One Less Privacy Intrusion: Bill to End Pre-Employment Credit Checks
Wednesday 15 September 2010
by: J. Kane Latta, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis
Will the Equal Employment for All Act make it out of the House Committee on Financial Services when Congress reconvenes this fall? The bill, HR 3149, would make it illegal for employers to use the personal and private credit reports of American job applicants when making hiring decisions for most positions.
Bad credit means no job and no job means bad credit. Second chances in Hollywood and professional sports occur every day, but the rest of America is locked down in a modern-day debtors' prison run by credit bureaus and ruled by corporate greed. A two-class America of the elite and the poor is becoming more and more a reality, thanks in part to the continuing practice of pre-employment credit checks.
In today's highly charged political environment, it's uncommon for any issue to have the overwhelming support of almost 90 percent of the American people, but HR 3149 does.(1) On top of its popular support, there are a wealth of studies, numbers and just plain logic that support passage - especially at this critical juncture in the Great Recession.
Nonetheless, lobbying efforts from the big three credit bureaus, the US Chamber of Commerce and 19 other business groups have kept the measure stalled for more a year. Swayed by a years-long, multi million dollar spin financed by the big three credit bureaus, businesses are clinging to the idea that credit reports can reveal an applicant's propensity for fraud and theft in the workplace. The truth, however, is that, by the numbers, Americans cannot afford to buy their argument.
Fair, Isaac and Company (FICO) just reported that as of April 2010, 43.4 million of America's 170 million consumers had credit scores below 599. That's more than 25 percent of all consumers in this country, up from the pre-recession tally of 15 percent, or 25.5 million consumers. FICO's benchmark for "bad credit" is anything under 650, and anything under 700 is considered a "moderate credit" number. The number of recession-damaged Americans with credit scores under 700 is now 75 million, or 44.1 percent of consumers.
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As horrific as 75 million sounds, consider that credit scores do not appear on the employer version of credit reports, and HR staff generally have little or no training in how to read and evaluate a credit report - employers' evaluations, absent any standard unit of measure, are completely arbitrary. For example, should someone with good credit (whose accompanying score does not appear on the employer's report) be passed over for a job because the person responsible for hiring judged them for missing a car payment five years ago?
Credit bureaus contend that they're doing consumers a favor by withholding their credit scores from employers, but that omission means any employer who chooses to make use of an already misleading tool is also engaging in pure guesswork - and that threatens to impact untold numbers of Americans whose scores fall at the margins of what is considered acceptable.
So, where is the connection between credit scores and workplace theft that justifies the practice of pre-employment credit checks in the first place? Apparently, there is none. When the issue was debated in Oregon, where legislation similar to HB 3149 is now law, a TransUnion vice president begrudgingly admitted during sworn testimony that his company has zero statistical evidence to document that employees with bad credit are any more likely to steal or commit fraud than workers with perfect credit. Clearly the findings of a study by any credit bureau would be suspect, since they all stand to make millions of dollars based on employers' belief in just such a correlation, but not even a questionable, industry-funded study exists - just marketing pamphlets.
TransUnion and the other two credit bureaus have also been known to cite a study by a fraud prevention firm that documents that people "living beyond their means" steal and commit fraud more often than others; what they fail to mention is that virtually every economic study for the past more than 20 years shows Americans have one of the highest debt to income ratios in the entire world. By that standard, then, every single American who needs to work is a fraud and theft risk.
Some 26 million Americans are unemployed or underemployed and nearly every indicator - from economic projections to record foreclosures and the highest number of bankruptcies filed since 2005 - adds up to millions more damaged credit reports to come. Nonetheless, with five applicants eager and available for every single job opening that exists in America, employers have little incentive to avoid economic discrimination and will continue to use credit reports as a screening tool as long as it remains legal.
Employers are deploying employment credit checks more and more frequently - at a time when Americans should be pulling together. Since the practice was first introduced in the early 1990s, the rise in the use of credit reports as an employment evaluation tool has accelerated each year. During that same time period, American CEO's such as Bernie Ebbers, Kenneth Lay, Ken Lewis, Richard Fuld and Bernie Madoff were pulling the biggest corporate heists in the history of American capitalism. Did any of these "business leaders" ever undergo an employment credit check? In the unlikely event that they did, it's hard to imagine deep-pocketed executives with anything to fear from their credit scores. But the companies these CEOs ran routinely pulled credit reports on rank-and-file applicants to gauge their propensity for stealing and committing fraud. Today, even according to numbers published by the Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) - which supporters of the bill have identified as one of its key opponents - 73 percent of employers pull a credit report before making an employment offer.
