Title: NAPBS
1NAPBS
National Association of Professional Background
Screenerswww.napbs.com Click on presentation
to advance to the next slide
2What is Background Screening?
3Why Companies Screen
- Avoid violence in the workplace
- 10 of job applicants have a criminal record
- Get the right person for the job
- 40 of resumes contain material lies or omissions
about education, past employment, or
qualifications - Reduce costs associated with bad hiring
- Lawsuits, theft, fraud, embezzlement
- Turnover, bad publicity, lost customers
4Typical Screens
- Basic Employment Screens
- SSN Verification Trace
- Criminal Records Search
- Driving Records
- Employment Verification
- Drug Test
- Expanded Employment
- Civil Records Search
- Education Verification
- Reference Check
- Special Employment
- International Criminal
- Bankruptcy Records
- Professional License
- OIG, Nurse Abuse, etc.
- Credit History
- Basic Tenant Screens
- SSN Verification Trace
- Criminal Records
- Credit History
5The Process
- Subject signs an FCRA release form, authorizing
screening - Employer provides release form and subject data
to screening agency - Screening Agency conducts investigation according
to federal, state, local laws - Results provided to Employer, usually within 72
hours - Employer shares results with subject, as required
by law
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6The Advantages of Screening
- Discourage applicants with something to hide or a
reason to falsify credentials
- Eliminate uncertainty in the hiring process by
basing decisions on hard information - Demonstrate Due Diligence in the hiring process,
promoting safety in the workplace - Encourage open communication and honesty on the
part of the Applicant - Excellent return on a small investment
7What is NAPBS?
8Who We Are
- An association of 300 companies engaged in
pre-employment and tenant screening - Regular members
- Pre-employment Screening Agencies
- Tenant Screening Agencies
- Affiliate members
- Professional Service Providers (e.g. insurance,
legal, consulting) - Human Resource Professionals
- Associate members
- Public Record Retrievers
- Technology and Data Providers
9Why We Exist
- Establish and promote ethical business standards
and practices - Promote compliance with the Fair Credit Reporting
Act (FCRA) - Foster awareness of issues related to consumer
protection and privacy rights - Advocate industry needs to local, state, and
federal lawmakers - Provide an education forum for members
10How We Operate
- Board of Directors
- Elected annually
- Active Committees
- Ethics and Accreditation
- Government Relations
- Public Awareness and Communication
- Others Finance, Membership, Provider, Resource
Library - Membership Requirements
- Commitment to abide by NAPBS code of ethics
11The History of Background Screening
12Humble Beginnings
- The 1980s . . .
- Forward thinking Human Resource departments use
Private Investigators to check on applicants - No organized network of public record retrievers
- Long turn-around times, expensive research
- The early 1990s . . .
- Negligent Hiring lawsuits begin to impact the
bottom line of major corporations - Pre-employment screening becomes a specialty, and
dedicated agencies begin to grow
13A Decade of Growth
NAPBS founded with 200 members 2003
FCRA becomes main law governing the industry 1997
Workplace violence dominates the headlines 1999
9/11 increases public awareness CA-1786
enacted 2001
Public Record Retriever Network organized 1995
1998 The Internet begins to impact the industry
2002 NAPBS proposed by leaders at industry
conference
1996 Half of all HR professionals use screening
to some extent
2000 Resume fraud becomes a major news story
1994 Driver's Privacy Protection Act becomes law
- More and more employers awaken to the high cost
of not screening applicants - Dedicated Pre-employment screening agencies
replace traditional Private Investigators as the
main supplier - NAPBS emerges based on desire to address common
needs within the industry
14Today
- SHRM survey reports that 80 of HR professionals
use pre-employment screening - Total Industry Revenue 4 Billion
- Public Record Retrievers (2,000)
- Small and Mid-size screening firms (1,000)
- Large screening firms, some public (50)
- Software and Data providers (30)
- NAPBS
- Serves a rapidly expanding industry that fills
critical needs in a security conscious economy - Continually improving standards and best practices
15The Legal Environment
16FCRA Fair Credit Reporting Act
- The Gold Standard for protection of consumer
rights - Applicant must expressly authorize screen
- Applicant must be given notice before any
negative information is used against them - Screening agency must investigate applicant
claims that report is inaccurate or incomplete - Report may only be used for a permissible purpose
(e.g. Employment or Tenant screen) - Numerous state laws augment the FCRA
17Privacy and Identity Theft
- Screening may uncover cases of identity theft,
providing a benefit to the applicant - Screens are restricted to relevant data about the
applicants public life - Strict precautions are taken to protect the
confidentiality of all reports - Protection of privacy and adherence to law is
central to NAPBS Code of Conduct
18Screening and the EEOC
- Screening agency works to help employers use data
correctly, in accordance with Equal Employment
Opportunity Laws - Information used to determine eligibility for
employment must be job related - A criminal record cannot be used to automatically
disqualify an applicant, unless there is a
business justification
19The Future of the Industry
20Trends in Screening
- Growing public awareness and acceptance due to
terrorism concerns - Expanding role of background screening-- tenants,
contractors, team coaches, etc. - More comprehensive screenings, requiring more
thorough research - Screening processes integrating with other Human
Resource systems - Even greater emphasis on legal compliance
21NAPBS Charter for the Future
- Help employers improve hiring standards in
accordance with evolving state and federal law  - Help maintain the balance between the right to a
safe workplace and the right to individual
privacy - Help employers avoid legal exposure for negligent
hiring and decrease violence in the workplace - Augment the homeland security effort, by acting
as a highly regulated private sector version of
law enforcement - Help to improve the productivity of American
business by enabling better hiring decisions and
lowering the costs of employee turnover. Â