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Unemployment Discrimination: Who's Afraid To Hire The Jobless?

First Posted: 08/11/11 09:42 AM ET Updated: 10/11/11 06:12 AM ET

Unemployment Line

WASHINGTON -- Job advertisements that require applicants to be "currently employed" are easy to find online. Yet attempts to trace the origins of such discriminatory job ads yield plenty of "It wasn't me" responses from the companies involved.

Many of the businesses insist they don't want to screen out the unemployed and blame the discriminatory language on the middlemen directly responsible for placing the ads.

Discrimination against people who are out of work is a phenomenon that's been in the news since last year, and lately it has been getting a lot more attention. Democrats in both chambers of Congress now want to make it a federal crime.

A recent report by the National Employment Law Project, a worker advocacy group, called out 73 businesses for asking in job postings that applicants be currently employed. "This perverse catch-22 is deepening our unemployment crisis by arbitrarily foreclosing job opportunities to many who are otherwise qualified for them," NELP said in the report.

The Huffington Post reached out to half the organizations cited in the report, and nineteen responded. While several staffing firms defended the ads, employers disavowed them, saying they'd been written by a person outside the company and that they were completely unaware of the language used.

For instance, a spokesperson for AIELLO Home Services, an HVAC company based in central Connecticut, said his company would never run a job ad that specified applicants should already have jobs.

"If you like to make money and have a flexible schedule, then a challenging and exciting opportunity awaits you," an online job ad for the company said. "And if you are currently employed, believe enough in yourself and your abilities to make a positive career move...you and your family will be glad you did." (The ad also specified: "NO prior industry experience required!")

After HuffPost forwarded the ad to the spokesperson, marketing manager Phil Clement, he looked into it and then said it was a mistake. "The ad is a pick-up from some consultant who has helped us in the past find sales people," said Clement. "The ad is even copyrighted by him. We've just put our address at the bottom and hoped to uncover one or two experienced sales people along the way."

Clement said his company has no policy against hiring the unemployed. "AIELLO simply wants to hire good people. There is absolutely no policy written or 'understood' that we will only recruit from the employed," Clement said, adding that he himself had been out of work for two months when the company hired him this year.

"As my own hiring should testify," Clement said, "AIELLO definitely hires the unemployed."

Some staffing firms, when questioned by reporters, are upfront about their intention to recruit only people who currently have jobs. Martin Recruiting Partners, a restaurant staffing agency based in Georgia, ran ads which stated candidates "Must be currently working & ready to move for the right reason."

George Seed, the company's vice president of operations, defended the policy.

"When my clients hire me, they want people who are motivated to go to work for the right reasons," Seed said. "And if someone is currently employed in a good position, then their motivation to move to a different company would be that the company offers better benefits or offers more growth for advancement, or whatever. They're not people who have to have a job, they're people who want to move for the right reasons."

Seed, along with representatives from four other staffing agencies listed in the NELP report, said many of his clients will only consider job applicants who are presently employed and claimed they had requested the language.

But when contacted by HuffPost, representatives from some of Martin Recruiting's clients denied having a policy against recruiting the unemployed.

"We hire people all the time that are not employed," said a representative from restaurant chain Golden Corral. "I can tell you that it's not part of our criteria that they be currently employed."

A representative from Cracker Barrel also said it has no policy excluding the unemployed from applying -- nor do they request that such language be included in job postings. A spokesperson for Wendy's, another client, said hiring decisions are made by franchisees and are usually done with local candidates.

When asked to comment on the fact that some of his clients said they did not wish to discriminate against the jobless, Seed did not respond.

NELP policy co-director Maurice Emsellem, who worked on the report, said hiring firms may be amplifying the anti-unemployed message. Emsellem said that since these agencies are one step removed from the hiring decision, they may feel less responsibility to remain open to all applicants.

"I don't think these big employers are saying to these big staffing agencies, 'Do me a favor: just don't send me anyone who's unemployed,' because it's contrary to their interest," Emsellem said. "If you're one day, two days unemployed, how does that make you ineligible for the job? It doesn't."

Roughly half of the companies named in the report were staffing agencies, and many of the ones HuffPost talked to passed responsibility for any discrimination to their clients, since the agencies don't make the hiring decisions themselves. Others defended the screening as legitimate.

Cypress Hospitality Group, a Florida-based staffing agency listed in the report, defended the ads it posted. "I don't see how 'current or very recent tenure' is discriminatory," a spokesperson said.

