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Many camps have been challenged by the time, effort,
and frustration of doing criminal background checks of employees who will
be supervising children. The public seems to expect this step, the ACA
standards require it for those with direct supervision or access to children,
and many youth organizations and schools serving children require it.
There are commercial services that will complete this
function for you for a fee. One such service lists fees as follows:
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Driver’s license record $16
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Educational verification $18
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Employment verification $24
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Felony and Misdemeanor checks at a county level (one
county) $15
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Sexual Offender records (state and county) $15
These fees represent searches on a single name (not including
an additional maiden name) in a single jurisdiction. They represent sample
fees from one company. Fees will vary and services will vary. Some services
will check state records, others will check federal records.
All record searches done by commercial companies are
subject to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
Fair Credit Reporting Act
The Federal Trade Commission has stated that you must
comply with the FCRA requirements when you hire a commercial company to
provide background checks, even if those checks do not include a credit
history.
The FCRA was passed in 1970 in response to concerns about
the accuracy of information maintained in various data banks. It was amended
in 1996 and those amendments took effect in 1997.
The law governs many kinds of information, including
any information about an individual’s credit, character, reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living if the information is collected for
the purpose of determining a person’s eligibility for credit or employment.
Companies providing background screening information are subject to the
requirements.
If using commercial companies, there are steps
you must follow with applicants.
Steps to Follow
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Inform the Applicant
Prior to ordering background reports, you must tell the applicant
you are ordering the reports and obtain permission to do so. This
disclosure and signature request must be clear and conspicuous. The
consent must be a separate release when you are using a commercial
firm. It cannot be combined with other releases or statement to the
applicant.
You may wish to obtain this as part of your application,
or at a time when you are doing initial screening. When using a third-party
commercial firm, you must also provide a Disclosure of an Investigative
Report. This must be clear and conspicuous and on a separate piece of
paper. It is also advisable to give the applicant a copy of A Summary
of Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. This outlines
their rights. The FCRA requires that any time an applicant receives
information pertaining to a report about himself, it must be accompanied
by a copy of this information.
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Order Background Reports
The FCRA imposes severe penalties for obtaining reports
without having a permissible purpose under the law. You should establish
strict policies in your organization for who may obtain such reports
and the purposes for which those reports will be used. You may wish
to have your employee sign a statement indicating their understanding
of the law in this regard.
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When negative information
is received . . .
If the reports you receive contain information that causes
you NOT to hire an individual, the FCRA requires you to mail a copy
of the report to the applicant together with another copy of the Summary
of Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Include a
letter explaining that the report contains information which, if accurate,
may cause you not to extend an offer of employment. Give the applicant
at least five days in which to notify you if the information in
the report is not correct.
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Notifying the Applicant of
a Non-Hire Decision
If you decide not to hire the applicant based in whole
or in part on any information you received from the background report,
you must notify the applicant of this decision. The law refers to
a denial of the employment as an "adverse action." This
adverse action notice can be given orally, in writing or by electronic
means. It must include:
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Notification that you will not be offering employment
due to information contained in the report.
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The name, address, and phone number of the consumer
reporting agency that provided the report.
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A statement that the consumer reporting agency
did not make this decision and thus cannot tell the applicant
the reason for the decision.
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A notice that the applicant has the right to
obtain another free copy of the report within sixty days.
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A notice that the applicant has the right to
dispute the accuracy or completeness of the report with the reporting
agency.
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A copy of A Summary of Your Rights Under the
Fair Credit Reporting Act.
There is no requirement in the law as to how soon
after you make the decision you must notify the applicant. This notification
can be part of your normal rejection process.
These reporting requirements to the applicant allow
the applicant to correct information that may be incorrect in the
file. There is no requirement that the employer must reverse the employment
decision if the report information is incorrect.
Summary
When using a commercial service:
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You must notify the employee of your intent to check
background (such as criminal background).
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You must obtain permission to do so.
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You must notify them if information in the report
will likely cause you to take an adverse action on their application
and give them at least five days to respond.
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You must provide them with a copy of the report and
the name of the organization that obtained the report.
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You must notify them of their rights at each step.
It is because of these strict requirements that some
have determined to do checking on their own. However, the difficulty of
doing those checks in multiple municipalities and jurisdictions is what
drives others to use commercial services to obtain the information.
Choose the means that is best for you, but do so being
aware of the requirements.
Originally published in the 1999 Fall issue
of The CampLine.
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