Target Settles Hiring Discrimination Lawsuit for $3.7M
Target Settles Hiring Discrimination Lawsuit for $3.7M
Popular retail chain, Target, recently agreed to settle a lawsuit that accused the company of having a discriminatory hiring process. According to the lawsuit, which was filed by Carnella Times and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission back in 2007, Target's “hiring process, which automatically rejected people with criminal backgrounds, disproportionately kept blacks and Hispanics from getting entry-level jobs at its stores.”Times was allegedly “rejected for an overnight stocker position at a store in 2006,” and claimed in the lawsuit that she also told, “Target personnel during interviews that she had a 10-year-old misdemeanor conviction.” At the end of her interview she was given a “conditional job offer that depended on a criminal background check,” but later was sent a letter from Target explaining that her 1996 conviction prevented her from officially getting the job, according to the lawsuit.Times wasn't the only one discriminated against by Target's hiring process, though. In fact, investigations and court documents revealed that, between 2008 and 2016, “more than 41,000 black and Hispanic applicants were denied jobs based on their criminal history.” Because of this, the lawsuit claimed that “blacks and Hispanics were harmed by the hiring system because they are arrested and incarcerated at higher rates than whites.”
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Sources:
Target Settles Suit Claiming Its Hiring System DiscriminatedTarget Settles Lawsuit Claiming Discrimination Against Black and Latino Job Applicants
About Brianna Smith
Brianna Smith is a freelance writer and editor in Southwest Michigan. A graduate of Grand Valley State University, Brianna has a passion for politics, social issues, education, science, and more. When she’s not writing, she enjoys the simple life with her husband, daughter, and son.