TARRANT COUNTY, FORT WORTH CIVIL LITIGATION–TEXAS ATTORNEY FEES CLAIM

TARRANT COUNTY, FORT WORTH LITIGATION–TEXAS ATTORNEY FEES CLAIM
Awarded In SIBs Case Where Claimant Prevails On Subsequent Quarters
Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Montana, 2001 WL 667826 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth) June 14, 2001

This was a workers’ compensation defense case in Fort Worth, Texas. The Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission determined that the Claimant was entitled to SIBs for the first quarter. Thereafter, the Carrier disputed entitlement to the sixth and seventh quarters. Claimant lost the sixth and seventh quarters of SIBs before the HO and the Appeals Panel (AP), but won in a jury trial. The Carrier appealed the trial court’s award of attorney fees. The company insurance attorneys in this Fort Worth case argued that the Texas statutes did not allow Claimant to recover.
The Carrier contends that because the Commission did not find entitlement to these quarters, it should not be liable for attorney fees since §408.147(c) says fees are awarded to a successful claimant when “an insurance carrier disputes a Commission determination” of entitlement.
The Court reviewed AP decisions and found them to be consistent with the plain meaning of the statute, determining that the statute authorizes an award of attorney fees in any case where the Commission initially awards SIBs and the carrier later disputes that award as long as the employee eventually prevails on any disputed issue.

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions–EEOC—-Fort Worth, Texas Employment Attorneys

Enforcement Guidance on the Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions Under Title VII

I. Summary

  • An employer’s use of an individual’s criminal history in making employment decisions may, in some instances, violate the prohibition against employment discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended.
  • The Guidance builds on longstanding court decisions and existing guidance documents that the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (Commission or EEOC) issued over twenty years ago.
  • The Guidance focuses on employment discrimination based on race and national origin. The Introduction provides information about criminal records, employer practices, and Title VII.
  • The Guidance discusses the differences between arrest and conviction records.
    • The fact of an arrest does not establish that criminal conduct has occurred, and an exclusion based on an arrest, in itself, is not job related and consistent with business necessity. However, an employer may make an employment decision based on the conduct underlying an arrest if the conduct makes the individual unfit for the position in question.
    • In contrast, a conviction record will usually serve as sufficient evidence that a person engaged in particular conduct. In certain circumstances, however, there may be reasons for an employer not to rely on the conviction record alone when making an employment decision.
  • The Guidance discusses disparate treatment and disparate impact analysis under Title VII.
    • A violation may occur when an employer treats criminal history information differently for different applicants or employees, based on their race or national origin (disparate treatment liability).
    • An employer’s neutral policy (e.g., excluding applicants from employment based on certain criminal conduct) may disproportionately impact some individuals protected under Title VII, and may violate the law if not job related and consistent with business necessity (disparate impact liability).
      • National data supports a finding that criminal record exclusions have a disparate impact based on race and national origin. The national data provides a basis for the Commission to investigate Title VII disparate impact charges challenging criminal record exclusions.
      • Two circumstances in which the Commission believes employers will consistently meet the “job related and consistent with business necessity” defense are as follows:
        • The employer validates the criminal conduct exclusion for the position in question in light of the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (if there is data or analysis about criminal conduct as related to subsequent work performance or behaviors); or
        • The employer develops a targeted screen considering at least the nature of the crime, the time elapsed, and the nature of the job (the three factors identified by the court in Green v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 549 F.2d 1158 (8th Cir. 1977)). The employer’s policy then provides an opportunity for an individualized assessment for those people identified by the screen, to determine if the policy as applied is job related and consistent with business necessity. (Although Title VII does not require individualized assessment in all circumstances, the use of a screen that does not include individualized assessment is more likely to violate Title VII.).
  • Compliance with other federal laws and/or regulations that conflict with Title VII is a defense to a charge of discrimination under Title VII.
  • State and local laws or regulations are preempted by Title VII if they “purport[] to require or permit the doing of any act which would be an unlawful employment practice” under Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-7.
  • The Guidance concludes with best practices for employers.

II. Introduction

The EEOC enforces Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.1 This Enforcement Guidance is issued as part of the Commission’s efforts to eliminate unlawful discrimination in employment screening, for hiring or retention, by entities covered by Title VII, including private employers as well as federal, state, and local governments.2

In the last twenty years, there has been a significant increase in the number of Americans who have had contact3 with the criminal justice system4 and, concomitantly, a major increase in the number of people with criminal records in the working-age population.5 In 1991, only 1.8% of the adult population had served time in prison.6 After ten years, in 2001, the percentage rose to 2.7% (1 in 37 adults).7 By the end of 2007, 3.2% of all adults in the United States (1 in every 31) were under some form of correctional control involving probation, parole, prison, or jail.8 The Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics (DOJ/BJS) has concluded that, if incarceration rates do not decrease, approximately 6.6% of all persons born in the United States in 2001 will serve time in state or federal prison during their lifetimes.9

Arrest and incarceration rates are particularly high for African American and Hispanic men.10 African Americans and Hispanics11 are arrested at a rate that is 2 to 3 times their proportion of the general population.12 Assuming that current incarceration rates remain unchanged, about 1 in 17 White men are expected to serve time in prison during their lifetime;13 by contrast, this rate climbs to 1 in 6 for Hispanic men; and to 1 in 3 for African American men.14

The Commission, which has enforced Title VII since it became effective in 1965, has well-established guidance applying Title VII principles to employers’ use of criminal records to screen for employment.15 This Enforcement Guidance builds on longstanding court decisions and policy documents that were issued over twenty years ago. In light of employers’ increased access to criminal history information, case law analyzing Title VII requirements for criminal record exclusions, and other developments,16 the Commission has decided to update and consolidate in this document all of its prior policy statements about Title VII and the use of criminal records in employment decisions. Thus, this Enforcement Guidance will supersede the Commission’s previous policy statements on this issue.

The Commission intends this document for use by employers considering the use of criminal records in their selection and retention processes; by individuals who suspect that they have been denied jobs or promotions, or have been discharged because of their criminal records; and by EEOC staff who are investigating discrimination charges involving the use of criminal records in employment decisions.

III. Background

The contextual framework for the Title VII analysis in this Enforcement Guidance includes how criminal record information is collected and recorded, why employers use criminal records, and the EEOC’s interest in such criminal record screening.

A. Criminal History Records

Criminal history information can be obtained from a wide variety of sources including, but not limited to, the following:

  • Court Records. Courthouses maintain records relating to criminal charges and convictions, including arraignments, trials, pleas, and other dispositions.17 Searching county courthouse records typically provides the most complete criminal history.18 Many county courthouse records must be retrieved on-site,19 but some courthouses offer their records online.20 Information about federal crimes such as interstate drug trafficking, financial fraud, bank robbery, and crimes against the government may be found online in federal court records by searching the federal courts’ Public Access to Court Electronic Records or Case Management/Electronic Case Files.21
  • Law Enforcement and Corrections Agency Records. Law enforcement agencies such as state police agencies and corrections agencies may allow the public to access their records, including records of complaints, investigations, arrests, indictments, and periods of incarceration, probation, and parole.22 Each agency may differ with respect to how and where the records may be searched, and whether they are indexed.23
  • Registries or Watch Lists. Some government entities maintain publicly available lists of individuals who have been convicted of, or are suspected of having committed, a certain type of crime. Examples of such lists include state and federal sex offender registries and lists of individuals with outstanding warrants.24
  • State Criminal Record Repositories. Most states maintain their own centralized repositories of criminal records, which include records that are submitted by most or all of their criminal justice agencies, including their county courthouses.25 States differ with respect to the types of records included in the repository,26 the completeness of the records,27 the frequency with which they are updated,28 and whether they permit the public to search the records by name, by fingerprint, or both.29 Some states permit employers (or third-parties acting on their behalf) to access these records, often for a fee.30 Others limit access to certain types of records,31 and still others deny access altogether.32
  • The Interstate Identification Index (III). The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) maintains the most comprehensive collection of criminal records in the nation, called the “Interstate Identification Index” (III). The III database compiles records from each of the state repositories, as well as records from federal and international criminal justice agencies.33The FBI’s III database may be accessed for employment purposes by:
    • the federal government;34
    • employers in certain industries that are regulated by the federal government, such as “the banking, nursing home, securities, nuclear energy, and private security guard industries; as well as required security screenings by federal agencies of airport workers, HAZMAT truck drivers and other transportation workers”;35 and
    • employers in certain industries “that the state has sought to regulate, such as persons employed as civil servants, day care, school, or nursing home workers, taxi drivers, private security guards, or members of regulated professions.”36

Recent studies have found that a significant number of state and federal criminal record databases include incomplete criminal records.

  • A 2011 study by the DOJ/BJS reported that, as of 2010, many state criminal history record repositories still had not recorded the final dispositions for a significant number of arrests.37
  • A 2006 study by the DOJ/BJS found that only 50% of arrest records in the FBI’s III database were associated with a final disposition. 38

Additionally, reports have documented that criminal records may be inaccurate.

  • One report found that even if public access to criminal records has been restricted by a court order to seal and/or expunge such records, this does not guarantee that private companies also will purge the information from their systems or that the event will be erased from media archives.39
  • Another report found that criminal background checks may produce inaccurate results because criminal records may lack “unique” information or because of “misspellings, clerical errors or intentionally inaccurate identification information provided by search subjects who wish to avoid discovery of their prior criminal activities.”40

Employers performing background checks to screen applicants or employees may attempt to search these governmental sources themselves or conduct a simple Internet search, but they often rely on third-party background screening businesses.41 Businesses that sell criminal history information to employers are “consumer reporting agencies” (CRAs)42 if they provide the information in “consumer reports”43 under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq. (FCRA). Under FCRA, a CRA generally may not report records of arrests that did not result in entry of a judgment of conviction, where the arrests occurred more than seven years ago.44 However, they may report convictions indefinitely.45

CRAs often maintain their own proprietary databases that compile information from various sources, such as those described above, depending on the extent to which the business has purchased or otherwise obtained access to data.46 Such databases vary with respect to the geographic area covered, the type of information included (e.g., information about arrests, convictions, prison terms, or specialized information for a subset of employers such as information about workplace theft or shoplifting cases for retail employers47), the sources of information used (e.g., county databases, law enforcement agency records, sex offender registries), and the frequency with which they are updated. They also may be missing certain types of disposition information, such as updated convictions, sealing or expungement orders, or orders for entry into a diversion program.48

B. Employers’ Use of Criminal History Information

In one survey, a total of 92% of responding employers stated that they subjected all or some of their job candidates to criminal background checks.49 Employers have reported that their use of criminal history information is related to ongoing efforts to combat theft and fraud,50 as well as heightened concerns about workplace violence51 and potential liability for negligent hiring.52 Employers also cite federal laws as well as state and local laws53 as reasons for using criminal background checks.

C. The EEOC’s Interest in Employers’ Use of Criminal Records in Employment Screening

The EEOC enforces Title VII, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Having a criminal record is not listed as a protected basis in Title VII. Therefore, whether a covered employer’s reliance on a criminal record to deny employment violates Title VII depends on whether it is part of a claim of employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Title VII liability for employment discrimination is determined using two analytic frameworks: “disparate treatment” and “disparate impact.” Disparate treatment is discussed in Section IV and disparate impact is discussed in Section V.

IV. Disparate Treatment Discrimination and Criminal Records

A covered employer is liable for violating Title VII when the plaintiff demonstrates that it treated him differently because of his race, national origin, or another protected basis.54 For example, there is Title VII disparate treatment liability where the evidence shows that a covered employer rejected an African American applicant based on his criminal record but hired a similarly situated White applicant with a comparable criminal record.55

Example 1: Disparate Treatment Based on Race. John, who is White, and Robert, who is African American, are both recent graduates of State University. They have similar educational backgrounds, skills, and work experience. They each pled guilty to charges of possessing and distributing marijuana as high school students, and neither of them had any subsequent contact with the criminal justice system.

After college, they both apply for employment with Office Jobs, Inc., which, after short intake interviews, obtains their consent to conduct a background check. Based on the outcome of the background check, which reveals their drug convictions, an Office Jobs, Inc., representative decides not to refer Robert for a follow-up interview. The representative remarked to a co-worker that Office Jobs, Inc., cannot afford to refer “these drug dealer types” to client companies. However, the same representative refers John for an interview, asserting that John’s youth at the time of the conviction and his subsequent lack of contact with the criminal justice system make the conviction unimportant. Office Jobs, Inc., has treated John and Robert differently based on race, in violation of Title VII.

Title VII prohibits “not only decisions driven by racial [or ethnic] animosity, but also decisions infected by stereotyped thinking . . . .”56 Thus, an employer’s decision to reject a job applicant based on racial or ethnic stereotypes about criminality – rather than qualifications and suitability for the position – is unlawful disparate treatment that violates Title VII.57

Example 2: Disparate Treatment Based on National Origin. Tad, who is White, and Nelson, who is Latino, are both recent high school graduates with grade point averages above 4.0 and college plans. While Nelson has successfully worked full-time for a landscaping company during the summers, Tad only held occasional lawn-mowing and camp-counselor jobs. In an interview for a research job with Meaningful and Paid Internships, Inc. (MPII), Tad discloses that he pled guilty to a felony at age 16 for accessing his school’s computer system over the course of several months without authorization and changing his classmates’ grades. Nelson, in an interview with MPII, emphasizes his successful prior work experience, from which he has good references, but also discloses that, at age 16, he pled guilty to breaking and entering into his high school as part of a class prank that caused little damage to school property. Neither Tad nor Nelson had subsequent contact with the criminal justice system.

The hiring manager at MPII invites Tad for a second interview, despite his record of criminal conduct. However, the same hiring manager sends Nelson a rejection notice, saying to a colleague that Nelson is only qualified to do manual labor and, moreover, that he has a criminal record. In light of the evidence showing that Nelson’s and Tad’s educational backgrounds are similar, that Nelson’s work experience is more extensive, and that Tad’s criminal conduct is more indicative of untrustworthiness, MPII has failed to state a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for rejecting Nelson. If Nelson filed a Title VII charge alleging disparate treatment based on national origin and the EEOC’s investigation confirmed these facts, the EEOC would find reasonable cause to believe that discrimination occurred.

There are several kinds of evidence that may be used to establish that race, national origin, or other protected characteristics motivated an employer’s use of criminal records in a selection decision, including, but not limited to:

  • Biased statements. Comments by the employer or decisionmaker that are derogatory with respect to the charging party’s protected group, or that express group-related stereotypes about criminality, might be evidence that such biases affected the evaluation of the applicant’s or employee’s criminal record.
  • Inconsistencies in the hiring process. Evidence that the employer requested criminal history information more often for individuals with certain racial or ethnic backgrounds, or gave Whites but not racial minorities the opportunity to explain their criminal history, would support a showing of disparate treatment.
  • Similarly situated comparators (individuals who are similar to the charging party in relevant respects, except for membership in the protected group). Comparators may include people in similar positions, former employees, and people chosen for a position over the charging party. The fact that a charging party was treated differently than individuals who are not in the charging party’s protected group by, for example, being subjected to more or different criminal background checks or to different standards for evaluating criminal history, would be evidence of disparate treatment.
  • Employment testing. Matched-pair testing may reveal that candidates are being treated differently because of a protected status.58
  • Statistical evidence. Statistical analysis derived from an examination of the employer’s applicant data, workforce data, and/or third party criminal background history data may help to determine if the employer counts criminal history information more heavily against members of a protected group.

V. Disparate Impact Discrimination and Criminal Records

A covered employer is liable for violating Title VII when the plaintiff demonstrates that the employer’s neutral policy or practice has the effect of disproportionately screening out a Title VII-protected group and the employer fails to demonstrate that the policy or practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity.59

In its 1971 Griggs v. Duke Power Company decision, the Supreme Court first recognized that Title VII permits disparate impact claims.60 The Griggs Court explained that “[Title VII] proscribes . . . practices that are fair in form, but discriminatory in operation. The touchstone is business necessity. If an employment practice which operates to exclude [African Americans] cannot be shown to be related to job performance, the practice is prohibited.”61 In 1991, Congress amended Title VII to codify this analysis of discrimination and its burdens of proof.62 Title VII, as amended, states:

An unlawful employment practice based on disparate impact is established . . . if a complaining party demonstrates that an employer uses a particular employment practice that causes a disparate impact on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin and the respondent fails to demonstrate that the challenged practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. . . .63

With respect to criminal records, there is Title VII disparate impact liability where the evidence shows that a covered employer’s criminal record screening policy or practice disproportionately screens out a Title VII-protected group and the employer does not demonstrate that the policy or practice is job related for the positions in question and consistent with business necessity.

A. Determining Disparate Impact of Policies or Practices that Screen Individuals Based on Records of Criminal Conduct

1. Identifying the Policy or Practice

The first step in disparate impact analysis is to identify the particular policy or practice that causes the unlawful disparate impact. For criminal conduct exclusions, relevant information includes the text of the policy or practice, associated documentation, and information about how the policy or practice was actually implemented. More specifically, such information also includes which offenses or classes of offenses were reported to the employer (e.g., all felonies, all drug offenses); whether convictions (including sealed and/or expunged convictions), arrests, charges, or other criminal incidents were reported; how far back in time the reports reached (e.g., the last five, ten, or twenty years); and the jobs for which the criminal background screening was conducted.64  Training or guidance documents used by the employer also are relevant, because they may specify which types of criminal history information to gather for particular jobs, how to gather the data, and how to evaluate the information after it is obtained.

2. Determining Disparate Impact

Nationally, African Americans and Hispanics are arrested in numbers disproportionate to their representation in the general population. In 2010, 28% of all arrests were of African Americans,65 even though African Americans only comprised approximately 14% of the general population.66 In 2008, Hispanics were arrested for federal drug charges at a rate of approximately three times their proportion of the general population.67 Moreover, African Americans and Hispanics were more likely than Whites to be arrested, convicted, or sentenced for drug offenses even though their rate of drug use is similar to the rate of drug use for Whites.68

African Americans and Hispanics also are incarcerated at rates disproportionate to their numbers in the general population. Based on national incarceration data, the U.S. Department of Justice estimated in 2001 that 1 out of every 17 White men (5.9% of the White men in the U.S.) is expected to go to prison at some point during his lifetime, assuming that current incarceration rates remain unchanged.69 This rate climbs to 1 in 6 (or 17.2%) for Hispanic men.70 For African American men, the rate of expected incarceration rises to 1 in 3 (or 32.2%).71 Based on a state-by-state examination of incarceration rates in 2005, African Americans were incarcerated at a rate 5.6 times higher than Whites,72 and 7 states had a Black-to-White ratio of incarceration that was 10 to1.73 In 2010, Black men had an imprisonment rate that was nearly 7 times higher than White men and almost 3 times higher than Hispanic men.74

National data, such as that cited above, supports a finding that criminal record exclusions have a disparate impact based on race and national origin. The national data provides a basis for the Commission to further investigate such Title VII disparate impact charges. During an EEOC investigation, the employer also has an opportunity to show, with relevant evidence, that its employment policy or practice does not cause a disparate impact on the protected group(s). For example, an employer may present regional or local data showing that African American and/or Hispanic men are not arrested or convicted at disproportionately higher rates in the employer’s particular geographic area. An employer also may use its own applicant data to demonstrate that its policy or practice did not cause a disparate impact. The Commission will assess relevant evidence when making a determination of disparate impact, including applicant flow information maintained pursuant to the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures,75 workforce data, criminal history background check data, demographic availability statistics, incarceration/conviction data, and/or relevant labor market statistics.76

An employer’s evidence of a racially balanced workforce will not be enough to disprove disparate impact. In Connecticut v. Teal, the Supreme Court held that a “bottom line” racial balance in the workforce does not preclude employees from establishing a prima facie case of disparate impact; nor does it provide employers with a defense.77 The issue is whether the policy or practice deprives a disproportionate number of Title VII-protected individuals of employment opportunities.78

Finally, in determining disparate impact, the Commission will assess the probative value of an employer’s applicant data. As the Supreme Court stated in Dothard v. Rawlinson, an employer’s “application process might itself not adequately reflect the actual potential applicant pool since otherwise qualified people might be discouraged from applying” because of an alleged discriminatory policy or practice.79 Therefore, the Commission will closely consider whether an employer has a reputation in the community for excluding individuals with criminal records. Relevant evidence may come from ex-offender employment programs, individual testimony, employer statements, evidence of employer recruitment practices, or publicly posted notices, among other sources.80 The Commission will determine the persuasiveness of such evidence on a case-by-case basis.

B. Job Related For the Position in Question and Consistent with Business Necessity

1. Generally

After the plaintiff in litigation establishes disparate impact, Title VII shifts the burdens of production and persuasion to the employer to “demonstrate that the challenged practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity.”81 In the legislative history of the 1991 Civil Rights Act, Congress referred to Griggs and its progeny such as Albemarle Paper Company v. Moody82 and Dothard83 to explain how this standard should be construed.84 The Griggs Court stated that the employer’s burden was to show that the policy or practice is one that “bear[s] a demonstrable relationship to successful performance of the jobs for which it was used” and “measures the person for the job and not the person in the abstract.”85 In both Albemarle86 and Dothard,87 the Court emphasized the factual nature of the business necessity inquiry. The Court further stated in Dothard that the terms of the exclusionary policy must “be shown to be necessary to safe and efficient job performance.”88

In a case involving a criminal record exclusion, the Eighth Circuit in its 1975 Green v. Missouri Pacific Railroad decision, held that it was discriminatory under Title VII for an employer to “follow[] the policy of disqualifying for employment any applicant with a conviction for any crime other than a minor traffic offense.”89 The Eighth Circuit identified three factors (the “Green factors”) that were relevant to assessing whether an exclusion is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity:

  • The nature and gravity of the offense or conduct;90
  • The time that has passed since the offense or conduct and/or completion of the sentence; 91 and
  • The nature of the job held or sought.92

In 2007, the Third Circuit in El v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority93 developed the statutory analysis in greater depth. Douglas El challenged SEPTA’s policy of excluding everyone ever convicted of a violent crime from the job of paratransit driver.94 El, a 55 year-old African American paratransit driver-trainee, was terminated from employment when SEPTA learned of his conviction for second-degree murder 40 years earlier; the conviction involved a gang fight when he was 15 years old and was his only disqualifying offense under SEPTA’s policy.95 The Third Circuit expressed “reservations” about a policy such as SEPTA’s (exclusion for all violent crimes, no matter how long ago they were committed) “in the abstract.”96

Applying Supreme Court precedent, the El court observed that some level of risk is inevitable in all hiring, and that, “[i]n a broad sense, hiring policies . . . ultimately concern the management of risk.”97 Recognizing that assessing such risk is at the heart of criminal record exclusions, the Third Circuit concluded that Title VII requires employers to justify criminal record exclusions by demonstrating that they “accurately distinguish between applicants [who] pose an unacceptable level of risk and those [who] do not.”98

The Third Circuit affirmed summary judgment for SEPTA, but stated that the outcome of the case might have been different if Mr. El had, “for example, hired an expert who testified that there is a time at which a former criminal is no longer any more likely to recidivate than the average person, . . . [so] there would be a factual question for the jury to resolve.”99 The Third Circuit reasoned, however, that the recidivism evidence presented by SEPTA’s experts, in conjunction with the nature of the position at issue – paratransit driver-trainee with unsupervised access to vulnerable adults – required the employer to exercise the utmost care.100

In the subsections below, the Commission discusses considerations that are relevant to assessing whether criminal record exclusion policies or practices are job related and consistent with business necessity. First, we emphasize that arrests and convictions are treated differently.

