By January 1, 2018, we will have at least four states and four cities that have enacted a new regulation that stipulates you cannot ask a candidate for employment, how much money they make. There is no equivocation there…you cannot ask them how much their salary is, their bonus, their past W-2, their estimated earnings or their history of income.
These new laws specifically prohibit anybody in the interview chain from asking that question; which includes third party search firms. A candidate can offer that information, but you have to document and provide evidence that the candidate stated his/her earnings history and was not asked for that information. In fact, the best approach, should a candidate offer up his earnings history, is to confirm in writing back to them and require they sign that letter or email certifying they offered their compensation information on their own; without provocation or prodding.
Why the requirement of them verifying that they offered the information? In NYC, the statute will include up to a $250,000 penalty just for asking that question; part of which the plaintiff may be entitled to as recompense in that penalty. In short…the candidate could try to trap you into asking that question.
What can you ask? You can ask what their compensation needs, requirements or expectations are.
Why are the new laws there? The logic was to eliminate the serial wage disparity between men and women. Since women tend to be paid less; when they try to apply to a new company, they are required to disclose their current or past earnings. As most offers are typically tied to past earnings, not the salary range of the position; the cycle of wage disparity has little opportunity to be mediated by simply changing employers.
What states? Massachusetts, Oregon, California and Delaware. Plus New York City, San Francisco, Pittsburgh and New Orleans. New Jersey and Illinois have had laws passed but vetoed by the governors, so far. Washington State has a bill in committee. Philadelphia enacted a similar law, but it is currently in litigation and under review.
While the laws are just in four states, the impact will become broader than that. Most national companies hire people throughout the country. Changing interviewing behavior to accommodate a handful of states will be very difficult to do. I’d expect to see a range of corporate directives that state you can no longer ask about compensation from any applicant and to instruct your recruiting and staffing firms to not provide any compensation information. The ability to be able to ask about financial expectations will be somewhat of a relief on the new burdens, but this will have far reaching impacts over the next several years as we are forced to unlearn our most basic question about employment. The laws are, also, different, with some regulations stating that if the candidate asks for the salary range of the position, you are required to give them the documented salary range. In general, the laws appear to support the premise that you should quantify the position and hire people to accommodate the responsibilities; within a salary range, regardless of the current income or sex of the applicant.
It is unlikely the federal government would be able to intercede in what is currently a state-driven rollout of employment policy. There is a bill pending in the House of Representatives for a national ban on asking for salary information; but it’s unlikely to succeed under this administration. In 2017, over half of the states have considered legislation to ban asking about salary history.1
We can expect this trend to grow and keeping track of which state or city is endorsing it will be challenging. As a national professional search firm, Egret (and Bishop Partners) will begin to ask solely for salary expectations and no longer provide exact current compensation as in the past.
Whether salary history is a core contributor to the wage disparity will be tested soon as these new laws are rolled out. For the vast majority of hiring authorities and HR practitioners, this law will be very difficult to fully implement. After more than 50 years since the enactment of the EEOC requirements, it’s still common for us to have a discussion with clients that mistakenly request something that is specifically proscribed in Title VII. Change is slow and traditions dim even more slowly.
As the talent market changes, it will be far more incumbent on employers to address hiring for the skills of the position. Talent is scarce, compensation is rising and will likely rise faster over the next year or two. We have arrived at full employment, so the challenge to attract the right talent to further your growth plans will have to rely on developing an aggressive bench strength plan (college recruitment and training) and an even more aggressive ‘free agency’ acquisition strategy to meet critical talent needs. We will be in a talent shortage for several years to come; Boomers are going away, GenX’ers are a much smaller population segment to fill those spots; so ‘youth’ will become a necessity. With youth, comes training and mentoring programs to ensure your new hire will ramp up more quickly.
The new hiring paradigm? Define the position, find the talent to do that role… build your compensation plan to be flexible enough to attract the talent. And don’t ask how much money they make!
This article was researched and written by my friend and colleague, Ted Konnerth, PhD and CEO of Egret Consulting, A 2017 Forbes' "Best Executive Recruiting Firms, Electrical Industry, Retained Search.