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For those of you who conduct background screening in California, new legislation
has
been enacted regarding the requirements for disclosure and consent:
California Governor Gray Davis on September 28th signed two
bills to ease the
requirements imposed on employers as a result of California Act
AB655. The laws are
effective immediately.
According to the California State Assembly, AB1068 was introduced
because
businesses expressed concern about the ability to comply with AB655,
which
required employers to send copies of all information collected
during a pre-employment
background check.
Under AB1068, applicants will select a box on the disclosure
and consent form
indicating they would like a copy of the report. If the box is
checked, employers will
be required to send copies within three days of receiving it
from the Investigative
Consumer Reporting Agency.
If the applicant does not check the box, the employer is not
required to send the
report.
AB2868 expands the range of information that may be obtained
with a background
check as explicitly required by a governmental agency to
include some of the items
that were otherwise prohibited under AB655, such as criminal
convictions and unpaid
tax liens dating back more than seven years.
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