The Fortune Society – a nonprofit social service and advocacy organization who seek to support successful re-entry from prison – filed the complaint claiming that Macy’s rejects otherwise qualified applicants and fires existing employees based on their criminal histories, a practice the group claims violates the Civil Rights Act.
The Fortune Society is asking the EEOC to investigate the claims and to determine whether it is reasonable to believe that discrimination occurred.
While federal law does not prohibit employers from asking about criminal history, federal EEO laws do prohibit employers from discriminating when they use criminal history information. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employers from treating job applicants or employees with similar criminal records differently because of their race, national origin or another protected characteristic.
Furthermore, to curb disparate impact discrimination, the law states that if an employer’s use of criminal record histories disproportionately excludes people of a particular race or national origin, the employer must show that the exclusions are job-related and consistent with necessity.
Source: Law360.com, 5/17/2017
Posted: May 25, 2017