Avoiding Hidden Hiring Landmines: 4-Step FCRA Compliance Plan for Handling Pre-Adverse Action Notices
Bobby Carmichael
FCRA Certified National Sales Executive (Pre-Emploment Background Screening/SaaS Sales) at Asurint, Inc., Certified Warrior Selling Practitioner, President's Club Winner, and successful Cryptocurrency Trader.
WRITTEN BY: Fisher Phillips
Background check reports are an important – and in many cases essential – tool in making informed and responsible employment decisions. Gathering and using this information, however, carries legal obligations and corresponding risks, some of which may not be immediately apparent to employers. One of the most common mistakes occurs when an employer ignores or incorrectly follows the pre-adverse action requirement created by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, a federal statute that many do not realize governs some hiring actions. What do employers need to know about this obligation? This Insight provides an overview and offers a four-step plan to ensure compliance.
The Background of Background Screenings
A background screening report may reveal that an applicant is unqualified for the position due to a criminal record that is incompatible with the prospective job. When this occurs, some hiring managers may assume they can automatically disqualify the applicant and move on to the next candidate. This assumption is incorrect – and could be costly.?
In addition to EEOC guidance requiring a consideration of individualized circumstances relating to criminal convictions and a growing number of local “fair chance” laws that may be implicated, the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires a meaningful “pre-adverse action” notice to an applicant or employee before making a final decision based, “in whole or in part,” on a background check obtained from a consumer reporting agency. The FCRA’s broad definition of consumer reporting agencies encompasses virtually all third-party background screening companies.??
A Primer on Pre-Adverse Notices
Among other legal obligations imposed on employers that utilize the services of a third-party background check company, an employer who “intends” to not to hire an applicant or take any “adverse” action against an employee because of information revealed in a background screening report must send a pre-adverse action notice to the applicant or employee?before?making the employment decision. The “pre-adverse action” notice – generally in a prepared letter form – should advise the applicant of the “intent” to take such action. The notice also must include a copy of the applicant’s consumer report and a written summary of the applicant’s rights under the FCRA.
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This requirement does not prohibit an employer from ultimately making a final decision based on the results of a background screen. Instead, the pre-adverse notice requirement is intended to provide the applicant important information at a time and in a form that allows them a reasonable opportunity to dispute errors in the report.
4-Step Plan to Meet the FCRA’s Pre-Adverse Action Notice Requirement
Although seemingly simple, navigating the FCRA’s pre-adverse action notice requirement requires intentionality, particularly for employers who have attempted to simplify and standardize their consideration of “criminal offenses.” In order to limit legal risk when relying on potentially “disqualifying” criminal offenses, you should (at the very least) follow these four steps.
Conclusion
The FCRA carries a private right of action that allows applicants the right to recover compensatory, statutory, and punitive damages, as well as attorneys’ fees. This has resulted in a growing cottage industry of attorneys and law firms dedicated to bringing single-plaintiff and class action claims against employers. Because the landscape in this area is increasingly dangerous, it would be to your benefit to review this four-step plan and incorporate it into your hiring practices.