From: Greg Fisher [mailto:greg@creditscoring.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 19, 2011 7:57 PM
To: Michael J. Morand, associate vice president of Yale University for New Haven and State Affairs
Cc: Martin Looney, state Senator, Majority Leader, Connecticut; Martin Looney, state Senator, Majority Leader, Connecticut (press aide email address); Matthew Lesser, state Representative, Connecticut; Robert Hiltonsmith, policy analyst, Demos; Timothy k. Rusch, director of Communications, Demos; Amelia Warren Tyagi, board chair, Demos; Miles Rapoport, president, Demos; Lori J. Pelletier, secretary-treasurer, Connecticut AFL-CIO; John Olsen, president, AFL-CIO, Connecticut; Sarah Poriss, attorney at law; Edith Prague, state Senator, chair, Labor & Public Employees, Connecticut; Edith Prague, state Senator, chair, Labor & Public Employees, Connecticut (press aide email address); Kia Murrell, assistant counsel, Connecticut Business & Industry Association; Kevin T. Kane, Chief State’s Attorney, Division of Criminal Justice, Connecticut
Subject: RE: credit score, employers, Connecticut SB 361, HB 5061 (2010), Yale
See this message and your response at https://blog.creditscoring.com/?tag=connecticut-sb-361.
You testified, “I write of behalf of Yale University, whose mission includes operations where the use of credit reports in employment decisions is prudent and reasonable.”
Is obtaining credit scores an option provided by your employment screening report supplier?
—
Greg Fisher
The Credit Scoring Site
creditscoring.com
PO Box 342
Dayton, Ohio 45409-0342
[attached: copy of previous messages]