- Why a Saudi blogger faces a possible death sentence for three tweets
- America's big wealth gap: Is it good, bad, or irrelevant?
- Xi Jinping, future Chinese president, faces test on first White House visit (+video)
- Iran accuses Israel of setting up attacks on its own diplomats
- Valentine's Day: cost of romance rising for flower delivery, 4 other things
- No budget? No problem! The strange politics behind a budgetless America.
New step for job applicants: FBI checks
(Page 2 of 2)
The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) estimates that up to 1 million aviation employees who have access to secure areas will be fingerprinted, because no screeners had FBI background checks prior to 1998 and no pilots prior to 1996. At the end of December, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) sent out a list of 28 felony convictions that could disqualify an airline employee - such as a pilot, mechanic, or ramp worker - from working in secure areas.
John Mazor, a spokesman for ALPA, worries that some airport workers will be disqualified because of domestic problems with a spouse or some long-ago indiscretion. "There are situations where otherwise good people could find themselves put on that [disqualification] list," says Mr. Mazor.
Bill Engle, who was an executive at 20th Century Fox, knows all about the effects of background checks. In 1978, he was convicted of pandering - that is, running an illegal massage parlor in Orange County, Calif. He served a jail sentence. But he didn't tell Fox that information when he filled out his job application.
Mr. Engle, a former police officer, was promoted four times during his seven years at Fox. As chief of security, he says he discovered various alleged wrongdoings, including what he thought were illegal background searches of celebrities and employees. He put it all together in a notebook and brought them to his boss. "He almost jumped away and said, 'I don't want anything to do with it,' " recalls Engle.
Shortly thereafter, Fox fired him for not reporting that he had been convicted of the felony. They ended up suing each other, with Fox dredging up as much about his past as they could. The firing "was very shattering to me," says Engle, now an executive at another company. Erin Cooper Rotgin, the attorney for Fox who litigated the case, did not return phone calls.
Privacy-rights groups worry that such background searches may result in many people losing their jobs for past wrongs. "My long-term worry is that we are creating a larger and larger number of people who are disenfranchised from all societal activity, but most important cannot get work," says Beth Givens, director of the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego.
Lawyers involved in labor law warn that employers are walking a tightrope. "If they react to information that is stale and unrelated to a job, they do so at their own peril," says Gerald Skoning, a lawyer with Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago. "If you don't hire as a result of a background check, you may be sued for invasion of privacy, or wrongful discharge."
But Mr. Skoning says firms also have to weigh the risk of not acting on an employee's past. "If there is a dangerous situation, such as a nuclear accident, the victims could sue the company for negligent retention."
The restaurant industry, meanwhile, says it doesn't really think the FDA intends it to comply with the guidelines. "Even those who wrote those guidelines don't have FBI background checks," says Steve Grover, of the National Restaurant Association in Washington. "We are going to make sure that everything is secure, but some of those recommendations do go a bit far."
Paul Bresson, a spokesman for the FBI, says that doing criminal checks on everyone involved in the food business would strain his agency's resources.
In fact, Mr. Bresson says the FBI can't do criminal checks on an individual unless there is some kind of law mandating them. "If a law passes, he says, "of course we will."
Page:
1 | 2