Express Employment Professionals, a staffing agency based out of Oklahoma City, listed an ad for a "reputable manufacturing firm" which sought a "motivated, self-directed full time receptionist" who was "currently employed."

In response to an inquiry about the NELP report, Express Employment said that the ad was not designed to discourage the unemployed, but to recruit people who will take the job seriously.

"We understand the impact the recession has had on today's workplace," the company said in a statement. "It has always been, and will always be, in our best interest to recruit from the unemployed, underemployed, or those looking for new opportunities. Unfortunately, some people mistakenly view job opportunities with staffing companies as short-term or temporary in nature. The ad in question was meant to define the job as long term. It was not intended to discourage unemployed job seekers."

Three companies said the ads cited by NELP were six months to a year old, but NELP said its review happened during a four-week period in March and April of 2011.

Several non-staffing companies named in the report disavowed the ads completely.

"We have no knowledge of the language [in the job postings]," said a representative for Allstate Insurance in Huntsville, Ala. "Perhaps for a part-time position, we have no problem hiring unemployed people. We actually receive state support to hire the unemployed."

Lakeshore Technical College, whose ad for a teaching job in Cleveland, Wis. called for a "currently employed" applicant, said that campus police officer was the only position for which they would require someone to be currently employed. Human resources director Kathy Kotajarvi explained that this is because of a policy with the local sheriff's department.

"The reason we said that is all our campus police have to be currently certified and employed by our local county sheriff's department," Kotajarvi said. "The sheriff has to certify them, and if they're not currently employed he will not certify them."

Lakeshore Technical College has a large number of unemployed workers who enroll in classes there trying to get retrained. Kotajarvi also said she knows they've hired several people who were unemployed in recent months.

"We hire unemployed persons for student help positions. We serve the dislocated workers, we understand what their needs are," Kotajarvi said. "We would never discriminate against anyone who's unemployed."

The report cited a Craigslist ad for Knight Transportation, a truckload company, that said candidates should be "currently employed" if they did not meet other background and experience criteria, such as 12 months of on-the-road experience in the past five years. A spokesman for Knight told HuffPost they consider all applicants on a case-by-case basis and that current employment is not a requirement.

Though the practice of restricting hiring to only those who are currently employed is legal under federal law, a NELP-commissioned survey, conducted last month by polling firm Hart Research Associates, found that 80 percent of of respondents felt discriminating against the unemployed was "very unfair. Ten percent called it "somewhat unfair."

The survey also found that 63 percent of respondents would support a law "making it illegal for companies to refuse to hire or consider a qualified job applicant solely because the person is currently unemployed."

Unlike race or gender, unemployment is not a protected status in most of the country because it has the ability to change. Helen Norton, associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Law, testified earlier this year before the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that discriminating by employment status would only be illegal if it is done to screen out a group like older workers, workers with disabilities, or minorities.

Yet at that same hearing, William Spriggs, assistant secretary for policy at the U.S. Department of Labor, pointed out that because blacks and Latinos have a higher unemployment rate, discrimination against the unemployed could disproportionately affect those groups.

"When employers exclude the unemployed from the applicant pool, they are likely to be excluding Latinos and African-Americans," Spriggs said.

In April, it became illegal in the state of New Jersey to use language in ads that discriminated against unemployed people, though lawmakers did not explicitly ban the practice of refusing to hire those who are jobless.

On July 12, Reps. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Henry Johnson, Jr. (D-Ga.) introduced the Fair Employment Opportunity Act of 2011. The legislation, if enacted, would prohibit employers and employment agencies from refusing to consider job applicants solely because they are unemployed. (Since that sort of discrimination is difficult to prove, employers would likely retain the ability to discriminate against the jobless, at least covertly.) Sens. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) introduced the same bill in the Senate last week.

"Losing your job through no fault of your own should never disqualify you from finding a new job," Gillibrand said.

Frankel Staffing, Entry Level Paralegal, Raleigh, N.C.
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Frankel denied having an ad stating the unemployment need not apply. "That was not us, we never had an ad like that," they told HuffPost. "If we did have an ad, that would've been for one of our clients and not for us."
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Click HERE to download a PDF of NELP's report.

