Thursday, June 19, 2008

Tequila Sunrise


Hi Alyse,

I work for a small advertising firm just outside of Chicago and it's one of those 7 days a week, 80 hours a week type of jobs. I love my job so I don't mind. I finally took some time off last week and decided to head out to Oak Street Beach. I went with a couple of girlfriends, had a couple of tequila's and a GREAT time. Every thing was perfect except for this loser than kept eyeing me, I finally let him buy me a drink and took his number just to get him off my back. I don't think the number made it off the beach. Monday morning, I'm back at work feeling refreshed and ready to go for a meeting with a new client. Alyse, the loser was the client! I was hoping the ground would open up and take me but that didn't happen. He made it a point to tell everyone that we met on the beach and that it must be fate. My boss, the pig, ignored my dirty looks, told the loser I would be working personally with him and said, "whatever you kids do on your own time is your business". I felt like I was being pimped. Please help, this is a big client for the firm and my boss took away my no fraternization policy argument.

Pimped in Chicago, IL


Hey Pimped,

First, I can tell you that things would go a lot smoother if you would stop thinking of him as "the loser" and start thinking of him as "the client". Let him know that while you are flattered by his interest, you have a personal, no fraternization policy with past, present and future clients. That way you leave him with no hope for the future and you let him down because he is a client, not a "loser".

A. Fox
Men are not prisoners of fate, but only prisoners of their own minds. (Franklin D. Roosevelt)

Ask A. Fox is sponsored by Workkrow.com
Your Job References, They're Checking, Why Aren't You?

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Express Yourself

Hi Alyse,

I work in a Hair Salon and it gets REALLY hot especially in the summertime. I'm on my feet all day and I sweat a lot when I get hot. My boss sold the salon to his sister and she came in today, pulled me aside and told me that I'd have to wear a jacket to cover up my tattoos! The reason I became a Hair Stylist is so that I could express myself and help other people express themselves, I got these tattoos before I started working. There's no way I can work in a jacket, how do I tell her no and still keep my job?

Suppressed in Los Angeles, CA


Hey Suppressed,

While you are certainly free to express yourself, you are not free to express yourself in anyway at someone else's business. Since you are not writing the paycheck, you are subject the to rules (that may change) of the business that is writing the check. You have many options but here are two - either get a jacket that you can work in or find a way to be the one writing the checks. Only by writing your own check will you be entitled to express yourself.


A. Fox
Anyone can revolt. It is more difficult silently to obey your own inner promptings, and to
spend our lives finding sincere and fitting means of expression for our temperament and
our gifts. (Georges Rouault)

Ask A. Fox is sponsored by Workkrow.com
Your Job References, They're Checking, Why Aren't You?

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Can you Hear Me Now?


Hi Alyse,

I was ratted out at work by someone who I thought was a friend. I met him at work and he's always been cool. My friend asked me to borrow my cell phone to make a call and of course, I let him use the phone. When he finished his call, he must have pressed the "end" button and saw the pictures I had on my phone. Later that day, I get written up (one more and I will be fired because I already have one write up) for having indecent pictures on my phone. The thing is, it's MY phone! If I want to have adult pictures on my phone, that's my business. I wasn't going around showing the pictures to everybody, I only gave him the phone because he asked. I don't think I should have been written up - What do you think?

Betrayed in Brookings, OR

Hey Betrayed,

Obviously you and your "friend" had a bad connection. What made you think you were friends? Friends are people who are there for you in the good times and the bad, you need to reevaluate your definition of a friend. This individual is your co-worker and might have been offended by the pictures (again you really don't know this friend that well after all). You seem to think that it was inappropriate for you to be written up, what was inappropriate was having those pictures on your phone at work. It is no different than having an adult magazine in your desk at work - not appropriate. Clearly, being written up did not demonstrate to you the error of your ways, hopefully, you can hear me, now.


A. Fox
Never explain, your friends do not need it and your enemies will not believe you anyway.
(Elbert Hubbard)


Ask A. Fox is sponsored by Workkrow.com
Your Job References, They're Checking, Why Aren't You?

