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If You're Fired, Will Past Employers
Keep Your Secret?
Despite what some job seekers think, it is not illegal for former
employers to tell reference checkers that you were fired.
They can say anything they want as long as it's true.
But many companies do have policies that limit what
they will reveal about past employees.
Is this a good thing or a bad thing?
I was watching an episode of CBS's "60 Minutes" recently
(hmmm, maybe I watch too much TV; no wait, this is "research,"
so it's OK). They had a shocking story about a male hospital
worker who is suspected of killing more than 40 patients in
several different hospitals during the past decade. He pleaded
guilty to two of the murders.
That is very disturbing by itself ... but what makes this
story so incredibly worse is that his employers unwittingly
helped him do it! This guy had been fired many times for a variety
of reasons -- hoarding potentially harmful drugs, illegally
administering unprescribed treatments, being negligent with
patients -- and other alarming actions. He'd even been convicted
of something (I can't recall the charge).
Yet he never had a problem getting another job
at another hospital. Why? Because his former employers all had
policies that prevented them from providing any information
about past employees, other than job titles and dates of employment.
Apparently the hospital's lawyers were trying to protect
them from lawsuits that could possibly result if something negative
(and not proven as fact) was said about a past employee which
prevented that employee from obtaining another job.
So even though references were checked, they revealed nothing
about this criminal's activities. And he was passed along from
one hospital to the next, allegedly killing patients in each
one until he was finally caught.
This is a very extreme example of how such personnel policies
are, in my opinion, doing more harm than good. This sword cuts
both ways, after all. If you've done a truly exceptional job
for your past employer, wouldn't you want that employer to be
free to confirm your glowing accomplishments during a reference
check?
Things are changing, thank goodness. According to the Society
of Human Resource Management, employers are conducting more
criminal checks than ever before. The need to provide a safe
workplace is helping to drive this increase. Plus companies
that were once worried about being sued by a former employee
over a bad reference are now more concerned about being sued
by an employer who wasn't warned about a bad employee!
Regardless of the threat of lawsuits (don't get me started
on that), the bottom line for job seekers is that you should
not assume your former employer will only provide your dates
of employment and job title. If you were fired, it may be revealed.
If you were an outstanding employee, it may be revealed.
If you're unsure of what your past employer's policy is,
call them and find out. It's a good thing to know!
Written by Bonnie Lowe,
www.Best-Interview-Strategies.com.
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