What Employers Need to Know?
Using Consumer Reports
Your advertisement for cashiers nets 100 applications. You want
credit reports on each applicant. You plan to eliminate those with poor credit
histories. What are your obligations?
You are considering a number of your long-term employees for major
promotions. Can you check their credit reports to ensure that only financially
responsible individuals are considered?
A job candidate has authorized you to obtain a credit report. The
applicant has a poor credit history. Although the credit history is considered a
negative factor, it's the applicant's lack of relevant experience that's more
important to you. You turn down the application. What procedures must you
follow?
As an employer, you may use consumer reports when you
hire new employees and when you evaluate employees for promotion, reassignment,
and retention — as long as you comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
Sections 604, 606, and 615 of the FCRA spell out your responsibilities when
using consumer reports for employment purposes.
The FCRA is designed primarily to protect the privacy of consumer report
information and to guarantee that the information supplied by consumer reporting
agencies is as accurate as possible. Amendments to the FCRA — which went into
effect September 30, 1997 — significantly increase the legal obligations of
employers who use consumer reports. Congress expanded employer responsibilities
because of concern that inaccurate or incomplete consumer reports could cause
applicants to be denied jobs or cause employees to be denied promotions
unjustly. The amendments ensure (1) that individuals are aware that consumer
reports may be used for employment purposes and agree to such use, and (2) that
individuals are notified promptly if information in a consumer report may result
in a negative employment decision.
What is a Consumer Report?
A
consumer report contains information about your personal and credit
characteristics, character, general reputation, and lifestyle. To be covered by
the FCRA, a report must be prepared by a consumer reporting agency (CRA) — a
business that assembles such reports for other businesses.
Employers often do background checks on applicants and get consumer reports
during their employment. Some employers only want an applicant's or employee's
credit payment records; others want driving records and criminal histories. For
sensitive positions, it's not unusual for employers to order investigative
consumer reports — reports that include interviews with an applicant's or
employee's friends, neighbors, and associates. All of these types of reports are
consumer reports if they are obtained from a CRA.
Applicants are often asked to give references. Whether verifying such
references is covered by the FCRA depends on who does the verification. A
reference verified by the employer is not covered by the Act; a reference
verified by an employment or reference checking agency (or other CRA) is
covered. Section 603(o) provides special procedures for reference checking;
otherwise, checking references may constitute an investigative consumer report
subject to additional FCRA requirements.
Key Provisions of the FCRA Amendments
Written Notice and Authorization.
Before you can get a consumer report for employment purposes, you
must notify the individual in writing — in a document consisting solely of this
notice — that a report may be used. You also must get the person's written
authorization before you ask a CRA for the report. (Special procedures apply to
the trucking industry.)
Adverse Action Procedures.
If you rely on a consumer report for an "adverse action"
- denying a job application, reassigning or terminating an employee, or denying
a promotion — be aware that:
Step 1: Before you take the
adverse action, you must give the individual a pre-adverse action
disclosure that includes a copy of the individual's consumer report and
a copy of "A Summary of Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act" — a
document prescribed by the Federal Trade Commission. The CRA that furnishes the
individual's report will give you the summary of consumer rights.
Step 2: After you've taken an
adverse action, you must give the individual notice — orally, in writing, or
electronically — that the action has been taken in an adverse action
notice. It must include:
- the name, address, and phone number of the CRA that supplied the report;
- a statement that the CRA that supplied the report did not make the decision
to take the adverse action and cannot give specific reasons for it; and
- a notice of the individual's right to dispute the accuracy or completeness
of any information the agency furnished, and his or her right to an additional
free consumer report from the agency upon request within 60 days.
Certifications to Consumer Reporting Agencies.
Before giving you an individual's consumer report, the CRA will
require you to certify that you are in compliance with the FCRA and that you
will not misuse any information in the report in violation of federal or state
equal employment opportunity laws or regulations.
In 1998, Congress amended the FCRA to provide special procedures for mail,
telephone, or electronic employment applications in the trucking industry.
Employers do not need to make written disclosures and obtain written permission
in the case of applicants who will be subject to state or federal regulation as
truckers. Finally, no pre-adverse action disclosure or Section 615(a) disclosure
is required. Instead, the employer must, within three days of the decision,
provide an oral, written, or electronic adverse action disclosure consisting of:
(1) a statement that an adverse action has been taken based on a consumer
report; (2) the name, address, and telephone number of the CRA; (3) a statement
that the CRA did not make the decision; and (4) a statement that the consumer
may obtain a copy of the actual report from the employer if he or she provides
identification.
In Practice...
- You advertise vacancies for cashiers and receive 100 applications. You want
just credit reports on each applicant because you plan to eliminate those with
poor credit histories. What are your obligations?
You can get credit reports — one type of consumer report — if you notify each
applicant in writing that a credit report may be requested and if you receive
the applicant's written consent. Before you reject an applicant based on credit
report information, you must make a pre-adverse action disclosure that includes
a copy of the credit report and the summary of consumer rights under the FCRA.
Once you've rejected an applicant, you must provide an adverse action notice if
credit report information affected your decision.
- You are considering a number of your long-term employees for a major
promotion. You want to check their consumer reports to ensure that only
responsible individuals are considered for the position. What are your
obligations?
You cannot get consumer reports unless the employees have been notified that
reports may be obtained and have given their written permission. If the
employees gave you written permission in the past, you need only make sure that
the employees receive or have received a "separate document" notice that reports
may be obtained during the course of their employment — no more notice or
permission is required. If your employees have not received notice and given you
permission, you must notify the employees and get their written permission
before you get their reports.
In each case where information in the report influences your decision to deny
promotion, you must provide the employee with a pre-adverse action
disclosure. The employee also must receive an adverse action
notice once you have selected another individual for the job.
- A job applicant gives you the okay to get a consumer report. Although the
credit history is poor and that's a negative factor, the applicant's lack of
relevant experience carries more weight in your decision not to hire. What's
your responsibility?
In any case where information in a consumer report is a factor in your
decision — even if the report information is not a major consideration — you
must follow the procedures mandated by the FCRA. In this case, you would be
required to provide the applicant a pre-adverse action disclosure before you
reject his or her application. When you formally reject the applicant, you would
be required to provide an adverse action notice.
- The applicants for a sensitive financial position have authorized you to
obtain credit reports. You reject one applicant, whose credit report shows a
debt load that may be too high for the proposed salary, even though the report
shows a good repayment history. You turn down another, whose credit report shows
only one credit account, because you want someone who has shown more financial
responsibility. Are you obliged to provide any notices to these applicants?
Both applicants are entitled to a pre-adverse action disclosure and an
adverse action notice. If any information in the credit report influences an
adverse decision, the applicant is entitled to the notices — even when the
information isn't negative.
Non-compliance
There
are legal consequences for employers who fail to get an applicant’s permission
before requesting a consumer report or who fail to provide pre-adverse action
disclosures and adverse action notices to unsuccessful job applicants. The FCRA
allows individuals to sue employers for damages in federal court. A person who
successfully sues is entitled to recover court costs and reasonable legal fees.
The law also allows individuals to seek punitive damages for deliberate
violations. In addition, the Federal Trade Commission, other federal agencies,
and the states may sue employers for noncompliance and obtain civil
penalties.
For More Information
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent
fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to
provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a
complaint or to get free information on consumer
issues, visit http://www.ftc.gov/ or
call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC
enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft and other fraud-related
complaints into Consumer Sentinel,
a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law
enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. |