Monster.com under fire for CV alterations

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Job hunters at Monster.com who happened to go to school in Syria or Iran may be in for an unpleasant surprise on Thursday. So might employers using the popular job-search site, which boasts more than 800,000 job postings, to advertise open positions in Sudan, Burma and five other countries. In a move the company claims is designed to comply with federal regulations, Monster.com on Thursday will delete most references to those countries from job postings and CVs. A note that Monster.com sent to affected users says: "Your resume will be altered, removing all sanctioned countries from your resume." The controversy is over whether the company is required by law to perform the deletions. According to Kevin Mullins, a Monster.com spokesman, "Monster took the actions to be in full compliance with US regulations" and consulted with the US Treasury Department first. A Treasury Department spokesman did not return calls Wednesday. But a senior department official said that no law "that I'm aware of" would require the deletions and Monster.com's scenario of legal liability was implausible. Monster.com pointed to a federal list of sanctioned countries that restricts U.S. firms from engaging in certain business activities. In the case of Iran, for instance, US corporations can be fined up to $500,000 (about £320,000) for importing "goods or services of Iranian origin" except for food, carpets and information. The regulations restrict "services" provided to Iranian companies but exempt "the exportation from the United States to Iran of information and informational materials, whether commercial or otherwise". Monster.com's Mullins was unable to immediately identify what section of the rules his company was worried about. The email from Monster.com to its customers said: "The US Department of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, as well as some states, maintain(s) sanctions which prohibit US companies from conducting certain business activities with organisations located in or residents of the following countries Burma/Myanmar, Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Sudan or Syria." The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) in Washington said Wednesday that Monster.com misunderstood the law. "ADC contacted the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control and spoke to the Sanctions Section," ADC representative Laila Al-Qatami said. "They advised ADC that Monster has misunderstood the regulations. They are not required to remove or modify any data on persons' resumes." "This practice is deeply troubling for the many that post their resumes on Monster.com," Al-Qatami said. "Altering or hiding information on resumes is not only misleading but also unjustified. Resumes are supposed to be based on truth and fact. Hiding or deleting information unfairly handicaps persons searching for gainful employment, not to mention going against standards of honesty and truthfulness." Thursday's deletion will not affect textual descriptions of jobs that customers type in themselves, such as a US photographer describing work that involved a trip to Burma. Instead, Monster.com said it will remove those seven nations from pop-up lists of countries that customers use to construct their listings and delete existing entries that use those fields from its database. "We're not changing words in resumes," Mullins said. "We're not getting into that. It's discriminatory." Mullins said the change in policy happened because of a routine internal review of Monster.com's procedures and was not initiated by the Bush administration.
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