Call for employers to stop discriminating against ex-offenders

-

shutterstock_125702075

Have you ever noticed the tick box on job application forms asking ‘Do you have any unspent criminal convictions? Yes or no’? If you’d been fined £300 for a driving offence by a court, you’d have to tick that box for 5 years. For a prison sentence of over 2.5 years, you’d have to tick that box for the rest of your life. If you had to tick ‘yes’, would you feel that your potential to be a good employee, your passion and skills for the job shine through? When 9.2 million people in the UK have a criminal record, this is not a niche issue.

This issue costs our society £11 billion a year.

Over 60% of short-term prisoners re-offend within a year of release, at a cost to business, communities and taxpayers. When research shows that employment reduces offending by 33-50%, it’s in every community’s interest to reduce the barriers to work for people with criminal convictions.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Ex-offenders not only contribute as taxpayers, but contribute as good employees

A diverse, engaged workforce is essential to any business. Removing a default tick box is not about increasing risk or changing job specifications. It’s about benefiting the business by recruiting from a wider pool, only considering criminal convictions where they are relevant to a specific role. Someone with a criminal conviction made a mistake in the past. However, they may also be the best person for the job.

What is Ban the Box?

We believe that a tick box is a blunt instrument for employers to use as a basis to reject candidates who could have the right skills and abilities for the job. Through the Ban the Box campaign, we at Business in the Community are calling on all UK employers to remove the tick box asking whether a candidate has unspent convictions from application forms. We want UK employers to give people a second chance by considering skills and abilities first. Sign this petition to ask UK employers to Ban the Box and change their recruitment process.

The campaign has had success in the USA, led there by the National Employment Law Project. In the city of Minnesota, where the City Council banned the box, 57.4% of applicants with convictions in the last seven years were hired (2007-08), compared to just 5.7% hired before the box was removed (2004-6).

Why is Ban the Box the right thing to ask UK employers to do?

A survey of 300 UK-based employers shows that three quarters admit to using a criminal conviction to discriminate against an applicant. So we know that the majority of employers are missing out on many potential employees who may be put off from applying or are ‘screened out’. Companies like Alliance Boots have already committed to ban the box. They say they want to employ ex-offenders “if they’re the right people for the job.”

Daley, who has had a criminal record since he was a teenager and has secured a trainee position, explains why he is worried about the impact tick box will have on his career: “Any future employer can ask me if I have an unspent conviction and I have to tell them. I think that’s fair enough, they’ll want to know what’s happened and whether I am going to be a risk to their company.

“The problem is that at the moment most employers use the application form to find out about convictions. So the very first thing they know about me is that I have a conviction, not about your interest in the job, or your experience or skills, just the conviction. Once an employer sees that tick box lots of them are already ruling you out.”

Employment plays a major part in reducing levels of re-offending. Taxpayers, communities and employers alike will benefit from giving people with criminal convictions a fair opportunity to compete for employment. Removing the tick box takes away the opportunity for employers to immediately judge an applicant because they have a criminal record. Instead they see their suitability for the role first.

Ban the Box is a first step towards making this happen. Your support for this petition will show employers that now is the time to take that step.

FAQs on how and why businesses should take this action, what we mean by unspent convictions, and why we’re not suggesting changes for roles such as doctors or teachers where full criminal records checks are required. Find out more atwww.bitc.org.uk/banthebox

Tweet your support with #BantheBoxUK

Latest news

Exclusive: London bus drivers’ ‘dignity’ at risk as strikes loom over welfare concerns

London bus drivers raise concerns over fatigue and lack of facilities as potential strikes escalate long-standing welfare issues.

Whistleblowing reports ‘surge by up to 250 percent’ at councils as new rights take effect

Whistleblowing cases are rising across UK councils as stronger workplace protections come into force, though concerns remain about underreporting of serious issues.

Bullying and harassment to become regulatory breaches under new FCA rules

New rules will bring bullying and harassment into regulatory scope, as firms face rising reports of workplace misconduct.

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.
- Advertisement -

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Must read

Leanne Maskell: What HR can do to protect neurodivergent employees from workplace harassment and bullying

The fact that one in five neurodivergent employees experience harassment or bullying at work should ring serious alarm bells.

Mark O’Hara: Right to Work checks are changing: what do you need to know?

If employers fail to observe the new guidelines, or if their policy is non-compliant, they can face severe penalties, warns Mark O'Hara.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you