"Background Checks"

By Lindsay Burke and Brian Fitzpatrick

On March 10, 2014, the EEOC and the FTC issued joint guidance on how the anti-discrimination laws and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”) apply to background checks performed by employers for employment application purposes. This guidance is published in two documents, one directed at employers and the other directed at employees and applicants, and aims to provide high-level practical assistance and answers to commonly asked questions that arise during the application process.  The pamphlet directed to employers builds off of the EEOC’s April 25, 2012 guidance regarding employer use of criminal history information, which we summarized here, and addresses the request for, appropriate use of, and disposal of such information.

Employers are reminded of their obligation to treat all applicants and employees equally and to refrain from performing background checks in a selective manner, where that decision is or could be perceived to be based on protected characteristics, including medical history (which implicates genetic information). When using background information to make employment decisions, employers must apply the same standards to all individuals and be cautious of basing employment decisions on background problems that may be more common among people of certain protected categories. If a certain type of background check disproportionately impacts members of a protected group, it must be job-related and consistent with business necessity. The guidance does not explain, however, how employers are to discern whether these warnings apply, nor does it mandate that employers conduct any research to investigate these possibilities. Continue Reading EEOC and FTC Issue Joint Guidance on Background Checks Performed by Employers