Crossing the line: Interview questions you canโt legally ask
Posted on January 2016 By Ellie Somers
The purpose of a job interview is to gather as much information about potential employees as possible, so itโs not surprising that occasionally interviewers cross the legal line of what they can and cannot ask.
Hereโs how to avoid asking discriminatory questions.
Before 1975, employers could throw all kinds of hairy questions at their potential employees, but the introduction of the Commonwealth Racial Discrimination Act (1975) brought an end to this kind of freestyle interrogation. Since then, the government has instituted seven Commonwealth acts to sanction equal opportunity.
So what does this mean for employers looking to hire? It means interviewers cannot ask questions that force a person to reveal information the interviewers may then use against them when narrowing down the best candidates. So treating one potential employee with a certain personal characteristic less favourably than a person without that characteristic is tantamount to discrimination.
What are the areas to avoid?
Avoiding these questions is the easiest way to avoid breaching discrimination acts:
Age: โHow old are you?โ
Disability/impairment (physical and mental): โHow many sick days did you take last year?โ
Family/carerโs responsibilities: โAre you the carer for your elderly family members?โ
Marital or relationship status: โAre you married?โ
Parental status: โDo you have children?โ
Political beliefs and activities: โAre you a Liberal voter?โ
Pregnancy: โDo you plan on becoming pregnant any time soon?โ
Race: โWhatโs your nationality?โ
Religious beliefs and activities: โAre you Christian?โ
Gender (including sexual harassment): โFemales rarely succeed in this industry.โ
Sexual orientation: โAre you gay?โ
Union or employer-association membership: โAre you a member of the union?โ
How do you legally obtain personal information?
Itโs important to phrase questions by identifying the specific tasks and requirements of the role, rather than concentrating on the characteristics of the candidate. For example, if the role requires travel and the company needs to know whether the candidate can travel without worrying about the responsibility of children, instead of asking, โDo you have any children?โ rephrase the question to โThis job requires interstate travel. Are you able to spend time away from home?โ
If the role is physically demanding, instead of asking โDo you have any health issues?โ rephrase this question to โThe role requires heavy lifting. Are you able to do this?โ
Like many things in life, itโs not what you do โ itโs how you do it. So when trying to obtain information from a candidate, consider how you phrase the question to avoid landing in discriminatory hot water.