We can’t check the employer’s history and reputation with other employees if we all become afraid and silenced. It also means that poor work environments will continue in perpetuity instead of being pressured to be fixed.

Employers need negative feedback the same as businesses need negative feedback from customers. If you don’t know what upsets people, then how can you improve?

It’s not like anyone tells the truth on an exit interview. Anyone who is remotely politically savvy knows that you tell Human Resources one of three things:

1. I’m moving out of the area
2. I’m leaving for more opportunity
3. I’m leaving for more money

These are the socially acceptable reasons to leave an employer. But the truth is, that’s what we are going to, it is not what we are leaving. If employer’s were to let people speak freely on social sites, they’d be able to use the research for themselves to find out why turnover is high, why morale is down, and why there is a lack of employee engagement.

Go ahead employers, silence us out of fear. You are only hurting yourself. We’ll shut up and get the job. And if we find the environment dumps more garbage on us than we bargained for, then we’ll leave. And you’ll be left scratching your head trying to figure out what the problem is. If you hadn’t used fear to silence us, you’d know.

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