Monday, June 9, 2008

Vehicular Assault - Innocent Until Proven Guilty?


Hi Alyse,

I been looking for a job for over a year, I make it past the first interview but it doesn't get past a background check. I checked my references and they were fine and then I checked my background and found out that there were all these charges on there. A year ago I accidentally rolled over someones foot with my car and was charged with Vehicular Assault - I swerved to avoid another car in the mall parking lot and that's how I ended up rolling over her foot. The person who I was avoiding of course drove away and the woman whose foot I ran over conveniently doesn't remember why I swerved. I thought I was innocent until proven guilty so why are these charges on my record? This thing snowballed, the case is pending so I can't get my record expunged - what do I do?

Charged in Austin, TX

Hey Charged,

This is tough, you would have to speak with your attorney about how you can go about removing this information from your record. Unfortunately, the idea that you are Innocent Until Proven Guilty is simply not the reality of the world in which we live. The term is not a codified nor explicit "law" - in the United States the idea behind the presumption of innocence is held to "follow" from the 5th, 6th and 14th Amendments of the Constitution. Even the idea of presumption does not prevent the information from appearing on a background check and being used against you. In addition, charges like "vehicular assault" simply don't read well. When you go into a job interview, if they request that you fill out a form authorizing them to conduct a background check, let them know that you had a car accident a year ago and someone was hurt accidentally - the case is being resolved in court and while you are sure it will be resolved in your favor, they will find information related to the case on your background. Be sure to let them (assuming it is true) that you have no obligations related to this case that will make it difficult for you to complete all the duties the job requires and that you will not need time off because of the case. Find out now what you are going to need to do in order to remove this information from your record so that you can start the process as soon as possible. You might have to go a few more job interviews but you will find greater success being upfront.

A. Fox


When they took the fourth amendment, I was silent because I don't deal drugs. When they took the sixth amendment, I kept quiet because I know I'm innocent. When they took the second amendment, I said nothing because I don't own a gun. Now they've come for the first amendment, and I can't say anything at all. (Tim Freeman)

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Graduate School - To Go or not to go, that is the question


Hey Alyse,

I graduated from college last year with a BA in Communications. I am a little disappointed in my job options and pay and started thinking about going to graduate school either for my Masters or maybe even law school. I still have some college loans I'm paying off and am going to need a combination of scholarships and loans to go to graduate school. I'm kind of scared though about having to pay all that money back - what do you think?

Broke in Lawrenceville, NJ


Hey Broke!

At the risk of sounding like Suze Orman, let's take a look at the numbers. According to an article recently written in the Wall Street Journal, graduate school costs have skyrocketed 240% in the last 20 years (see article below). In the last 20 years wages have either stagnated or declined as a result of inflation. $120,000 worth of student loans will cost you roughly $700 - $1,000 a month depending on the interest rate over the course of 20 to 30 years. With regards to your financial prospects upon graduating from law school, you really have to do your homework. A top tier law school (Harvard, Columbia, NYU School of Law) for example will land you a position in a top tier law firm (for example White & Case, Proskauer Rose LLP or Cadwalder Wickersham & Taft) making around $145,000 - $160,000 (this is an estimate - the number goes up almost every year). A government lawyer (Assistant D. A., etc.) can expect a starting salary around $60,000. There are some lawyers who are making what you are making now. There are no guarantees with regards to your salary upon graduation and like anything else, it is a risk. I can not tell you what to do, but I will say that you need to check the numbers and make sure they work for you.

A. Fox
What is important is to keep learning, to enjoy challenge, and to tolerate ambiguity. In the end there are no certain answers. Martina Horner - President of Radcliffe College

Betting on Grad School

by Shelly Banjo
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
provided by

What's graduate school really worth?

A sluggish economy and hiring slowdown has led many twentysomethings to consider heading back to school. But amid rising tuition costs and a generation-wide accumulation of debt, is graduate school financially worth it?

The cost of graduate school has skyrocketed, rising 60% in the past decade according to the Council of Graduate Schools. A one-year master's degree in political management at George Washington University can cost $38,000. Harvard tells law-school students to plan for $62,000 a year for tuition, living and food costs.



