The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is federal regulation enacted to protect consumer information and designates how that information is allowed to be used by consumer reporting agencies (CRA). The increasingly complex legislation has been amended several times since its inception in 1970 and is still up to interpretation and enforcement by the Federal Trade Commission. Section 613 of the FCRA has been under question by some employers vigilant to follow the law and mitigate the risk of litigation.
The FCRA specifies procedures used to ensure confidentiality, privacy, accuracy, and relevancy of information collected about consumers. In relation to employment, sections of the FCRA are used to define terms such as:
The challenge with section 613 of the FCRA is the defined process for consumer reporting agencies if there was a public record of information that would likely adversely affect a consumer's ability to obtain employment. The CRA has two options when adverse information is found:
When assessing the current litigious environment, especially in relation to FCRA class action and employment, employers are left wondering which of these processes their background screening company follows; Notification by letter, verification of accurate information, or both?
Time and cost is typically a factor when employers need background checks. When an employer relies on CRAs promising "cheap" or "instant background checks", they may be unable to verify the accuracy or validity of the "database" information provided. Since they cannot ensure the accuracy, employers run the risk of violating section 613 if they do not ensure their background screening company is notifying consumers of the negative information.
The timing of notification of the consumer is also ambiguously stated in section 613 (a)(1) as "at the time such public record information is reported to the user of such consumer report, notify the consumer..." Employers have been taken to court for notifying the consumer a day later than the party requesting the report.
A 613 Letter is the notice the CRA sends to the applicant if a potentially negative item was discovered in their background screening report.
This letter is in lieu of requiring court searches to verify the record at the source (county court, DMV, etc.). Although VeriFirst recommends our clients conduct direct-from-the-source background checks, it can delay the turnaround time and increase the cost if a researcher is required to verify information before releasing it to the client. 613 Letters are typically sent on “database” searches, since they are not considered the most accurate and up-to-date source.
With regards to timing and mitigating the risk of litigation to the employer, VeriFirst provides a bonus service to our clients. When a client runs a database background check, VeriFirst will send a 613 Letter free of charge to the applicant’s address and hold screening results till notification is sent. Once the letter is post-marked (sent), we will release the records to the employer.
Often these records don’t matter nor do they factor into the employer's decision, therefore it is not considered an adverse action notice. A 613 Letter is more of a notification to the applicant that information was discovered during a background check and that information could possibly have a negative impact on their ability to obtain employment. In essence, this letter serves as a "heads-up" notification to the applicant / consumer.