Pubdate: Sun, 22 Aug 2010 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2010 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/opinion/letters/send/ Website: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Joe Napsha, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review JOB APPLICANTS' PASTS' UNDER MICROSCOPE Before Andrew Greene could qualify for a free training program to learn basic manufacturing skills at Westmoreland County Community College, he and a dozen other students had to undergo a drug test and criminal background check. Greene said he wasn't surprised and felt it was a good way of showing prospective employers he is ready for work when he completes the five-week program at the Youngwood school. "That's kind of the point of this program," said Greene, 27, of Greensburg. These days, a majority of employers is conducting similar screening measures as part of their hiring process -- criminal background, credit checks and drug screening -- to get an accurate picture of their job finalists. "The consequences of making the poor hiring decision are enormous," said Michael Aitken, spokesman at the Society for Human Resource Management of Alexandria, Va., which has 250,000 members worldwide. Seventy-three percent of employers conduct criminal background checks on candidates for all jobs; 55 percent conduct drug screening; and 40 percent conduct credit checks, according to a survey conducted for the society in November. Another 47 percent of employers conduct credit checks on selected candidates, mainly those who would handle money. Typically, employers are conducting tests on just the final candidates for a position, because of the high cost of testing, particularly if an outside screening company is hired to do the work, said Aitken. Under the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act, employers must get permission from a candidate to conduct a credit check, and employers must make sure the tests are not being done in a discriminatory way, Aitken said. In the criminal background checks, employers are looking for a record of a violent felony or a nonviolent felony, such as fraud or embezzlement. "You want to have a safe work environment. Employers have a liability not only to their customers, but to their employees as well. You're trying to make sure you're not bringing someone into the worksite that has a propensity for violence, or past history" of violence, Aitken said. In the midst of a recession and higher unemployment, employers need to scrutinize applications even more carefully, said Adrienne T. Taucher, vice president of Corporate Investigations Inc. of Scott, a employment screening company. . "In better economic times, we see about a 20-22 percent inaccuracy rate in the information provided on applications. However, in these difficult economic times, we have seen up to a 30 percent inaccuracy rate, as increased volumes of applicants are vying for fewer jobs. This situation requires employers to be on the watch for fraudulent credentials, such as inflated or fictional employment or education history," Taucher said. Employers have been increasing the use of screening measures in recent years, human resource and staffing experts say. "The benchmark was really 9/11. That's the kind of reference point," said Tracy Seabrook, executive director of the National Association of Professional Background Screeners, said of increased concerns over security and background checks after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Regulations put in place following 9/11 have placed a greater emphasis on learning about the person a company wants to hire, said Ronald Alvarado, president of Novus Staffing Solutions of Robinson. "It's changed the way employment practices happen," he said. Companies with federal contract or subcontracting with a government contractor must check prospective employees through the a government operated employment eligibility verification system, called E-Verify. The Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration determine if the person with that Social Security number is eligible to work in the United States That helps determined whether a job-seeker is in America illegally, and whether they are on a terrorist watch list, Alvarado said. "Once you do it for one candidate, you do it for all candidates ... to make sure the social security number belongs to the person" applying for a job, Alvarado said. "It's not expensive, but it's something you want to do right," Alvarado said. Workers involved in pipeline construction, plus those in a construction office miles from the work site, are required to undergo drug and alcohol screenings and random drug tests, according to the Department of Transportation regulations. The agency issued regulations governing tests for truck drivers for pipeline companies, Alvarado said. Before hiring an employee who would come into contact with children, a candidate must undergo criminal background checks to determine if they are on a national sex offender database, Alvarado said. Some pre-employment background screening is conducted because the consumer expects it, particularly from those service industries that send employees into homes, said Seabrook said, whose 700-member group is based in Morrisville, N.C.. "They want to know whether or not (service personnel) have had background checks," Seabrook said. Employers have typically said they need to screen about double the number of candidates in order to get a sufficient number of qualified people to fill positions, said Terri Campbell, vice president of operations for the Private Industry Council of Westmoreland/Fayette Inc., which operates training and employment programs. Some employers have said that up to 50 percent of the job-seekers they see can not pass a drug test, Campbell said. "One of the biggest challenges employers will tell you is that they are having a hard time finding people who show up for work and have a clean record," said David Rea, organizational and development consultant for Catalyst Connection, a South Oakland-based nonprofit that provides consulting services to industries. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D