Floridian2000
Member
Is it legal for potential employers in FL to ask for candidates' SS# before offering a job? Tnx.
Thank you Sir/Madam.Yes. There is no federal or Florida law that prohibits an employer from asking for that information from an applicant.
For ID purposes DL/US Passport should do just fine before tax agent/payer (employment) relationship is established. But... if it is not illegal they can do what they want. Obviously, I can say that I don't want to be employed by such unscrupulous company and leave the interview. That is, if I can afford it...It's the de facto national ID.
Why do you see it as "unscrupulous"? It's actually pretty common for employers to ask for that on applications. If you won't accept providing that on applications (obviously you want to be sure it's a legitimate company/firm at least) you may be limiting your opportunities.Obviously, I can say that I don't want to be employed by such unscrupulous company and leave the interview.
Not as much an employee's market as you'd think. The unemployment figures are an imperfect measure of the real job situation because they don't tell you how many people are underemployed or have gotten so discouraged that they stop looking for work. If it were truly an employee's market, employers would need to start raising wages to compete against other employers for the scarce labor pool. The fact that wage growth has been pretty much flat tells you that the job market is not as a strong for employees as a 3% unemployment rate would suggest.With current unemployment rate (under 3% in FL) it is an EMPLOYEE'S market. Employers scramble to find at least somewhat qualified help for any position, from shop assistant to NASA physicist. Thank you, President Trump!
More power to them! After conditional job offer - subject to even checking my mother-in-law' urine test...That doesn't mean that employers have stopped doing background checks.
I won't argue here about details of macroeconomics and unemployment rate calculation methods. "Now hiring" signs on every business' window and swelling classified ads suggest that those numbers are rather realistic.Not as much an employee's market as you'd think. The unemployment figures are an imperfect measure of the real job situation because they don't tell you how many people are underemployed or have gotten so discouraged that they stop looking for work. If it were truly an employee's market, employers would need to start raising wages to compete against other employers for the scarce labor pool. The fact that wage growth has been pretty much flat tells you that the job market is not as a strong for employees as a 3% unemployment rate would suggest.