Between “ban the box” and Fair Chance laws, many levels of government across the United States have spent the last several years engaged in efforts to expand opportunities and lower the barriers that those with criminal records face in society. With the arrival of 2023, three states are set to make sweeping changes in their laws. What are they?
There are some pitfalls to understand for employers in these states and other jurisdictions that have undertaken extensive efforts to overhaul the criminal record expungement process. State laws generally restrict employers from considering sealed arrests and convictions in the hiring process. Violating those laws could carry penalties or the potential for civil lawsuits. Therefore, it is important to understand that conducting background checks in states with expanded expungement/sealing requires additional care.
Not every state instantly records a conviction’s status change once it goes under seal. It can take time for the order to percolate through the courts and reach the appropriate individuals. Simultaneously, third-party consumer reporting agencies may scrape these databases between an expungement order and its execution.
The precise logistics of how to notify third-party agencies to ensure the proper destruction of sealed records remain undecided. While it has always been possible for such a mismatch to occur, changing conditions make it potentially more likely. Employers should therefore exercise additional caution in how they approach the interpretation of background checks. Using the EEOC factors, which include judging relevance to the job role and the age of the conviction, can help. Recognizing a conviction type that may very likely be sealed, such as a cannabis conviction in Connecticut, is also essential.
These new laws have the potential to create far-reaching changes that open new opportunities for many of the formerly incarcerated. For employers, these changes are an important reminder that criminal record check processes cannot be static. Instead, you must stay updated on the latest changes affecting your business and be prepared to adapt to shifting expectations quickly. Effective, compliant hiring processes depend on your resilience.