2. Arrests

The fact of an arrest does not establish that criminal conduct has occurred.101 Arrests are not proof of criminal conduct. Many arrests do not result in criminal charges, or the charges are dismissed.102 Even if an individual is charged and subsequently prosecuted, he is presumed innocent unless proven guilty.103

An arrest, however, may in some circumstances trigger an inquiry into whether the conduct underlying the arrest justifies an adverse employment action. Title VII calls for a fact-based analysis to determine if an exclusionary policy or practice is job related and consistent with business necessity. Therefore, an exclusion based on an arrest, in itself, is not job related and consistent with business necessity.

Another reason for employers not to rely on arrest records is that they may not report the final disposition of the arrest (e.g., not prosecuted, convicted, or acquitted). As documented in Section III.A., supra, the DOJ/BJS reported that many arrest records in the FBI’s III database and state criminal record repositories are not associated with final dispositions.104 Arrest records also may include inaccuracies or may continue to be reported even if expunged or sealed.105

Example 3: Arrest Record Is Not Grounds for Exclusion. Mervin and Karen, a middle-aged African American couple, are driving to church in a predominantly white town. An officer stops them and interrogates them about their destination. When Mervin becomes annoyed and comments that his offense is simply “driving while Black,” the officer arrests him for disorderly conduct. The prosecutor decides not to file charges against Mervin, but the arrest remains in the police department’s database and is reported in a background check when Mervin applies with his employer of fifteen years for a promotion to an executive position. The employer’s practice is to deny such promotions to individuals with arrest records, even without a conviction, because it views an arrest record as an indicator of untrustworthiness and irresponsibility. If Mervin filed a Title VII charge based on these facts, and disparate impact based on race were established, the EEOC would find reasonable cause to believe that his employer violated Title VII.

Although an arrest record standing alone may not be used to deny an employment opportunity, an employer may make an employment decision based on the conduct underlying the arrest if the conduct makes the individual unfit for the position in question. The conduct, not the arrest, is relevant for employment purposes.

Example 4: Employer’s Inquiry into Conduct Underlying Arrest. Andrew, a Latino man, worked as an assistant principal in Elementary School for several years. After several ten and eleven-year-old girls attending the school accused him of touching them inappropriately on the chest, Andrew was arrested and charged with several counts of endangering the welfare of children and sexual abuse. Elementary School has a policy that requires suspension or termination of any employee who the school believes engaged in conduct that impacts the health or safety of the students. After learning of the accusations, the school immediately places Andrew on unpaid administrative leave pending an investigation. In the course of its investigation, the school provides Andrew a chance to explain the events and circumstances that led to his arrest. Andrew denies the allegations, saying that he may have brushed up against the girls in the crowded hallways or lunchroom, but that he doesn’t really remember the incidents and does not have regular contact with any of the girls. The school also talks with the girls, and several of them recount touching in crowded situations. The school does not find Andrew’s explanation credible. Based on Andrew’s conduct, the school terminates his employment pursuant to its policy.

Andrew challenges the policy as discriminatory under Title VII. He asserts that it has a disparate impact based on national origin and that his employer may not suspend or terminate him based solely on an arrest without a conviction because he is innocent until proven guilty. After confirming that an arrest policy would have a disparate impact based on national origin, the EEOC concludes that no discrimination occurred. The school’s policy is linked to conduct that is relevant to the particular jobs at issue, and the exclusion is made based on descriptions of the underlying conduct, not the fact of the arrest. The Commission finds no reasonable cause to believe Title VII was violated.

3. Convictions

By contrast, a record of a conviction will usually serve as sufficient evidence that a person engaged in particular conduct, given the procedural safeguards associated with trials and guilty pleas.106 However, there may be evidence of an error in the record, an outdated record, or another reason for not relying on the evidence of a conviction. For example, a database may continue to report a conviction that was later expunged, or may continue to report as a felony an offense that was subsequently downgraded to a misdemeanor.107

Some states require employers to wait until late in the selection process to ask about convictions.108 The policy rationale is that an employer is more likely to objectively assess the relevance of an applicant’s conviction if it becomes known when the employer is already knowledgeable about the applicant’s qualifications and experience.109 As a best practice, and consistent with applicable laws,110 the Commission recommends that employers not ask about convictions on job applications and that, if and when they make such inquiries, the inquiries be limited to convictions for which exclusion would be job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity.

4. Determining Whether a Criminal Conduct Exclusion Is Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity

To establish that a criminal conduct exclusion that has a disparate impact is job related and consistent with business necessity under Title VII, the employer needs to show that the policy operates to effectively link specific criminal conduct, and its dangers, with the risks inherent in the duties of a particular position.

Two circumstances in which the Commission believes employers will consistently meet the “job related and consistent with business necessity” defense are as follows:

  • The employer validates the criminal conduct screen for the position in question per the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (Uniform Guidelines) standards (if data about criminal conduct as related to subsequent work performance is available and such validation is possible); 111 or
  • The employer develops a targeted screen considering at least the nature of the crime, the time elapsed, and the nature of the job (the three Green factors), and then provides an opportunity for an individualized assessment for people excluded by the screen to determine whether the policy as applied is job related and consistent with business necessity.

The individualized assessment would consist of notice to the individual that he has been screened out because of a criminal conviction; an opportunity for the individual to demonstrate that the exclusion should not be applied due to his particular circumstances; and consideration by the employer as to whether the additional information provided by the individual warrants an exception to the exclusion and shows that the policy as applied is not job related and consistent with business necessity. See Section V.B.9, infra (examples of relevant considerations in individualized assessments).

Depending on the facts and circumstances, an employer may be able to justify a targeted criminal records screen solely under the Green factors. Such a screen would need to be narrowly tailored to identify criminal conduct with a demonstrably tight nexus to the position in question. Title VII thus does not necessarily require individualized assessment in all circumstances. However, the use of individualized assessments can help employers avoid Title VII liability by allowing them to consider more complete information on individual applicants or employees, as part of a policy that is job related and consistent with business necessity.

5. Validation

The Uniform Guidelines describe three different approaches to validating employment screens.112 However, they recognize that “[t]here are circumstances in which a user cannot or need not utilize” formal validation techniques and that in such circumstances an employer “should utilize selection procedures which are as job related as possible and which will minimize or eliminate adverse impact as set forth [in the following subsections].”113 Although there may be social science studies that assess whether convictions are linked to future behaviors, traits, or conduct with workplace ramifications,114 and thereby provide a framework for validating some employment exclusions, such studies are rare at the time of this drafting.

6. Detailed Discussion of the Green Factors and Criminal Conduct Screens

Absent a validation study that meets the Uniform Guidelines’ standards, the Green factors provide the starting point for analyzing how specific criminal conduct may be linked to particular positions. The three Green factors are:

  • The nature and gravity of the offense or conduct;
  • The time that has passed since the offense, conduct and/or completion of the sentence; and
  • The nature of the job held or sought.
a. The Nature and Gravity of the Offense or Conduct

Careful consideration of the nature and gravity of the offense or conduct is the first step in determining whether a specific crime may be relevant to concerns about risks in a particular position. The nature of the offense or conduct may be assessed with reference to the harm caused by the crime (e.g., theft causes property loss). The legal elements of a crime also may be instructive. For example, a conviction for felony theft may involve deception, threat, or intimidation.115 With respect to the gravity of the crime, offenses identified as misdemeanors may be less severe than those identified as felonies.

b. The Time that Has Passed Since the Offense, Conduct and/or Completion of the Sentence

Employer policies typically specify the duration of a criminal conduct exclusion. While the Green court did not endorse a specific timeframe for criminal conduct exclusions, it did acknowledge that permanent exclusions from all employment based on any and all offenses were not consistent with the business necessity standard.116 Subsequently, in El, the court noted that the plaintiff might have survived summary judgment if he had presented evidence that “there is a time at which a former criminal is no longer any more likely to recidivate than the average person . . . .”117 Thus, the court recognized that the amount of time that had passed since the plaintiff’s criminal conduct occurred was probative of the risk he posed in the position in question.

Whether the duration of an exclusion will be sufficiently tailored to satisfy the business necessity standard will depend on the particular facts and circumstances of each case. Relevant and available information to make this assessment includes, for example, studies demonstrating how much the risk of recidivism declines over a specified time.118

c. The Nature of the Job Held or Sought

Finally, it is important to identify the particular job(s) subject to the exclusion. While a factual inquiry may begin with identifying the job title, it also encompasses the nature of the job’s duties (e.g., data entry, lifting boxes), identification of the job’s essential functions, the circumstances under which the job is performed (e.g., the level of supervision, oversight, and interaction with co-workers or vulnerable individuals), and the environment in which the job’s duties are performed (e.g., out of doors, in a warehouse, in a private home). Linking the criminal conduct to the essential functions of the position in question may assist an employer in demonstrating that its policy or practice is job related and consistent with business necessity because it “bear[s] a demonstrable relationship to successful performance of the jobs for which it was used.”119

7. Examples of Criminal Conduct Exclusions that Do Not Consider the Green Factors

A policy or practice requiring an automatic, across-the-board exclusion from all employment opportunities because of any criminal conduct is inconsistent with the Green factors because it does not focus on the dangers of particular crimes and the risks in particular positions. As the court recognized in Green, “[w]e cannot conceive of any business necessity that would automatically place every individual convicted of any offense, except a minor traffic offense, in the permanent ranks of the unemployed.”120

Example 5: Exclusion Is Not Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. The National Equipment Rental Company uses the Internet to accept job applications for all positions. All applicants must answer certain questions before they are permitted to submit their online application, including “have you ever been convicted of a crime?” If the applicant answers “yes,” the online application process automatically terminates, and the applicant sees a screen that simply says “Thank you for your interest. We cannot continue to process your application at this time.”

The Company does not have a record of the reasons why it adopted this exclusion, and it does not have information to show that convictions for all offenses render all applicants unacceptable risks in all of its jobs, which range from warehouse work, to delivery, to management positions. If a Title VII charge were filed based on these facts, and there was a disparate impact on a Title VII-protected basis, the EEOC would find reasonable cause to believe that the blanket exclusion was not job related and consistent with business necessity because the risks associated with all convictions are not pertinent to all of the Company’s jobs.

Example 6: Exclusion Is Not Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. Leo, an African American man, has worked successfully at PR Agency as an account executive for three years. After a change of ownership, the new owners adopt a policy under which it will not employ anyone with a conviction. The policy does not allow for any individualized assessment before exclusion. The new owners, who are highly respected in the industry, pride themselves on employing only the “best of the best” for every position. The owners assert that a quality workforce is a key driver of profitability.

Twenty years earlier, as a teenager, Leo pled guilty to a misdemeanor assault charge. During the intervening twenty years, Leo graduated from college and worked successfully in advertising and public relations without further contact with the criminal justice system. At PR Agency, all of Leo’s supervisors assessed him as a talented, reliable, and trustworthy employee, and he has never posed a risk to people or property at work. However, once the new ownership of PR Agency learns about Leo’s conviction record through a background check, it terminates his employment. It refuses to reconsider its decision despite Leo’s positive employment history at PR Agency.

Leo files a Title VII charge alleging that PR Agency’s conviction policy has a disparate impact based on race and is not job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. After confirming disparate impact, the EEOC considers PR Agency’s defense that it employs only the “best of the best” for every position, and that this necessitates excluding everyone with a conviction. PR Agency does not show that all convictions are indicative of risk or danger in all its jobs for all time, under the Green factors. Nor does PR Agency provide any factual support for its assertion that having a conviction is necessarily indicative of poor work or a lack of professionalism. The EEOC concludes that there is reasonable cause to believe that the Agency’s policy is not job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. 121

8. Targeted Exclusions that Are Guided by the Green Factors

An employer policy or practice of excluding individuals from particular positions for specified criminal conduct within a defined time period, as guided by the Green factors, is a targeted exclusion. Targeted exclusions are tailored to the rationale for their adoption, in light of the particular criminal conduct and jobs involved, taking into consideration fact-based evidence, legal requirements, and/or relevant and available studies.

As discussed above in Section V.B.4, depending on the facts and circumstances, an employer may be able to justify a targeted criminal records screen solely under the Green factors. Such a screen would need to be narrowly tailored to identify criminal conduct with a demonstrably tight nexus to the position in question. Title VII thus does not necessarily require individualized assessment in all circumstances. However, the use of individualized assessments can help employers avoid Title VII liability by allowing them to consider more complete information on individual applicants or employees, as part of a policy that is job related and consistent with business necessity.

9. Individualized Assessment

Individualized assessment generally means that an employer informs the individual that he may be excluded because of past criminal conduct; provides an opportunity to the individual to demonstrate that the exclusion does not properly apply to him; and considers whether the individual’s additional information shows that the policy as applied is not job related and consistent with business necessity.

The individual’s showing may include information that he was not correctly identified in the criminal record, or that the record is otherwise inaccurate. Other relevant individualized evidence includes, for example:

  • The facts or circumstances surrounding the offense or conduct;
  • The number of offenses for which the individual was convicted;
  • Older age at the time of conviction, or release from prison; 122
  • Evidence that the individual performed the same type of work, post conviction, with the same or a different employer, with no known incidents of criminal conduct;
  • The length and consistency of employment history before and after the offense or conduct; 123
  • Rehabilitation efforts, e.g., education/training; 124
  • Employment or character references and any other information regarding fitness for the particular position;125 and
  • Whether the individual is bonded under a federal, state, or local bonding program.126

If the individual does not respond to the employer’s attempt to gather additional information about his background, the employer may make its employment decision without the information.

Example 7: Targeted Screen with Individualized Assessment Is Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. County Community Center rents meeting rooms to civic organizations and small businesses, party rooms to families and social groups, and athletic facilities to local recreational sports leagues. The County has a targeted rule prohibiting anyone with a conviction for theft crimes (e.g., burglary, robbery, larceny, identity theft) from working in a position with access to personal financial information for at least four years after the conviction or release from incarceration. This rule was adopted by the County’s Human Resources Department based on data from the County Corrections Department, national criminal data, and recent recidivism research for theft crimes. The Community Center also offers an opportunity for individuals identified for exclusion to provide information showing that the exclusion should not be applied to them.

Isaac, who is Hispanic, applies to the Community Center for a full-time position as an administrative assistant, which involves accepting credit card payments for room rentals, in addition to having unsupervised access to the personal belongings of people using the facilities. After conducting a background check, the County learns that Isaac pled guilty eighteen months earlier, at age twenty, to credit card fraud, and that he did not serve time in prison. Isaac confirms these facts, provides a reference from the restaurant where he now works on Saturday nights, and asks the County for a “second chance” to show that he is trustworthy. The County tells Isaac that it is still rejecting his employment application because his criminal conduct occurred eighteen months ago and is directly pertinent to the job in question. The information he provided did nothing to dispel the County’s concerns.

Isaac challenges this rejection under Title VII, alleging that the policy has a disparate impact on Hispanics and is not job related and consistent with business necessity. After confirming disparate impact, the EEOC finds that this screen was carefully tailored to assess unacceptable risk in relevant positions, for a limited time period, consistent with the evidence, and that the policy avoided overbroad exclusions by allowing individuals an opportunity to explain special circumstances regarding their criminal conduct. Thus, even though the policy has a disparate impact on Hispanics, the EEOC does not find reasonable cause to believe that discrimination occurred because the policy is job related and consistent with business necessity. 127

Example 8: Targeted Exclusion Without Individualized Assessment Is Not Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. “Shred 4 You” employs over 100 people to pick up discarded files and sensitive materials from offices, transport the materials to a secure facility, and shred and recycle them. The owner of “Shred 4 You” sells the company to a competitor, known as “We Shred.” Employees of “Shred 4 You” must reapply for employment with “We Shred” and undergo a background check. “We Shred” has a targeted criminal conduct exclusion policy that prohibits the employment of anyone who has been convicted of any crime related to theft or fraud in the past five years, and the policy does not provide for any individualized consideration. The company explains that its clients entrust it with handling sensitive and confidential information and materials; therefore, it cannot risk employing people who pose an above-average risk of stealing information.

Jamie, who is African American, worked successfully for “Shred 4 You” for five years before the company changed ownership. Jamie applies for his old job, and “We Shred” reviews Jamie’s performance appraisals, which include high marks for his reliability, trustworthiness, and honesty. However, when “We Shred” does a background check, it finds that Jamie pled guilty to misdemeanor insurance fraud five years ago, because he exaggerated the costs of several home repairs after a winter storm. “We Shred” management informs Jamie that his guilty plea is evidence of criminal conduct and that his employment will be terminated. Jamie asks management to consider his reliable and honest performance in the same job at “Shred 4 You,” but “We Shred” refuses to do so. The employer’s conclusion that Jamie’s guilty plea demonstrates that he poses an elevated risk of dishonesty is not factually based given Jamie’s history of trustworthiness in the same job. After confirming disparate impact based on race (African American), the EEOC finds reasonable cause to believe that Title VII was violated because the targeted exclusion was not job related and consistent with business necessity based on these facts.

C. Less Discriminatory Alternatives

If an employer successfully demonstrates that its policy or practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity, a Title VII plaintiff may still prevail by demonstrating that there is a less discriminatory “alternative employment practice” that serves the employer’s legitimate goals as effectively as the challenged practice but that the employer refused to adopt.128

VI. Positions Subject to Federal Prohibitions or Restrictions on Individuals with Records of Certain Criminal Conduct

In some industries, employers are subject to federal statutory and/or regulatory requirements that prohibit individuals with certain criminal records from holding particular positions or engaging in certain occupations. Compliance with federal laws and/or regulations is a defense to a charge of discrimination. However, the EEOC will continue to coordinate with other federal departments and agencies with the goal of maximizing federal regulatory consistency with respect to the use of criminal history information in employment decisions.129

A. Hiring in Certain Industries

Federal laws and regulations govern the employment of individuals with specific convictions in certain industries or positions in both the private and public sectors. For example, federal law excludes an individual who was convicted in the previous ten years of specified crimes from working as a security screener or otherwise having unescorted access to the secure areas of an airport.130 There are equivalent requirements for federal law enforcement officers,131 child care workers in federal agencies or facilities,132 bank employees, 133 and port workers,134 among other positions.135 Title VII does not preempt these federally imposed restrictions. However, if an employer decides to impose an exclusion that goes beyond the scope of a federally imposed restriction, the discretionary aspect of the policy would be subject to Title VII analysis.

Example 9: Exclusion Is Not Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. Your Bank has a rule prohibiting anyone with convictions for any type of financial or fraud-related crimes within the last twenty years from working in positions with access to customer financial information, even though the federal ban is ten years for individuals who are convicted of any criminal offense involving dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering from serving in such positions.

Sam, who is Latino, applies to Your Bank to work as a customer service representative. A background check reveals that Sam was convicted of a misdemeanor for misrepresenting his income on a loan application fifteen years earlier. Your Bank therefore rejects Sam, and he files a Title VII charge with the EEOC, alleging that the Bank’s policy has a disparate impact based on national origin and is not job related and consistent with business necessity. Your Bank asserts that its policy does not cause a disparate impact and that, even if it does, it is job related for the position in question because customer service representatives have regular access to financial information and depositors must have “100% confidence” that their funds are safe. However, Your Bank does not offer evidence showing that there is an elevated likelihood of committing financial crimes for someone who has been crime-free for more than ten years. After establishing that the Bank’s policy has a disparate impact based on national origin, the EEOC finds that the policy is not job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity. The Bank’s justification for adding ten years to the federally mandated exclusion is insufficient because it is only a generalized concern about security, without proof.

B. Obtaining Occupational Licenses

Title VII also does not preempt federal statutes and regulations that govern eligibility for occupational licenses and registrations. These restrictions cover diverse sectors of the economy including the transportation industry,136 the financial industry,137 and import/export activities,138 among others.139

C. Waiving or Appealing Federally Imposed Occupational Restrictions

Several federal statutes and regulations provide a mechanism for employers or individuals to appeal or apply for waivers of federally imposed occupational restrictions. For example, unless a bank receives prior written consent from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), an individual convicted of a criminal offense involving dishonesty, breach of trust, money laundering, or another financially related crime may not work in, own, or control “an insured depository institution” (e.g., bank) for ten years under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act.140 To obtain such FDIC consent, the insured institution must file an application for a waiver on behalf of the particular individual.141 Alternatively, if the insured institution does not apply for the waiver on the individual’s behalf, the individual may file a request directly with the FDIC for a waiver of the institution filing requirement, demonstrating “substantial good cause” to grant the waiver.142 If the FDIC grants the individual’s waiver request, the individual can then file an application directly with the FDIC for consent to work for the insured institution in question.143 Once the institution, or the individual, submits the application, the FDIC’s criminal record waiver review process requires consideration of mitigating factors that are consistent with Title VII, including evidence of rehabilitation, and the nature and circumstances of the crime.144

Additionally, port workers who are denied the Transportation Workers Identification Credential (TWIC) based on their conviction record may seek a waiver for certain permanently disqualifying offenses or interim disqualifying offenses, and also may file an individualized appeal from the Transportation Security Administration’s initial determination of threat assessment based on the conviction.145 The Maritime Transportation Security Act, which requires all port workers to undergo a criminal background check to obtain a TWIC,146 provides that individuals with convictions for offenses such as espionage, treason, murder, and a federal crime of terrorism are permanently disqualified from obtaining credentials, but those with convictions for firearms violations and distribution of controlled substances may be temporarily disqualified.147 Most offenses related to dishonesty are only temporarily disqualifying.148

Example 10: Consideration of Federally Imposed Occupational Restrictions. John Doe applies for a position as a truck driver for Truckers USA. John’s duties will involve transporting cargo to, from, and around ports, and Truckers USA requires all of its port truck drivers to have a TWIC. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) conducts a criminal background check and may deny the credential to applicants who have permanently disqualifying criminal offenses in their background as defined by federal law. After conducting the background check for John Doe, TSA discovers that he was convicted nine years earlier for conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction. TSA denies John a security card because this is a permanently disqualifying criminal offense under federal law.149 John, who points out that he was a minor at the time of the conviction, requests a waiver by TSA because he had limited involvement and no direct knowledge of the underlying crime at the time of the offense. John explains that he helped a friend transport some chemical materials that the friend later tried to use to damage government property. TSA refuses to grant John’s waiver request because a conviction for conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction is not subject to the TSA’s waiver procedures.150 Based on this denial, Truckers USA rejects John’s application for the port truck driver position. Title VII does not override Truckers USA’s policy because the policy is consistent with another federal law.

