BMW Fired and Denied Hire to Class of Employees Who Worked Successfully for Years; Dollar General Disproportionately Excluded African Americans From Hire
June 11, 2013
WASHINGTON
— A BMW manufacturing facility in South Carolina, and the largest
small-box discount retailer in the United States violated Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act by implementing and utilizing a criminal background
policy that resulted in employees being fired and others being screened
out for employment, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
alleged in two lawsuits filed today.
The
EEOC’s Charlotte district office filed suit in U.S. District Court of
South Carolina, Spartanburg Division against BMW Manufacturing Co., LLC,
and a separate suit was filed in Chicago against Dolgencorp, doing
business as Dollar General.
In
the suit against BMW, the EEOC alleges that BMW disproportionately
screened out African Americans from jobs, and that the policy is not job
related and consistent with business necessity. The claimants were
employees of UTi Integrated Logistics, Inc. (“UTi”), which provided
logistic services to BMW at the South Carolina facility. The logistics
services included warehouse and distribution assistance, transportation
services and manufacturing support.
Since
1994, BMW has had a criminal conviction policy that denies facility
access to BMW employees and employees of contractors with certain
criminal convictions. However, when UTi assigned the claimants to work
at the BMW facility, UTi screened the employees according to UTi’s
criminal conviction policy. UTi’s criminal background check limited
review to convictions within the prior seven years. BMW’s policy has no
time limit with regard to convictions. The policy is a blanket exclusion
without any individualized assessment of the nature and gravity of the
crimes, the ages of the convictions, or the nature of the claimants’
respective positions.
In
2008, UTi ended its contract with BMW. During a transitional period,
UTi employees were informed of the need to re-apply with the new
contractor to retain their positions in the BMW warehouse. As
part of the application process, BMW directed the new contractor to
perform new criminal background checks on every current UTi employee
applying for transition of employment. The new contractor subsequently
discovered that several UTi employees had criminal convictions in
violation of BMW’s criminal conviction policy. As a result, those
employees were told that they no longer met the criteria for working at
the BMW facility and were subsequently terminated and denied rehire as
employees of the new contractor, despite the fact that many of the
employees had worked at the BMW facility for years.
In Illinois, the Chicago office of the EEOC filed a nationwide lawsuit based on discrimination charges filed by two rejected black applicants.
That lawsuit charges that Dollar General conditions all of its job
offers on criminal background checks, which results in a disparate
impact against blacks. Dollar
General operates 10,000 stores in 40 states, plus 11 distribution
centers. Ninety percent of all Dollar General employees are store clerks
who are both stockers and cashiers at the stores.
According
to the EEOC, one of the applicants who had filed a charge with EEOC was
given a conditional employment offer, although she had disclosed a
six-year-old conviction for possession of a controlled substance. Her application also showed that she had previously worked for another discount retailer as a cashier-stocker for four years. Nevertheless,
her job offer was allegedly revoked because Dollar General’s practice
was to use her type of conviction as a disqualification factor for 10
years.
The
other applicant who filed an EEOC charge was fired by Dollar General
although, according to the EEOC, the conviction records check report
about her was wrong – she did not have the felony conviction attributed
to her. The EEOC said that
although she advised the Dollar General store manager of the mistake in
the report, the company did not reverse its decision and her firing
stood.
“Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination against
job applicants and employees on account of their race," said EEOC Chair
Jacqueline A. Berrien. "Since
issuing its first written policy guidance in the 1980s regarding the use
of arrest and conviction records in employment decisions, the EEOC has
advised employers that under certain circumstances, their use of that
information to deny employment opportunities could be at odds with Title
VII.”
“The
Commission is committed to using public education and informal
resolution to address discriminatory hiring practices," said David
Lopez, EEOC General Counsel. "When
these methods are unsuccessful, the Commission will, if necessary, seek
redress from the federal courts and ensure equal opportunity for all. This is the latest in a series of systemic cases the Commission has filed to challenge unlawful hiring practices."
Both
lawsuits were brought under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race and national origin
as well as retaliation. The EEOC
will assert claims of disparate impact, in both cases, against African
Americans. The EEOC filed suit in each instance after attempting to
resolve the matter through settlement. In
all, the Commission will seek back pay, as well as injunctive relief to
prevent future discrimination of employees and applicants.
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