3Back to Course | Resources / Links | Research | Training & Education | Service Details | ESR.net
Special Report
Complying
with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) in Four Easy Stepsİ
Employers
have become acutely aware that hiring a job applicant with an undesirable
background, criminal record or falsified credentials can carry enormous
economic and legal consequences. Many employers utilize pre-employment
background screening to be more careful about who is hired in the first
place.
Pre-employment
background screening promotes a safe and profitable workplace, by protecting
an employer from negligent hiring exposure, wrongful termination lawsuits,
incidents of sexual harassment, financial loss, false claims, theft,
workplace disruption or time wasted in recruiting and training the wrong
candidate.
Background
pre-screening is normally conducted by outside agencies called Consumer
Reporting Agencies (CRA). Other than calling former employers for references,
employers generally cannot conduct such screenings in-house due to the
specialized resource and knowledge involved. In addition, firms risk
legal liability if the procedures utilized to check on applicants infringe
on legally protected areas of privacy.
A federal
law called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), however, governs pre-screening
obtained from outside agencies. This law sets out various requirements
and rules for pre-employment background reports, called Consumer Reports.
This law was substantially amended on September 30, 1997, to provide
greater privacy protection to consumers, and to ensure that information
was accurate and complete.
A Consumer
Report is much broader in scope than just a credit report. It affects
a wide variety of information obtained concerning job applicants. A
Consumer Report includes criminal and civil records, driving records,
civil lawsuits, reference checks and any other information obtained
by a Consumer Reporting Agency. By following the FCRA, an applicant's
privacy rights are protected. For this reason, most legal experts advise
employers to engage the services of an outside screening firm.
When
engaging the services of a Consumer Reporting Agency, both the employer
and the CRA must follow the four steps described in this report. Failure
to do so can result in substantial legal exposures, including fines,
damages, punitive damages and attorneys fees. Private investigators
who engage in the business of pre-employment background screening are
also covered by the FCRA.
STEP
ONE
--An Employer must certify to the Consumer Reporting Agency that it
will follow the FCRA (FCRA Section 604)
Prior
to supplying a Consumer Report, an employer must certify to the Consumer
Reporting Agency (CRA), that the employer will follow all the steps
set forth in the Fair Credit Reporting Act. These include:
- That the employer
will use the information for employment purposes only.
- That the employer
will not use the information in violation of any federal or state
equal opportunity law.
- That the employer
will obtain all the necessary disclosures and consents as discussed
below.
- That the employer
will give the appropriate notices in the event that an adverse action
is taken against an applicant based in whole or in part on the contents
of the Consumer Report.
- That if a special
type of consumer report is requested, called an Investigative Consumer
Report, that the employer will give the additional information required
by law.
These requirements
are explained further in a document prepared by the Federal Trade commission
entitled, "Notice to Users of Consumer Report." The FCRA requires a
Consumer Reporting Agency to provide a copy of that document to every
employer who requests a report. A copy can be found on the Employment
Screening Resources at www.ESRcheck.com
under the link "Research."
STEP TWO
--An Employer must obtain a written Release and a separate Disclosure
from a job applicant before obtaining a Consumer Report (FCRA Sections
604 and 606)
Before obtaining
a Consumer Report from a Consumer Reporting Agency, the employer must
obtain two separate documents:
- There must be
a clear and conspicuous disclosure that a report may be requested.
This must be provided in a "separate document." The purpose is to
prevent the disclosure being buried in an employment application.
- The employer
must obtain written consent from the applicant.
The Consumer Reporting
Agency will normally provide employers with the forms needed for the
Disclosure and Release.
Recently, the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) clarified that the release and disclosure can
be on the same document, a long as the language does not distract from
a clear and conspicuous disclosure that a report is being requested.