While Title VII does not mandate that an employer seek such waivers, where an employer does seek waivers it must do so in a nondiscriminatory manner.

D. Security Clearances

The existence of a criminal record may result in the denial of a federal security clearance, which is a prerequisite for a variety of positions with the federal government and federal government contractors.151 A federal security clearance is used to ensure employees’ trustworthiness, reliability, and loyalty before providing them with access to sensitive national security information.152 Under Title VII’s national security exception, it is not unlawful for an employer to “fail or refuse to hire and employ” an individual because “such individual has not fulfilled or has ceased to fulfill” the federal security requirements.153 This exception focuses on whether the position in question is, in fact, subject to national security requirements that are imposed by federal statute or Executive Order, and whether the adverse employment action actually resulted from the denial or revocation of a security clearance.154 Procedural requirements related to security clearances must be followed without regard to an individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.155

E. Working for the Federal Government

Title VII provides that, with limited coverage exceptions, “[a]ll personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment . . . shall be made free from any discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.”156 The principles discussed above in this Guidance apply in the federal employment context. In most circumstances, individuals with criminal records are not automatically barred from working for the federal government.157 However, the federal government imposes criminal record restrictions on its workforce through “suitability” requirements for certain positions.158 The federal government’s Office of Personnel Management (OPM) defines suitability as “determinations based on a person’s character or conduct that may have an impact on the integrity or efficiency of the service.”159 Under OPM’s rules, agencies may bar individuals from federal employment for up to three years if they are found unsuitable based on criminal or dishonest conduct, among other factors.160 OPM gives federal agencies the discretion to consider relevant mitigating criteria when deciding whether an individual is suitable for a federal position.161 These mitigating criteria, which are consistent with the three Green factors and also provide an individualized assessment of the applicant’s background, allow consideration of: (1) the nature of the position for which the person is applying or in which the person is employed; (2) the nature and seriousness of the conduct; (3) the circumstances surrounding the conduct; (4) the recency of the conduct; (5) the age of the person involved at the time of the conduct; (6) contributing societal conditions; and (7) the absence or presence of rehabilitation or efforts toward rehabilitation.162 In general, OPM requires federal agencies and departments to consider hiring an individual with a criminal record if he is the best candidate for the position in question and can comply with relevant job requirements.163 The EEOC continues to coordinate with OPM to achieve employer best practices in the federal sector.164

VII. Positions Subject to State and Local Prohibitions or Restrictions on Individuals with Records of Certain Criminal Conduct

States and local jurisdictions also have laws and/or regulations that restrict or prohibit the employment of individuals with records of certain criminal conduct.165 Unlike federal laws or regulations, however, state and local laws or regulations are preempted by Title VII if they “purport[] to require or permit the doing of any act which would be an unlawful employment practice” under Title VII.166 Therefore, if an employer’s exclusionary policy or practice is not job related and consistent with business necessity, the fact that it was adopted to comply with a state or local law or regulation does not shield the employer from Title VII liability.167

Example 11: State Law Exclusion Is Job Related and Consistent with Business Necessity. Elijah, who is African American, applies for a position as an office assistant at Pre-School, which is in a state that imposes criminal record restrictions on school employees. Pre-School, which employs twenty-five full- and part-time employees, uses all of its workers to help with the children. Pre-School performs a background check and learns that Elijah pled guilty to charges of indecent exposure two years ago. After being rejected for the position because of his conviction, Elijah files a Title VII disparate impact charge based on race to challenge Pre-School’s policy. The EEOC conducts an investigation and finds that the policy has a disparate impact and that the exclusion is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity because it addresses serious safety risks of employment in a position involving regular contact with children. As a result, the EEOC would not find reasonable cause to believe that discrimination occurred.

Example 12: State Law Exclusion Is Not Consistent with Title VII. County Y enforces a law that prohibits all individuals with a criminal conviction from working for it. Chris, an African American man, was convicted of felony welfare fraud fifteen years ago, and has not had subsequent contact with the criminal justice system. Chris applies to County Y for a job as an animal control officer trainee, a position that involves learning how to respond to citizen complaints and handle animals. The County rejects Chris’s application as soon as it learns that he has a felony conviction. Chris files a Title VII charge, and the EEOC investigates, finding disparate impact based on race and also that the exclusionary policy is not job related and consistent with business necessity. The County cannot justify rejecting everyone with any conviction from all jobs. Based on these facts, County Y’s law “purports to require or permit the doing of an[] act which would be an unlawful employment practice” under Title VII.

VIII. Employer Best Practices

The following are examples of best practices for employers who are considering criminal record information when making employment decisions.

General

  • Eliminate policies or practices that exclude people from employment based on any criminal record.
  • Train managers, hiring officials, and decisionmakers about Title VII and its prohibition on employment discrimination.

Developing a Policy

  • Develop a narrowly tailored written policy and procedure for screening applicants and employees for criminal conduct.
    • Identify essential job requirements and the actual circumstances under which the jobs are performed.
    • Determine the specific offenses that may demonstrate unfitness for performing such jobs.
      • Identify the criminal offenses based on all available evidence.
    • Determine the duration of exclusions for criminal conduct based on all available evidence.
      • Include an individualized assessment.
    • Record the justification for the policy and procedures.
    • Note and keep a record of consultations and research considered in crafting the policy and procedures.
  • Train managers, hiring officials, and decisionmakers on how to implement the policy and procedures consistent with Title VII.

Questions about Criminal Records

  • When asking questions about criminal records, limit inquiries to records for which exclusion would be job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity.

Confidentiality

  • Keep information about applicants’ and employees’ criminal records confidential. Only use it for the purpose for which it was intended.

Approved by the Commission:

 

/s/
_____________________________
Chair Jacqueline A. Berrien

 

4/25/2010
_____________
Date

ENDNOTES

1 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. The EEOC also enforces other anti-discrimination laws including: Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (ADA), and Section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act, as amended, which prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of disability; the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended (ADEA), which prohibits discrimination on the basis of age 40 or above; Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA), which prohibits discrimination on the basis of genetic information; and the Equal Pay Act of 1963, as amended (EPA), which requires employers to pay male and female employees at the same establishment equal wages for equal work.

2 All entities covered by Title VII are subject to this analysis. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 (anti-discrimination provisions); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b)””(e) (defining “employer,” “employment agency,” and “labor organization”); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a) (prohibiting discriminatory employment practices by federal departments and agencies). For purposes of this Guidance, the term “employer” is used in lieu of listing all Title VII-covered entities. The Commission considers other coverage questions that arise in particular charges involving, for example, joint employment or third party interference in Compliance Manual Section 2: Threshold Issues, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, § 2-III B., Covered Entities, http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/threshold.html#2-III-B (last visited April 23, 2012).

3 For the purposes of this Guidance, references to “contact” with the criminal justice system may include, for example, an arrest, charge, indictment, citation, conviction, incarceration, probation, or parole.

4 See Thomas P. Bonczar, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Prevalence of Imprisonment in the U.S. Population, 1974″”2001, at 3 (2003), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/piusp01.pdf [hereinafter Prevalence of Imprisonment] (“Between 1974 and 2001 the number of former prisoners living in the United States more than doubled, from 1,603,000 to 4,299,000.”); Sean Rosenmerkel et al., Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Felony Sentences in State Courts, 2006 “” Statistical Tables 1 (2009), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/fssc06st.pdf (reporting that between 1990 and 2006, there has been a 37% increase in the number of felony offenders sentenced in state courts); see also Pew Ctr. on The States, One in 31: The Long Reach of American Corrections 4 (2009), http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/uploadedFiles/PSPP_1in31_report_FINAL_WEB_3-26-09.pdf [hereinafter One in 31] (“During the past quarter-century, the number of prison and jail inmates has grown by 274 percent . . . .[bringing] the total population in custody to 2.3 million. During the same period, the number under community supervision grew by a staggering 3,535,660 to a total of 5.1 million.”); Pew Ctr. on the States, One in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008, at 3 (2008), http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/uploadedFiles/8015PCTS_Prison08_FINAL_2-1-1_FORWEB.pdf (“[M]ore than one in every 100 adults is now confined in an American jail or prison.”); Robert Brame, Michael G. Turner, Raymond Paternoster, & Shawn D. Bushway, Cumulative Prevalence of Arrest From Ages 8 to 23 in a National Sample, 129 Pediatrics 21, 25, 26 (2012) (finding that approximately 1 out of 3 of all American youth will experience at least 1 arrest for a nontraffic offense by the age of 23).

5 See John Schmitt & Kris Warner, Ctr. For Econ. & Policy Research, Ex-Offenders and the Labor Market 12 (2010), www.cepr.net/documents/publications/ex-offenders-2010-11.pdf (“In 2008, ex-prisoners were 2.9 to 3.2 percent of the total working-age population (excluding those currently in prison or jail) or about one in 33 working-age adults. Ex-felons were a larger share of the total working-age population: 6.6 to 7.4 percent, or about one in 15 working-age adults [not all felons serve prison terms].”); see id. at 3 (concluding that “in the absence of some reform of the criminal justice system, the share of ex-offenders in the working-age population will rise substantially in coming decades”).

6 Prevalence of Imprisonment, supra note 4, at 4, Table 3.

7 Id.

8 One in 31, supra note 8, at 5 (noting that when all of the individuals who are probationers, parolees, prisoners or jail inmates are added up, the total is more than 7.3 million adults; this is more than the populations of Chicago, Philadelphia, San Diego, and Dallas combined, and larger than the populations of 38 states and the District of Columbia).

9 Prevalence of Imprisonment, supra note 4, at 7.

10 Id. at 5, Table 5; cf. Pew Ctr. on the States, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic Mobility 6 (2010), http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/uploadedFiles/Collateral_Costs.pdf?n=8653 (“Simply stated, incarceration in America is concentrated among African American men. While 1 in every 87 white males ages 18 to 64 is incarcerated and the number for similarly-aged Hispanic males is 1 in 36, for black men it is 1 in 12.”). Incarceration rates are even starker for 20-to-34-year-old men without a high school diploma or GED: 1 in 8 White males in this demographic group is incarcerated, compared to 1 in 14 Hispanic males, and 1 in 3 Black males. Pew Ctr. on the States, supra, at 8, Figure 2.

11 This document uses the terms “Black” and “African American,” and the terms “Hispanic” and “Latino,” interchangeably.

12 See infra notes 65-67 (citing data for the arrest rates and population statistics for African Americans and Hispanics).

13 Prevalence of Imprisonment, supra note 4, at 1.

14 Id. at 8.

15 See Policy Statement on the Issue of Conviction Records Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n (Feb. 4, 1987), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/convict1.html; EEOC Policy Statement on the Use of Statistics in Charges Involving the Exclusion of Individuals with Conviction Records from Employment, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n (July 29, 1987), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/convict2.html; Policy Guidance on the Consideration of Arrest Records in Employment Decisions Under Title VII, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n (Sept. 7, 1990), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/arrest_records.html; Compliance Manual Section 15: Race & Color Discrimination, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, § 15-VI.B.2 (April 19, 2006), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/race-color.pdf. See also EEOC Decision No. 72-1497 (1972) (challenging a criminal record exclusion policy based on “serious crimes”); EEOC Decision No. 74-89 (1974) (challenging a policy where a felony conviction was considered an adverse factor that would lead to disqualification); EEOC Decision No. 78-03 (1977) (challenging an exclusion policy based on felony or misdemeanor convictions involving moral turpitude or the use of drugs); EEOC Decision No. 78-35 (1978) (concluding that an employee’s discharge was reasonable given his pattern of criminal behavior and the severity and recentness of his criminal conduct).

16 In 2011, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder assembled a Cabinet-level interagency Reentry Council to support the federal government’s efforts to promote the successful reintegration of ex-offenders back into their communities. National Reentry Resource Center “” Federal Interagency Reentry Council, http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/reentry-council (last visited April 23, 2012). As a part of the Council’s efforts, it has focused on removing barriers to employment for ex-offenders to reduce recidivism by publishing several fact sheets on employing individuals with criminal records. See, e.g., Fed. Interagency Reentry Council, Reentry Mythbuster! on Federal Hiring Policies (2011), http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/documents/0000/1083/Reentry_Council_Mythbuster_Fed_Employment.pdf; Fed. Interagency Reentry Council, Reentry Mythbuster! on Hiring/Criminal Records Guidance (2011), http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/documents/0000/1082/Reentry_Council_Mythbuster_Employment.pdf; Fed. Interagency Reentry Council, Reentry Mythbuster! Criminal Histories and Employment Background Checks (2011), http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/documents/0000/1176/Reentry_Council_Mythbuster_FCRA_Employment.pdf; Fed. Interagency Reentry Council, Reentry Mythbuster! on Federal Bonding Program (2011), http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/documents/0000/1061/Reentry_Council_Mythbuster_Federal_Bonding.pdf.

In addition to these federal efforts, several state law enforcement agencies have embraced initiatives and programs that encourage the employment of ex-offenders. For example, Texas’ Department of Criminal Justice has a Reentry and Integration Division and within that Division, a Reentry Task Force Workgroup. See Reentry and Integration Division-Reentry Task Force, Tex. Dep’t of Criminal Justice, http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/divisions/rid/rid_texas_reentry_task_force.html (last visited April 23, 2012). One of the Workgroups in this Task Force specifically focuses on identifying employment opportunities for ex-offenders and barriers that affect ex-offenders’ access to employment or vocational training programs. Reentry and Integration Division “” Reentry Task Force Workgroups, Tex. Dep’t of Criminal Justice, http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/divisions/rid/r_workgroup/rid_workgroup_employment.html (last visited April 23, 2012). Similarly, Ohio’s Department of Rehabilitation and Correction has an Offender Workforce Development Office that “works with departmental staff and correctional institutions within the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction to prepare offenders for employment and the job search process.” Jobs for Ohio Offenders, Ohio Dep’t of Rehab. and Corr. Offender Workforce Dev., http://www.drc.ohio.gov/web/JOBOFFEN.HTM (last updated Aug. 9, 2010). Law enforcement agencies in other states such as Indiana and Florida have also recognized the importance of encouraging ex-offender employment. See, e.g., IDOC: Road to Re-Entry, Ind. Dep’t of Corr., http://www.in.gov/idoc/reentry/index.htm (last visited April 23, 2012) (describing various services and programs that are available to ex-offenders to help them to obtain employment); Fla. Dep’t of Corrs., Recidivism Reduction Strategic Plan: Fiscal Year 2009-2014, at 11, 12 (2009), http://www.dc.state.fl.us/orginfo/FinalRecidivismReductionPlan.pdf (identifying the lack of employment as one of the barriers to successful ex-offender reentry).

17 Carl R. Ernst & Les Rosen, “National” Criminal History Databases 1 (2002), http://www.brbpub.com/articles/CriminalHistoryDB.pdf.

18 LexisNexis, Criminal Background Checks: What Non-profits Need to Know About Criminal Records 4 (2009), http://www.lexisnexis.com/risk/nonprofit/documents/Volunteer_Screening_White_Paper.pdf.

19 Id.

20 Ernst & Rosen, supra note 17, at 1; Nat’l Ass’n of Prof’l Background Screeners, Criminal Background Checks for Employment Purposes 5, http://www.napbs.com/files/public/Learn_More/White_Papers/CriminalBackgroundChecks.pdf.

21 LexisNexis, supra note 18, at 6. See also Nat’l Ass’n of Prof’l Background Screeners, supra note 20 at 5.

22 Ernst & Rosen, supra note 17, at 1.

23 Id.

24 See SEARCH, The National Task Force on the Criminal Backgrounding of America 3, 4 (2005), http://www.search.org/files/pdf/ReportofNTFCBA.pdf. Registries and watch lists can also include federal and international terrorist watch lists, and registries of individuals who are being investigated for certain types of crimes, such as gang-related crimes. Id. See also LexisNexis, supra note 18, at 5 (reporting that “all 50 states currently have a publicly available sex offender registry”).

25 See U.S. Dep’t of Justice, The Attorney General’s Report on Criminal History Background Checks 4 (2006), http://www.justice.gov/olp/ag_bgchecks_report.pdf [hereinafter Background Checks]. See also Ernst & Rosen, supra note 17, at 2.

26 See Nat’l Ass’n of Prof’l Background Screeners, supra note 20, at 5. See also LexisNexis, supra note 18, at 5.

27 LexisNexis, supra note 18, at 5. See also Am. Ass’n of Colls. of Pharmacy, Report of the AACP Criminal Background Check Advisory Panel 6″”7 (2006), http://www.aacp.org/resources/academicpolicies/admissionsguidelines/Documents/AACPBackgroundChkRpt.pdf.

28 Am. Ass’n of Colls. of Pharmacy, supra note 27, at 6″”7.

29 Background Checks, supra note 25, at 4.

30 Id.

31 Nat’l Ass’n of Prof’l Background Screeners, supra note 20, at 5.

32 Background Checks, supra note 25, at 4.

33 Id. at 3.

34 See id. (“Non-criminal justice screening using FBI criminal history records is typically done by a government agency applying suitability criteria that have been established by law or the responsible agency.”).

35 Id. at 5.

36 Id. at 4.

37 Dennis A. DeBacco & Owen M. Greenspan, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems, 2010, at 2 (2011), https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/237253.pdf [hereinafter State Criminal History].

38 See Background Checks, supra note 25, at 17.

39 SEARCH, Report of the National Task Force on the Commercial Sale of Criminal Justice Record Information 83 (2005), www.search.org/files/pdf/RNTFCSCJRI.pdf; see also Douglas Belkin, More Job Seekers Scramble to Erase Their Criminal Past, Wall St. J., Nov. 11, 2009, at A1, available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125789494126242343.html?KEYWORDS=Douglas+Belkin (“Arrests that have been legally expunged may remain on databases that data-harvesting companies offer to prospective employers; such background companies are under no legal obligation to erase them.”).

If applicants deny the existence of expunged or sealed records, as they are permitted to do in several states, they may appear dishonest if such records are reported in a criminal background check. See generally Debbie A. Mukamal & Paul N. Samuels, Statutory Limitations on Civil Rights of People with Criminal Records, 30 Fordham Urb. L.J. 1501, 1509″”10 (2003) (noting that 29 of the 40 states that allow expungement/sealing of arrest records permit the subject of the record to deny its existence if asked about it on employment applications or similar forms, and 13 of the 16 states that allow the expungement/sealing of adult conviction records permit the subject of the record to deny its existence under similar circumstances).

40 See SEARCH, Interstate Identification Name Check Efficacy: Report of the National Task Force to the U.S. Attorney General 21″”22 (1999), www.search.org/files/pdf/III_Name_Check.pdf (“A so-called ‘name check’ is based not only on an individual’s name, but also on other personal identifiers such as sex, race, date of birth and Social Security Number. . . . [N]ame checks are known to produce inaccurate results as a consequence of identical or similar names and other identifiers.”); id. at 7 (finding that in a sample of 82,601 employment applicants, 4,562 of these individuals were inaccurately indicated by a “name check” to have criminal records, which represents approximately 5.5% of the overall sample).

41 Background Checks, supra note 25, at 2.

42 A “consumer reporting agency” is defined by FCRA as “any person which, for monetary fees, dues, or on a cooperative nonprofit basis, regularly engages in whole or in part in the practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other information on consumers for the purposes of furnishing consumer reports to third parties . . . .” 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(f) (emphasis added); see also Background Checks, supra note 25, at 43 (stating that the records that CRAs collect include “criminal history information, such as arrest and conviction information”).

43 A “consumer report” is defined by FCRA as “any written, oral, or other communication of any information by a consumer reporting agency bearing on a consumer’s credit worthiness, credit standing, credit capacity, character, general reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of living which is used or expected to be used or collected in whole or in part for the purpose of serving as a factor in establishing the consumer’s eligibility for . . . employment purposes . . . .” 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(d)(1) (emphasis added).

44 See 15 U.S.C. § 1681c(a)(2) (“[N]o consumer reporting agency may make any consumer report containing . . . records of arrest that, from date of entry, antedate the report by more than seven years or until the governing statute of limitations has expired, whichever is the longer period.”). But see id. §1681c(b)(3) (stating that the reporting restrictions for arrest records do not apply to individuals who will earn “an annual salary which equals, or which may reasonably be expected to equal $75,000 or more”).

45 15 U.S.C. § 1681c(a)(5) (“[N]o consumer reporting agency may make any consumer report containing . . . [a]ny other adverse item of information, other than records of convictions of crimes which antedates the report by more than seven years.”).

46 Background Checks, supra note 25, at 2.

47 See Adam Klein, Written Testimony of Adam Klein, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/7-26-11/klein.cfm (last visited April 23, 2012) (describing how “several data-collection agencies also market and sell a retail-theft contributory database that is used by prospective employers to screen applicants”). See also Retail Theft Database, ESTEEM, Workplace Theft Contributory Database, LexisNexis, http://www.lexisnexis.com/risk/solutions/retail-theft-contributory-database.aspx (last visited April 23, 2012) (stating that their database has “[t]heft and shoplifting cases supplied by more than 75,000 business locations across the country”). These databases may contain inaccurate and/or misleading information about applicants and/or employees. See generally Goode v. LexisNexis Risk & Info. Analytics Grp., Inc., No. 2:11-CV-2950-JD, 2012 WL 975043 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 22, 2012) (unpublished).