A medical degree at Northwestern University? About $241,000, including $168,000 for tuition. The typical 2008 medical-school graduate will start her career about $150,000 in debt, says the Virginia-based American Medical Student Association, and will spend 20 to 30 years paying it off.

After graduating from Boston University in 2001, 28-year-old classmates Zach Dubey and Aaron Plitt took out loans and enrolled in separate law schools. Today they lead very different lives.

While Mr. Dubey works at a law firm in New York, Mr. Plitt left law school after three semesters and is now a broker in a steel-services company.

"I realized that staying in school just to finish was not worthwhile," says Mr. Plitt who now makes about 50% more than Mr. Dubey.


Grad school has to be "intentional and purposeful," says Peter Vogt, president of Career Planning Resources in Bloomington, Minn. Do not apply with thoughts of riding out the economy or figuring out a career path, he says, because "that is an expensive risk."

Before even looking into graduate schools, narrow in on specific jobs you want. Dig deeper than just a career in business, law or medicine. What industries in business or subsets of law or medicine interest you? Find out if those jobs require or prefer a professional degree by contacting professional organizations and people who work in those fields.

When evaluating a degree program, call the schools and research how many graduates actually land the jobs they wanted. Ask about their salary levels. These numbers may vary greatly by school and profession with bottom-tier schools commanding similar tuitions but smaller future earnings.

Before you borrow, consider how much school debt you will be able to afford. Lawyer Zach Dubey says he is happy at his firm, but he still lives with his parents because "I can't pay rent and afford to pay my loans off."

Using the Student Loan Advisor calculator on his Web site, FinAid.org, publisher Mark Kantrowitz says loan payments shouldn't take more than 10% to 15% of your income. Go to the Bureau of Labor Statistic's www.bls.gov and human resources data firm Salary.com to find earnings estimates and salaries by profession.

Copyrighted, Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Two Weeks Notice


Hey Alyse,

I hate my job. I work for a company whose motto seems to be "MORE, MORE, MORE" work but no MORE pay! I don't think I can stay here another day. The thing is I am the only person working in my family and have to take care of all the bills. I started looking for other jobs a couple of weeks ago and have been on some promising interviews. I don't have any offers yet but today, I put in my two weeks notice. I couldn't believe it when they accepted my resignation immediately! I'm so PO'd! Can they do that?

Shocked in Waldorf, MD


Hi Shocked!

I'm sorry to report that they can do that - Maryland is an at will employment state see below:

In Maryland, employees work "at the will" of their employers. This means, in the absence of an express contract, agreement or policy to the contrary, an employee may be hired or fired for almost any reason -- whether fair or not -- or for no reason at all.

HOWEVER, you should never give your two weeks notice without 1. considering the possibility that it will be accepted immediately and 2. already having another job. Have you considered the possibility that it might just take you a lot longer to find a job? Are you aware of the statistics that indicate clearly now is not the time to make haste employment decisions? Are you going to need a reference from the job you "hate" and do you think you are going to get a good one? If you do a quick check on how long it takes to find another job, you will find that it is taking sometimes as long as 3 or 4 months. I would suggest that you 1. make sure that you can get good references from your most recent position and smooth any feathers you have have ruffled 2. hit the pavement, don't just post your resume online 3. let your network of friends, co-workers, etc. know that you are in the job market and finally 4. shift your perspective on giving your two weeks notice - next time, try to be a little more patient.

A. Fox
"A handful of Patience is worth more than an bushel of brains." Dutch Proverb




Monday, June 2, 2008

The Problem with Background Checks

I came across this article today from Business Week - very interesting, it illustrates why it is so important to check your own background and references (one company that does both is Workkrow.com) - given today's tightening job market, employers are getting more and more selective and they have access to inexpensive tools to help them their hiring decisions. This is just part of the article.