There is no lack of ideological factors that could help hasten HR 3149's passage. The bill stands to protect consumer privacy, curtail greed and end one of many discriminatory practices that disproportionately impacts minorities - or, more dramatically, to forestall the rise of an Orwellian world overseen by Big Brother. Meanwhile, for those who shrink from ideologies when it comes to lawmaking, we have the numbers.
After more than a year, HR 3149 will finally be debated in Congress. Now that HR 3149 is on your radar, you have a choice. You can demand that Congress pass an equitable, sensible solution to this national crisis, or you can remain silent. The "freedom" to work has been restored by legislation outlawing pre-employment credit screenings in Hawaii, Washington State and Oregon, but that's not doing anything for Americans in the other 47 states. Now is the time to restore the right to work and the right to privacy to all Americans.
Footnote:
1. The MSNBC article ran back in the spring and we tallied the responses. If you wanted to be extremely safe you could say well over 75 percent, but neither number is going out on a limb at all whatsoever.

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Comments
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"You can demand that
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 11:47 — Anonymous (not verified)"You can demand that Congress pass an equitable, sensible solution to this national crisis, or you can remain silent."
Demand it people.
" Bad credit means no job and no job means bad credit."
The elites are creative when it comes to building "prisons", indentured servitude appears to be one of the preferred methods to drive people into the ground. No one should be "working" for credit bureaus.
Another villain are the auto
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 11:59 — Anonymous (not verified)Another villain are the auto insurers, who now raise rates on people whose credit turns sour.
Anybody with an ounce of
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 12:26 — Anonymous (not verified)Anybody with an ounce of common sense knows that a credit report gives zero information about a propensity of any sort. That is why credit reports are complete frauds for any purpose whatsoever. Credit reports are the same thing as reading goat entrails. Pure superstition.
This is a fantastic article,
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 20:46 — Renee Taylor (not verified)This is a fantastic article, well researched and accurate in all the details and ramifications of this disturbing practice. The only thing missing is a question as to why, in this catastrophic economic situation this bill is just sitting there unheard as millions file bankruptcy every 30 seconds in this nation and many have been unemployed for 2 years or more. I am highly disturbed that The White House approach to jobs is either more stimulus dollars or tax cuts. Tax Cuts are a JOKE,
a pharse that does NOT employ anyone. As a matter of fact, the new proposed tax cut will reimburse 100% the cost of new equipment. Has anyone thought that the new equipment may just replace a human worker?And the equipment they are buying is from China? HR3149 would employ millions over night and without ONE RED CENT in stimulus dollars. What a win, win for this entire nation. We need this bill FAST TRACKED TODAY!!!!
Credit Bureau screenings
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 21:02 — douin (not verified)Credit Bureau screenings before hiring is discriminatory. It is judgmental and is basically used as a tool to use as an excuse not to hire. In this economy today, it would be a rarity for most to gain a Perfect Rating from any of these Credit Bureaus.
This HR 3149 must be passed. If it is good enough for a Few states, it should be extended to all states.
The holdup must be due to the pay off to the Politicians that hold it off, and the money the Reports make for the Credit Bureaus. We can sure do without any further obstacles to landing a job. We have too many hoops to jump through already. Not enough jobs, for a starter. Anyone can end up with Missed Payments when they have no job ! And that is cause not to hire ?
