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by erichurkman
2983 days ago
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I'd love if they could re-use data to temporary supplement checks that take a long time. Some background checks can take _ages_ for certain counties, especially if they were a city/county employee, a police officer, or lived in some rural county that only does background checks via paper or fax and their city office is only open 10am to 3pm two days per week. If Checkr could tell me immediately, "We submitted the requests, but they may take a long time, so here's Bob's clear background check as of 2 years ago while you wait." (I've had a few background checks via Checkr take many weeks or more, meanwhile the employee is left in limbo. 98% were quick, but those 2% were painful; not Checkr's fault of course.) |
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1) Walk into the courthouse
2) Go find which binder has the first letter of the last name of the applicant
3) Flip through the dot-matrix printed green/white reams of printed papers to see if someone with a first and last name has a court record
4) Write down the case number on a form with a bunch of other info
5) Go wait in line and hand it to the clerk
6a) If it's a record they have, you can go into the back and view it with a clerk watching to make sure you don't steal or adulterate the record. It's the only copy.
6b) If it's not in the courthouse, they'll tell you to come back in a few days while they pull it from the archive.
7) If you had many records to pull, some courts will restrict you to a max of 1-2 per day. So you either have to send lots of people, or just wait. Some courts like Santa Barbra can take 120+ days.
This is true for lots of counties in the US, and it takes getting involved in local politics to fix it. A lot of Americans can't make rent if they don't get their next paycheck, and a long background check can be really stressful.
It's a hard problem, but it's getting better. I could go on :)