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Author: Debbie Sadler

Ban the Box employers

TheBan the Box campaign launched in October 2013 at which time, 24 employers had committed to support the campaign. Nearly 6 years on and over 130 employers have now removed the ‘tick box’ from application forms which ask about criminal convictions.

We’ve developed the list of Ban the Box employers (which Business in the Community host on their website) into information more aimed at individuals with a criminal record, including the name and contact details of the employer as well as setting out the point at which the employer may ask you to disclose your criminal record.

Our aim is to regularly update and improve this information. If you have any experience (good or bad) of applying to or working for one of these companies, please let us know by emailing feedback@unlock.org.uk.

Monthly summary – August 2019

Welcome to our monthly update for August 2019.

This provides a summary of:

  1. the latest updates to our self-help information site for people with convictions
  2. recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord
  3. discussions on our online forum
  4. other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record.

Have you stumbled across this? You can receive these updates direct to your inbox every month for free by signing up to our mailing list (made sure you choose to receive ‘news for people with convictions’)

Updates to our information site

Here’s a summary of updates that we’ve made recently to the information hub. There are links within each update to where you can find more information about the update. There are also links next to many of the updates, which links to threads on our online forum where you can discuss these with other people with convictions.

About criminal records

  • Extended sentences – We’ve produced some new information on extended sentences which sets out when they become spent and when you will need to disclose them to employers, insurers etc.
  • Barring (Children’s Barred List and Adults’ Barred List) – We’ve updated this page to include a link to information produced by the DBS for individuals that have been referred to them. This includes details of why you may have been referred and the barring process.

Banking

  • Opening a basic bank account and understanding the role of prepaid cards – We’ve published a new advice post on opening a basic bank account and the alternatives if you’re unable to open a basic bank account, possibly due to having a fraud conviction which flags up on the CIFAS database.
  • Criminal convictions and a history of fraud – This page has been updated to include details of managed bank accounts and prepaid cards.

Insurance

  • List of insurance brokers – We’ve added a new broker to our list of insurance brokers that can provide motoring, home and contents insurance to people with convictions.
  • Commercial insurance – We’ve added a new broker to our list of commercial insurers who can provide public liability and professional indemnity insurance to people with convictions.

theRecord posts

Below are links to recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord. These are often linked to from the practical information that we have, to help give some personal experiences.

SuccessGoogle you know my name but don’t judge me when you don’t know my story “25 years ago I received a conviction which resulted in a 3 line article in a local newspaper. The conviction resulted in a community order which I completed as soon as I could and since then, I’ve worked hard and done well career wise …..”

SuccessIt took prison to help get my gambling addiction under control“For the last 8 years of my life I have suffered with a serious gambling addiction. It started when I was just 19 and at university. I was so excited to be going to university and for me it was the start of a new chapter in my life, the start of an exciting future – to study sport and exercise science and become a teacher …..”

Struggles and stigma‘Employers, if you want me to disclose my conviction, then please ask me the question’“I’ve been out of prison for 18 months and still have another 2.5 years to go on licence. In the past 18 months I’ve applied for over 700 jobs, getting to interview stage on only 6 of the applications, only to be rejected when I disclose my conviction …..”

Discussions on our online forum

Below are links to recent posts to our online forum. If you’d like to join in the discussion but are not currently a forum member, find out how you can join here.

Spent convictions available to view on Google – Marsbar88 has highlighted the problems he’s encountered as a result of his spent conviction still appearing online. Does anybody have any advice on how he can have the links to his name removed or what he can do to counteract the negative stories?

‘Alternative date of birth’ and other post-conviction weirdness – Harmless is seeking some advice regarding property seized by the police prior to his arrest and the incorrect recording of his date of birth. Can anyone help him?

Other news and developments

Below are links to other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record. For more news, check out the news and media section of our main website.

Insurance industry trade body issues updated guidance to insurers on how they should treat people with convictions

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) have published updated guidance on how insurers should treat people with convictions. Read our comments and download the guidance here.

Monthly update – August 2019

We’ve just published our update for August 2019.

This months update includes:

  1. New information on extended sentences.
  2. An advice post on opening a basic bank account and the alternatives if you’re unable to, possibly due to having a fraud conviction which flags up on the CIFAS database.
  3. A personal story setting out the link between a gambling addiction and a criminal record.
  4. A link to a discussion on theForum on the impact of spent convictions appearing on Google.
  5. Details of updated guidance published by the Association of British Insurers on how insurers should treat people with convictions.