48 Background Checks, supra note 25, at 2.

49 Soc’y for Human Res. Mgmt., Background Checking: Conducting Criminal Background Checks, slide 3 (Jan. 22, 2010), http://www.slideshare.net/shrm/background-check-criminal?from=share_email [hereinafter Conducting Criminal Background Checks] (73% of the responding employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks on all of their job candidates, 19% reported that they conducted criminal background checks on selected job candidates, and a mere 7% reported that they did not conduct criminal background checks on any of their candidates). The survey excluded the “not sure” responses from its analysis, which may account for the 1% gap in the total number of employer responses. Id.

50 Conducting Criminal Background Checks, supra note 49, at slide 7 (39% of the surveyed employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks “[t]o reduce/prevent theft and embezzlement, other criminal activity”); see also Sarah E. Needleman, Businesses Say Theft by Their Workers is Up, Wall St. J., Dec. 11, 2008, at B8, available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122896381748896999.html.

51 Conducting Criminal Background Checks, supra note 49, at slide 7 (61% of the surveyed employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks “[to] ensure a safe work environment for employees”); see also Erika Harrell, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Workplace Violence, 1993″”2009, at 1 (2011), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/wv09.pdf (reporting that in 2009, “[n]onfatal violence in the workplace was about 15% of all nonfatal violent crime against persons age 16 or older”). But see id. (noting that from “2002 to 2009, the rate of nonfatal workplace violence has declined by 35%, following a 62% decline in the rate from 1993 to 2002”). Studies indicate that most workplace violence is committed by individuals with no relationship to the business or its employees. See id. at 6 (reporting that between 2005 and 2009, strangers committed the majority of workplace violence against individuals (53% for males and 41% for females) while violence committed by co-workers accounted for a much smaller percentage (16.3% for males and 14.3% for females)); see also Nat’l Inst. for Occupational Safety & Health, Ctr. for Disease Control & Prevention, Workplace Violence Prevention Strategies and Research Needs 4, Table 1 (2006), http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2006-144/pdfs/2006-144.pdf (reporting that approximately 85% of the workplace homicides examined were perpetrated in furtherance of a crime by persons with no relationship to the business or its employees; approximately 7% were perpetrated by employees or former employees, 5% were committed by persons with a personal relationship to an employee, and 3% were perpetrated by persons with a customer-client relationship to the business).

52 Conducting Criminal Background Checks, supra note 49, at slide 7 (55% percent of the surveyed employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks “[t]o reduce legal liability for negligent hiring”). Employers have a common law duty to exercise reasonable care in hiring to avoid foreseeable risks of harm to employees, customers, and the public. If an employee engages in harmful misconduct on the job, and the employer has not exercised such care in selecting the employee, the employer may be subject to liability for negligent hiring. See, e.g., Stires v. Carnival Corp., 243 F. Supp. 2d 1313, 1318 (M.D. Fla. 2002) (“[N]egligent hiring occurs when . . . the employer knew or should have known of the employee’s unfitness, and the issue of liability primarily focuses upon the adequacy of the employer’s pre-employment investigation into the employee’s background.”).

53 Conducting Criminal Background Checks, supra note 49, at slide 4 (40% of the surveyed employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks for “[j]ob candidates for positions for which state law requires a background check (e.g., day care teachers, licensed medical practitioners, etc.)”); see id. at slide 7 (20% of the employers reported that they conducted criminal background checks “[t]o comply with the applicable State law requiring a background check (e.g., day care teachers, licensed medical practitioners, etc.) for a particular position”). The study did not report the exact percentage of employers that conducted criminal background checks to comply with applicable federal laws or regulations, but it did report that 25% of the employers conducted background checks for “[j]ob candidates for positions involving national defense or homeland security.” Id. at slide 4.

54 See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a).

55 Disparate treatment based on the race or national origin of job applicants with the same qualifications and criminal records has been documented. For example, a 2003 study demonstrated that White applicants with the same qualifications and criminal records as Black applicants were three times more likely to be invited for interviews than the Black applicants. See Devah Pager, The Mark of a Criminal Record, 108 Am. J. Soc. 937, 958, Figure 6 (2003), www.princeton.edu/~pager/pager_ajs.pdf. Pager matched pairs of young Black and White men as “testers” for her study. The “testers” in Pager’s study were college students who applied for 350 low-skilled jobs advertised in Milwaukee-area classified advertisements, to test the degree to which a criminal record affects subsequent employment opportunities. The same study showed that White job applicants with a criminal record were called back for interviews more often than equally-qualified Black applicants who did not have a criminal record. Id. at 958. See also Devah Pager et al., Sequencing Disadvantage: The Effects of Race and Criminal Background for Low Wage Job Seekers, 623 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci., 199 (2009), www.princeton.edu/~pager/annals_sequencingdisadvantage.pdf (finding that among Black and White testers with similar backgrounds and criminal records, “the negative effect of a criminal conviction is substantially larger for blacks than whites. . . . the magnitude of the criminal record penalty suffered by black applicants (60 percent) is roughly double the size of the penalty for whites with a record (30 percent)”); see id. at 200″”201 (finding that personal contact plays an important role in mediating the effects of a criminal stigma in the hiring process, and that Black applicants are less often invited to interview, thereby having fewer opportunities to counteract the stigma by establishing rapport with the hiring official); Devah Pager, Statement of Devah Pager, Professor of Sociology at Princeton University, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/11-20-08/pager.cfm (last visited April 23, 2012) (discussing the results of the Sequencing Disadvantage study); Devah Pager & Bruce Western, NYC Commission on Human Rights, Race at Work, Realities of Race and Criminal Record in the NYC Job Market 6, Figure 2 (2006), http://www.nyc.gov/html/cchr/pdf/race_report_web.pdf (finding that White testers with a felony conviction were called back 13% of the time, Hispanic testers without a criminal record were called back 14% of the time, and Black testers without a criminal record were called back 10% of the time).

56 Race & Color Discrimination, supra note 15, § V.A.1.

57 A 2006 study demonstrated that employers who are averse to hiring people with criminal records sometimes presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that African American men applying for jobs have disqualifying criminal records. Harry J. Holzer et al., Perceived Criminality, Criminal Background Checks, and the Racial Hiring Practices of Employers, 49 J.L. & Econ. 451 (2006), http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/10.1086/501089.pdf; see also Harry Holzer et al., Urban Inst., Employer Demand for Ex-Offenders: Recent Evidence from Los Angeles 6″”7 (2003), http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/410779_ExOffenders.pdf (describing the results of an employer survey where over 40% of the employers indicated that they would “probably not” or “definitely not” be willing to hire an applicant with a criminal record).

58 The Commission has not done matched-pair testing to investigate alleged discriminatory employment practices. However, it has issued an Enforcement Guidance that discusses situations where individuals or organizations file charges on the basis of matched-pair testing, among other practices. See generally Enforcement Guidance: Whether “Testers” Can File Charges and Litigate Claims of Employment Discrimination, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n (May 22, 1996), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/testers.html.

59 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(i). If an employer successfully demonstrates that its policy or practice is job related for the position in question and consistent with business necessity, a Title VII plaintiff may still prevail by demonstrating that there is a less discriminatory “alternative employment practice” that serves the employer’s legitimate goals as effectively as the challenged practice but that the employer refused to adopt. Id. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(ii).

60 401 U.S. 424, 431″”32 (1971).

61 Id. at 431.

62 The Civil Rights Act of 1991, Pub. L. No. 102-166, § 105; see also Lewis v. City of Chicago, 130 S. Ct. 2191 (2010) (reaffirming disparate impact analysis); Ricci v. DeStefano, 557 U.S. 557 (2009) (same).

63 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(i).

64 The Commission presumes that employers use the information sought and obtained from its applicants and others in making an employment decision. See Gregory v. Litton Sys. Inc.,316 F. Supp. 401, 403 (C.D. Cal.1970). If an employer asserts that it did not factor the applicant’s or employee’s known criminal record into an employment decision, the EEOC will seek evidence supporting this assertion. For example, evidence that the employer has other employees from the same protected group with roughly comparable criminal records may support the conclusion that the employer did not use the applicant’s or employee’s criminal record to exclude him from employment.

65 Unif. Crime Reporting Program, Fed. Bureau of Investigation, Crime in the U.S. 2010, at Table 43a (2011), http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2010/crime-in-the-u.s.-2010/tables/table-43/10tbl43a.xls.

66 U.S. Census Bureau, The Black Population: 2010, at 3 (2011) , http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-06.pdf (reporting that in 2010, “14 percent of all people in the United States identified as Black, either alone, or in combination with one or more races”).

67 Accurate data on the number of Hispanics arrested and convicted in the United States is limited. See Nancy E. Walker et al., Nat’l Council of La Raza, Lost Opportunities: The Reality of Latinos in the U.S. Criminal Justice System 17″”18 (2004), http://www.policyarchive.org/handle/10207/bitstreams/20279.pdf (explaining why “[i]t is very difficult to find any information “” let alone accurate information “” on the number of Latinos arrested in the United States”). The Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics’ (BJS) Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics and the FBI’s Crime Information Services Division do not provide data for arrests by ethnicity. Id. at 17. However, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) disaggregates data by Hispanic and non-Hispanic ethnicity. Id. at 18. According to DOJ/BJS, from October 1, 2008 to September 30, 2009, 45.5% of drug arrests made by the DEA were of Hispanics or Latinos. Mark Motivans, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Federal Justice Statistics, 2009 “” Statistical Tables, at 6, Table 1.4 (2011), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/fjs09.pdf. Accordingly, Hispanics were arrested for drug offenses by the DEA at a rate of three times their numbers in the general population. See U.S. Census Bureau, Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010, at 3 (2011), http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf (reporting that in 2010, “there were 50.5 million Hispanics in the United States, composing 16 percent of the total population”). However, national statistics indicate that Hispanics have similar or lower drug usage rates compared to Whites. See, e.g., Substance Abuse & Mental Health Servs. Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., Results from the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings 21, Figure 2.10 (2011), http://oas.samhsa.gov/NSDUH/2k10NSDUH/2k10Results.pdf (reporting, for example, that the usage rate for Hispanics in 2009 was 7.9% compared to 8.8% for Whites).

68 See, e.g., Human Rights Watch, Decades of Disparity: Drug Arrests and Race in the United States 1 (2009), http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/us0309web_1.pdf (noting that the “[t]he higher rates of black drug arrests do not reflect higher rates of black drug offending . . . . blacks and whites engage in drug offenses – possession and sales – at roughly comparable rates”); Substance Abuse & Mental Health Servs. Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., Results from the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings 21 (2011), http://oas.samhsa.gov/NSDUH/2k10NSDUH/2k10Results.pdf (reporting that in 2010, the rates of illicit drug use in the United States among persons aged 12 or older were 10.7% for African Americans, 9.1% for Whites, and 8.1% for Hispanics); Harry Levine & Deborah Small, N.Y. Civil Liberties Union, Marijuana Arrest Crusade: Racial Bias and Police Policy In New York City, 1997″”2007, at 13″”16 (2008), www.nyclu.org/files/MARIJUANA-ARREST-CRUSADE_Final.pdf (citing U.S. Government surveys showing that Whites use marijuana at higher rates than African Americans and Hispanics; however, the marijuana arrest rate of Hispanics is nearly three times the arrest rate of Whites, and the marijuana arrest rate of African Americans is five times the arrest rate of Whites).

69 Prevalence of Imprisonment, supra note 4, at 1, 8. Due to the nature of available data, the Commission is using incarceration data as a proxy for conviction data.

70 Id.

71 Id.

72 Marc Mauer & Ryan S. King, The Sentencing Project, Uneven Justice: State Rates of Incarceration by Race and Ethnicity 10 (2007), www.sentencingproject.org/Admin%5CDocuments%5Cpublications%5Crd_stateratesofincbyraceandethnicity.pdf.

73 Id.

74 Paul Guerino et al., Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Prisoners in 2010, at 27, Table 14 (2011), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/p10.pdf (reporting that as of December 31, 2010, Black men were imprisoned at a rate of 3,074 per 100,000 Black male residents, Hispanic men were imprisoned at a rate of 1,258 per 100,000 Hispanic male residents, and White men were imprisoned at a rate of 459 per 100,000 White male residents); cf. One in 31, supra note 4, at 5 (“Black adults are four times as likely as whites and nearly 2.5 times as likely as Hispanics to be under correctional control. One in 11 black adults — 9.2 percent — was under correctional control [probation, parole, prison, or jail] at year end 2007.”).

75 The Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures, 29 C.F.R. part 1607, provide that “[employers] should maintain and have available . . . information on [the] adverse impact of [their employment selection procedures].” 29 C.F.R. § 1607.15A. “Where [an employer] has not maintained [such records, the EEOC] may draw an inference of adverse impact of the selection process from the failure of [the employer] to maintain such data . . . .” Id. § 1607.4D.

76 See, e.g., El v. SEPTA, 418 F. Supp. 2d 659, 668″”69 (E.D. Pa. 2005) (finding that the plaintiff established a prima facie case of disparate impact with evidence from the defendant’s personnel records and national data sources from the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics and the Statistical Abstract of the U.S.), aff’d on other grounds, 479 F.3d 232 (3d Cir. 2007); Green v. Mo. Pac. R.R., 523 F.2d 1290, 1294″”95 (8th Cir. 1975) (concluding that the defendant’s criminal record exclusion policy had a disparate impact based on race by evaluating local population statistics and applicant data), appeal after remand, 549 F.2d 1158, 1160 (8th Cir. 1977).

77 457 U.S. 440, 442 (1982).

78 Id. at 453″”54

79 433 U.S. 321, 330 (1977).

80See, e.g., Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters v. United States, 431 U.S. 324, 365 (1977) (stating that “[a] consistently enforced discriminatory policy can surely deter job applications from those who are aware of it and are unwilling to subject themselves to the humiliation of explicit and certain rejection”).

81 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(i). See Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424 (1971). See also 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(m) (defining the term “demonstrates” to mean “meets the burdens of production and persuasion”).

82 422 U.S. 405 (1975).

83433 U.S. 321 (1977).

84 137 Cong. Rec. 15273 (1991) (statement of Sen. Danforth) (“[T]he terms “˜business necessity’ and “˜job related’ are intended to reflect the concepts enunciated by the Supreme Court in Griggs v. Duke Power Co, and in the other Supreme Court decisions prior to Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio.” (citations omitted)). Section 105(b) of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 provides that only the interpretive memorandum read by Senator Danforth in the Congressional Record may be considered legislative history or relied upon in construing or applying the business necessity standard.

85 401 U.S. at 431, 436.

86 422 U.S. at 430″”31 (endorsing the EEOC’s position that discriminatory tests are impermissible unless shown, by professionally acceptable methods, to predict or correlate with “”˜important elements of work behavior which comprise or are relevant to the job or jobs for which candidates are being evaluated'” (quoting 29 C.F.R. § 1607.4(c))).

87 433 U.S. at 331″”32 (concluding that using height and weight as proxies for strength did not satisfy the business necessity defense because the employer failed to establish a correlation between height and weight and the necessary strength, and also did not specify the amount of strength necessary to perform the job safely and efficiently).

88 Id. at 331 n.14.

89 523 F.2d 1290, 1293 (8th Cir. 1975). “In response to a question on an application form, Green [a 29-year-old African American man] disclosed that he had been convicted in December 1967 for refusing military induction. He stated that he had served 21 months in prison until paroled on July 24, 1970.” Id. at 1292″”93.

90 Green v. Mo. Pac. R.R., 549 F.2d 1158, 1160 (8th Cir. 1977) (upholding the district court’s injunction prohibiting the employer from using an applicant’s conviction record as an absolute bar to employment but allowing it to consider a prior criminal record as a factor in making individual hiring decisions, as long as the defendant took these three factors into account).

91 Id. (referring to completion of the sentence rather than completion of parole).

92 Id.

93 479 F.3d 232 (3d Cir. 2007).

94 Id. at 235.

95 Id. at 235, 236.

96 Id. at 235.

97 Id. at 244.

98 Id. at 244″”45.

99 Id. at 247. Cf. Shawn Bushway et al., The Predictive Value of Criminal Background Checks: Do Age and Criminal History Affect Time to Redemption?, 49 Criminology 27, 52 (2011) [hereinafter The Predictive Value of Criminal Background Checks] (“Given the results of the current as well as previous [recidivism] studies, the 40-year period put forward in El v. SEPTA (2007) . . . seems too old of a score to be still in need of settlement.”).

100 El, 479 F.3d at 248.

101 Some states have enacted laws to limit employer inquiries concerning all or some arrest records. See Background Checks, supra note 25, at 48″”49. At least 13 states have statutes explicitly prohibiting arrest record inquiries and/or dissemination subject to certain exceptions. See, e.g., Alaska (Alaska Stat.§ 12.62.160(b)(8)); Arkansas (Ark. Code Ann. § 12-12-1009(c)); California (Cal. Lab. Code § 432.7(a)); Connecticut (Conn. Gen. Stat. § 46a-80(e)); Illinois (775 Ill. Comp. Stat. § 5/2-103(A)) (dealing with arrest records that have been ordered expunged, sealed, or impounded); Massachusetts (Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151B § 4(9)); Michigan (Mich Comp. Laws § 37.2205a(1) (applying to misdemeanor arrests only)); Nebraska (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-3523(2)) (ordering no dissemination of arrest records under certain conditions and specified time periods)); New York (N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(16)); North Dakota (N.D. Cent. Code § 12-60-16.6(2)); Pennsylvania (18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9121(b)(2)); Rhode Island (R.I. Gen. Laws § 28-5-7(7)), and Wisconsin (Wis. Stat. §§ 111.321, 111.335a).

102 See United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456, 464 (1996) (discussing federal prosecutors’ broad discretionary authority to determine whether to prosecute cases and whether to bring charges before a grand jury); Bordenkircher v. Hayes, 434 U.S. 357, 364 (1978) (explaining same for state prosecutors); see also Thomas H. Cohen & Tracey Kyckelhahn, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 2006, at 10, Table 11 (2010), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/fdluc06.pdf (reporting that in the 75 largest counties in the country, nearly one-third of the felony arrests did not result in a conviction because the charges against the defendants were dismissed).

103 Schware v. Bd. of Bar Exam’rs, 353 U.S. 232, 241 (1957) (“The mere fact that a [person] has been arrested has very little, if any, probative value in showing that he has engaged in any misconduct.”); United States. v. Hynes, 467 F.3d 951, 957 (6th Cir. 2006) (upholding a preliminary jury instruction that stated that a “defendant is presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty. The indictment against the Defendant is only an accusation, nothing more. It’s not proof of guilt or anything else.”); see Gregory v. Litton Sys. Inc., 316 F. Supp. 401, 403 (C.D. Cal. 1970) (“[I]nformation concerning a prospective employee’s record of arrests without convictions, is irrelevant to [an applicant’s] suitability or qualification for employment.”), modified on other grounds, 472 F.2d 631 (9th Cir. 1972); Dozier v. Chupka, 395 F. Supp. 836, 850 n.10 (S.D. Ohio 1975) (stating that the use of arrest records was too crude a predictor of an employee’s predilection for theft where there were no procedural safeguards to prevent reliance on unwarranted arrests); City of Cairo v. Ill. Fair Empl. Prac. Comm., 8 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) & 9682 (Ill. App. Ct. 1974) (concluding that, where applicants sought to become police officers, they could not be absolutely barred from appointment solely because they had been arrested, as distinguished from convicted); see also EEOC Dec. 74 83, ¶ 6424 (CCH) (1983) (finding no business justification for an employer’s unconditional termination of all employees with arrest records (all five employees terminated were Black), purportedly to reduce thefts in the workplace; the employer produced no evidence that these particular employees had been involved in any of the thefts, or that all people who are arrested but not convicted are prone towards crime in the future); EEOC Dec. 76 87, ¶ 6665 (CCH) (1983) (holding that an applicant who sought to become a police officer could not be rejected based on one arrest five years earlier for riding in a stolen car when he asserted that he did not know that the car was stolen and the charge was dismissed).

104 See State Criminal History, supra note 37, at 2; see also Background Checks, supra note 25, at 17.

105 See supra notes 39-40.

106 See Clark v. Arizona, 548 U.S. 735, 766 (2006) (“The first presumption [in a criminal case] is that a defendant is innocent unless and until the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the offense charged. . . .”). See also Fed. R. Crim P 11 (criminal procedure rule governing pleas). The Supreme Court has concluded that criminal defendants have a Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations. See generally Lafler v. Cooper, 132 S. Ct. 1376 (2012); Missouri v. Frye, 132 S. Ct. 1399 (2012).

107 See supra text accompanying note 39.

108 See e.g., Haw. Rev. Stat. § 378-2.5(b). Under this provision, the employer may withdraw the offer of employment if the prospective employee has a conviction record “that bears a rational relationship to the duties and responsibilities of the position.” Id. See also Conn. Gen. Stat. § 46a-80(b) (“[N]o employer . . . shall inquire about a prospective employee’s past convictions until such prospective employee has been deemed otherwise qualified for the position.”); Minn. Stat. § 364.021(a) (“[A] public employer may not inquire or consider the criminal record or criminal history of an applicant for public employment until the applicant has been selected for an interview by the employer.”). State fair employment practices agencies have information about applicable state law.

109 See generally Nat’l League of Cities & Nat’l Emp’t Law Project, Cities Pave the Way: Promising Reentry Policies that Promote Local Hiring of People with Criminal Records (2010), www.nelp.org/page/-/SCLP/2010/CitiesPavetheWay.pdf?nocdn=1 (identifying local initiatives that address ways to increase employment opportunities for individuals with criminal records, including delaying a background check until the final stages of the hiring process, leveraging development funds, and expanding bid incentive programs to promote local hiring priorities); Nat’l Emp’t Law Project, City and County Hiring Initiatives (2010), www.nelp.org/page/-/SCLP/CityandCountyHiringInitiatives.pdf (discussing the various city and county initiatives that have removed questions regarding criminal history from the job application and have waited until after a conditional offer of employment has been made to conduct a background check and inquire about the applicant’s criminal background).

