Privacy Issues in the Workplace

Fingerprints,

Photographs,

 Dates of arrest and arresting agencies,

Booking numbers,

Charges, and

Dispositions.

This section permits the Department of Justice to release (subject to the restrictions of Labor Code section 432.7, Penal Code section 11105.3, and Public Resources Code section 5164) this information to any local public agency if the agency’s governing body authorizes its management staff to obtain criminal background data in the employment application process. Employers should specifically request that the Department of Justice only provide information about convictions, or arrests pending adjudication. Once the employer obtains an applicant’s criminal record, it must determine whether it will hire the individual or withdraw a conditional offer of employment. An employer should not automatically disqualify applicants with criminal records. Rejecting all applicants with criminal records might disproportionately impact individuals within a protected class and lead to a disparate impact race discrimination lawsuit against the agency. The agency should therefore consider all of the circumstances related to the conviction and whether it has any relationship to the job. The following factors should be given consideration:

Nature and seriousness of the offense

 Circumstances related to the conviction

Repeat offenses

 Relationship between the job and the conviction

Length of time since last conviction

Age at the time of conviction

Evidence of rehabilitation

Deciding whether to hire an individual with a criminal record requires thorough analysis and assessment. Human resources professionals know that they must assess each candidate’s ability to perform the essential functions of a job. The rules preventing employers from automatically disqualifying individuals on the assumption that a disability prevents them from doing the job also applies to criminal convictions. The employer needs to consider the applicant’s individual circumstances to determine if the conviction is sufficiently serious, recent and job-related to disqualify him or her from the job.

As mentioned above, Government Code section 12952 likely does not apply to schools and community colleges because they are required to fingerprint applicants.

Privacy Issues in the Workplace ©2019 (s) Liebert Cassidy Whitmore 34

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