The full update provides a summary of:

  1. the latest updates to our self-help information site for people with convictions
  2. recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord
  3. discussions on our online forum
  4. other news and developments that might be of interest to individuals with a criminal record.

Read the August 2019 update in full.

Best wishes,

Unlock

Notes

Opening a basic bank account and understanding the role of prepaid cards

Life without a bank account can be difficult, if not impossible. A bank account can offer so much more than just a place to store our money. From paying direct debits or utility bills, or receiving a salary or benefits, to simply identifying you as someone who exists, bank accounts are a huge part of a person’s life.

Research suggests that between one third and one half of people in prison don’t have a bank account. Opening an account either whilst in prison or upon release can be difficult, especially if you don’t have the correct ID.

However, as a result of a 9-year project run by Unlock which came to an end in 2014, the situation has improved and the majority of people in prison (or just released) will be able to open a basic bank account with a range of high-street banks.

Although this is important, it remains the case that there are a small number of people that won’t be able to open a basic bank account, perhaps due to a fraud conviction that flags up on the CIFAS database. In this situation, there are other options available.

One of those alternative options is a prepaid card. And we’ve been getting quite a few enquiries to our helpline in recent months about prepaid cards, so we thought we’d cover this in this post.

We were recently made aware of Renovare, an organisation offering to “provide you with a bespoke bank account, debit card and full banking solution to fit your needs” as well as set up mobile phone contracts, find work and access counselling for a monthly membership fee of £7.99. We understand the ‘bank account’ to be a prepaid card like the ones described above.

We have always been cautious in making sure that people try to open a basic bank account, either in prison or when they are released, before looking at alternatives such as prepaid cards.

More information

Monthly summary – July 2019

Welcome to our monthly update for July 2019.

This provides a summary of:

  1. the latest updates to our self-help information site for people with convictions
  2. recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord
  3. discussions on our online forum
  4. other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record.

Have you stumbled across this? You can receive these updates direct to your inbox every month for free by signing up to our mailing list (make sure you choose to receive ‘news for people with convictions’)

Updates to our information site

Here’s a summary of updates that we’ve made recently to theinformationhub. There are links within each update to where you can find more information about the update. There are also links next to many of the updates, which links to threads on our online forum where you can discuss these with other people with convictions.

Work and volunteering

  • Exploring the hidden job market to find work – We’ve produced some new information on finding jobs which are not advertised in the usual way, often referred to as the hidden job market.

Information on the internet, online and through search engines like Google

  • The ‘google-effect’ internet search results and the right to be forgotten – We’ve updated this page to reflect the fact that the online Google form which asks you to give reasons why your search results should be removed is limited to 1000 characters.

Travelling abroad

  • Identifying whether your offence is a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude – As a result of feedback from users, we’ve made some changes to this page which hopefully make clearer the link between the questions on the ESTA form and Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude.

theRecord posts

Below are links to recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord. These are often linked to the practical information that we have, to help give some personal user experiences.

Struggles and stigmaI’ve worked hard to be part of a system that’s now holding me back – problems with the UK criminal record disclosure system“As a young lad I was the class clown; the one that never went to class, never did my exams and eventually got expelled – it was classed as ‘early study leave’ at that time. With few qualifications I worked in factories for a while and then decided to go and work abroad for several months. I really enjoyed the time I spent overseas and I started to plan for all the things I was going to do in the future …..”

Success The smartest thing I’ve learnt since my conviction is that I don’t need a man to be successful “When I left school at the age of 18, I suppose I would have been described as a bit ‘geeky’ or naive. I’d never had a boyfriend, didn’t smoke or drink and thought ‘weed’ was just something that grew in the garden …..”

SuccessTravelling to Thailand with a criminal record – You just Thai and stop me! “Approximately 35 years ago I was convicted of a sexual offence and received a suspended prison sentence. The details of the offence are not really relevant to the story and I’m mindful that when you put something in writing it can look as though you’re trying to minimise what happened – I don’t want to do that. All I will say is that my life now is very, very different to how it was at the time of my conviction …..”

Discussions on our online forum

Below are links to recent posts to our online forum. If you’d like to join in the discussion but are not currently a forum member, find out how you can join here.

Has Schengen system changed? – Following a recent trip to Greece, Forever Changes wanted to know whether the Schengen rules had changed as his most recent experience had been very different to when he’d travelled to the EU previously. Please tell us about your own experiences?

Case study Gerry – Excessive interventions by the police and probation – We provided a link to a case study published on the main Unlock website which had generated a lot of discussion on Twitter. Read the case study and other forum members comments here.