A special procedure
is necessary where the employer requests a Consumer Reporting Agency
to obtain employment references. Where the Consumer Reporting Agency
is merely verifying factual matters, such as the dates of employment
or salary, no special procedure is necessary. However, where the Consumer
Reporting Agency is asking for information such as job performance,
then that falls into a special category of consumer report called an,
" Investigative Consumer Report."
When an Investigative
Consumer Report is requested, there are some special procedures to follow:
- There must be
a disclosure to the applicant that an investigative consumer report
is being requested, along with a certain specified language. Unless
it is contained in the initial Disclosure, the consumer must receive
this additional disclosure within three days after the request is
made.
- The Disclosure
must tell the applicant that they have a right to request additional
information about the nature of the investigation.
- If the applicant
makes a written request, then the employer has five days to respond
with additional information and must provide a copy of a document
prepared by the Federal Trade commission called, "A Summary of Your
Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (which your background
agency should provide).
As a practical matter,
a Consumer Reporting Agency should handle all of these requirements
for an employer as part of their services.
STEP THREE
--If adverse action is intended as a result of a Consumer Report, then
the applicant is entitled to certain documents (FCRA Section 604)
Where an employer
receives a Consumer Report, and intends not to hire the applicant based
upon the report in any way, then the applicant has certain rights. Before
taking the adverse action, the employer must provide the following information
to the applicant:
- A copy of the
consumer report
- The FTC document
"A Summary of Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act." (This
should be provided by the screening service.)
Here is a sample
letter:
Dear Applicant,
A decision
is currently pending concerning your application for employment at
(the above employer)(this company). Enclosed for your information
is a copy of the consumer report that you authorized in regard to
your application for employment, together with a "Summary of Your
Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act."
If there is
any information that is inaccurate or incomplete, you should contact
this office as soon as possible so an employment decision may be completed.
Sincerely yours,
The purpose is to
give an applicant the opportunity to see the report that is being used
against them. If the report is inaccurate or incomplete, the applicant
then has the opportunity to contact the Consumer Reporting Agency to
dispute or explain what is in the report. Otherwise, applicants may
be denied employment without ever knowing they were the victims of inaccurate
or incomplete data.
As a practical matter,
by the time an applicant is the subject of a Consumer Report, an employer
has spent time, money and effort in recruiting, and hiring. Therefore,
it is in the employer's best interest to give an applicant an opportunity
to explain any adverse information before denying a job offer. If there
was an error in the public records, giving the applicant the opportunity
to explain or correct it could be to the employer's advantage.
Even if there were
other reasons in addition to the Consumer Report for not hiring an applicant,
these rights still apply. If the intended decision was based in whole
or part on the Consumer Report, the applicant has a right to receive
the report. In a situation where the employer feels that they would
make an adverse decision anyway, regardless of the report, the employer
may still want to follow this procedure for maximum legal protection.
The question that
arises is how long an employer must wait before denying employment based
upon information contained in a Consumer Report. The Fair Credit Reporting
Act is silent on this point. However, many legal authorities advise
that an employer should wait a reasonable period of time before making
the final decision. This period should be the time that would be needed
for an applicant to meaningfully review the report and make known to
the employer or the Consumer Reporting Agency any inaccurate or incomplete
information in the Consumer Report. A Consumer Reporting Agency should
be able to assist employers in complying with these requirements. This
does not mean that an employer is required to hold the job open for
a long period of time. After the first notice is given, and the applicant
has had an appropriate opportunity to respond, an employer may either
wait until there has been a re-investigation, or fill the position with
another applicant. Most employers find as a practical matter that this
provision of law does NOT impose any hardship or burden upon an employer.
Even though in rare situations an employer may have questions on how
to proceed, the clear advantages of a pre-employment screening program
far outweigh any complications that can theoretically arise from compliance.
STEP FOUR
--Notice must be give to an applicant after an adverse action (FCRA
sec. 615)
If after sending
out the documents required in Step 3, the employer intends to make the
decision final, the employer must take one more step. The employer must
send the applicant a Notice of Adverse Action informing the job applicant
that the employer has made a final decision, along with another copy
of the FTC form "Summary of Your Rights under the Fair Credit Reporting
Act."