110 Several federal laws automatically prohibit employing individuals with certain felony convictions or, in some cases, misdemeanor convictions. See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 7371(b) (requiring the mandatory removal of any federal law enforcement officer who is convicted of a felony); 46 U.S.C. § 70105(c)(1)(A) (mandating that individuals who have been convicted of espionage, sedition, treason or terrorism be permanently disqualified from receiving a biometric transportation security card and thereby excluded from port work employment); 42 U.S.C. § 13726(b)(1) (disqualifying persons with felony convictions or domestic violence convictions from working for a private prisoner transport company); 25 U.S.C. § 3207(b) (prohibiting individuals with a felony conviction, or any of two or more misdemeanor convictions, from working with Indian children if their convictions involved crimes of violence, sexual assault, molestation, exploitation, contact or prostitution, crimes against persons, or offenses committed against children); 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), (9) (prohibiting an individual convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor for domestic violence from possessing a firearm, thereby excluding such individual from a wide range of jobs that require such possession); 18 U.S.C. § 2381 (prohibiting individuals convicted of treason from “holding any office under the United States”). Other federal laws prohibit employing individuals with certain convictions for a defined time period. See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 7313(a) (prohibiting individuals convicted of a felony for inciting a riot or civil disorder from holding any position in the federal government for five years after the date of the conviction); 12 U.S.C. § 1829 (requiring a ten-year ban on employing individuals in banks if they have certain financial-related convictions); 49 U.S.C. § 44936(b)(1)(B) (imposing a ten-year ban on employing an individual as a security screener for an air carrier if that individuals has been convicted of specified crimes).

111 See 29 C.F.R. § 1607.5 (describing the general standards for validity studies).

112 Id.

113 Id. § 1607.6B. The following subsections state:

(1) Where informal or unscored procedures are used. When an informal or unscored selection procedure which has an adverse impact is utilized, the user should eliminate the adverse impact, or modify the procedure to one which is a formal, scored or quantified measure or combination of measures and then validate the procedure in accord with these guidelines, or otherwise justify continued use of the procedure in accord with Federal law.

(2) Where formal and scored procedures are used. When a formal and scored selection procedure is used which has an adverse impact, the validation techniques contemplated by these guidelines usually should be followed if technically feasible. Where the user cannot or need not follow the validation techniques anticipated by these guidelines, the user should either modify the procedure to eliminate adverse impact or otherwise justify continued use of the procedure in accord with Federal law.

Id. § 1607.6A, B(1)””(2).

114 See, e.g., Brent W. Roberts et al., Predicting the Counterproductive Employee in a Child-to-Adult Prospective Study, 92 J. Applied Psychol. 1427, 1430 (2007), http://internal.psychology.illinois.edu/~broberts/Roberts,%20Harms,%20Caspi,%20&%20Moffitt,%202007.pdf (finding that in a study of New Zealand residents from birth to age 26, “[a]dolescent criminal convictions were unrelated to committing counterproductive activities at work [such as tardiness, absenteeism, disciplinary problems, etc.]. In fact, according to the [results of the study], people with an adolescent criminal conviction record were less likely to get in a fight with their supervisor or steal things from work.”).

115 See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2913.02.

116 523 F.2d at 1298 (stating that “[w]e cannot conceive of any business necessity that would automatically place every individual convicted of any offense, except a minor traffic offense, in the permanent ranks of the unemployed”).

117 479 F.3d at 247.

118 See, e.g., Keith Soothill & Brian Francis, When do Ex-Offenders Become Like Non-Offenders?, 48 Howard J. of Crim. Just., 373, 380″”81 (2009) (examining conviction data from Britain and Wales, a 2009 study found that the risk of recidivism declined for the groups with prior records and eventually converged within 10 to 15 years with the risk of those of the nonoffending comparison groups); Alfred Blumstein & Kiminori Nakamura, Redemption in the Presence of Widespread Criminal Background Checks, 47 Criminology 327 (2009) (concluding that there may be a “point of redemption” (i.e., a point in time where an individual’s risk of re-offending or re-arrest is reasonably comparable to individuals with no prior criminal record) for individuals arrested for certain offenses if they remain crime free for a certain number of years); Megan C. Kurlychek, Robert Brame & Shawn D. Bushway, Enduring Risk? Old Criminal Records and Predictions of Future Criminal Involvement, 53 Crime & Delinquency 64 (2007) (analyzing juvenile police contacts and Racine, Wisconsin police contacts for an aggregate of crimes for 670 males born in 1942 and concluding that, after seven years, the risk of a new offense approximates that of a person without a criminal record); Megan C. Kurlychek et al., Scarlet Letters and Recidivism: Does an Old Criminal Record Predict Future Offending?, 5 Criminology & Pub. Pol’y 483 (2006) (evaluating juvenile police contacts and arrest dates from Philadelphia police records for an aggregate of crimes for individuals born in 1958, a 2006 study concluded that the risk of recidivism decreases over time and that, six or seven years after an arrest, an individual’s risk of re-arrest approximates that of an individual who has never been arrested).

119 Griggs, 401 U.S. at 431.

120 523 F.2d at 1298; see also Field v. Orkin Extermination Co., No. Civ. A. 00-5913, 2002 WL 32345739, at *1 (E.D. Pa. Feb. 21, 2002) (unpublished) (“[A] blanket policy of denying employment to any person having a criminal conviction is a [per se] violation of Title VII.”). The only exception would be if such an exclusion were required by federal law or regulation. See, e.g., supra note 110.

121 Cf. Field, 2002 WL 32345739, at *1. In Field, an employee of ten years was fired after a new company that acquired her former employer discovered her 6-year-old felony conviction. The new company had a blanket policy of firing anyone with a felony conviction less than 10 years old. The court granted summary judgment for the employee because the employer’s argument that her conviction was related to her job qualifications was “weak at best,” especially given her positive employment history with her former employer. Id.

122 Recidivism rates tend to decline as ex-offenders’ ages increase. A 2011 study found that an individual’s age at conviction is a variable that has a “substantial and significant impact on recidivism.” The Predictive Value of Criminal Background Checks, supra note 99, at 43. For example, the 26-year-olds in the study, with no prior criminal convictions, had a 19.6% chance of reoffending in their first year after their first conviction, compared to the 36-year-olds who had an 8.8% chance of reoffending during the same time period, and the 46-year-olds who had a 5.3% of reoffending. Id. at 46. See also Patrick A. Langan & David J. Levin, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Special Report: Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 1994, at 7 (2002), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/rpr94.pdf (finding that, although 55.7% of ex-offenders aged 14″”17 released in 1994 were reconvicted within three years, the percentage declined to 29.7% for ex-offenders aged 45 and older who were released the same year).

Consideration of an applicant’s age at the time the offense occurred or at his release from prison would benefit older individuals and, therefore, would not violate the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. See Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 C.F.R. § 1625.2 (“Favoring an older individual over a younger individual because of age is not unlawful discrimination under the ADEA, even if the younger individual is at least 40 years old.”); see also Gen. Dynamics Land Sys., Inc. v. Cline, 540 U.S. 581, 600 (2004) (concluding that the ADEA does not preclude an employer from favoring an older employee over a younger one within the protected age group).

123 See Laura Moskowitz, Statement of Laura Moskowitz, Staff Attorney, National Employment Law Project’s Second Chance Labor Project, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/11-20-08/moskowitz.cfm (last visited April 23, 2012) (stating that one of the factors that is relevant to the assessment of an ex-offender’s risk to a workplace and to the business necessity analysis, is the “length and consistency of the person’s work history, including whether the person has been recently employed”; also noting that various studies have “shown a strong relationship between employment and decreases in crime and recidivism”). But see Stephen J. Tripodi et al., Is Employment Associated With Reduced Recidivism?: The Complex Relationship Between Employment and Crime, 54 Int’l J. of Offender Therapy and Comp. Criminology 716, 716 (2010) (finding that “[b]ecoming employed after incarceration, although apparently providing initial motivation to desist from crime, does not seem to be on its own sufficient to prevent recidivism for many parolees”).

124 See Wendy Erisman & Jeanne Bayer Contardo, Inst. for Higher Educ. Policy, Learning to Reduce Recidivism: A 50 State Analysis of Postsecondary Correctional Education 5 (2005), http://www.ihep.org/assets/files/publications/g-l/LearningReduceRecidivism.pdf (finding that increasing higher education for prisoners enhances their prospects for employment and serves as a cost-effective approach to reducing recidivism); see also John H. Laud & Robert J. Sampson, Understanding Desistance from Crime, 28 Crime & Just. 1, 17″”24 (2001), http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/192542-192549NCJRS.pdf (stating that factors associated with personal rehabilitation and social stability, such as stable employment, family and community involvement, and recovery from substance abuse, are correlated with a decreased risk of recidivism).

125 Some employers have expressed a greater willingness to hire ex-offenders who have had an ongoing relationship with third party intermediary agencies that provide supportive services such as drug testing, referrals for social services, transportation, child care, clothing, and food. See Amy L. Solomon et al., From Prison to Work: The Employment Dimensions of Prisoner Reentry, 2004 Urban Inst. 20, http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/411097_From_Prison_to_Work.pdf. These types of services can help ex-offenders avoid problems that may interfere with their ability to obtain and maintain employment. Id.; see generally Victoria Kane, Transcript of 7-26-11 Meeting, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/7-26-11/transcript.cfm#kane (last visited April 23, 2012) (describing why employers should partner with organizations that provide supportive services to ex-offenders).

126 See generally Reentry Mythbuster! on Federal Bonding Program, supra note 16; Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC), Emp’t & Training Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Labor, http://www.doleta.gov/business/incentives/opptax/ (last visited April 3, 2012); Directory of State Bonding Coordinators, Emp’t & Training Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Labor, http://www.doleta.gov/usworkforce/onestop/FBPContact.cfm (last visited April 3, 2012); Federal Bonding Program – Background, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, http://www.bonds4jobs.com/program-background.html (last visited April 3, 2012); Bureau of Prisons: UNICOR’s Federal Bonding Program, http://www.bop.gov/inmate_programs/itb_bonding.jsp (last visited April 3, 2012).

127 This example is loosely based on a study conducted by Alfred Blumstein and Kiminori Nakamura measuring the risk of recidivism for individuals who have committed burglary, robbery, or aggravated assault. See Blumstein & Nakamura, supra note 118.

128 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(k)(1)(A)(ii), (C). See also Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust, 487 U.S. 977, 998 (1988).

129 See Exec. Order No. 12,067, 3 C.F.R. 206 (1978 Comp.).

130 See 49 U.S.C. §§ 44935(e)(2)(B), 44936(a)(1), (b)(1). The statute mandates a criminal background check.

131 See 5 U.S.C. § 7371(b) (requiring mandatory removal from employment of law enforcement officers convicted of felonies).

132 See 42 U.S.C. § 13041(c) (“Any conviction for a sex crime, an offense involving a child victim, or a drug felony may be grounds for denying employment or for dismissal of an employee. . . .”).

133 12 U.S.C. § 1829.

134 46 U.S.C. § 70105(c).

135 Other jobs and programs subject to federally-imposed restrictions based on criminal convictions include the business of insurance (18 U.S.C. § 1033(e)), employee benefits employee (29 U.S.C. § 1111(a)), participation in Medicare and state health care programs (42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(a)””(b)), defense contractor (10 U.S.C. § 2408(a)), prisoner transportation (42 U.S.C. § 13726b(b)(1)), and court-imposed occupational restrictions (18 U.S.C. §§ 3563(b)(5), 3583(d)). This list is not meant to be exhaustive.

136 See, e.g., federal statutes governing commercial motor vehicle operator’s licenses (49 U.S.C. § 31310(b)-(h)), locomotive operator licenses (49 U.S.C. § 20135(b)(4)(B)), and certificates, ratings, and authorizations for pilots, flight instructors, and ground instructors (49 U.S.C. §§ 44709(b)(2), 44710(b), 4711(c); 14 C.F.R. § 61.15).

137 See, e.g., federal statutes governing loan originator licensing/registration (12 U.S.C. § 5104(b)(2)), registration of brokers and dealers (15 U.S.C. § 78o(b)(4)(B)), registration of commodity dealers (7 U.S.C. § 12a(2)(D), (3)(D), (E), (H)), and registration of investment advisers (15 U.S.C. § 80b-3(e)(2)-(3), (f)).

138 See, e.g., custom broker’s licenses (19 U.S.C. § 1641(d)(1)(B)), export licenses (50 U.S.C. App. § 2410(h)), and arms export (22 U.S.C. § 2778(g)).

139 See, e.g., grain inspector’s licenses (7 U.S.C. § 85), merchant mariner’s documents, licenses, or certificates of registry (46 U.S.C. § 7503(b)), licenses to import, manufacture, or deal in explosives or permits to use explosives (18 U.S.C. § 843(d)), and farm labor contractor’s certificates of registration (29 U.S.C. § 1813(a)(5)). This list of federally-imposed restrictions on occupational licenses and registrations for individuals with certain criminal convictions is not meant to be exhaustive. For additional information, please consult the relevant federal agency or department.

140 See 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a)(1). The statute imposes a ten-year ban for individuals who have been convicted of certain financial crimes such as corruption involving the receipt of commissions or gifts for procuring loans (18 U.S.C. § 215), embezzlement or theft by an officer/employee of a lending, credit, or insurance institution (18 U.S.C § 657), false or fraudulent statements by an officer/employee of the federal reserve or a depository institution (18 U.S.C. § 1005), or fraud by wire, radio, or television that affects a financial institution (18 U.S.C. § 1343), among other crimes. See 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a)(2)(A)(i)(I), (II). Individuals who have either been convicted of the crimes listed in § 1829(a)(2)(A), or conspiracy to commit those crimes, will not receive an exception to the application of the 10-year ban from the FDIC. 12 U.S.C. § 1829(a)(2)(A).

141 See Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., FDIC Statement of Policy For Section 19 of the FDI Act, § C, “Procedures” (amended May 13, 2011), http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/rules/5000-1300.html [hereinafter FDIC Policy]; see also Statement of Policy, 63 Fed. Reg. 66,177, 66,184 (Dec. 1, 1998); Clarification of Statement of Policy, 76 Fed. Reg. 28,031 (May 13, 2011) (clarifying the FDIC’s Statement of Policy for Section 19 of the FDI Act).

“Approval is automatically granted and an application [for a waiver] will not be required where [an individual who has been convicted of] the covered offense [criminal offenses involving dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering] . . . meets all of the [“de minimis“] criteria” set forth in the FDIC’s Statement of Policy. FDIC Policy, supra, § B (5). These criteria include the following: (1) there is only one conviction or program of record for a covered offense; (2) the offense was punishable by imprisonment for a term of one year or less and/or a fine of $1,000 or less, and the individual did not serve time in jail; (3) the conviction or program was entered at least five years prior to the date an application would otherwise be required; and (4) the offense did not involve an insured depository institution or insured credit union. Id. Additionally, an individual’s conviction for writing a “bad” check will be considered a de minimis offense, even if it involved an insured depository institution or insured credit union, if: (1) all other requirements of the de minimis offense provisions are met; (2) the aggregate total face value of the bad or insufficient funds check(s) cited in the conviction was $1000 or less; and (3) no insured depository institution or insured credit union was a payee on any of the bad or insufficient funds checks that were the basis of the conviction. Id.

142 See FDIC Policy, supra note 141, § C, “Procedures.”

143 Id. But cf. Nat’l H.I.R.E. Network, People with Criminal Records Working in Financial Institutions: The Rules on FDIC Waivers, http://www.hirenetwork.org/FDIC.html (“Institutions rarely seek a waiver, except for higher level positions when the candidate is someone the institution wants to hire. Individuals can only seek FDIC approval themselves if they ask the FDIC to waive the usual requirement. Most individuals probably are unaware that they have this right.”); Fed. Deposit Insur. Corp. 2010 Annual Report, § VI.A: Key Statistics, FDIC Actions on Financial Institution Applications 2008“”2010 (2011), http://www.fdic.gov/about/strategic/report/2010annualreport/chpt6-01.html (reporting that between 2008 and 2010, the FDIC approved a total of 38 requests for consent to employ individuals with covered offenses in their background; the agency did not deny any requests during this time period).

144 FDIC Policy, supra note 141, § D, “Evaluation of Section 19 Applications” (listing the factors that are considered in this waiver review process, which include: (1) the nature and circumstances underlying the offense; (2) “[e]vidence of rehabilitation including the person’s reputation since the conviction . . . the person’s age at the time of conviction . . . and the time which has elapsed since the conviction”; (3) the position to be held in the insured institution; (4) the amount of influence/control the individual will be able to exercise over management affairs; (5) management’s ability to control and supervise the individual’s activities; (6) the degree of ownership the individual will have in the insured institution; (7) whether the institution’s fidelity bond coverage applies to the individual; (8) the opinion of the applicable federal and/or state regulators; and (9) any other relevant factors).

145 See 49 C.F.R. §§ 1515.7 (describing the procedures for waiver of criminal offenses, among other standards), 1515.5 (explaining how to appeal the Initial Determination of Threat Assessment based on a criminal conviction). In practice, some worker advocacy groups have criticized the TWIC appeal process due to prolonged delays, which leaves many workers jobless; especially workers of color. See generally Maurice Emsellem et al., Nat’l Emp’t Law Project, A Scorecard on the Post-911 Port Worker Background Checks: Model Worker Protections Provide a Lifeline for People of Color, While Major TSA Delays Leave Thousands Jobless During the Recession (2009), http://nelp.3cdn.net/2d5508b4cec6e13da6_upm6b20e5.pdf.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, § 6201, 124 Stat. 721 (2010) (the Act) includes a process to appeal or dispute the accuracy of information obtained from criminal records. The Act requires participating states to perform background checks on applicants and current employees who have direct access to patients in long-term care facilities, such as nursing homes, to determine if they have been convicted of an offense or have other disqualifying information in their background, such as a finding of patient or resident abuse, that would disqualify them from employment under the Social Security Act or as specified by state law. See 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7l(a)(3)(A), (a)(4)(B), (6)(A)””(E). The background check involves an individualized assessment of the relevance of a conviction or other disqualifying information. The Act protects applicants and employees in several ways, for example, by: (1) providing a 60-day provisional period of employment for the prospective employee, pending the completion of the criminal records check; (2) providing an independent process to appeal or dispute the accuracy of the information obtained in the criminal records check; and (3) allowing the employee to remain employed (subject to direct on-site supervision) during the appeals process. 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7l(a)(4)(B)(iii), (iv).

146See 46 U.S.C. § 70105(d); see generally TWIC Program, 49 C.F.R. § 1572.103 (listing the disqualifying offenses for maritime and land transportation security credentials, such as convictions and findings of not guilty by reason of insanity for espionage, murder, or unlawful possession of an explosive; also listing temporarily disqualifying offenses, within seven years of conviction or five years of release from incarceration, including dishonesty, fraud, or misrepresentation (expressly excluding welfare fraud and passing bad checks), firearms violations, and distribution, intent to distribute, or importation of controlled substances).

147 46 U.S.C. § 70105(c)(1)(A)””(B).

148 46 U.S.C. § 70105(c)(1)(B)(iii).

149 See 46 U.S.C. § 70105(c)(1)(A)(iv) (listing “Federal crime of terrorism” as a permanent disqualifying offense); see also 18 U.S.C. § 2332b(g)(5)(B) (defining “Federal crime of terrorism” to include the use of weapons of mass destruction under § 2332a).

150 See 49 C.F.R. § 1515.7(a)(i) (explaining that only certain applicants with disqualifying crimes in their backgrounds may apply for a waiver; these applicants do not include individuals who have been convicted of a Federal crime of terrorism as defined by 18 U.S.C. § 2332b(g)).

151 These positions are defined as “national security positions” and include positions that “involve activities of the Government that are concerned with the protection of the nation from foreign aggression or espionage, including development of defense plans or policies, intelligence or counterintelligence activities, and related activities concerned with the preservation of the military strength of the United States” or “require regular use of, or access to, classified information.” 5 C.F.R. § 732.102(a)(1)””(2). The requirements for “national security positions” apply to competitive service positions, Senior Executive Service positions filled by career appointment within the Executive Branch, and excepted service positions within the Executive Branch. Id. § 732.102(b). The head of each Federal agency can designate any position within that department or agency as a “sensitive position” if the position “could bring about, by virtue of the nature of the position, a material adverse effect on the national security.” Id. § 732.201(a). Designation of a position as a “sensitive position” will fall under one of three sensitivity levels: Special-Sensitive, Critical-Sensitive, or Noncritical-Sensitive. Id.

152 See Exec. Order No. 12,968, § 3.1(b), 3 C.F.R. 391 (1995 Comp.):

[E]ligibility for access to classified information shall be granted only to employees who are United States citizens for whom an appropriate investigation has been completed and whose personal and professional history affirmatively indicates loyalty to the United States, strength of character, trustworthiness, honestly, reliability, discretion, and sound judgment, as well as freedom from conflicting allegiances and potential for coercion, and willingness and ability to abide by regulations governing the use, handling, and protection of classified information. A determination of eligibility for access to such information is a discretionary security decision based on judgments by appropriately trained adjudicative personnel. Eligibility shall be granted only where facts and circumstances indicate access to classified information is clearly consistent with the national security interests of the United States, and any doubt shall be resolved in favor of the national security.

153 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(g); see, e.g., Bennett v. Chertoff, 425 F.3d 999, 1001 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (“[E]mployment actions based on denial of a security clearance are not subject to judicial review, including under Title VII.”); Ryan v. Reno, 168 F.3d 520, 524 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (“[A]n adverse employment action based on denial or revocation of a security clearance is not actionable under Title VII.”).

154 See Policy Guidance on the use of the national security exception contained in § 703(g) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, § II, Legislative History (May 1, 1989), http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/national_security_exemption.html (“[N]ational security requirements must be applied equally without regard to race, sex, color, religion or national origin.”); see also Jones v. Ashcroft, 321 F. Supp. 2d 1, 8 (D.D.C. 2004) (indicating that the national security exception did not apply because there was no evidence that the government considered national security as a basis for its decision not to hire the plaintiff at any time before the commencement of the plaintiff’s lawsuit, where the plaintiff had not been forthright about an arrest).

155 Federal contractor employees may challenge the denial of a security clearance with the EEOC or the Office of Contract Compliance Programs when the denial is based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. See generally Exec. Order No. 11,246, 3 C.F.R. 339 (1964″”1965 Comp.).

156 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a).