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WASHINGTON -- Job advertisements that require applicants to be "currently employed" are easy to find online. Yet attempts to trace the origins of such discriminatory job ads yield plenty of "It wasn't...
WASHINGTON -- Job advertisements that require applicants to be "currently employed" are easy to find online. Yet attempts to trace the origins of such discriminatory job ads yield plenty of "It wasn't...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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hypnotoad72 12:56 PM on 08/11/2011
Oh, that's great.

Employed in the same field?  Or different fields?  Not hard to guess, especially given the number of fields becoming obsolete or discarded outright.

Those studying for work in other fields...

End ALL corporate entitlements now.  Tax cuts, tax benefits, BAILOUTS because too many employers pulls this shtick leaving the WORKERS out to dry, and everything  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Republican No More
I would like to nominate my dog...she's smarter...
08:11 AM on 08/27/2011
(continued)...
OK GOPers, get those arrows, rocks, and bronx cheers ready... this is why a resurrection of a WPA type organization makes sense. There is a great deal of work to be done in this country and we have a surplus in the workforce of people with diverse talents that could be used to generate wealth for this nation. Yes wealth, not money. Not motivated by profit, but by benefit to the public. I have seen the clouds gathering on the horizon... this will happen if a GOP candidate is elected. The GOP will suddenly get out of the way and work on fixing these problems and take credit for them. This is why it is time that if the progressives want to "progress" they must continue to force the issue publicly to demonstrate to the people that this has become about blame and power for the GOP. It has become like children who broke the lamp and deny it by blaming their sibling... what do they have to lose? Either the other one gets blamed or they both get punished... unfortunately it is our population and the economy that absorbs the punishment. Make no mistake. It is that simple. Have not the GOP told you that is exactly their plan for nearly 3 years now? Listen and they do tell us what their plans are, over and over...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Republican No More
I would like to nominate my dog...she's smarter...
08:10 AM on 08/27/2011
This is wrong but I don't see how you can legislate choice. Should we make a list of all the unemployed and length of unemployment and force companies to hire them first? I just don't see how this could be enforced. It stinks but I don't know that this is a solution. Maybe it can be incentivized again but that would be prone to fraud. Many companies have sought to hire handicapped and disabled employees doing menial work but that often requires a benevolence that is not often found in todays society. (continued below)....
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tbeals46
Normal is only the average of everyone's weirdness
06:31 PM on 09/30/2011
They're not saying that the unemployed should be hired first, that is not the idea. What they're saying is that the unemployed, if they're otherwise qualified for the job, should have the same chance at getting the job as someone who's currently working.
10:34 PM on 08/26/2011
Well how about age discrimination as well, there are laws
About that as well, but Local, State,as well as Federal Governments
Discriminate against age all the time. If your older than 35 your screwed
Trying to get one of those JOBS. Make the Government LIVE by the
Same RULES they Impose on US.
11:31 AM on 08/26/2011
Even though companies and outside people who write these employment ads claim that they do not discriminate against the unemployed, and that it is not their policy, it is quite apparent that this blatant attitude towards not hiring the unemployed now exists!
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onelobo53
Finding Facts, not believing Rhetoric
07:27 AM on 08/20/2011
The ones who are being discriminated against the most is the Baby Boomers" we graduated High School, and went to work, to fill the job needs at the time. Most of these jobs were blue collar, but it was a living and still was the American Dream. Now these jobs have been eliminated or downsized, leaving millions on the unemployment lines.
Since the loss of these jobs, finding work has been impossible to get hired, due to the requirement of the requirement of attending college.
This is nothing short of age discrimination, to weed out the elder but not retired.
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mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
11:53 PM on 08/15/2011
With so many people unemployed for so long Companies who are hiring need to give priority to hiring the unemployed. There are so many out of work that it should be easy for them to find applicants who may be overqualified for the vacant position but will GLADLY accept the job as it is better than the alternatives such as: starving, accumulation of debt, being evicted for lack of ability to pay the rent or many other negative and revolting consequences.
03:37 PM on 08/26/2011
Very well said MudShark, I agree with you 100%, my company was taken over by an other company and worked in their European division and of course they didn't want a European division and after spending almost 9 yrs working for them I'm back here and I can't find anything even close to my previous job experience and I could offer a company so much if they hired me but it's tought out there, I never in a million yrs thought I would be out of work for this long and it's getting bad.
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bellaluna30
One tired Mama of a VERY active toddler!
10:18 PM on 08/15/2011
No one is more "motivated" than a person who needs to keep a roof over their family's head and food on the table.

