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| Is it ethical or are you flogging a dead horse? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lying can put a strain on everything right from the word go. You will be nipping and tucking every misshaped statement to cover the non-existent excuses until it becomes a farce, matched only by the French classics of the late 19th century. Hark! I hear you shout. What is he going on about? I am referring to the fine line that many people play around when it comes to disclosing personal information about themselves. You may be in a good job with good prospects but at the back of your mind lies a doubt. Before applying for your current position you had a run in with a drunken lout outside a pub one night. It wasn't your fault but you got into a fight and he ended up in hospital leaving you with a charge of GBH. Your life before and since has been a picture of perfection as you ride up the corporate ladder. Success is so good that you don't mention the conviction when you are asked. A persons past invariably affects that persons future. A failed education can restrict a persons ability to move on when potential employers are looking for good GCSE's as opposed to bad trips on LSD. Civil actions and criminal records can restrict people in getting the job that they want. It's Monday morning and back to work after another non-eventful weekend. You meet the same faces with the added excitement of meeting possibly new ones. Cup of coffee to start the day and you have your banter ready for the go. But your mate, who normally gets in before you, isn't at his desk. The steam from the hot coffee and the skewed chair tells you he is about. But where? You think nothing more and carry on with your chores for the day. A few minutes tick by and a shadow draws over your desk from the other side, where your missing colleague normally sits. But he is missing no more. He is accompanied, not by the sexy PA but by the security man from downstairs, about to escort him out of the building. This scene has been played out in many offices around the world. Obvious ways of losing your job includes, head butting the boss for no good reason, being drunk and abusive towards colleagues, discriminating against colleagues, and basically breaking the terms of your contract. Disclosure If the form asks for details about criminal convictions, only then you are not required to disclose any civil matters that may have involved you in the county court, for example. If you do have a criminal record and do not disclose it, then if your were to accept the job and your employer found out about your conviction, then your employer may be justified in disciplining you or dismissing you. It is likely that they would consider the seriousness of the offence both in making any decision to offer the job and subsequently should you not disclose this and they were to find out about it later. It can be at the least embarrassing and the most severe financially crippling, if you lose your job after your employer finds out you had a past criminal record which you did not declare on your application form. Criminal
Records But other than those
jobs, all people who have been asked must really tell the truth. Think about the seriousness of the conviction. Was it serious? was it something or nothing?, was it civil or criminal?, was it violent?, was it blue or white collar crime? Because, you may be surprised at the potential employers reaction. If you are applying for a Sales job but have been convicted before for driving offences, then an explanation would more than likely suffice. A new employer may empathise with the situation and not give it the importance that you may have given. Things would be considerably different if however, you added that you were drinking at the same time and knocked over a pedestrian. Legislation Jobs
that definitely will not accept an applicant with a criminal record Police Working with
children Teacher Financial Institution
Employee
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