Other news and developments

Below are links to other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record. For more news, check out the news and media section of our main website.

Summer 2019 Newsletter – What we’ve been up to

We’ve published our summer newsletter which provides an update on the news at Unlock in the past 3 months.

‘Double discrimination?’ report published

We’ve published research on the impact of criminal records as perceived by people from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) backgrounds. Download the full report or the executive summary here.

Unlock comment: Ministry of Justice plans on criminal record reform

Unlock have commented on the announcement made by the Ministry of Justice on plans to make changes to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974. Read what Unlock’s co-director, Christopher Stacey says.

Monthly update – July 2019

We’ve just published our update for July 2019.

This months update includes:

  1. New information on exploring the hidden job market to find work.
  2. An update to our information on identifying whether your offence is a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude.
  3. A personal story setting out an individuals experience of finding work in the care industry with old, multiple convictions.
  4. A link to a discussion on theForum on a case study published on the main Unlock site regarding the consequences of excessive interventions by the police and probation.
  5. Details of research published by us on the impact of criminal records as perceived by people from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) backgrounds.

The full update provides a summary of:

  1. the latest updates to our self-help information site for people with convictions
  2. recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord
  3. discussions on our online forum
  4. other news and developments that might be of interest to individuals with a criminal record.

Read the July 2019 update in full.

Best wishes,

Unlock

Notes

Exploring the hidden job market to find work

You’d think that employers looking to recruit the best people for their vacant roles would want to advertise their roles in as many places as possible to ensure that they had cast their nets as wide as they could.

So you may be surprised to learn that about half of all jobs are not advertised at all. This is often referred to as the hidden job market.

Advertising can be expensive and the recruitment process can be long. Recruiters will often decide to look through their existing records to see if they have anybody that fits their criteria, rather than advertise and then wade through reams of application forms.

If you’re looking for a job then it’s important to know how you can access these hidden jobs and how to go about approaching employers that don’t want you to complete an application form or hand over a CV.

We’ve published some new information on finding a job from the hidden job market which sets out how to access the hidden job market and how to go about approaching employers speculatively.

Moving on: Unlock, who are we and what do we do?

This month, we’ve written a further article for InsideTime ‘Through the Gate’ Section which gives a bit more information about who Unlock are.

A copy of the article can be found below.

Since 2016, Unlock has written regularly for Inside Time’s ‘Through the Gate’ section which focuses on some of the issues that people leaving prison may come up against. This article explains what Unlock does and how we may be able to help you now, or in the future.

Unlock was established in 1999 by a group of former prisoners and became a charity in 2000. We help people with convictions by providing information, advice and support to overcome the effects of their criminal record and move on positively. This is all delivered by peers who understand the challenges faced when dealing with the long term effects of a conviction – over 50% of our trustees and staff, and all of our volunteers, are people with convictions. We have a track record of delivering successful campaigns and projects, including influencing the reform of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act, developing agreements for prisoners to open bank accounts before release and providing an online ‘Disclosure Calculator’.

Perhaps the most useful element of our work for anybody in prison is our helpline, which provides confidential expert advice and information. Common areas we cover include understanding the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act, the way criminal record checks work, disclosing to employers, buying insurance and travelling abroad. Our helpline telephone number is on the prison global list so you don’t need to add it to your PIN, making it easier for you to contact us.

In addition to our self-help information hub, our other websites include a disclosure calculator, an online tool which calculates when convictions become spent and no longer have to be disclosed for the majority of jobs and insurance – resettlement staff or friends or family outside can check this for you. We also have an online magazine, theRecord, and a peer-to-peer forum.

We provide direct support to approximately 8,000 people each year through our helpline (we can be contacted by telephone, letter and email) and over 1.3 million people access our online services, including our self-help information site – https://unlock.org.uk/information-and-advice//.

Providing practical support to individuals and understanding the difficulties they face means we can tailor our information and advice. It also helps us work with government, employers, insurers and others to influence their policies, practices and attitudes. Our aim is to create a fairer and more inclusive society, where law-abiding people with convictions can move on positively with their lives.

If you need advice on overcoming the difficulties that you’re experiencing as a result of your criminal record, please get in touch with our helpline. We provide information and advice on a wide range of subjects but we’re not able to provide you with legal advice or assist you in appealing your sentence or conviction.

If you have any ideas for a subject you’d like us to cover in one of our regular articles then please let us know what topics you’d like us to address. We’d like to hear from you as this helps us to provide the most relevant and up-to-date information and advice for all users of our service.

