Credit Scores
foxfeathers
2 Posts
This question is for all the bankers--for employment, how do you handle credit scores on prospective employees? Is the score part of your overall information on the candidate or is the score a determining factor? We pull credit scores on all prospects as a final qualification and determing factor and there has been a lot of discussion about this process. I know aobut bankruptcy and how that is supposed to be treated as far as employment and I do get the prospects to sign a sepaarate form and give them a copy of the Fair Credit Reporting Act.
I just would like to compare processes with other HR folks as to how you use credit scores or if you do.
I just would like to compare processes with other HR folks as to how you use credit scores or if you do.
Comments
**When we do for others what they should do for themselves, we disempower them.**
that the stress of financial burdens can be too tempting to some people who are handling money and that the bank should not have an employee who they wouldn't loan money to. And so the argument goes!
I just bought a house recently, so I'm one of those weird folks (I think it's weird, because a lot of folks I chat with don't seem to know theirs) that actually knows my credit score. Right after buying my house, do you know that my credit score dropped 21 points? Apparently it had to deal with taking a lot of credit out (mortgage) & no payments had as of yet shown up. Fortunately, I just recently looked it up & it went up 12 points from what it was when I was first "pre-approved" for the home loan. Good news, but if you consider how it dipped, then you could say it went up 33 points in about 5 months. Geez, I wonder what would have happened if I had been applying for a job at that time? Sure, I could probably explain it away, but there are so many factors involved with the score - to consider it in regards to hiring someone seems pretty silly. First and foremost, the score changes over time as it's really only a "snapshot" at the point in time it was requested - 5 months ago it could have been higher or lower. Also, the score is made up of:
35% Payment history
15% Length of Credit History
10% New Credit
10% Types of Credit used
30% Amounts Owed
So, my question is: how do you know if the reason the score is low is due to the amount that's owed or their payment history or a combo of length of credit history/new credit sought or the types of credit used? The answer is, you don't. Take the reverse, you hire someone & check their history 5 months from now & it goes down - fire them?
Criminal background checks, yes, do them. Pull a credit report, okay, if you have to. Base hiring decisions on a "snap shot" credit score - no way.
ps - my info can be found at this website:
[url]http://www.myfico.com/myfico/CreditCentral.asp?fire=1[/url]
No we are not a banking institution, but bonding is the best course of action. At one point I had $43,000.00 worth of bad debt and I never knew until I had the FBI call me on a charge. Needless to say I went to work on the situation and was blown away with what was allowed to be charged against my name and social security number, followed by the business world logging onto the credit bureaus with bad credit information.
Sorry for using your post to vent, but it still hurts!
PORK
**When we do for others what they should do for themselves, we disempower them.**
Borrow money to put children through college? You're the same loser with a judgement against him or her for driving without car insurance. The credit agencies, with all their inefficiencies have alot of power in our lives. The reports I request have so many errors that it's overwhelming! My daughter is my spouse, numerous permutations of my address and employment, I don't know where to begin to correct this stuff.
There was another thread about this. I think I got flamed by one person when I said that being in financial difficulty does not make a dishonest person out of an honest one. Naive, I guess.
The bottom line is do your homework and then you will be in a better position to advise your bank management on what they should do to comply with the act and protect the bank (balance!).
Good luck...
If someone I want to hire has bad credit, I call them and ask... why is this on your credit report? I actually had one lady tell me she moved from West Virginia to Ohio, so she didn't have to pay the utility bills from WV that were listed as collection items on her report. Yes, they were here bills, but she felt no obligation to pay them...
You can get a lot of insight into the integrity of the individual.