A leading labour lawyer has publicly criticised the practice but concedes there’s nothing illegal about them.
Carrying out credit checks on potential new employees is becoming increasingly popular with Canadian companies but one leading employment lawyer has spoken out against the practice, labelling it “morally unjust.”
“The reality is the individuals with the extremely low credit rating presumably are the ones that are the most vulnerable and they’re the ones that need the job the most so for them to be turned away on that premise – it’s definitely unjust,” said Muneeza Sheikh.
Unethical acts
First used in the financial industry, candidate credit checks have now entered the mainstream job market – even the federal government recently introduced mandatory checks for all public servants – but what purpose do they even have?
Spokeswoman Lisa Murphy defended the fed’s decision and said; “This practice is common in certain private industries to indicate excessive indebtedness that may increase temptation to commit unethical acts.”
Critic Sheikh doesn’t agree – “There’s been a number of studies stating that, actually, there is no correlation between your poor credit and your propensity to behave unethically,” she argued.
In the eyes of the law
The Levvitt & Grossman partner might not agree with the controversial hiring tool from a moral standpoint but she did concede that, legally, there’s nothing wrong with it.
“There’s nothing at law that precludes you from doing the credit check as long as you’ve got the individuals consent,” she confirmed.
In Ontario, guidelines that determine discrimination in a hiring practice are governed by the Ontario Human Rights Code, which identifies protected characteristics such as age, race and gender. As it stands, financial situation is not a protected ground under the code so employers aren’t breaking the law by taking in into account.
“If you had the same employer saying; ‘Well you’ve got to disclose what religion you practice or what your ethnicity is before we go ahead and interview,’ that’s a different story because it’s a protected ground under the code but economic disadvantage isn’t,” explained Sheikh.
Time for change
While the practice may be picking up speed in Canada, other countries are cracking down on it – the U.S. in particular. In April, New York City joined several states – including California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Oregon, Vermont and Washington – in banning the use of credit checks for employment purposes.
So could something similar soon cross the border? Sheikh says there’s still a long way to go but it’s not entirely unlikely.
“I think there is a lot of dialogue that needs to take place before something like that happens,” she said, before adding; “Do I think that that sort of discussion is going to take place in Ontario? – It’s probably going to happen soon.”
Watch Muneeza Sheikh’s full interview here.
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“The reality is the individuals with the extremely low credit rating presumably are the ones that are the most vulnerable and they’re the ones that need the job the most so for them to be turned away on that premise – it’s definitely unjust,” said Muneeza Sheikh.
Unethical acts
First used in the financial industry, candidate credit checks have now entered the mainstream job market – even the federal government recently introduced mandatory checks for all public servants – but what purpose do they even have?
Spokeswoman Lisa Murphy defended the fed’s decision and said; “This practice is common in certain private industries to indicate excessive indebtedness that may increase temptation to commit unethical acts.”
Critic Sheikh doesn’t agree – “There’s been a number of studies stating that, actually, there is no correlation between your poor credit and your propensity to behave unethically,” she argued.
In the eyes of the law
The Levvitt & Grossman partner might not agree with the controversial hiring tool from a moral standpoint but she did concede that, legally, there’s nothing wrong with it.
“There’s nothing at law that precludes you from doing the credit check as long as you’ve got the individuals consent,” she confirmed.
In Ontario, guidelines that determine discrimination in a hiring practice are governed by the Ontario Human Rights Code, which identifies protected characteristics such as age, race and gender. As it stands, financial situation is not a protected ground under the code so employers aren’t breaking the law by taking in into account.
“If you had the same employer saying; ‘Well you’ve got to disclose what religion you practice or what your ethnicity is before we go ahead and interview,’ that’s a different story because it’s a protected ground under the code but economic disadvantage isn’t,” explained Sheikh.
Time for change
While the practice may be picking up speed in Canada, other countries are cracking down on it – the U.S. in particular. In April, New York City joined several states – including California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Oregon, Vermont and Washington – in banning the use of credit checks for employment purposes.
So could something similar soon cross the border? Sheikh says there’s still a long way to go but it’s not entirely unlikely.
“I think there is a lot of dialogue that needs to take place before something like that happens,” she said, before adding; “Do I think that that sort of discussion is going to take place in Ontario? – It’s probably going to happen soon.”
Watch Muneeza Sheikh’s full interview here.
More like this:
Snoop Dogg under fire for “creepy” workplace comments
Disfigured applicants face tougher challenge
Communications Department executives slammed – for lack of communication