Some examples of people we’ve helped

Looking back over the last couple of months, we’ve written up a few examples of the people we’ve helped.

We hope they give a good idea of how we help people.

However, more importantly than our role, we think that these examples show how people with convictions are able to overcome some of the barriers that have been put in their way due to their criminal record.

We’ve posted the examples below as case studies in the support section of our website:

Alan – Successfully making representation to be placed on a Council’s housing register

Gerry – Excessive interventions by the police and probation can affect an individuals ability to move on with their lives

Hilary – Having the confidence to challenge a Public Protection Officers decision enabled my son to find employment

KatieUnderstanding my rights under the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) heled me keep my job

Monthly summary – June 2019

Welcome to our monthly update for June 2019.

This provides a summary of:

  1. thelatest updates to our self-help information site for people with convictions
  2. recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord
  3. discussions on our online forum
  4. other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record.

Have you stumbled across this? You can receive these updates direct to your inbox every month for free by signing up to our mailing list (make sure you choose to receive ‘news for people with convictions’)

Updates to our information site

Here’s a summary of updates that we’ve made recently to theinformationhub. There are links within each update to where you can find more information about the update. There are also links next to many of the update, which links to threads on our online forum where you can discuss these with other people with convictions.

Work and volunteering

  • Long list of spent/disposals and how long it takes them to become spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 – We’ve updated this page to give examples of how a relevant order can affect other convictions.

Travelling abroad

  • Identifying whether your offence is a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude – We’ve published some new information which sets out a list of the 80 most common UK offences and those which, in our opinion, would be deemed to be a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude.
  • Travelling to Japan – We’ve updated this page to include an individual’s personal experience of travelling to Japan with a criminal record.

Coming to the UK

  • Deportation due to a criminal record – We’ve added the details of a Court of Appeal deportation appeal case to this page where a deportee successfully resisted deportation not merely because he had a British child residing in the UK, but because of the impact his deportation would have on the child.

theRecord posts

Below are links to recent posts to our online magazine, theRecord. These are often linked to the practical information that we have, to help give some personal experiences.

SuccessVolunteers Week 2019 – A shout out to Unlock’s volunteers“Volunteer Week is celebrated between 1st and 7th June every year. It’s a week in which the UK celebrates volunteers and says thank you to them for the contribution they make. The week hopefully also raises awareness of the benefits of volunteering …..”

Struggles and stigmaWhat’s the point of having a policy if an employer doesn’t bother to follow it?“A couple of years ago I applied for a job at a large organisation famous for its inclusive values. Having unspent convictions for drugs-related offences, I was nervous about applying but the organisation’s online policy on recruiting people with criminal records was clear and seemed progressive. Although applicants were asked to disclose unspent convictions on their application form, the policy said …..”

SuccessThe inconsistencies of travelling when you have a sexual offence“I was convicted of a sexual offence and currently have to sign the Sex Offenders Register. I believe my conviction was harsh, but I’ve accepted it and understand that every year I’ll have to sign the register and, when I want to go abroad, I’ll have to inform the police …..”

SuccessForgiveness won’t change the past but it has improved my future – why I wasn’t added to the DBS barred list“Prior to my conviction in 2002, I was a law-abiding citizen with an impeccable record. I’d been in the same job for 20 years and also volunteered for several charities in my spare time. Other than my work and charity interests, my only other focus was my wife and children …..”

Discussions on our online forum

Below are links to recent posts to our online forum. If you’d like to join in the discussion but are not currently a forum member, find out how you can join here.

Applying for work through a recruitment agency – DisplacedR has been having a lot of difficulties finding work through a recruitment agency due to his unspent conviction. He’s interested in hearing other people’s experience of applying for jobs with an unspent conviction. Can you help?

Things going well – Although things have been going well for Square, he’s just come up against an unexpected problem, namely disclosing his conviction to a new partner. Does anybody have any advice they can offer him?

Other news and developments

Below are links to other news and developments that might be of interest to people with a criminal record. For more news, check out the news and media section of our main website.

New dates announced for criminal record disclosure training

We’ve just announced details of our upcoming disclosure training for practitioners. Find more information here.

Report backs tax breaks for employers that recruit people with convictions

Commenting on a report published by Onward, Christopher Stacey, Unlock’s co-director has said “We welcome Onwards recommendations that government should deliver on the manifesto commitment to give employers a national insurance tax break to those who recruit people with convictions. Read Chris’ comments and Onwards Unlocking a better life report.

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