What is the name of your state? NY. This is something for Carl or the Senior Judge may know.
As i understand criminal background checks in NY, NY state DCJS fingerprint generated criminal records are only open to government agencies and those entities who can fingerprint or otherwise obtain rap sheet information on prospective job applicants(such as hospitals, banks, museums). Those who are not authorized by law to obtain rap sheet information are considered "the public".
For those entities who are considered "the public" and not authorized to obtain such information, they have to obtain criminal history information either through a consumer reporting agency or by doing a background check through the NY state court system (Office of Court Administration-OCA).
I see that there are several laws set in place that prevent discrimination based on a conviction. For example the EEOC says that an employer must consider the nature and gravity of an offense, how long ago it occured, and "if the employer has any doubt the applicant did not commit the offense", they do not have to hire the applicant. Other laws say that a conviction can only be relevant to the job being applied for such as a DWI conviction for a bus driver or a theft conviction for a bank teller.
My question: For these laws to be applied, does it matter the manner in which the background check was run? For example, does the job applicant have to be fingerprinted in order for these laws to be applied, or can the applicant have had the background check done through the courts or a CRA and still have these laws apply?
As i understand criminal background checks in NY, NY state DCJS fingerprint generated criminal records are only open to government agencies and those entities who can fingerprint or otherwise obtain rap sheet information on prospective job applicants(such as hospitals, banks, museums). Those who are not authorized by law to obtain rap sheet information are considered "the public".
For those entities who are considered "the public" and not authorized to obtain such information, they have to obtain criminal history information either through a consumer reporting agency or by doing a background check through the NY state court system (Office of Court Administration-OCA).
I see that there are several laws set in place that prevent discrimination based on a conviction. For example the EEOC says that an employer must consider the nature and gravity of an offense, how long ago it occured, and "if the employer has any doubt the applicant did not commit the offense", they do not have to hire the applicant. Other laws say that a conviction can only be relevant to the job being applied for such as a DWI conviction for a bus driver or a theft conviction for a bank teller.
My question: For these laws to be applied, does it matter the manner in which the background check was run? For example, does the job applicant have to be fingerprinted in order for these laws to be applied, or can the applicant have had the background check done through the courts or a CRA and still have these laws apply?