157 Robert H. Shriver, III, Written Testimony of Robert H. Shriver, III, Senior Policy Counsel for the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/7-26-11/shriver.cfm (last visited April 23, 2012) (stating that “with just a few exceptions, criminal convictions do not automatically disqualify an applicant from employment in the competitive civil service”); see also Reentry Mythbuster! on Federal Hiring Policies, supra note 16 (“The Federal Government employs people with criminal records with the requisite knowledge, skills and abilities.”). But see supra note 110, listing several federal statutes that prohibit individuals with certain convictions from working as federal law enforcement officers or port workers, or with private prisoner transport companies.

158 OPM has jurisdiction to establish the federal government’s suitability policy for competitive service positions, certain excepted service positions, and career appointments in the Senior Executive Service. See 5 C.F.R. §§ 731.101(a) (stating that OPM has been directed “to examine “˜suitability’ for competitive Federal employment”), 731.101(b) (defining the covered positions within OPM’s jurisdiction); see also Shriver, supra note 157.

OPM is also responsible for establishing standards that help agencies decide whether to grant their employees and contractor personnel long-term access to federal facilities and information systems. See Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12: Policy for a Common Identification Standard for Federal Employees and Contractors, 2 Pub. Papers 1765 (Aug. 27, 2004) (“establishing a mandatory, Government-wide standard for secure and reliable forms of identification issued by the Federal Government to its employees and contractors [including contractor employees]”); see also Exec. Order No. 13,467, § 2.3(b), 3 C.F.R. 196 (2009 Comp.) (“[T]he Director of [OPM] . . . [is] responsible for developing and implementing uniform and consistent policies and procedures to ensure the effective, efficient, and timely completion of investigations and adjudications relating to determinations of suitability and eligibility for logical and physical access.”); see generally Shriver, supra note 157.

159 5 C.F.R. § 731.101(a).

160 See 5 C.F.R. §§ 731.205(a) (stating that if an agency finds applicants unsuitable based on the factors listed in 5 C.F.R. § 731.202, it may, in its discretion, bar those applicants from federal employment for three years), § 731.202(b) (disqualifying factors from federal civilian employment may include: misconduct or negligence in employment; material, intentional false statement, or deception or fraud in examination or appointment; refusal to furnish testimony as required by 5 C.F.R. § 5.4; alcohol abuse without evidence of substantial rehabilitation; illegal use of narcotics, drugs, or other controlled substances; and knowing and willful engagement in acts or activities designed to overthrow the U.S. Government by force).

161 See id. § 731.202(c).

162 Id.

163 See generally Shriver, supra note 157. See also Reentry Mythbuster! on Federal Hiring Policies, supra note 16 (“Consistent with Merit System Principles, [federal] agencies [and departments] are required to consider people with criminal records when filling positions if they are the best candidates and can comply with requirements.”).

164 See generally EEOC Informal Discussion Letter (March 19, 2007), http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/foia/letters/2007/arrest_and_conviction_records.html#N1 (discussing the EEOC’s concerns with changes to OPM’s suitability regulations at 5 CFR part 731).

165 See Stephen Saltzburg, Transcript of 7-26-11 Meeting, U.S. Equal Emp’t Opportunity Comm’n, http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/meetings/7-26-11/transcript.cfm#saltzburg (last visited April 23, 2012) (discussing the findings from the American Bar Association’s (ABA) Collateral Consequences of Conviction Project, which found that in 17 states that it has examined to date, 84% of the collateral sanctions against ex-offenders relate to employment). For more information about the ABA’s project, visit: Janet Levine, ABA Criminal Justice Section Collateral Consequences Project, Inst. for Survey Research, Temple Univ., http://isrweb.isr.temple.edu/projects/accproject/ (last visited April 20, 2012). In April 2011, Attorney General Holder sent a letter to every state Attorney General, with a copy to every Governor, asking them to “evaluate the collateral consequences” of criminal convictions in their state, such as employment-related restrictions on ex-offenders, and “to determine whether those [consequences] that impose burdens on individuals . . . without increasing public safety should be eliminated.” Letter from Eric H. Holder, Jr., Att’y Gen., Dep’t of Justice, to state Attorney Generals and Governors (April 18, 2011), http://www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org/documents/0000/1088/Reentry_Council_AG_Letter.pdf.

Most states regulate occupations that involve responsibility for vulnerable citizens such as the elderly and children. See State Criminal History, supra note 37, at 10 (“Fifty states and the District of Columbia reported that criminal history background checks are legally required” for several occupations such as nurses/elder caregivers, daycare providers, caregivers in residential facilities, school teachers, and nonteaching school employees). For example, Hawaii’s Department of Human Services may deny applicants licensing privileges to operate a childcare facility if: (1) the applicant or any prospective employee has been convicted of a crime other than a minor traffic violation or has been confirmed to have abused or neglected a child or threatened harm; and (2) the department finds that the criminal history or child abuse record of the applicant or prospective employee may pose a risk to the health, safety, or well-being of children. See Haw. Rev. Stat. § 346-154(e)(1)””(2).

166 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-7.

167See Int’l Union v. Johnson Controls, Inc., 499 U.S. 187, 210 (1991) (noting that “[i]f state tort law furthers discrimination in the workplace and prevents employers from hiring women who are capable of manufacturing the product as efficiently as men, then it will impede the accomplishment of Congress’ goals in enacting Title VII”); Gulino v. N.Y. State Educ. Dep’t, 460 F.3d 361, 380 (2d Cir. 2006) (affirming the district court’s conclusion that “the mandates of state law are no defense to Title VII liability”).

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Mandatory Venue For Texas Attorney Fee Only Disputes In Travis County District Court–Texas Workers’ Compensation Lawyers

ATTORNEY FEES / VENUE
Mandatory Venue For Attorney Fee Only Disputes Is In Travis County District Court And Must Be Filed Within 30 Days, Not 40 Days
In re Hartford Underwriters Insurance Company, 2005 Tex.App.Lexis 5124 (Tex.App.-Eastland 2005)

The Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission awarded attorney fees to a beneficiary and The Carrier Hartford appealed. The TWCC Appeals Panel reversed that decision and the beneficiary filed for judicial review in the county that the claimant lived in on the date of injury. Hartford sought a transfer of venue pursuant to Texas Government Code 2001.176. Tex. Labor Code §410.255 states that all issues other than those covered under §410.301 shall be conducted in accordance with Tex. Gov’t Code ch. 2001, which contains a 30 day statute of limitations and mandatory venue in Travis County district court.
The court determined that a TWCC AP decision dealing only with attorney fees is not a decision regarding compensability or eligibility for or the amount of income or death benefits. Therefore, the case is subject to the Tex. Gov’t Code ch. 2001 provisions.

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

A Right Is Not What Someone Gives You; It’s What No One Can Take From You

QUOTES ON LIBERTY AND JUSTICE, TRUTH AND DUTY:

 

“Always will we remember the character of the onslaught against us. No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory. I believe I interpret the will of the Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the uttermost, but will make very certain that this form of treachery shall never endanger us again. Hostilities exist. There is no blinking at the fact that our people, our territory and our interests are in grave danger. With confidence in our armed forces – with the unbounding determination of our people – we will gain the inevitable triumph – so help us God.” Pearl Harbor Speech December 8 1941, To the Congress of the United States

-Franklin D. Roosevelt

 

“It is better to limp in the way, than run with the greatest swiftness out of it.” The Institutes of the Christian Religion

-John Calvin 

 

“You know, that man has a spirit, that each man and woman is unique, that we have duty to promote our unalienable rights and to protect them, that we have a duty to our families and ourselves, to take care of ourselves, to contribute to charity, that we have a duty to support a just and righteous law that is stable and predictable.”

-Mark R. Levin

 

“The attempt to secure individual liberty by vast-scale centralization would eventually lead to a spectacular loss of liberty. The modern liberal state, grounded in the autonomy of the individual, could not tolerate private ownership of labor, but, unhappily, for the same reason that it could not tolerate any independent social authority. However, by the logic of centralization inherent in all modern states, it would gradually accept state ownership of labor in the form of the income tax and universal conscription, both of which eighteenth-century monarchs found quite beyond their reach.” 

-Donald W. Livingston

 

“The limitation of tyrants is the endurance of those they oppose.”

-Frederick Douglass

 

“I like a little rebellion now and then. It is like a storm in the atmosphere.” Letter to Abigail Adams, 1787

-Thomas Jefferson 

 

“Well, you know what’s wrong with the world today? People have gone and put their Bibles away. They’re living by the law of the jungle not the law of the land. The good book says it so I know it’s the truth, an eye for and eye and a tooth for a tooth. You better watch where you go and remember where you been. That’s the way I see it, I’m a simple man.”

-Charles Daniels

 

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place, oblige it to control itself.” Federalist No. 51, February 8, 1788

-James Madison

 

“People want America to have a certain image when we fight. Yet I would guess if someone were shooting at them and they had to hold their family members while they bled out against an enemy who hid behind their children, played dead only to throw a grenade as they got closer, and who had no qualms about sending their toddler to die from a grenade from which they personally pulled the pin—they would be less concerned with playing nicely.” American Sniper

-Chris Kyle

 

“Wealth can only be accumulated by the earnings of industry and the savings of frugality.”

-John Tyler

 

“That all political power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are founded on their authority, and established for their benefit; and, therefore, they have, at all times, an inalienable and indefeasible right to alter or abolish their form of government, in such manner as they may deem expedient.”

-Florida Constitution of 1838

 

“A right is not what someone gives you; it’s what no one can take from you.”  New York Times, 10/02/77

-Ramsey Clark, U.S. Attorney General

 

“No government, no legislature, has a right to limit your dreams. You should never agree to surrender your dreams.”

-Jesse Jackson

 

“I think that Texas is forever ruined unless the citizens make a manly, energetic effort to save themselves from anarchy and confusion, which are the worst of all evils. Let us march like a band of brothers.”

-William B. Travis

 

“Property is the fruit of labor. Property is desirable, is a positive good in the world. That some should be rich shows that others may become rich and hence is just encouragement to industry and enterprise. Let not him who is houseless pull down the house of another, but let him work diligently to build one for himself, thus by example assuring that his own shall be safe from violence.”

-Abraham Lincoln

 

“As government expands, liberty contracts.”

-Ronald W. Reagan

 

“It ain’t so much what a man doesn’t know that causes him so many problems, but what he knows that ain’t so.”

-Will Rogers

 

“The danger is imminent and calls for the most energetic action in strengthening the force which now holds our lines.”

-Richard Ewell

 

“The cure for evil and disorder is more liberty, not suppression.”

-Alexander Berkman

 

“It is indeed a singular thing that people wish to pass laws to nullify the disagreeable consequences that the law of responsibility entails. Will they never realize that they do not eliminate these consequences but merely pass them along to other people? The result is one injustice the more and one moral the less.”

-Frederic Bastiat

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

ATTORNEY JAMES L. WILLIAMS AWARDED AV® Preeminent™ Rating–Fort Worth, Texas Civil Litigation Attorneys

Williams, McClure & Parmelee
Press Release Fort Worth

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is pleased to announce that James L. Williams has been awarded the AV® Preeminent™ Rating by Martindale-Hubbell®, the country’s leading legal directory. He achieved the highest possible rating (5.0 out of 5.0). The rating is awarded to less than five percent of all attorneys across the United States. This designation is a widely respected mark of achievement. The Martindale-Hubbell® Peer Review Ratings™ are an objective indicator of an attorney’s high ethical standards and professional ability, generated from evaluations of attorneys by other members of the bar and the judiciary. The rating is the highest possible rating given by LexisNexis Martindale, and is established on a peer-review basis. It signifies that Mr. Williams has been rated as having the best possible scores for legal abilities and ethical standards. It is a nationally-recognized acknowledgment of an attorney’s accomplishments and skills, and is known to position him among the elite practitioners in the country.

Mr. Williams commented, “It is a tremendous honor to be peer reviewed by judges and other attorneys for this kind of recognition. It is truly an achievement that belongs as much to me as to my great teammates at the firm who I have been fortunate enough to work with over the years.”

In addition to attaining AV® Preeminent™ status, Mr. Williams has also been recently named as one of Tarrant County’s Top Lawyers in Fort Worth Magazine.

He has also been awarded a  “Superb” Rating by AVVO (a perfect score of 10.0 out of 10.0), a Top Attorney rating calculated using a mathematical model that evaluates relevant data in an attorney’s profile, including experience, disciplinary history, professional achievements, client reviews, peer reviews and industry recognition .The rating system periodically collects background data from multiple sources, including state bar associations, court records, websites, and other information, and is considered a premier consumer dedicated attorney rating system.

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. For more information, please contact the firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

www.texasdefensecounsel.com

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Governor Robert L. Williams State of the State Address, 1915

Since Oklahoma is a close neighbor, this Address makes the Texas Tidbits category:

 

