Ban the Box Policies – California
California’s ban-the-box law prohibits public sector employers from inquiring into an applicant's criminal history until the candidate is deemed qualified to meet the minimum requirements of the position. California employers with at least five employees, regardless of those employees’ work location, cannot use criminal history in employment decisions if doing so would adversely affect candidates, and
- the employer cannot prove such use is job-related and consistent with business necessity; or
- the screening and hiring policy must be the absolute least discriminatory method for achieving the business need.
San Francisco's Fair Chance Ordinance, which applies to all city businesses with five or more employees, prohibits employers from asking about criminal records until after making a conditional offer of employment.
Employers are also forbidden from considering:
- An arrest not leading to a conviction, except for unresolved arrests
- Participation in a diversion or deferral of judgment program
- A conviction that has been dismissed, expunged, otherwise invalidated, or inoperative
- A conviction in the juvenile justice system
- An offense other than a felony or misdemeanor, such as an infraction
- A conviction more than seven years old (unless the position being considered supervises minors or dependent adults).
The Los Angeles Fair Chance Initiative for Hiring Ordinance (FCIHO) applies to private employers and city contractors in the City of Los Angeles who have at least 10 employees. Under FCIHO, employers:
- Cannot include any inquiries into a candidate’s criminal history in job applications or postings
- Cannot inquire about a candidate’s criminal history until after a conditional offer of employment is made
- Conduct a written assessment linking specific aspects of the candidate’s criminal history with risks specific to the job being sought.
- Give a candidate an opportunity for the Fair Chance Process if an offer of employment is withdrawn due to criminal history
- Wait at least five business days before taking adverse action or filling the job.
Other local ban-the-box laws include: the county government of Alameda and Santa Clara and the city governments in Berkeley, Carson, Compton, East Palo Alto, Oakland, Pasadena, Richmond and Sacramento.