In Depth May 29, 2008, 5:00PM EST text size: TT

The Trouble with Background Checks

Employee screening has become a big business, but not always an accurate one



Theodore Pendergrass was shocked in November, 2006, when the Walgreens (WAG) pharmacy chain rejected his application for a store supervisor job. The company told him a background-screening firm called ChoicePoint (CPS) reported that a past employer had accused him of "cash register fraud and theft of merchandise" totaling $7,313. "I wanted to cry," Pendergrass says. The $4 billion business of background screening is booming. Companies large and small are sorting mostly mid- and lower-level job applicants based on information compiled by ChoicePoint, its major rivals, and hundreds of smaller competitors. Some employers have grown more vigilant about hiring since the September 11 terrorist attacks. Others like the efficiency of outsourcing tasks once handled by in-house human resources departments or bosses who simply picked up the phone themselves. Whatever their motives, employers are becoming more dependent on mass-produced background reports that rely heavily on anonymous, and sometimes inaccurate or unfair, sources.

Pendergrass' difficulties stemmed from a previous job at Rite Aid (RAD). By late 2005, when he was 25 years old, he had reached the first rung of management as a shift supervisor in a Rite Aid store in Philadelphia. His bosses trusted him to oversee cashiers, bank deposits, and merchandise deliveries. Then, in January, 2006, a store official accused him of stealing goods and underpaying for DVDs. He denied the accusations, but the official said police were waiting outside to arrest him if he did not confess. Pendergrass wrote a statement but wouldn't admit to theft. He was soon fired anyway.

Later, at a hearing for unemployment compensation, Pendergrass was vindicated. A state labor referee ruled that Rite Aid had not proved its allegations and awarded him nearly $1,000 in benefits. But Rite Aid had already submitted its theft report to a database used by more than 70 retailers and run by ChoicePoint, the largest screening firm for corporate employers in the U.S. Based in a leafy Atlanta suburb, ChoicePoint says it checks applicants for more than half of the country's 100 biggest companies, including Bank of America (BAC), UnitedHealth Group (UNH), and United Parcel Service (UPS). Because of Pendergrass' tainted ChoicePoint file, retailers CVS Caremark (CVS) and Target (TGT) also rejected him for jobs.

Pendergrass, now 27, makes lattes at a Starbucks (SBUX) in Philadelphia. The coffee chain doesn't use a screening firm for entry-level hires. Pendergrass earns $17,000 a year, or 30% less than he did at Rite Aid, and fears his career has been derailed. "I worked hard in that store, and none of this stuff was true," he says. "I would be locked up somewhere if I stole $7,000."

Rite Aid declines to comment. A ChoicePoint spokeswoman says the company's background report merely conveyed information provided by a former employer.

FAT PROFITS

Background screening has become a highly profitable corner of the HR world. At the screening division of First Advantage (FADV), based in Poway, Calif., profits soared 47% last year, to $29 million; revenue grew 20%, to $233 million. HireRight (HIRE), based in Irvine, Calif., reported that earnings jumped 44%, to $9 million, last year on revenues of $69 million. To grab a piece of this growing market, Reed Elsevier Group (RUK), the Anglo-Dutch information provider, agreed to acquire ChoicePoint for $4.

1 billion in February—at a 50% premium to its stock price.

Industry surveys show why Reed Elsevier was eager to expand its screening business. In a 2004 study by the Society for Human Resource Management, 96% of personnel executives said their companies conduct background checks on job candidates, up from 51% in 1996. Two-thirds of larger companies say they outsource screening, and many now vet current employees in addition to applicants.

Screening often goes far beyond the familiar checking of public criminal records. For $60 to $80 per applicant, ChoicePoint and its rivals assemble digital dossiers of educational degrees and credit histories as well as interviews with friends, past bosses, and colleagues. Call-center workers wearing headsets inquire about work habits, personal character, and drug or alcohol problems. Just by dint of their heft and permanence, the proprietary data caches they compile can seem authoritative, even though the information sometimes contains errors, innuendos, or outright falsehoods.

"You won't believe what people tell you," says Mary Beth Gotshall, who has done interviews since 1999 at Employment Background Investigations, a midsize firm in Owings Mills, Md. She and colleagues have collected comments from a father who said he would never rehire his son because he had missed so much work at a family business. Another former boss accused an applicant of stealing and demanded Employment Background help find him. (The firm declined.) "We put everything in there," Gotshall says while juggling employment checks for retailer Ikea, a Pittsburgh medical clinic, and a Texas engineering firm. Her boss, Richard Kurland, chief executive of Employment Background, says the company goes to great lengths to be accurate. "We have a huge responsibility to mankind," he adds.