State of the State
Governor Robert L. Williams
January 15, 1915
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF
OKLAHOMA:
At the beginning of the present quadrennium in the government of this State, I
desire to submit for the consideration of Your Honorable Bodies, as follows:
CAPITOL COMMISSION—WHAT IT SHOULD ACCOMPLISH AND DO.
At the extraordinary session of the Legislature of 1913, an act was passed
providing for the construction of a State Capitol. By this act, a State Capitol Commission
was created and the Commissioners selected and appointed by the Legislature, and such
selection and appointment approved in the bill; which bill was also approved by the
Governor. Said Commissioners were to be commissioned by Concurrent Resolution of
the Senate and House of Representatives, which was to be signed by the President pro
tempore of the Senate and Speaker of the House of Representatives. The appointment of
the members of the Commission was to “be construed to be the act of the Legislature,
consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives, and the tenure of office of the
Commissioners elected and appointed” as provided therein, was to begin with the
approval of said Act, and the term to end “with the completion of the construction of the
Capitol building proper.” Said Commission is required to maintain its office and hold its
sessions at the seat of government. “Each Commissioner shall receive a salary of three
thousand ($3,000.00) dollars per annum, payable monthly, and shall be allowed
reimbursement for all railroad fare actually incurred and all hotel and traveling expenses
actually expended in carrying out the purpose of this Act when away from the seat of
government; said items of salary and expense shall be audited, approved and allowed by
the Commission against the appropriation for the construction of the State Capitol
provided herein.”
The State Capitol Commission, as soon as practicable after its organization, is
required to proceed to select a plan for a State Capitol, provided the reasonable cost of
said plan of said Capitol building proper shall not exceed one and one-half million
dollars. After plans for this building have been adopted by said Commission, contract or
contracts are to be made in writing for the construction of the entire building by a
contractor, individual or corporate, who may undertake the whole work, or the
Commission may divide the work into appropriate classes and make separate contracts as
to either of them as it may deem most advisable and for the best interest of the State, or
may adopt and carry out other plans for the building of said State Capitol. All contracts
for the construction of said building or for designated classes of the work thereof shall be
let to the lowest and best bidder therefore [sic]; “nor shall any contract or contracts take
effect until all of said work for constructing said State Capitol shall have been contracted
for.”
The Commission is required to appoint a practical builder or other specially
qualified person to act as superintendent of the construction of said Capitol Building. It
is made his duty to see that all contracts made with the Commission are faithfully
performed; that all material furnished and work done shall be such as is required by law
or the contract thereof; that all duties imposed upon the architects are faithfully
2
performed by him and his subordinates, and that no provisions of the contract are
violated. Said superintendent is to receive as compensation such sum as the Commission
shall deem reasonable, not exceeding eight ($8.00) dollars per day for each and every
day, or part of a day, he is actually engaged in the performance of his duties.
Said Act also apropriates [sic] “out of any money in the State Treasury, not
otherwise appropriated, for the purpose of constructing a State Capitol, as provided in
this Act, the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand ($250,000.00) dollars, said sum of
two hundred and fifty thousand ($250,000.00) dollars to be available for use by the
Capitol Commission during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1915.” Also, said Act further
appropriates the sum of four hundred and ninety-seven thousand, two hundred and
seventy-four and 72-100 ($497,274.72) dollars from another specified fund, making a
total appropriation of seven hundred and forty-seven thousand, two hundred and seventyfour
and 72-100 ($747,274.72) dollars, that is made by the Legislature for the erection of
this Capitol building.
Said Act provides that whilst the Legislature is not in session, said
Commissioners may be removed by the joint action of the President pro tempore of the
Senate and Speaker of the House of Representatives. It also provides for the employment
of a secretary to said Commission at a salary of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars.
Section 7 of said Act provides that “All bills, claims and demands for labor
performed, work done or material furnished, shall be made out in duplicate by the person
or persons, or corporation or company, presenting the same to the Commission for
allowance and be passed on by the Commission at a session thereof.” The provision is
made for the payment of same by warrants drawn on the State Auditor.
The Act further provides that no contract for the building of the Capitol or any
part thereof shall be valid until the entire building has been contracted for. Such contract
cannot be legally entered into until an appropriation is available to meet the entire cost of
the building. This has been settled by the Supreme Court of this State in Campbell et al.
v. State ex rel. Brett, 23 Okla. 109, 99 Pac. 778.
Section 55 of Article 5 of the Constitution provides that:
“No money shall ever be paid out of the treasury of this State, nor any of its
funds, nor any of the funds under its management, except in pursuance of an
appropriation by law, nor unless such payments be made within two and one-half years
after the passage of such appropriation act.”
On account of said provision, it may become necessary for some part of the
$747,274.72 to be re-appropriated.
Section 12, of Article 5 of the Constitution, requires every bill passed by the
Legislature making appropriation of money to be presented to the Governor for his
approval or his disapproval.
I call your attention not only to the legal obstacles to the letting of the contract for
the completion of the Capitol building under the present bill, but, also, to the
responsibility of the Governor under the terms of the Constitution in the raising of funds
for its completion. Under the terms of this Act, the Capitol Commission has no fixed
tenure, but is to hold office until the Capitol building proper is completed. Necessarily,
the time of completion depends, in a measure, upon the will, desire and inclination of the
Commission. As a rule, when provisions are made for the payment out of a fund of
salaries or expenses, limitations or restriction under the terms of the Act are imposed for
3
the protection of the taxpayers. Hence, my duty to point these matters out, with
suggestions as to corrections. A reasonably speedy construction and completion of the
State Capitol building is essential. At the present time, the State officers are housed in
different parts of the city, and the Legislature, when in session, convenes at still a
different place. This has a tendency to prevent efficiency and economy. If all the
different departments of government, with their various employes [sic], were quartered in
one building, or in buildings located at the same place, by way of closer administrative
organization, and the saving of time, greater efficiency and economy would result. In
addition, a rental for these various quarters, approximating an amount equal to the
interest on the cost of the State Capitol, is now borne by the State. The advisability of the
State owning at the earliest reasonable date, its own State House, cannot be seriously
questioned. This must be done, however, on practical lines, with a special view of
protecting the taxpayers. Our chief duty is to them. The $747,274.72 already provided
and appropriated, has been taken from them. The additional necessary funds for its
completion must be taken from the taxpayers of this State. The expenditure of this
money must be made with every safeguard around it for the protection of these
burdenbearers.
Accordingly, I recommend:
That the bill passed by the extraordinary session of the Legislature in 1913,
providing for the construction of the State Capitol, be amended so as to provide for the
appointment of a Citizens’ Committee, to serve without pay, and to consist of not less
than five, nor more than seven members, a majority of whom may not reside in any one
county. The duty of this Committee will be to make an examination as to the plans
drawn and adopted for said Capitol building, and at stated times to examine the work on
said building as it is constructed; and report the result of its investigation to the Governor,
a copy to be filed with the Secretary of State, and also, with each House of the
Legislature, when in session. This Citizens’ Committee will be both a shield and a
sword; a shield to protect the officers of the State in the construction of this building,
when they are right, and a sword to prevent wrong or imposition being done.
The question as to the power of the Legislature to delegate to the President pro
tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives the authority to
remove the Capitol Commissioners is not clear. As to whether or not such power may be
delegated to such officers may be well doubted. If the occasion shall arise when said
Commissioners or any one of them should be removed, and the Legislature was not in
session, grave complications might then arise. If such power could not be thus delegated;
not to say anything about the unobservance of the provisions for the different co-ordinate
branches of the State Government being a check one upon the other.
I further recommend that the original bill be so amended as to place the power to
remove said Commissioners either with the Governor, or some other board of elective
Executive State officers; and further, that the bill be so amended as to provide that before
the contract which may be let by the State Capitol Commission becomes effective and
binding on the State, the same must be approved by the Governor; and that if the
Legislature is at that time in session, the same must also be submitted to the Legislature,
when, if the Legislature should disapprove the contract, though the same had already
been entered into by the Capitol Commissioners, and approved by the Governor, it should
still be of no effect.
4
When the contract for the State Capitol shall have been let by the State Capitol
Commission, then its existence as such should cease. The question of the contractors’
complying with the contract must necessarily be determined by experts and provision is
made in the bill for the employing of an expert for that purpose. The general duty of the
Commission will be to employ this expert and draw their salaries and maintain an office
in accordance with the station of their position and have a secretary and other employes
[sic]. This duty can be exercised by the State Board of Affairs, or a Commission of exofficio
elective State officers just as effectively and without any cost to the State.
I therefore recommend that provision be made by law that after the contract is let
and approved, that within fifteen days the term of the office of the Capitol Commission
shall cease, and that the duties of that office shall then be exercised by a commission, to
be composed of certain elective State officers, to be named by the Legislature, or by the
State Board of Affairs.
BOARD OF PRISON CONTROL—TO BE ABOLISHED.
The Legislature of 1913 passed an Act creating a Board of Prison Control for the
State Penitentiary at McAlester and the Oklahoma State Reformatory at Granite.
I respectfully recommend that by an Act of the Legislature, these duties be
imposed upon the Board of Affairs, with the exception of that duty imposed on the Board
of Prison Control as to the examining and investigating of applications for pardons,
paroles, or reprieves and commutations, together with applications to remit fines and
penalties. Provision should be made for this investigation to be made by a clerk, to be
known as Pardon Clerk to the Governor; provision being made, also, for stenographic
help for the Pardon Clerk. This contemplates that a complete record shall be made of the
hearings. I want to see the pardoning power exercised under the same care that
judgments and decrees of courts are entered, with a complete record made of all the
evidence and everything that is offered, with a view of securing executive clemency.
This should be reduced to writing and made of record, and the Pardon Clerk make his
findings of fact thereon, similar to a master in chancery or referee, and furnish the
applicant with such findings before same is presented to the Governor for his
determination as to whether clemency should be exercised. Safeguards must be thrown
around these applications for executive clemency, so that all shall stand on the same level
and footing, and the Chief Executive to be protected from imposition. The Board of
Control, if they are to make careful investigations and get the facts as contemplated in
this recommendation, would consume practically the entire four months time in which
the present statute permits the old board to serve, and, therefore, no time could
reasonably be given to the constructive administration of the prisons. The report of this
Prison Board of Control on pardons, reprieves and commutations can, under our
Constitution, be only advisory to the Governor. Under our constitutional provision it
cannot operate to be a limitation upon his power. At most, it is a matter of procedure
which may be essential to the acquiring of jurisdiction of the matter by the Governor.
The same essential procedure may be prescribed in the way of requiring the filing of
applications and giving notice of hearings before the Pardon Clerk. In prescribing such
procedure, exceptions in the cases of reprieves should be made. I suggest, further, that
the Governor be required to state in writing and make of official record his reasons for
granting pardons, reprieves and communications. By the abolishing of the Prison Board
5
and placing this work on the Board of Affairs, not only will efficiency, but, also,
economy operate; for if this board is to be retained and its work operate efficiently to the
State, it would be necessary to increase their compensation, and, also, to give them more
help and contingent expenses. In selecting the members of the Board of Affairs, I had
this in view. One member has had special experience in the line of handling prisoners
and is especially fitted in that respect.
CONVICTS AND THEIR EMPLOYMENT.
In the two state prisons, to-wit: The one at McAlester and the other at Granite,
about fifteen hundred prisoners are confined. Whilst it is the duty of the State in
restraining them from society to endeavor by humane treatment to bring about a
reformation, yet in doing this, their labor should be utilized in such a way as to cause this
effort to be made by the State at as little expense as reasonably possible upon the
taxpaying citizenship.
I accordingly recommend for your consideration the employment of said inmates
in the penitentiary (1) upon the highways of the State and (2) for working them within the
walls in the manufacture of such things as are to be used by the State and its institutions;
(3) upon a State farm; and (4) where possible on irrigation projects.
GOOD ROADS.
It is not necessary to go into any argument as to the necessity for good roads.
That is self-evident. Article 16 of the Constitution directs the Legislature to establish a
Department of Highways with power to create improvement districts and to provide for
building and maintaining public roads and the utilization of convicts thereon. Under this
provision, local road districts may be formed upon the betterment plan. In addition, roads
may be built by townships, counties and State. I recommend that legislation may be had
so that all these systems may be combined, when desirable. Further, that provision be
made for the building of roads exclusively on the betterment plan by the improvement
districts, and also by townships or counties, or the State, separately, so as to leave the
proposition in a way to be worked out reasonably by these different agencies, separately
or combined.
HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER.
The office of State Highway Commissioner should be continued with an adequate
salary; the business of the Highway Department being placed under the supervision and
regulation of the Board of Affairs. It is my desire that we shall build roads and that the
Highway Commissioner shall be a constructive working agent in bringing this about.
The people of this State must have good roads. Let’s devote our energies to that end. I
feel sure that we can accomplish this greatly desired result.
TAXES—EXTENSION AND PENALTIES.
It is essential that too much technical observances should not be required in order
to cause taxes to become due and bear penalties. Therefore, the statute should be
amended so as to not require notice to the taxpayer as a condition precedent to his taxes
becoming due, in such a way as to bear penalties. However, under the depressed
conditions that exist in many parts of the State, occasioned by the general European war,
many people are not now able to pay their taxes.
Therefore, I recommend that a statute be passed, providing for a reasonable
extension of all taxes, the same to bear interest during such extension at the rate of six per
cent per annum, and that the State Board of Equalization may make still further
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extensions at any time as to any county or counties, or entire State, under the same terms.
Otherwise, the penalty provided by law to obtain.
PRODUCTION OF GROSS PROCEEDS TAX.
As to the tax on gas, petroleum or other crude oil when segregated from the
common source of supply beneath the surface and for taxing the same as property, each
producer should be required to pay a mining production tax of two per cent upon the
gross value of such production, at the point where the same is mined, according to the
market value thereof.
Three-fourths of all sums derived from such tax should be paid into the general
State fund, and the other fourth be applied to the maintenance of the common schools of
the county where the tax is collected. The larger portion should go to the State, on
account of the great agencies of the State, like the Corporation Commission and
inspections that have to do so much with said business, being borne at the general State
expense.
FARM PRODUCTS NOT TO BE TAXED.
The farmer and producer should be encouraged to so market his crops as to get
reasonable prices therefore [sic]. If he is forced to rush the same upon the market, such
results may not be obtained. If the same are taxable, he would be required to sell the
same prior to the beginning of the tax year, or bear the burden of the tax upon the raw
product. This does not appear to me to be in accordance with the best interest of the
State.
Therefore, I recommend the passage of an Act, so classifying farm products as not
to be subject to taxation.
RURAL CREDITS.
We should cause the people to get money upon approved economical lines at as
low a rate of interest as reasonably possible. I accordingly recommend that real estate
loans be taken as security for State and county deposits; that only real estate mortgages
where the entire charges of interest, commission and everything, does not exceed eight
per cent, shall be taken for such security.
I further recommend the consideration and passage of an Act providing for the
formation and incorporation of rural credit unions, or co-operative associations for the
purpose of promoting thrift among their members, and to enable the members thereof,
when in need, to obtain for productive purposes moderate loans of money for short
periods and at reasonable rates of interest.
I further recommend for your consideration the formation of a state loan bank, so
as to establish a state-wide rural credit system. I urge that this be given careful
consideration and that we travel along safe economic lines, but that we do it patriotically
and wisely, so as to effectively bring relief to the people.
A MARKETING SYSTEM.
I further recommend for your careful consideration the devising of ways and
means of creating a marketing system through the agency of the Board of Agriculture.
A STATE TAX COMMISSION.
The State Board of Equalization should be abolished and a State Tax Commission
created in its stead. To that end I recommend that Section 21, of Article 10, of the
Constitution, be so amended and that said Tax Commission be authorized to exercise the
powers of a State Board of Equalization, to adjust and equalize the value of real and
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personal property and perform such other duties as may be prescribed by law, and
exercise not only administrative but judicial and legislative powers in the settlement of all
controversies over taxation, and to have exclusive jurisdiction over same, except that its
orders as to the equalization of property values and the settlement of tax controversies
may be reviewed by writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State. In addition it should
also be made the duty of the said Tax Commission to assess all railroad and public
service corporation property, to be reviewed by appeal by the Supreme Court of the State,
and biennially and at such other times as may be requested by the Governor report and
recommend such legislation as is necessary for revenues.
It is contemplated that these Commissioners shall be experts as to all matters of
taxation and in the course of its duty to become acquainted in detail with the taxable
property of this State so that no injustice may be done any taxpayer in the assessment or
equalization of property.
A SAFEGUARD AGAINST DEFICIENCIES.
I recommend the repeal of the statute permitting municipalities to issue funding
bonds to cover deficiencies on account of the failure of revenue. This will have a
salutary influence toward restraining city officials within the revenue provided and cause
parties to be cautious in dealing with municipalities. This is a necessary safeguard in
order to protect taxpayers.
RURAL LANDS TO BE ASSESSED BIENNIALLY.
I recommend that land located outside of towns and cities shall be assessed only
once in every two years so as to reduce the expenses of assessment.
REVENUES TO BE DERIVED FROM DEPARTMENTS.
Provision should be made for the fixing and charging a fee by the Secretary of the
Corporation Commission for transcripts in appeals from its orders, and copies furnished
private parties; also fees to be collected by the Commission on all refunds made through
its intervention. These fees should be converted at stated times into the State Treasury.
Provision should, also, be made for charging fees for copies of all records furnished by
the various Executive Departments to parties desiring the same and for the converting of
these fees at stated times into the State Treasury. By this means revenues may be
acquired without any burden to the taxpayers, and these departments will, in a measure,
at least, be self-sustaining.
Every state agency with a few exceptions should be made at least partially selfsustaining.
The courts which are a necessary agency for the peaceable settlement of civil
controversies, and essential for good government, should not be supported entirely by the
taxpayers. The litigants in civil cases should at least bear a part of these burdens. There
is no reason why the peaceable man, who settles his matters without legal controversies,
should be taxed to furnish this legal luxury entirely to the litigious citizen. The record
shows that it costs the state on an average of about fifty dollars for every civil case
appealed to the Supreme Court. I accordingly recommend that a docket fee be taxed in
the sum of twenty-five dollars as a part of the costs in every such case to follow the result
of the case, provision being made by the statute for the plaintiff in error securing this cost
or depositing same and to recover judgment therefore if prevailing in the appeal.
Provision should be made, also, for the charging of a jury fee, so as to place a part
of the burdens upon the litigants in the trial courts and not cause the same to be borne
entirely by the taxpayers.
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THE CLERK OF THE SUPREME COURT.
The assistants now provided by law for the office of the Clerk of the Supreme
Court should be reduced. Two assistants at $1,800.00 per year, and one assistant at
$1,200.00 per year, and another at $900.00 per year will be entirely adequate, with the
Clerk giving his personal attention to the duties of his office, as required by Section 11,
Article 2, of the Constitution.
The State, for clerical help, should not pay more for salaries than private
concerns. The same constructive business rule should control in departments of State as
in private concerns. In private concerns higher salaries are paid for heads of departments,
the balance of the work being done by clerks. Good clerks are available now at $100. per
month. I feel that I am going the limit when I agree in this message to approve
appropriations for two clerks at $1,800.00 per year; for some strict business concerns,
under the same circumstances, would consider that only one chief deputy would be
necessary. In determining the prices for help we should consider what salaries these
employes [sic] would likely draw in private employment. That should be the controlling
test. I have no disposition to be harsh on government employes [sic]. I only insist that
the employes [sic] of the State, for the same kind of work, are not entitled to any more
compensation than that usually received in private employment. I feel that it is our duty
to give the same careful consideration to the interests of the taxpayers that we would to
our own private interests, if these employes [sic] were to be paid by us.
STENOGRAPHERS OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT.
The stenographers to the Justices of the Supreme Court should be required, as a
part of their official duties, to make copies of all opinions, where necessary, for the Clerk
of the Supreme Court. This to be done under rules and regulations to be prescribed by
the Justices of the Supreme Court. The statute should provide that it shall be made the
duty of the Justices of the Supreme Court to make orders and provide rules and
regulations for the stenographers to make copies of all opinions, as requested by said
Clerk. By this means an actual saving of between $2,500.00 and $3,000.00 per year can
be made to the State. I recommend that it be made a misdemeanor for the Clerk or any
employe [sic] to be interested directly or indirectly in the furnishing of copies of opinions
or records from any department of state whatever where provision is made by law for the
state to receive compensation for such work if it were done by an officer or employe [sic]
in such capacity.
APPELLATE COURTS.
The dockets of the Appellate Courts, especially as to civil cases, are considerably
congested. The Supreme Court being over two years behind. This is not occasioned by
the fault of the members of the Court, but is brought about by several causes, over which
the court has no control. (1) No limitation now exists as to appeals; (2) the cost of
appeals is now borne almost entirely by the taxpayers; (3) written opinions are required
by the Constitution in all cases; (4) so many new questions arising for determination; (5)
in that the congested condition of the docket encourages appeals for delay.
TRIAL COURTS.
In trial courts, the speedy final determination of cases is essential. For proper
results to be had, not only must there be expedition in the trial, but also, in the Appellate
Court. In all cases, except as to questions of unliquidated damages, the trial should be
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had in such a way and the record made so that upon appeal, if the proper judgment was
not rendered in the trial court, the Appellate Court may render the judgment that should
have been rendered without remanding it for a new trial. This is essential for the speedy
determination of litigation and saving expense, not only to the litigant, but also to the
taxpayer.
I accordingly recommend that amendments to the Constitution be submitted so
that (1) appeals in civil cases to the Appellate Court may be limited by legislative
enactment; (2) that the Supreme Court may sit in divisions under such rules and
regulations as may be prescribed by law, the Criminal Court of Appeals to constitute the
division thereof as to appeals in criminal cases; the other divisions to consider appeals in
civil cases; a decision by any one division to be the judgment of the court; provided that
under certain rules and regulations same may be reviewed by the court en banc; and
further, to provide the manner in which the judges may be nominated and elected; (3) that
written opinions may be dispensed with in the Appellate Court under rules and
regulations to be prescribed by the Legislature; (4) that the Appellate Courts in civil
cases, except where there is an issue as to unliquidated damages, may without reversing
and remanding, render the judgment that ought to have been rendered in the trial court,
and as to appeals in criminal cases, may modify the judgment of the lower court without
reversing and remanding the same; (5) provide for the abolishing of the county court and
the placing of all jurisdiction, except that of the justice of the peace, in the District Court.
Demurrers and answers should be required to be filed at the same time so as to
expedite the trials. As to whether civil cases should be tried to a jury, rules and
regulations should be made, so that a jury and a non-jury docket may be made up and
thus save the expense of a jury during the period that the non-jury docket is being tried.
LIBRARIAN AND MARSHAL TO BE CONSOLIDATED.
The office of Librarian and Marshal of the Supreme Court should be consolidated.
At present, each of these officers receive a salary of $1,500.00 per year. The Librarian
also has an assistant and a reference clerk, each of whom receive $1,000.00 per year. By
the consolidation of the office of Librarian and Marshal, at a salary of $1,500.00 per year,
the Librarian becoming ex-officio Marshal of the Supreme Court, the same results may
be had and this saving made to the taxpayers.
BOARDS FOR THE HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE TO BE ABOLISHED.
Sections 7021, 7022, 7023 and 7024, Revised Laws of Oklahoma, Annotated,
place the management of the Oklahoma Hospital for the Insane, located at Supply,
Oklahoma, under the control of a Board of Trustees composed of the Governor and two
other persons and provides for the holding of regular sessions at the Capitol on the first
Monday in January, April, July and October of each year, and also for special sessions.
The affairs of the hospital generally are placed under the control of this board. The
expense of this local board can be reasonably dispensed with and its duties imposed upon
the Board of Affairs. I recommend that this board be abolished and that the Board of
Affairs be charged with these duties with the exception that the Superintendent, Steward
and Physician be appointed by the Governor direct, subject to be removed at any time
within the discretion of the Governor. Section 2032 of the Revised Laws of Oklahoma
provides that the said Board of Trustees shall appoint three competent practicing
physicians, residents of this State, to constitute a Board of Examiners of said hospital. I
recommend that the Governor of the State be authorized to appoint these physicians in
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lieu of said board, and that the Board of Examiners transmit a copy of their report in
duplicate, one to the Governor and the other to the Board of Affairs.
Sections 7040, 7045 and 7046, Revised Laws of Oklahoma, 1910, Annotated,
creates a board for the control and management of the East Oklahoma Hospital for the
Insane at Vinita, the board to consist of three persons to be appointed by the Governor. I
recommend that this board be abolished and all the duties of that board be vested in the
Board of Affairs, except that the Superintendent, Steward be appointed by the Governor.
By this means the expense of two boards will be dispensed with, and the business
management of these institutions placed in the hands of men appointed to transact
business affairs of this State. I desire to see a profitable dairy and poultry farm in
connection with these institutions, and everything done reasonably possible toward
making these institutions self-sustaining.
THE NUMBER OF JURORS TO BE REDUCED.
Under Section 19, of Article 2, of the Constitution, twelve petit jurors are required
in courts of record other than county courts, and six petit jurors in county courts, and a
grand jury is to be composed of twelve jurors. As provision is contemplated for the
conferring of the jurisdiction of the county court upon the district court, I recommend that
provision be submitted to amend Sections 18 and 19, of Article 2, of the Constitution, so
that eight jurors shall constitute all grand and petit juries in courts of record, and provide
that juries may be empaneled in the justice court under rules and regulations prescribed
by law but without cost to the state, county or municipality, and further provide that
provision may be made by the Legislature for jury fees to be required to be paid by
litigants.
A SMALLER LEGISLATURE AND SHORTER SESSIONS.
As to the Legislature, I recommend the submission of a Constitutional
amendment, providing (1) that the Senate shall consist of twenty-four members and the
House of seventy-five members, providing also therein that by legislative enactment, the
membership in either or both bodies may be reduced, and (2) that a regular session shall
not exceed fifty days, and an extraordinary session not to exceed thirty days.
SPECIAL CHARTERS FOR MUNICIPALITIES AND COUNTIES—POLITICS
TO BE ELIMINATED.
As local government under the exercise of the police power is made to respond to
the modern needs and conditions of the people, its administration becomes more
complex. Fixed and general rules for the administration of counties or municipalities
generally are not adequate for such conditions. Hence, the necessity for the framing of
special charters by local municipalities. In the evolvment of such government, the
electors in their local governmental capacity should be given great latitude. This should
be done to the extent of permitting elimination of nominations by political parties, so that
such government may be reduced to strictly a business proposition. Political parties exist
for the purpose of promoting principles and measures for good government. What is
essential for local government in one community might not be proper in another. So, a
political party as a party in a state may have no particular mission as to such local
matters. One of the cardinal principles of the Democratic party is local self-government.
If the electors of the municipality desire to provide for the selection of their officials
without party nominations so that efficiency may be promoted without party machine
impediments, such sub-divisions should have that power. Oft’ times local officers are
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indifferent as to the success of the party in the State, where great political principles are
at issue, being absorbed in personal local matters. But if these local officers are
inefficient and do not meet the required duty, the party in the State has to bear the odium
of such deficiencies.
I accordingly recommend the submission of an amendment to Section 5, Article 3,
of the Constitution of this State, so as to permit municipalities in framing such charters to
dispense with political nominations and also to authorize counties to adopt special
charters for their county governments, and also therein to provide for the elimination of
party nominations.
SAFEGUARD AGAINST INPROVIDENT INDEBTEDNESS BY
MUNICIPALITIES.
While credit has brought riches to some it has impoverished many. Credit is
always exercised by the capable business man with great care and with such reasonable
sinking fund or equity under reasonable safeguards as to meet emergencies. The business
man who uses his credit and weathers all storms is indeed well ballasted. Credit when
exercised by municipalities or other political subdivisions should be exercised with the
same care. Safeguards and limitations against the making of such obligations is essential.
The future should never be mortgaged except when an adequate necessity exists and then
under reasonable limitations. One of the dangers of any community is in improving too
fast, and incurring too many obligations. We should advance and progress wisely,
carefully and surely, so that there should be no reaction. We feel now the burden of the
hand of the tax gatherer, but if we examine into details we find that a great part of these
taxes are gathered every year to provide a sinking fund for municipal indebtedness. Oft’
times this indebtedness has been created under the feverish spirit for development.
Section 26, of Article 10, of the Constitution permits municipalities to become
indebted generally to an amount in the aggregate not exceeding five per cent of the
valuation of the taxable property therein to be ascertained from the last assessment for
State and county purposes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness, provided that
three-fifths of the voters thereof must concur. Section 27, of the same Article, in addition
permits municipalities to become indebted without limit for the purpose of purchasing or
constructing public utilities or for repairing the same, to be owned exclusively by such
municipalities, provided that such be authorized by a majority of the properly qualified
taxpaying voters of such city. Section 27 extends too much credit to a municipality and
makes it too easy for it to become bankrupt. Additional safeguards should be adopted so
as to insure safe and sane development and protection to the taxpayers.
I accordingly recommend that an amendment be submitted imposing the same
restrictions in Section 27 both as to the amount and as to the number of voters to assent as
are contained in Section 26. By this means then a municipality could not become
indebted for all purposes to an amount in the aggregate not exceeding ten per cent of the
valuation of the taxable property therein to be ascertained from the last assessment for
State and county purposes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness. Such a
measure would not be retroactive.
STATE AND FEDERAL MACHINES TO BE PREVENTED.
It is essential that we should have the agencies by which the people may evidence
their judgment without political machine interference. This should extend not only to the
State, but also its sub-divisions. For that reason and the further fact that our party
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platform so declared, I recommend that amendments to the Constitution be submitted as
follows:
1. No official whilst holding a State office shall be a candidate for any State,
county or municipal office, except to succeed himself, when eligible.
2. No Federal office-holder or member of Congress or United States Senate
shall become a candidate for any State, county or municipal office during
his term of office.
3. The Governor of the State shall not be eligible to become a candidate for a
party nomination as a candidate for a seat in the United States Senate
during his term of office and for one year after the expiration of such term.
4. A member of the Legislature may not become a candidate for a party
nomination as a candidate for a seat in Congress of the United States for
two years after the passage of a congressional apportionment Act by the
legislative body of which he was a member.
By this means, not only will State machines, but also, Federal machines be made
an impossibility in the State of Oklahoma.
TO MAKE THE SHORT BALLOT POSSIBLE.
I further recommend that constitutional amendments be submitted, so as to cause
the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Commissioner of Insurance, the State Examiner and
Inspector and such other state officers as you deem advisable except those made by the
terms of the Constitution ex-officio Commissioners of the Land Office, to be filled by
appointment. On account of the number of elective offices in this State, the length of the
ballot often results in confusing the voters. If we are to ever have an opportunity to try
out the wisdom of the short ballot, it is essential that these amendments be submitted so
that the people can determine as to whether they want to try out the short ballot plan. In
framing these amendments, it might be wise to submit them in such a manner as to make
these offices appointive until otherwise provided by law. Then if the people were to
become dissatisfied with the appointive plan, a change could be made without an
amendment to the Constitution.
INSURANCE RATES.
Provision should be made for the fixing of fire insurance rates. This is a work of
great magnitude and should not be left to the discretion and judgment of any one person.
At the same time, it should be done in such a way as not to occasion the creation of any
more offices than reasonably practical.
I accordingly recommend the creation of a State Fire Insurance Commission, to
be composed of the Insurance Commissioner and the Fire Marshall, as ex-officio
members, the other members to be appointed, and to be secretary of said board. Said
board should have the power to suspend and fix rates and do everything necessary to the
effective regulation and control of the fire insurance business in the State. Provision
should be made for the review of the actions of this insurance commission by judicial
proceedings, thereby safeguarding the powers of said commission.
GINS AND GINNING.
Gins should be specifically declared by statute to be public utilities; and before a
gin is installed, a license should be required from the Corporation Commission. The
regulation and control of the ginning business and the fixing of the price therefore [sic], I
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recommend to be placed under the jurisdiction and control of the Corporation
Commission, just as public service corporations are.
ACCOUNTING AND BOOKKEEPING.
A system of accounting and bookkeeping should be established in all state
institutions on a reasonable check to disclose irregularities and deficiencies and this
system should apply not only to state institutions, but, also, to county government. I
recommend legislation to bring this about.
THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE AS TO ABOLISHING OFFICES TO BE
SUSTAINED.
The Legislature of 1913 passed an Act providing for the consolidation of a certain
offices. The validity of this Act is now being tested in the courts. I recommend the
passage of a declaratory act so as to obviate these objections and carry into effect at once
the expressed will of the people. Litigation, as a rule is at the expense of the taxpayers.
By the immediate passage of such a declaratory act, not only will this expense be
obviated, but office-holders will be made to realize that they cannot hold on to the public
teat by means of a technicality.
PERMANENT SCHOOL FUND TO BE IN STATE TREASURY.
The permanent school fund should be converted into the State Treasury and not
held by the Secretary of the Board of School Land Commissioners. This cannot be done,
however, without such constitutional amendment as will provide for this permanent fund
to be converted into the Treasury, subject to the charge and management of the Board of
School Land Commissioners, but with an automatic provision for the same to be drawn
out and loaned on warrants of the School Land Commissioners through the State
Auditor’s office.
PERMANENT SCHOOL FUND—ITS INVESTMENT.
Specific provision should be made for the loaning and investment of the
permanent school fund. This fund should be apportioned by the State Board of School
Land Commissioners to each county pro rata on an agricultural per capita basis, and the
same loaned through the agency of a board in each county to be composed of the County
Clerk, County Judge and County Assessor. This contemplates a plan which will cause
local inspection, appraisement and examination, that board then to make its
recommendation and transmit the papers to the State School Land Board, who shall
finally approve or disapproved the application after inspection again made through the
State Board..
I recommend the consideration of this subject by you and the passage of such
laws as may be necessary to place same into effect.
OIL PIPE LINES AND PRODUCING COMPANIES TO BE SEPARATE.
Oil pipe lines should not be permitted to become producers. These lines are now
common carriers and should be confined in their business as such and divorced from the
management and control of producing companies, so that they may not have common
officials.
I accordingly recommend the passage of such necessary legislation, and all other
legislation essential for the consideration of the natural resources of the State.
A WORKMAN’S COMPENSATION ACT—SHORTER HOURS FOR WOMEN.
A fair, just and adequate compensation act to be administered by the State should
be enacted. I earnestly recommend the enactment of such a law by this Legislature. Also
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a just and fair law providing for shorter hours for women in the various employments, the
kind and character of employment being considered in the terms of the bill, is necessary.
I recommend the passage of such a statute.
ELECTIONS.
Our primary election laws should be overhauled and a preferential system
adopted, by which the voters may be permitted to express their choice in such a way that
the party nominee shall be the choice of the majority of the voters.
It is also desirable that effective means be provided for the publicity pamplet [sic]
in reaching each voter when questions are submitted to the voters of the State by means
of the initiative and referendum.
PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPOSITION.
Private individuals have formed an association in this State for the purpose of
erecting an Oklahoma building at the Panama-Pacific Exposition at San Francisco and
have endeavored to raise sufficient funds for that purpose. It appears that on account of
the depressed conditions, resulting from the general European war, that that has been
rendered impractical, and it will take the sum of $5,000.00 to complete the building.
Mrs. Fred Sutton has pledged her property for this amount. In addition to this pledge, she
has given her time to further this object. I recommend that the Legislature consider the
advisability of making an appropriation of $5,000.00 to help complete the building, to be
available only when sufficient funds are on hand to pay the entire cost of the building.
APPROPRIATIONS.
I respectfully call your attention to the conditions now prevailing in the State. On
account of the depression occasioned by the great European war certain parts of our State
in a financial way are greatly handicapped. To impose any more burdens upon them by
way of taxes than is absolutely necessary would be an abuse of power. So I urge that in
making appropriations we stay within the narrowest limit. Our institutions and
departments must cramp and stint themselves so as to meet these conditions and be in
harmony with the conditions of the people. I urge that no appropriation, at least in excess
of that heretofore made, be made without our earnest consultation relative thereto.
As the occasion arises I shall have other recommendations as to other departments
to make. I have specialized as to a great many boards, officers and employes [sic], which
I think should be abolished. I did this so as to assume a joint burden with you in
initiating this retrenchment. This is not a pleasant duty, but is comes our way because the
people have preferred us by the exercise of their suffrage. I hope to see every board and
every commission in the State abolished except that of the Board of Affairs, Board of
Education and the State Election Board. The creation of the State Fire Insurance
Commission is not in fact the creation of a new commission. The additional member will
act a secretary and it is intended that he is to be a working secretary.
I feel sure that the members of these two honorable bodies are zealous for
retrenchment and reform and for the constructive protection of the people. This is a
period in the history of this new commonwealth which calls for efficient service in every
public station. I join arms with you with a view of presenting a solid phalanx in carrying
out these measures and re-establishing government in the hearts and affections of the
people.
THE JOINT SESSION DISSOLVED
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About Digitizing the Governors’ State of the State Addresses
Section 9, Article 6 of the Constitution of Oklahoma provides as follows:
“At every session of the Legislature, and immediately upon its organization, the
Governor shall communicate by message, delivered to joint session of the two
houses, upon the condition of the State; and shall recommend such matters to the
Legislature as he shall judge expedient.”
From statehood in 1907 to present, the state of the state addresses of Oklahoma’s
Governors have been recorded in pamphlets, booklets, and Senate Journals. One could
not foresee the toll that time would take on the earliest of these documents. When these
items first arrived at the Oklahoma State Archives, the leather bindings had dried
considerably, cracking the spines significantly. Due to the acidity in the paper, many
pages have darkened with age. Some of the more brittle pamphlets crumble at the
slightest touch.
Thus when we decided to digitize these materials, we faced two challenges: the
safety of the original documents and ease of viewing/reading for patrons. Our primary
objective was that the unique and historic qualities of the documents should be reflected
in the website. However, older fonts would not digitize clearly when scanned and even
using a flatbed scanner could cause the bindings to worsen. An image of each page
would increase download time considerably and any hand-written remarks or crooked
pages could be lost. We decided to retype each document with every period, comma, and
misspelled word to maintain the integrity of the document while placing some unique
images of the documents online. Patrons can download the addresses quicker and view
them clearer as well as save, print, and zoom with the Adobe Acrobat Reader. We have
learned much from our efforts and we hope that our patrons are better served in their
research on the state of the state addresses of Oklahoma’s Governors.

