The Fair Trade Commission (FTC) recently issued new guidance for owners who use background checks to screen tenants to help them comply with the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), which the FTC helps enforce. If part of your applicant screening process involves running a tenant background check through a company that compiles background information, you must take certain steps before using such services and after taking an adverse action based on a report.
These companies may provide a report that includes a variety of information, including rental and eviction history, credit, or criminal records. They also are known as consumer reports. When you use consumer reports to make tenant decisions, you must comply with the FCRA. We’ll go over what a consumer report and an adverse action entail. And we’ll discuss the steps you need to take before you get a consumer report and after you take an adverse action against an applicant.
A consumer report may contain information about a person’s credit characteristics, rental history, or criminal history. Consumer reports are prepared by a credit reporting agency (CRA), a business that assembles such reports for other businesses, and are covered by the FCRA. Examples of these reports include:
You can obtain a consumer report only if you have a permissible purpose. Owners may obtain consumer reports on applicants and tenants who apply to rent housing or renew a lease. And you should obtain written permission from applicants or tenants to show that you have a permissible purpose.
You must certify to the company from which you’re getting the consumer report that you’ll use the report for housing purposes only. You may not use the consumer report for another purpose.
It’s also a good idea to review other applicable federal and state laws related to consumer reports. For example, in Best Practices for Complying with HUD’s Guidance on Criminal Background Checks in the September 2016 issue, we discussed HUD guidance on criminal background checks and evaluation standards for applicants with criminal records. HUD’s guidance clearly states that records of arrest should not be used to deny housing or terminate a lease. There may be circumstances where a criminal event has occurred and the arrest record might justify further research into the behavior, but an arrest alone can’t be used to deny housing eligibility. Also, resident selection criteria should not include a blanket exclusion for all convictions or all felonies. Those policies are likely to be challenged by disparate impact claims.
An adverse action is any action by an owner that’s unfavorable to the interests of a rental applicant or tenant. Examples of common adverse actions by landlords include:
If you reject an applicant or take any other adverse action based partly or completely on information in a consumer report, you must give the applicant or tenant a notice of that fact either orally, in writing, or electronically.
An adverse action notice tells people about their rights to see information being reported about them and to correct inaccurate information. Like our Model Notice: Send Notice to Applicant After Taking an Adverse Action, your notice must include:
The adverse action notice is required even if information in the consumer report wasn’t the primary reason for the decision. Even if the information in the report played only a small part in the overall decision, the applicant or tenant must be notified.
While oral adverse action notices are allowed, written notices provide proof of FCRA compliance. Copies of adverse action notices denoting the date it was delivered to the applicant can help you avoid unjustified legal claims by angry applicants.
The FTC guidance provided the following scenarios in which an adverse action notice must be sent to the applicant:
Owners who use “investigative reports,” reports based on personal interviews concerning a person’s character, general reputation, personal characteristics, and lifestyle, have additional obligations under the FCRA. These obligations include giving written notice that you may request or have requested an investigative consumer report, and giving a statement that the person has a right to request additional disclosures and a summary of the scope and substance of the report. (See 15 U.S.C. Section 1681d(a), (b)).
When you’re done using a consumer report, you must securely dispose of the report and any information you gathered from it. The FTC’s Disposal Rule requires disposal practices that are reasonable and appropriate to prevent the unauthorized access to or use of information in a consumer report. For example, reasonable measures for disposing of consumer report information could include establishing and complying with policies to: