Prohibit businesses from asking applicants about criminal histories
Tony Evers
“As governor, Tony will support: Banning the box.”
Evers-O-Meter
Promise Broken
Gov. Tony Evers included a so-called "ban the box" provision in his 2019-20 budget, but it was stripped out by Republicans in the Legislature, so at that time we rated the measure Stalled. Evers proposed the change again in his 2021-23 budget.
"Currently, 13 states and the District of Columbia prohibit private employers from asking applicants to identify whether they have criminal records, including Illinois and Minnesota," Britt Cudaback, Evers' spokesperson, told us in March 2021. "The governor's budget would prevent a prospective employer from requesting conviction information from a job applicant before the applicant receives a job interview. This would apply, too, for crimes that have been expunged."
In 2016, then-Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, signed the 2015 Wisconsin Act 150, which incorporated a "ban the box" provision as part of a Civil Service reform measure.
But that applied to state hires through the civil service process.
Ever's proposal would apply to all employers in the state.
And while he made an effort on it, the bottom line is this goal has not been met in his first term – and with the Legislature out of session for the year, there's no path to getting it passed this year.
We rate this Promise Broken.
PolitiFact Wisconsin Evers-O-Meter
PolitiFact Wisconsin Evers-O-Meter, March 26, 2019.
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Budget in Brief, Feb. 2021
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Budget in Brief, 2021-23
Gov. Tony Evers, Executive Orders
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Gov. Tony Evers' campaign website promised to "ban the box" -- prohibiting businesses from asking applicants about their criminal history.
His first budget sought to do that, specifying that employment discrimination would include requesting criminal histories from a job applicant or otherwise investigating their criminal history before the applicant has been selected for an interview. Employers could still notify applicants that particular convictions would disqualify them from employment.
"We have to reduce employment barriers and empower the folks re-entering our communities with the skills and support they need to live a better life," Evers said in his Feb. 28, 2019, budget address.
The Republican-controlled Legislature deleted the provision.
Evers spokeswoman Melissa Baldauff said the governor "will continue to advocate for this."
But with no progress so far, we rate this promise Stalled.
Tony Evers, campaign website
Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2019-21 Department of Workforce Development budget analysis, accessed Jan. 28, 2020
Email exchange with Melissa Baldauff, spokeswoman for Gov. Tony Evers, Jan. 22-27, 2020