The Notice of Adverse
Action must contain certain information. The following is a sample letter
that contains the necessary statements:
Dear Applicant,
In reference
to your application for employment, we regret to inform you that we
are unable to further consider you for employment at this time. Our
decision, in part, is the result of information obtained through the
Consumer Reporting Agency identified below.
The Consumer
Reporting Agency did not make the adverse decision, and is unable
to explain why the decision was made.
You have the
right to obtain within 60 days a free copy of your consumer report
from the Consumer Reporting Agency as identified below and from any
other consumer reporting agency which complies and maintains files
on consumers on a nationwide basis.
You have the
right to contact the Consumer Reporting Agency listed below to dispute
any information contained in the report that you believe may be inaccurate
or incomplete. A copy of your rights under the "Fair Credit Reporting
Act" is enclosed, entitled "Summary of Your Rights under the Fair
Credit Reporting Act." (List the Consumer Reporting Agency's name,
address and phone number below, including any 800/888 number.)
Many employers
find it difficult to believe that Congress intended that an applicant
be notified twice, both before an adverse action and after. However,
the law clearly requires two notices. This is also the interpretation
of the Federal Trade Commission Staff. The purpose is to give job
applicants the maximum opportunity to correct any incomplete or inaccurate
reports that could affect their chances of employment.
If you have
any further questions, please contact Employment Screening Resources
at 1-888-999-4474.
The following is
a copy of the summary of rights that should be given to a job applicant
any time an employer sends one of the two letters in this report. This
can be copied directly from this site, or by going to, "A Summary of
Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act." A one-page printed
copy is available from ESR for ESR clients.
Appendix
A to Part 601
Prescribed
Summary of Consumer Rights
The
prescribed form for this summary is as a separate document, on paper
no smaller than 8x11 inches in size, with text no less than 12-point
type (8-point for the chart of federal agencies), in bold or capital
letters as indicated. The form in this appendix prescribes both the
content and the sequence of items in the required summary. A summary
may accurately reflect changes in numerical items that change over time
(e.g., dollar mounts, or phone numbers and addresses of federal agencies),
and remain in compliance.
A
Summary of Your Rights
Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act
The
federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is designed to promote accuracy,
fairness, and privacy of information in the files of every "consumer
reporting agency" (CRA). Most CRAs are credit bureaus that gather and
sell information about you -- such as if you pay your bills on time
or have filed bankruptcy -- to creditors, employers, landlords, and
other businesses. You can find the complete text of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C.
1681-1681u, at the Federal Trade Commission's web site (http://www.ftc.gov).
The FCRA gives you specific rights, as outlined below. You may have
additional rights under state law. You may contact a state or local
consumer protection agency or a state attorney general to learn those
rights.
- You must be told
if information in your file has been used against you. Anyone who
uses information from a CRA to take action against you -- such as
denying an application for credit, insurance, or employment -- must
tell you, and give you the name, address, and phone number of the
CRA that provided the consumer report.
- You can find
out what is in your file. At your request, a CRA must give you the
information in your file, and a list of everyone who has requested
it recently. There is no charge for the report if a person has taken
action against you because of information supplied by the CRA, if
you request the report within 60 days of receiving notice of the action.
You also are entitled to one free report every twelve months upon
request if you certify that (1) you are unemployed and plan to seek
employment within 60 days, (2) you are on welfare, or (3) your report
is inaccurate due to fraud. Otherwise, a CRA may charge you up to
eight dollars.
- You can dispute
inaccurate information with the CRA. If you tell a CRA that your file
contains inaccurate information, the CRA must investigate the items
(usually within 30 days) by presenting to its information source all
relevant evidence you submit, unless your dispute is frivolous. The
source must review your evidence and report its findings to the CRA.
