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HOW OLD IS THE MATTER? YOU CAN CHECK WITH THE COURT ABOUT GETTING AN APPLICATION FOR AN "expungement" WHICH COSTS SOME MONEY. YOU CAN STILL FIND JOBS IF YOU ARE HONEST WITH YOUR MATTER ON THE EMPLOYMENT APPLICATIONS. NOT ALL EMPLOYERS CHECK EVERYTHING OR SOME DONT GO BACK MORE THAN 7-10 YEARS. IT ALL DEPENDS ON YOUR STATE AND THE QUESTIONS ON THE APPLICATION. REMEMBER YOU SHOULD NOT BE PENALIZED FOR LIFE FOR TRYING TO BE A TAX PAYER AND TRYING TO OBTAIN EMPLOYMENT. THE FELONY IS IN THE PAST, AND YOU WANT TO MOVE ON WITH YOUR LIFE SO TELL YOUR FRIEND TO SEARCH FOR THE JOB THAT THEY DESIRE AND WOULD BE HAPPY PERFORMING? YOU CAN ALSO DO HOME NASED BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES - CHECK WWW.CAREERBANK.COM OR WWW.MONSTER.COM FOR SOME ADDITIONAL GREAT JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN YOUR AREA AND TERRIFIC RESOURCES TO HELP. THE QUICKEST WAY TO GET A JOB IS TO BE PROACTIVE IN YOUR APPROACH. SEND OUT RESUMES ONLINE IS A THE FASTEST WAY TO GET YOUR NAME AND SKILLS IN FRONT OF A POTENTIAL HIRING MANAGER TODAY! MAKE PHONE CALLS, SEND RESUMES AND SEND THANK YOU LETTERS AFTER EACH CONTACT. FOLLOW-UP AND FOCUS FOR SUCCESS! GOOD LUCK! :-)

2007-05-15 08:55:23 · answer #1 · answered by JEDI MASTER YODA 4 · 0 0

Most employment applications ask if you've been convicted of a felony within the past 7 to 10 years. So if the felony goes back beyond this, it might not come up in a standard background check, unless it's for a security position say with the government.

But if it is within this timeframe, it's not an automatic disqualification. It all depends on what the felony was and the job itself. For example, somebody with a robbery conviction may not be the best choice for a retail job as a cashier. The question of trust and responsibility is what employers will focus on.

Now it all depends on what that person has done since the conviction. If he or she has turned his or her life around, then that helps to allay some fears among employers. But you do have to realize that felons already have a strike against them going in. That's nothing that can be controlled, but it can be mitigated up to a point.

Employers want to protect their resources: money, merchandies, and personnel. Felons have an air of mistrust about them, and that just goes with the territory. And this is exactly why they find life after prison tough and cold.

Most will start at the very bottom doing jobs that aren't the most glamorous or well paying. But work is work, and the important thing is to regain that level of trust. Once that begins to happen, then life improves.

But it's a slow process and doens't happen overnight! Many will get discouraged and return to a life of crime. Those few who are the stronger stick it out and eventually succeed.

2007-05-15 10:49:32 · answer #2 · answered by msoexpert 6 · 0 0

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2016-12-29 05:43:34 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

FAST FOOD!!!

2007-05-15 08:46:08 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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