Shame on all of them. There is no excuse for this. A lot of people have been unemployed for quite some time, due to this economy. It's not a reflection on them.

But, of course, it's "no one's fault" these practises/ads exist. Try possessing some of the qualities you want in an employee: accountability, personal responsibility, and diligence.
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Moonspirit48
Progressive Homeschooler
11:26 PM on 08/15/2011
F/F bellaluna
07:45 PM on 08/15/2011
This is just another example of why reputable companies do their own hiring. Staffing firms & recruiters have gone from viable service providers to the death of your workforce. In my industry, technical recruiters reproduce like rabbits. They seem to get worse daily. I discontinued using these services and hired myself an HR Manager. The tech recruiters got worse and worse, soon they were unable to provide good results. And when I learned about how they were treating applicants, I pulled the plug. Good companies do their own hiring.
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oxjr
07:28 PM on 08/15/2011
Having a job is not exactly the best way to gauge a future hire. Lots of talented people quit, get fired, or laid off every day and go on to be star employees at the next job. A good recruiter knows this and wants as many resumes as possible. Those resumes are shortlisted by experiences, and then the first interviewer should be able to tell if the 'fit' is right - and disregard the persons current employment status.
12:26 PM on 08/14/2011
In response to ads like these, we created a website where employers who WILL hire the unemployed and consider them in their hiring process - ReEmployAmerica.com. We also started a blog and we're writing about these kinds of ads as well. http://reemployamerica.com/blog
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Moonspirit48
Progressive Homeschooler
11:27 PM on 08/15/2011
Thank you for doing this. F/F
11:19 AM on 08/14/2011
The purpose of staffing agencies is to hire the unemployed unless the job is a direct hire. It appears you misread the first ad..."Junior level Paralegals currently employed in a non-litigation field (corporate/transactional)" They ARE asking for someone currently employed in a non-litigation field. Also, the quote from "someone" at the company doesn't sound professional. If the other ads you cite are anything like this one, you are misinforming your readers.
03:42 PM on 08/26/2011
Your point is well taken, I agree with you, this was not the same as not hiring the unemployed, not by a long shot and to use it as an example of this is just showing how the extent that the writers from the HP will go to make a point, their are many good example of this and they should not have used this one, good pick up.
04:06 PM on 08/13/2011
Such discrimination will be very entertaining when it leads to their company's demise. The firings and layoffs were composed not only of their less productive employees, but also those that simply annoyed them. That last group is the means of their undoing. Companies still hire and maintain personnel based on whether they like and get along with people, a main component of this is simple compliance, no matter what. A good chunk of those that rub them the wrong way simply have a dissenting view, and many times it is the right view which makes it hard for them to give that up.
Case in point, there's no acceptance of competent bankers on Wall Street. Competent bankers are forced to take positions at smaller regional and local banks. You can recognize them as they are the few banks that are still actually solvent and are not playing "extend and pretend".
Other evidence are the plagues of ISO 900x, blackbelt, kanban, etc. It is ok to take elements of such programs as they fit your organization, but to run a business based on a completely canned system kills any innovation and actually works against quality and efficiency. It's a case of social pressure and uniform documentation taking precedence over profits, best business practices and most times common sense. With business going bureaucratic and government sold to the highest bidder, there's little hope of recovery until we've scraped absolute bottom.
alunsulen
Digging the liberal hatred!
11:09 AM on 08/14/2011
It is more likely to lead to the lib's demise than the company's :P
04:56 PM on 08/14/2011
lib? If you mean liberal by that, you could not be more off the mark.
Anyway, when companies are forced to really get efficient to maintain profits in a shrinking economy, those that ditch the social club aspect and go for output per employee are those that are going to survive. The demise part comes when competitors scoop them up. I worked for a company and we got prototypes down to between same day and 3 weeks lead depending on how much specialized tooling was required. This was a 3 - 6 month improvement over competitors that did everything by the book. Documentation was as needed and only needed signed off by one person. That is the type of efficiency that will eat competitors for lunch. Sadly, when this plant started to really up production and profits it attracted the attention of the head corporate office. Now this plant went "corporate" and it's a backwards, stagnant money losing endeavor that involves a lot of afternoon golf. Glad I got out before it's death/zombification really got going, would have been too sad to watch.
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mochaview
Big Money Talks Too Much...OCCUPY!
01:29 PM on 08/13/2011
I have been told this to my face a few times. Employers only want people who are currently employed. I was only called into several agencies because of past employers/well known companies on my resume. They tell me they juat wanted to "take a look at me and collect resumes for right now". For those in NYC there is an agency right by Grand Central that will tell you this and another at 675 3rd ave was owning up to it for awhile but now they keep their mouths shut.
99ers are walking around, maxed out of unemployment insurance,lucky to have internet,about to give up cellphones and CREDIT IN THE TOILET. One agency told me to say that I should find a relative who owns a business and say that I'm currently working for them. Wish I had that connection cause I'd do it and help others out too. It'd be the tiniest company with 1000 employees! THEY ARE DISCRIMINATING AGAINST US AND IT'S TIME FOR US TO HIT THE STREETS, JAM REPS/SENATORS PHONE LINES/WEBSITES AND START PROTESTING.
I propose a campaign of nagging. Day in, day out all the corporations hear is us nag them about doing the right thing. Nag, nag, nag. All of us who have phone/web access should nag them also. We need to grab pitchforks, torches, buckets of tar and bags of feathers and go after not only those in DC but all the corp headquarters. Power TO THE PEOPLE!
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main945
01:59 PM on 08/13/2011
i emailed McCain and Kyl several times in past years about the jobs situation for people who had their jobs outsourcedand were discriminated against because they were not currently working. Well that was a black hole. The people in our government could care less about the people they represent because they only suck up to the corporations to get their kick backs for doing their bidding against us. Nagging won't work, we need to get together and physicly be in their face. Vote them out, that takes their power and money away, the only thing they care about.
06:48 PM on 08/13/2011
DO YOU REALLY THINK THAT YOUR VOTE COUNTS AND THAT THERE IS A REP AND DEM TWO PARTY SYSTEM? JUST WHAT PLANET DO YOU LIVE ON? THERE HASN'T BEEN A TWO PARTY SYATEM FOR MANY YEARS. AND GOOD LUCK WITH THAT VOTE.