(The source also must advise national CRAs -- to which it has provided
the data -- of any error.) The CRA must give you a written report
of the investigation, and a copy of your report if the investigation
results in any change. If the CRA's investigation does not resolve
the dispute, you may add a brief statement to your file. The CRA must
normally include a summary of your statement in future reports. If
an item is deleted or a dispute statement is filed, you may ask that
anyone who has recently received your report be notified of the change.
- Inaccurate information
must be corrected or deleted. A CRA must remove or correct inaccurate
or unverified information from its files, usually within 30 days after
you dispute it. However, the CRA is not required to remove accurate
data from your file unless it is outdated (as described below) or
cannot be verified. If your dispute results in any change to your
report, the CRA cannot reinsert into your file a disputed item unless
the information source verifies its accuracy and completeness. In
addition, the CRA must give you a written notice telling you it has
reinserted the item. The notice must include the name, address and
phone number of the information source.
- You can dispute
inaccurate items with the source of the information. If you tell anyone
-- such as a creditor who reports to a CRA -- that you dispute an
item, they may not then report the information to a CRA without including
a notice of your dispute. In addition, once you've notified the source
of the error in writing, it may not continue to report the information
if it is, in fact, an error.
- Outdated information
may not be reported. In most cases, a CRA may not report negative
information that is more than seven years old; ten years for bankruptcies.
- Access to your
file is limited. A CRA may provide information about you only to people
with a need recognized by the FCRA -- usually to consider an application
with a creditor, insurer, employer, landlord, or other business.
- Your consent
is required for reports that are provided to employers, or reports
that contain medical information. A CRA may not give out information
about you to your employer, or prospective employer, without your
written consent. A CRA may not report medical information about you
to creditors, insurers, or employers without your permission.
- You may choose
to exclude your name from CRA lists for unsolicited credit and insurance
offers. Creditors and insurers may use file information as the basis
for sending you unsolicited offers of credit or insurance. Such offers
must include a toll-free phone number for you to call if you want
your name and address removed from future lists. If you call, you
must be kept off the lists for two years. If you request, complete,
and return the CRA form provided for this purpose, you must be taken
off the lists indefinitely.
- You may seek
damages from violators. If a CRA, a user or (in some cases) a provider
of CRA data, violates the FCRA, you may sue them in state or federal
court.
The FCRA gives several
different federal agencies authority to enforce the FCRA:
| FOR
QUESTIONS OR CONCERNS REGARDING: |
PLEASE
CONTACT: |
| CRAs,
creditors and others not listed below |
Federal
Trade Commission
Consumer Response Center - FCRA
Washington, DC 20580
202-326-3761 |
| National
banks, federal branches/agencies of foreign banks (word "National"
or initials "N.A." appear in or after bank's name) |
Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency
Compliance Management, Mail Stop 6-6
Washington, DC 20219
800-613-6743 |
| Federal
Reserve System member banks (except national banks, and federal
branches/agencies of foreign banks) |
Federal
Reserve Board
Division of Consumer & Community Affairs
Washington, DC 20551
202-452-3693 |
| Savings
associations and federally chartered savings banks (word "Federal"
or initials "F.S.B." appear in federal institution's name) |
Office
of Thrift Supervision
Consumer Programs
Washington, DC 20552
800-842-6929 |
| Federal
credit unions (words "Federal Credit Union" appear in institution's
name) |
National
Credit Union Administration
1775 Duke Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
703-518-6360 |
| State-chartered
banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve System |
Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation
Division of Compliance & Consumer Affairs
Washington, DC 20429
800-934-FDIC |
| Air,
surface, or rail common carriers regulated by former Civil Aeronautics
Board or Interstate Commerce Commission |
Department
of Transportation
Office of Financial Management
Washington, DC 20590
202-366-1306 |
| Activities
subject to the Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921 |
Department
of Agriculture
Office of Deputy Administrator - GIPSA
Washington, DC 20250
202-720-7051 |
|