Albuquerque Journal

Give ex-offenders a fair shot at employment

- BY MARK HOLDEN SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, KOCH INDUSTRIES

For the many New Mexicans concerned that outdated criminal justice laws are endangerin­g public safety and ruining people’s lives, it’s heartening that Congress has indicated that it hopes to take up the issue during the coming weeks. But it remains unclear whether any legislatio­n will make it to the president’s desk.

That’s why the roughly 33,000 employers that call New Mexico home should consider voluntaril­y taking action themselves.

Businesses have a powerful role to play in giving individual­s with criminal records a second chance. The easiest step they can take is to “ban the box.”

Right now, most employers require job-seekers to check a box on an applicatio­n if they have any criminal record. Too often, this can function as an automatic “applicatio­n denied” for individual­s who have any blemish in their past.

Nationwide, some 650,000 incarcerat­ed individual­s rejoin society every year, and they desperatel­y need jobs to help them transition back into society and provide for themselves and their families. The criminal record box often shuts them out of the job market before they get a foot in the door.

A 2009 study by Harvard and Princeton researcher­s showed individual­s who checked the box reduced their chances of a callback by 50 percent, with blacks hurt twice as much as whites.

Sure enough, unemployme­nt among those with a criminal record remains staggering­ly high: A third of men without jobs between the ages of 25 and 54 have a criminal record. And the lack of employment is one of the key reasons why over twothirds are rearrested, over half are reconvicte­d, and two out of five are reincarcer­ated within three years of release.

Ex-offender unemployme­nt not only holds back individual­s working to improve their lives, it also stifles our economy. A 2010 study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research estimated the annual lost economic value at between $57 billion and $65 billion.

These are a few of the reasons why my employer, Koch Industries, officially banned the box on our job applicatio­n last year, including for applicants in New Mexico.

Now we delay the question until later in the hiring process. This allows us to consider a candidate’s past record in the context of their other life experience­s.

Companies big and small have made the same choice because it makes sense from a business perspectiv­e.

With an estimated one in three adults in the U.S. having some sort of criminal record, it’s shortsight­ed for an employer to potentiall­y eliminate a third of the available applicant pool. We should seek the best talent period — with or without a record.

Over the years at Koch, individual­s hired with a past record have been dedicated employees who have succeeded at the company. They are valuable contributo­rs, and more importantl­y, they are on a path toward a productive and fulfilling life.

We recognize that banning the box may not make sense for every business, which is why a government mandate isn’t the solution.

Each employer needs to make its own decision on this issue. If the roughly 33,000 employers in New Mexico voluntaril­y considered banning the box, the social and economic landscape could be defined by more opportunit­y and prosperity, especially for the least fortunate.

Thousands of New Mexicans with criminal records try to rejoin society every year, and they want to contribute to their communitie­s and improve their lives. New Mexico businesses can help them by breaking down barriers that stand in their way. No one should be judged forever based on what they did on their worst day — and everyone deserves a second chance.

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