JSDIVARCO
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mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
12:05 AM on 08/16/2011
I'm employed but I can empathize with what you're going through having "been there" in the past. However if you "nag" them don't use your real name as nagging may only antagonize them and put you on a blacklist, you need to be careful.
12:18 PM on 08/13/2011
While choosing to consider only the employed is an unfortunate practice and one that I, as a recruiter, do not condone, it is within the rights of businesses to hire and fire whoever they choose.

Businesses are businesses, not charities. Employers want the highest chance of a return on their investment in new employees and many assume that those who currently are employed have proven through their continued employment that they are worth something to somebody and hence, less risky than somebody who may or may not have been laid off for performance reasons.

Let's face it. With current HR laws it's nearly impossible to call up somebody's former workplace and get the reason why thy were let-go. Did they quit on their own? Was there a budget gap? Was the employee involved in a compliance violation? Since we can't get these quesitons answered it's no surprised employers are more cautious with people that have gaps in their resumes. We haven't even begun to take into account job skill deterioration when a worker is out of the market.
Complared to that, seeing somebody who's still working in good standing and hasn't begun to lose their skillset and/or routine is much more appleaing.
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excaderesdesire
I have spread my dreams beneath your feet...
12:43 PM on 08/13/2011
We get it it's one of those things that are like peer pressure. Either your working or your not. If your working then uncle sam wants you if you are not working then you are not one of the favorite crowd get lost.
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lisalulu
I stand for Planned Parenthood.
10:47 AM on 08/14/2011
As a former hiring mgr for over 20 years....the key is fit. If a person has the skills and job record, the fact that the applicant is not currently working never crossed my mind.

I think much of this is actually illegal age discrimination, veiled in rationales you present.
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Nino Bookman
04:50 PM on 08/15/2011
Your "outdated" - hope you never lose your job or you'll be replaced by a recent college grad for half the pay. Companies have been discriminating for years. I tried to hire a qualified applicant for a job in the technical publications department for a defense company contractor - I was told "she was too heavy." I fought it but had to tell her no. The company said they could block her employment because she was overweight. I was astounded. I have my own business now and happy I don't have to live under the ridiculous corporate thumb!
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excaderesdesire
I have spread my dreams beneath your feet...
12:17 PM on 08/13/2011
Here is another one for pending approval, we do need to censor the opinions of those who oppose the masses who wish to inflict their tyranny upon others who have nothing left to fight with or for...