But Lester Rosen, a veteran in the industry and president of Employment Screening Resources in Novato, Calif., says: "Essentially, it's the Wild, Wild West. It's an unregulated industry with easy money and not a huge emphasis on compliance or on hiring quality people" to do the screening.

Theron Carter, a 61-year-old unemployed truck driver in Middleville, Mich., is waiting for his name to be cleared in a database used widely in the transportation business. In May, 2006, a U.S. Labor Dept. administrative law judge ruled that Carter was wrongly terminated by Marten Transport (MRTN) for making legitimate complaints about the safety of his 18-wheel truck. He had hauled loads for the Mondovi (Wis.) company for only two weeks before being fired in June, 2005. The judge awarded him more than $31,000 in damages and back pay and ordered Marten Transport to delete "any unfavorable work record information" in a report compiled by USIS, a large screening company in Falls Church, Va. Once an arm of the federal Office of Personnel Management, USIS was privatized in 1996. It still screens government workers and runs an employment-history database used by 2,500 transport companies called Drive-A-Check, or DAC.

Despite his legal victory, Carter's DAC report still says Marten Transport dismissed him for "excessive complaints" and a "company policy violation." "No one will hire me," says Carter, who withdrew $50,000 from retirement savings to support his wife and himself. Trucking company J.B. Hunt Transport Services (JBHT) "told me I had excessive complaints and wouldn't hire me. I told them I won my case." Hunt declines to comment.

Marten Transport has appealed the Labor Dept. ruling. A company attorney, Stephen DiTullio, says it would be "fraudulent" for the carrier to remove the reference to excessive grievances from Carter's DAC file. "That was an accurate portrayal of what led to his termination," DiTullio says. Marten Transport has addressed Carter's safety concerns, he adds.

John Griffith, 47, won a similar Labor Dept. ruling in October, 2003, against his former employer, Atlantic Inland Carrier.


The administrative law judge ruled that the company wrongly fired Griffith in December, 2001, for complaining about the safety of his truck and ordered Atlantic Inland to remove unfavorable information from his DAC record.

Someone at Atlantic Inland—it's not clear who—had told DAC that Griffith was terminated and not eligible to be rehired because of his grievances. The company eventually deleted that information in January, 2004—more than two years after it was posted. During that time, Griffith says, it was hard to find trucking work. The Aiken (S.C.) resident turned to lower-paying odd jobs, although he recently got back behind the wheel making deliveries for a nursery. "Truck drivers live and die by DAC," he says. "They can ruin a driver's career with a few clicks of their mouse."

LIVING IN FEAR

USIS declines to comment on any specific cases. Gripes about its database have made "DAC" a popular verb in the industry, with drivers lamenting they have "been DAC-ed." Responding to the anxiety surrounding the database, USIS officials have defended their methods on radio interview shows aimed at truckers. They argue that screening is legally required, generally accurate, and keeps bad drivers off the road.

But Kristen Turley, director of market development and communications at USIS' commercial-services unit in Tulsa, concedes that no system is immune to mistakes and misuse. "There is a chance somebody who holds a grudge will put negative information in the database," she says. "We are not trying to blackball drivers or ruin their chance to get a job." When a driver disputes a background report, USIS asks its sources for proof supporting negative comments, she says. USIS doesn't seek such evidence up front. "Ideally that would be a good solution," Turley says, but it could dissuade past employers from submitting information in the first place.

The federal Fair Credit Reporting Act covers background screeners, but it hasn't been aggressively enforced. The law says screeners must use "reasonable procedures" to ensure "maximum possible accuracy." It also requires employers to give a copy of background reports to rejected applicants. An applicant can dispute the information, but the Federal Trade Commission has said employers must wait only five business days before hiring someone else, meaning that objections frequently become moot. Lately the agency has focused more on identity theft than on screening, Rebecca Kuehn, assistant director for privacy and identity protection, says.