Credit is the slippery slope
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 23:28 — Anonymous (not verified)Credit is the slippery slope foundation of our society. It's the ro0ck on which we stand. Is there any wonder our country is going in the toilet in a hand basket? Some of the most vicious and purely evil people I know have great credit reports. It proves nothing about a person's character and is a form of discrimination. We'd all be better off if we lived by the old testament and borrowed nothing. IMHO
tks
People who have bad credit
Thu, 09/16/2010 - 02:11 — Anonymous (not verified)People who have bad credit did not get it because they are thieves, they have it because they become unable to pay their bills. It's funny that we are suppose to rehearse, practice, and be prepared with smart answers for any question asked at job interviews, while being interviewed by people that actually believe they can determine a persons moral make-up from a credit report. Where is the sense in this? It's no wonder there are so many businesses with bad management issues. The real problem in America is however, that we no longer have any privacy at all, of any kind. America needs to get it together, and stay out of others private affairs when evaluating for employment!
why in sams hill do the dems
Thu, 09/16/2010 - 03:12 — Anonymous (not verified)why in sams hill do the dems not repeal the bush bankrupt america act of oct 2005
Not taking sides in the
Thu, 09/16/2010 - 05:17 — Erich von Freemason (not verified)Not taking sides in the debate, but thought I'd shed a little light on the subject. I have 27 years experience writing (among other things) statistical analysis software. I have a degree in Math and a degree in Computer Science and Statistics.
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 17:26 — Anonymous (not verified)
Credit scores (assuming that they are accurate) can most certainly be used to predict future behavior. Statistically, people with low credit are more likely to be unreliable, quit without notice, and steal from their employers.
Wed, 09/15/2010 - 16:59 — Anonymous (not verified)
I don't know why, but people with low credit scores ARE more likely to get into auto accidents. People with bad credit are also more likely to have serious illnesses (this is true regardless of income or availability of insurance [at any income level, those with poor credit have more medical problems]). They are also more likely to be unfaithful to their partners. There is a whole host of behaviors that seemingly have nothing to do with credit worthiness, but are statistically strongly correlated with low credit (or high credit, for that matter).
God forbid anyone might
Thu, 09/16/2010 - 07:12 — raine51 (not verified)God forbid anyone might conject something on a credit report to be inaccurate. I have found things on mine that flabbergasted me. After being turned down for a conventional loan at a bank, I discovered that my weak credit score of 625 was a result of a house in forclosure i knew nothing about in a town i had never lived in, an unpaid utility bill for an apartment i had never leased, a medical bill from an anesthesiologist whose services I had never used and a collection from a bookclub I had never belonged to and charge offs on credit cards I never owned. I have been trying very hard to get this sordid mess cleared up and off my credit report for over a year. Though one of the reporting agencies has removed most, it is not all cleared. To use a credit report as a tool to decide who is hired is worse than discriminatory, it's nuts with the percentage of households affected by stolen identities and the sheer lack of accuracy of these diabolical assessments of one's credit worthy status.
I pay my bills, regularly and on time the first of each month. I frankly can not remember the last time I was late paying on any bill. It was a huge shock to me that my credit report was such a mess. Were it not for the loan gone south (I wanted to buy a new roof for an old house), I would never have been the wiser. Tip...DO check your credit report at least twice a year. You really don't know what horror you may have to undo that has no business being there.
The credit score may not
Sun, 09/19/2010 - 19:37 — Anonymous (not verified)The credit score may not show, but everything else does, who you pay mortgage to, child support payments, school loans, etc...and Human Resources
sizes up the potential employee by what he/she
sees...The report also shows addresss, spouse, how
long lived in the area, etc., etc....more information
than is needed as far as I'm concerned...There is
already enough work place bias in getting & keeping a job... This Bill HR 3149 needs to be
implemented ASAP..I say we get rid of FICO & go
back to proving ourselves that we are worthy
to get a loan, credit card etc..(when needed).
PASS HR 3149 SOON!!!!
So let me get this straight.
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 18:35 — Debra Rallings (not verified)So let me get this straight. We, the taxpayers bailed out with our hard-earned money the greedy executives; yet the economy went down due to their GREED.
Now, you're telling me that due to their negligence the public who loses their job because of the recession and has taken a hit on their credit - may now not be able to venture back in the job market. And yet, unemployment only lasts for so long.
CRIMINAL. Public voters should be marching in the streets.
Love the article. Its time
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 21:10 — Fed Up (not verified)Love the article. Its time to cut those greedy bastards off at the knees. As a single parent who went through a messy divorce and had their spouse ruin their credit I've had this happen to me a lot recently when looking for work and it really isn't fair. It's discrimination no matter which way you slice it and it should not be allowed.