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Texas Homeowner’s Insurance Policy Litigation

Trevino v. Evanston Ins. Co. (2011)

United States District Court,
S.D. Texas,
McAllen Division.
Antonio TREVINO, Plaintiff,
v.
EVANSTON INSURANCE
COMPANY, et al, Defendants.
Civil Action No. M–11–18. July 12, 2011.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT EVANSTON’S
MOTION TO DISMISS AND GRANTING
DEFENDANT CARRINGTON’S MOTION TO DISMISS
RANDY CRANE, District Judge.
I. Introduction
*1 Now before the Court are the Motions to Dismiss filed
by Defendants Evanston Insurance Company and Carrington
Mortgage Services, LLC d/b/a CMS Mortgage Services,
LLC, respectively, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction
pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1).
(Docs.13, 17). Plaintiff Antonio Trevino originally filed suit
in the 389th Judicial District Court, Hidalgo County, Texas,
on September 21, 2010, and Defendants removed the action to
federal court on January 21, 2011 on the uncontested grounds
that the requisites of federal diversity jurisdiction are present.
(Doc. 1; Doc. 1, Ex. E); see 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a), 1441(a),
1446. Plaintiff’s Original Petition, the live pleading in the
action, alleges that “Defendants” issued a policy insuring
property owned by Plaintiff in Edinburg, Texas and that
Plaintiff made a claim under the policy seeking coverage
for roof and water damage sustained by the property as a
result of Hurricane Dolly on July 23, 2008. (Doc. 1, Ex. E).
Plaintiff brings causes of action against both Evanston and
Carrington for breach of the insurance policy, violations of
sections 541 and 542 of the Texas Insurance Code and of the
Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”), and breach
of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, all arising out
of Defendants’ alleged mishandling of the insurance claim
and unfair settlement practices. Id. Defendants now move to
dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the grounds
that Plaintiff has no standing to sue under the policy, which is
a force-placed (also known as lender-placed) policy issued by
insurer Evanston to mortgage servicing company Carrington
as the only named insured. (Docs.13, 17). Plaintiff counters
that he has standing to sue as a third-party beneficiary of the
policy. (Docs.18, 19). Upon review of Plaintiff’s pleading,
Defendants’ motions, and the record, in light of relevant case
law, the Court finds that the motions must be granted for the
following reasons.
II. Standard of Review
Rule 12(b)(1) authorizes the dismissal of a case for lack
of subject matter jurisdiction when the district court lacks
the statutory or constitutional power to adjudicate the case.
Home Builders Ass’n of Miss., Inc. v. City of Madison,
143 F.3d 1006, 1010 (5th Cir.1998) (quoting Nowak v.
Ironworkers Local 6 Pension Fund, 81 F.3d 1182, 1187
(2d Cir.1996)). “[T]he issue of standing is one of subject
matter jurisdiction,” Cobb v. Cent. States, 461 F.3d 632, 635
(5th Cir.2006), and in this diversity case the substantive law
of Texas governing Plaintiff’s causes of action determines
whether he has standing to sue as a third-party beneficiary.
See Kona Tech. Corp. v. S. Pac. Transp. Co., 225 F.3d
595, 602–03 (5th Cir.2000) (addressing standing inquiry in
diversity case pursuant to Texas law governing third-party
beneficiary status); Palma v. Verex Assurance, Inc., 79 F.3d
1453, 1456 (5th Cir.1996) (district court in diversity case
correctly held that it was bound to apply substantive law
of Texas in determining whether plaintiff had third-party
beneficiary status to sue under policy for Texas Insurance
Code violations). A court may base its disposition of a motion
to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on any one
of three bases: (1) the complaint alone; (2) the complaint
supplemented by undisputed facts in the record; or (3) the
complaint supplemented by undisputed facts plus the court’s
resolution of disputed facts. Ramming v. United States, 281
F.3d 158, 161 (5th Cir.2001) (citing Barrera–Montenegro v.
United States, 74 F.3d 657, 659 (5th Cir.1996)). Ultimately,
the court should grant the motion “only if it appears certain
that the plaintiff cannot prove any set of facts in support of his
claim that would entitle [him] to relief.” Ramming, 281 F.3d
at 161 (citing Home Builders Ass’n, 143 F.3d at 1010).
Trevino v. Evanston Ins. Co., Slip Copy (2011)
III. Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss
*2 Plaintiff’s Original Petition erroneously references a
policy that became effective after the date of loss, but
Defendants do not dispute that another Evanston policy
concerning Plaintiff’s property was in place when the loss
occurred. See (Doc. 1, Ex. E; Doc. 13, Ex. B; Doc.
17, Exs. 1–3). Evanston issued that policy, a “Standard
Fire Insurance Policy” with a “Mortgage Guard Policy”
endorsement (collectively, “the Policy”), to Carrington as the
only named insured. (Doc. 13, Ex. B at 0001, 0005, 0010).
The Policy language reflects and Plaintiff does not dispute
that Carrington is the servicer of Plaintiff’s mortgage and
obtained the Policy to protect its interest in the event Plaintiff
failed to maintain windstorm coverage on the mortgaged
property, which in fact occurred. (Doc. 13, Ex. B). 1 The
Policy covers property damage resulting from specific perils,
including windstorm or hail. (Doc. 13, Ex B at 0023–0025,
0080–0081). Under the Policy, “[l]oss shall be adjusted with
and made payable to the Named Insured unless another payee
is specifically named.” (Doc. 13, Ex. B at 0012).
1 The Policy provides automatic coverage to Carrington
when it files a claim showing an absence of coverage
on the property. (Doc. 13, Ex B at 0080–0081).
Plaintiff does not contest that he is neither a named or
additional insured under the Policy. (Docs.18, 19). Therefore,
he recognizes that whether he has standing to bring any
of the asserted causes of action turns on whether he is a
third-party beneficiary of the contract between Evanston and
Carrington. Id. In the context of insurance litigation arising
from Hurricane Katrina, numerous district courts applying
Louisiana law have declined to find that a borrower, or
mortgagor, was a third-party beneficiary under a force-placed
hazard insurance policy issued by the insurer to the lender, or
mortgagee. E.g., Graphia v. Balboa Ins. Co., 517 F.Supp.2d
854, 857–58 (E.D.La.2007); Carrier v. Balboa Ins. Co., 2009
WL 666962, at *2–3 (W.D.La. Mar.10, 2009); Riley v. Sw.
Bus. Corp., 2008 WL 4286631, at *3 (E.D.La.2008). The
district court in Riley explained:
Under Louisiana law, “[t]he most basic requirement of a
stipulation pour autrui [stipulation “for other persons”]
is that the contract manifest a clear intention to benefit
the third party; absent such a clear manifestation, a party
claiming to be a third-party beneficiary cannot meet his
burden of proof.” Joseph v. Hospital Service Dist. No. 2
of Parish of St. Mary, 939 So.2d 1206, 1212 (La.2006). In
this case, the contracts do not “manifest a clear intention
to benefit” Riley. Id. As with all forced placed policies,
Midwest initiated coverage in order to protect its own
security interest in the property, not to provide any sort of
benefit for the mortgagor. Indeed, the very purpose of a
forced placed policy is to cover the uninsured portion of
the mortgagee’s interest. Though Riley may incidentally
benefit from the stopgap coverage, he was not an intended
beneficiary and is thus not entitled to enforce the contract
in court. See id. (holding that for a third party to be entitled
to enforce a contractual benefit, the benefit must not be “a
mere incident of the contract between the promisor and the
promisee”)….
*3 Riley, 2008 WL 4286631 at *3. Recently, the Fifth
Circuit in an unpublished decision also concluded that the
force-placed flood insurance policy at issue did not manifest
a clear intent to benefit the borrowers as is required to
show third-party beneficiary status under Louisiana law.
Williams v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London, 2010
WL 4009818, at ––––4–6 (5th Cir. Oct.13, 2010). Plaintiff
attempts to distinguish the district court cases and Williams by
claiming that although the Evanston Policy “is primarily for
the benefit of Carrington,” the Policy “also provides coverage
for personal liability, medical pay to others, personal property
loss, and loss of use coverage” which could only inure to
the benefit of Plaintiff. (Doc. 19 (citing Doc. 13, Ex. B
at 0049, 0051, 0054, 0056)). Plaintiff points out that the
plaintiffs in Williams attempted to make a similar argument
—that the “temporary housing expense” section of the policy
conferred third-party beneficiary status on them—and that
the Fifth Circuit did not reach the merits of that argument
because the plaintiffs had waived it by first raising it on
appeal. (Docs.18, 19); see Williams, 2010 WL 4009818,
at ––––3–4. Therefore, Plaintiff directs the Court instead
to the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Palma, supra, in which
the court determined that the borrower was a third-party
beneficiary under a “mortgage guarantee insurance policy”
purchased by the mortgagee to protect it from a loss in the
event the borrower defaulted on the loan. Palma, 79 F.3d
at 1457–58. The policy provided that “[t]he Borrower shall
not be liable to the Company [insurer] for any loss paid
to the Insured [mortgagee] pursuant to this policy.” Id. at
1457. The court determined that this language benefitted the
borrower only and gave her third-party beneficiary standing
to sue the insurer when, after receiving an assignment of
the deficiency due on the note, the insurer attempted to
collect the deficiency from the borrower without crediting to
her those proceeds already paid to the mortgagee under the
policy. Id. at 1457–58. Plaintiff characterizes the “personal
liability,” “medical pay to others,” “personal property,” and
Trevino v. Evanston Ins. Co., Slip Copy (2011)
“loss of use” coverages provided by the “Special Broad Form
Homeowners Coverage” endorsement to the Evanston Policy
as clearly benefitting only Plaintiff and therefore akin to
the provision in Palma. (Docs.18, 19). However, Evanston
counters that these coverages only become available when
a mortgagee complies with the reporting provisions of the
Mortgage Guard Policy, which require the mortgagee to
notify Evanston of “any change of ownership or occupancy
or increase of hazard,” i.e., foreclosure, and to pay additional
risk premiums. (Doc. 13, Ex. B at 0016; see also Doc. 13,
Ex. B at 0048–0072; Docs. 18, 19, 22). In Texas, much like
in Louisiana, “a presumption exists that parties contracted for
themselves unless it ‘clearly appears’ that they intended a third
party to benefit from the contract.” MCI Telecomms. Corp.
v. Tex. Utils. Elec. Co., 995 S.W.2d 647, 651 (Tex.1999).
“Incidental benefits that may flow from a contract to a third
party do not confer the right to enforce the contract.” S.
Tex. Water Auth. v. Lomas, 223 S.W.3d 304, 306 (Tex.2007)
(citing MCI Telecomms. Corp., 995 S.W.2d at 652). Here,
the Policy language unambiguously manifests the intent to
provide hazard coverage to Carrington to the extent of its
interest in the property, and any benefit conferred to Plaintiff
as a result is incidental. See Gilbreath v. White, 903 S.W.2d
851, 854 (Tex.App.-Texarkana 1995, no writ) (mortgagee
has insurable interest in mortgaged property that is “entirely
separate and distinct” from that of mortgagor to the extent
of the debts secured). Plaintiff has pointed to no provision
that makes clearly apparent the contracting parties’ intent to
confer a direct benefit on Plaintiff. Therefore, Plaintiff is not
a third-party beneficiary under the Policy and has no standing
to pursue his claims.
IV. Conclusion
*4 For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that Plaintiff
lacks standing to assert all of the causes of action in this suit.
Accordingly, the Court hereby ORDERS that Defendants
Evanston’s and Carrington’s respective Motions to Dismiss
for lack of subject matter jurisdiction are hereby GRANTED
and all claims against Defendants are hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Texas Law on Alternatives to Traffic Control Signals–Texas Insurance Defense Litigation Attorneys

Texas Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices

Section 4B.04  Alternatives to Traffic Control Signals
Guidance:
01 Since vehicular delay and the frequency of some types of crashes are sometimes greater under traffic signal
control than under STOP sign control, consideration should be given to providing alternatives to traffic control
signals even if one or more of the signal warrants has been satisfied.
Option:
02 These alternatives may include, but are not limited to, the following:
A. Installing signs along the major street to warn road users approaching the intersection;
B. Relocating the stop line(s) and making other changes to improve the sight distance at the intersection;
C. Installing measures designed to reduce speeds on the approaches;
D. Installing a flashing beacon at the intersection to supplement STOP sign control;
E. Installing flashing beacons on warning signs in advance of a STOP sign controlled intersection on majorand/
or minor-street approaches;
F. Adding one or more lanes on a minor-street approach to reduce the number of vehicles per lane on
the approach;
G. Revising the geometrics at the intersection to channelize vehicular movements and reduce the time
required for a vehicle to complete a movement, which could also assist pedestrians;
H. Revising the geometrics at the intersection to add pedestrian median refuge islands and/or curb extensions;
I. Installing roadway lighting if a disproportionate number of crashes occur at night;
J. Restricting one or more turning movements, perhaps on a time-of-day basis, if alternate routes are
available;
K. If the warrant is satisfied, installing multi-way STOP sign control;
L. Installing a pedestrian hybrid beacon (see Chapter 4F) or In-Roadway Warning Lights (see Chapter 4N) if
pedestrian safety is the major concern;
M. Installing a roundabout; and
N. Employing other alternatives, depending on conditions at the intersection.

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

General Contractor Protected From Tort Liability Under Section 406.123 Based On Agreement With Subcontractor–Ft. Worth, Texas Employment Law Defense Attorneys

Texas Non Subscriber Defense Law

 

IMMUNITY FROM SUIT
General Contractor Protected From Tort Liability Under Section 406.123 Based On Agreement With Subcontractor
Williams v. Brown & Root Inc. 1997 WL 297750 (Tex. App.- Texarkana, June 6, 1997)
Texas Eastman Company was a general contractor that subcontracted work to Brown and Root. Brown and Root in turn subcontracted work to Tracer Construction Company. Williams sustained a work-related injury as a Tracer employee when he slipped on some stairs and was paid workers’ compensation. Williams then sued Brown and Root for negligently permitting the stairs to be slippery. Brown and Root had an agreement to provide workers’ compensation for Tracer through Eastman’s “Owner Controlled Insurance Program”.
The Texarkana Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment in Brown and Root’s favor.
Under Section 406.123, workers’ compensation tort immunity is extended to the general contractor for “providing” workers’ compensation insurance. It is not necessary that the general contractor “pay” for that insurance.

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]

Texas Law on Setting Speed Limits–Texas Insurance Defense Litigation Attorneys

 

Setting Speed Limits

 

Texas law requires that speed limits on state roadways be set at the state maximum, unless traffic and engineering studies show a need to alter a speed limit for safety reasons.

Maximum Speed Limit

The law sets the maximum at 70 mph, but allows the Texas Transportation Commission to establish a maximum speed limit of 75 mph (80 mph or 85 mph if the highway is designed to accommodate that speed) on the highway system if that speed is determined to be safe and reasonable after a traffic or engineering study. A maximum speed limit of 80 mph within 10 counties on Interstate 10 and Interstate 20 is also permitted.

City governments and TxDOT must conduct traffic and engineering studies according to requirements outlined in TxDOT’s publication, Procedures for Establishing Speed Zones, when setting a speed limit on the state highway system. Speed limits on state highways may be set by the Commission or by a city if the highway is within city limits.

Jurisdiction

Citizen requests for speed zone studies on highways should be made to the TxDOT district office with jurisdiction over the roadway.

TxDOT only has jurisdiction over setting speed limits on the state highway system. Questions about speed limits on city streets or county roads should be directed to the transportation departments of these local governments.

More Information

 

Williams, McClure & Parmelee is dedicated to high quality legal representation of businesses and insurance companies in a variety of matters. We are experienced Texas civil litigation attorneys based in Fort Worth who know Texas courts and Texas law. For more information, please contact the law firm at 817-335-8800. The firm’s new office location is 5601 Bridge Street, Suite 300, Fort Worth, Texas 76112.

Martindale AVtexas[2]