highland145
Lifer
- Oct 12, 2009
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In our society, everyone that can be served, ftl.Who is liable when that convicted criminal commits a crime in the workplace?
In our society, everyone that can be served, ftl.Who is liable when that convicted criminal commits a crime in the workplace?
Who is liable when that convicted criminal commits a crime in the workplace?
Who is liable when this employee sexually assaults an employee's child on bring your kid to work day? Or at company day care?
Who is liable when that convicted criminal commits a crime in the workplace?
.....except for that one mistake....
Yea no, there is no "mistake" when it comes to criminals especially rape. If I start a business I will never hire anyone with any sort of criminal history unless it is a traffic ticket, speeding or pot related. They are not my problem, they made their choice and as far as I care they could die in a ditch somewhere. I really do not care, there are ample amounts of qualified adults or high schoolers ready to do the job and get off to a good start in life. It's not my job to give them second chances, it's the church and their gods job.
If liberals want to hire child molesters then let them, but don't tell me who I can and can not hire.
Well that would be the person who committed the crime.
Yea no, there is no "mistake" when it comes to criminals especially rape. If I start a business I will never hire anyone with any sort of criminal history unless it is a traffic ticket, speeding or pot related. They are not my problem, they made their choice and as far as I care they could die in a ditch somewhere. I really do not care, there are ample amounts of qualified adults or high schoolers ready to do the job and get off to a good start in life. It's not my job to give them second chances, it's the church and their gods job.
If liberals want to hire child molesters then let them, but don't tell me who I can and can not hire.
Yea, I understand what you are saying through your question. However, common sense and looking at all the circumstances is what an employer should do, instead of arbitrarily writing that person off for some criminal offense on their record.
You want to assign blame on someone like the company in the event "something should happen" or in this case your assuming someone with a criminal record is going to re-offend.
If you had a habitual criminal, someone who shows a criminal history or a pattern, in that case you wouldn't hire.
Again see my previous posts on this.
We want people to not re-offend, we want them to be rehabilitated so they can become productive citizens again and pull their own weight. If we keep pushing people with a criminal record out of the workforce or put them back onto the streets desperate, they will resort right back to criminal behavior out of "survival mode".
Again, looking at all circumstances is important.
1) how long has it been since they committed the crime?
2) have they re-offended, is there a criminal history/pattern
3) how serious were the charges? Assault, stalking, murder, or something less
4) What was the age of that person when they committed the crime?
5) What were the circumstances?
Check out the Internet hard man here, lads.
I bet he's up in all the gun restriction threads as well, foaming at the mouth at the prospect of being able to shoot a burglar.
Ah yes I am such an ethug, thank you for noticing. Fortunately for me you're a retard who hates rich people with nothing of relevance to add in basically every single one of your posts here in P&N. I could literally sum up everyone of your posts in a sentance referencing rich people and hate.
You could, but then you'd actually be very wrong.
I wouldn't want to get involved in checking out all of that. IIRC, you are limited to what you can ask/find out, anyway.
How would I know if they have re-offended? Unless they got caught, I would have no way to know.
If I have two applicants that are close in qualifications, I'm probably not bothering with the convicted felon.
There are no shortage of dumb asses no matter what party is in charge,The biggest bombshell in the new guidelines is that businesses complying with state or local laws that require employee background checks can still be targeted for EEOC lawsuits.
This is a key issue in a case the EEOC commenced in 2010 against G4S Secure Solutions after the company refused to hire a twice-convicted Pennsylvania thief as a security guard.
G4S provides guards for nuclear power plants, chemical plants, government buildings and other sensitive sites, and it is prohibited by state law from hiring people with felony convictions as security officers. But, as G4S counsel Julie Payne testified before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights this past December, the EEOC insists "that state and local laws are pre-empted by Title VII" and is pressuring the company "to defend the use of background checks in every hiring decision we have made over a period of decades."
The EEOC's new regime leaves businesses in a Catch-22. As Todd McCracken of the National Small Business Association recently warned: "State and federal courts will allow potentially devastating tort lawsuits against businesses that hire felons who commit crimes at the workplace or in customers' homes. Yet the EEOC is threatening to launch lawsuits if they do not hire those same felons."
I know the OP pretty well and he's commited no felonies or even misdemeanors.What are chances OP has committed felonies but just not been caught & arrested for them?
This is a bunch of feel-good bullshit. You've already forgotten that doing background checks is essentially forbidden unless an employer wants to chance exposing himself to a potential discrimination lawsuit.Yea, I understand what you are saying through your question. However, common sense and looking at all the circumstances is what an employer should do, instead of arbitrarily writing that person off for some criminal offense on their record.
You want to assign blame on someone like the company in the event "something should happen" or in this case your assuming someone with a criminal record is going to re-offend.
If you had a habitual criminal, someone who shows a criminal history or a pattern, in that case you wouldn't hire.
Again see my previous posts on this.
We want people to not re-offend, we want them to be rehabilitated so they can become productive citizens again and pull their own weight. If we keep pushing people with a criminal record out of the workforce or put them back onto the streets desperate, they will resort right back to criminal behavior out of "survival mode".
Again, looking at all circumstances is important.
1) how long has it been since they committed the crime?
2) have they re-offended, is there a criminal history/pattern
3) how serious were the charges? Assault, stalking, murder, or something less
4) What was the age of that person when they committed the crime?
5) What were the circumstances?
This is a bunch of feel-good bullshit. You've already forgotten that doing background checks is essentially forbidden unless an employer wants to chance exposing himself to a potential discrimination lawsuit.
This is the problem with the thinking of the left. You want it all, but set up criteria that preclude it. I can't run a background check but you would like me to consider all these criteria to determine whether I hire a convicted felon. It's an impossibility within the parameters you've created because I cannot find out any of that information. I can't find out anything about the individual that cannot be gleaned from a resume.
How would I know if they have re-offended? Unless they got caught, I would have no way to know.
.
Will new fed guidelines force companies to hire more employees with criminal pasts?
I own a gym. My members are on contract and one of the clauses is that I can terminate a membership at any time with no reason given. As an example, if I were to discover that a member had a record as a sex offender, I could terminate that member. This would be pretty much a necessity because my members have 24/7/365 access but we are not staffed all those hours. That's how I can deal with my members. Potential employee's, well that's different.
The EEOC has suggested guidelines that would eliminate policies that "exclude people from employment based on a criminal record". If I were to do a background check, the commission report states that I should limit my inquiries to criminal records related only to the open job.
So, if were to hire a manager, a manager who handled money, sold contracts that included taking credit card numbers and bank account information, I would likely not be subject to a discrimination claim for not hiring an individual convicted of identity theft but could be for not hiring a convicted drug dealer?
The majority of my members are women and many of them wear tight clothing when working out. On that basis, can I exclude an individual convicted of rape? How about sexual assault?
I'm thinking someone convicted of embezzlement could be ruled out.
What I'm trying to get a handle on, is what crimes that someone had been convicted of would be suitable for the job of a manager at my business? A discrimination claim from someone who has done time is not something I feel is in my best interest.
Bueller?
Yea no, there is no "mistake" when it comes to criminals especially rape. If I start a business I will never hire anyone with any sort of criminal history unless it is a traffic ticket, speeding or pot related. They are not my problem, they made their choice and as far as I care they could die in a ditch somewhere. I really do not care, there are ample amounts of qualified adults or high schoolers ready to do the job and get off to a good start in life. It's not my job to give them second chances, it's the church and their gods job.
If liberals want to hire child molesters then let them, but don't tell me who I can and can not hire.
