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What's behind the highly unusual move to block Minnesota officials from investigating ICE shooting; Report: WA State driver data still flows to ICE; Amazon data centers worsen nitrate pollution in eastern OR; Child development experts lament new Lego tech-filled Smart Bricks.

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The nation is divided by a citizen's killing by an ICE officer, a group of Senate Republicans buck Trump on a Venezuela war powers vote and the House votes to extend ACA insurance subsidies.

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Debt collectors may soon be knocking on doors in Kentucky over unpaid utility bills, a new Colorado law could help homeowners facing high property insurance due to wildfire risk, and after deadly flooding, Texas plans a new warning system.

In Tight Labor Market, Some Major Companies to Drop Criminal Check

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Monday, March 18, 2019   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Leading U.S. companies and trade groups have committed to welcome more new hires with criminal backgrounds. These employers represent more than half the U.S. workforce.

Nearly 1-in-3 American adults may have some kind of criminal record. But Johnny Taylor Jr., president and CEO at the Society for Human Resource Management, said employers are looking to access the talent pool of more than a half-million people re-entering society each year.

"And the person who is recently returning to society - who wants to stay out of jail, out of prison - has an opportunity to become a productive, tax-paying citizen,” Taylor said. “So it is a win, win, win."

Because people with jobs are far less likely to return to prison, Taylor said taxpayers also could save the tens of thousands of dollars each year it costs to incarcerate a single person. Some employers have shied away from hiring people with criminal backgrounds because of concerns about increased liability and work-related crimes.

West Virginia lawmakers have taken several steps to help reformed nonviolent offenders get work, including legislation just approved to make it easier to expunge nonviolent criminal records. And Taylor said he's hopeful that the pledge taken by IBM, Walmart, the National Restaurant Association, National Retail Association and U.S. Chamber of Commerce will convince more employers to give workers a second chance.

"All of the research tells us that the formerly incarcerated do not commit violent crimes, or more workplace-related crimes, than people who have no criminal background,” he said.

According to a recent poll, more than 80 percent of managers say they value workers with criminal records as much as or more than workers with clean records. The overall incarceration rate in the U.S. is 700 per 100,000 people. In France, by comparison, just 100 people per 100,000 are in the criminal justice system.


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