office (212)
581-1180
fax (212) 581-8002
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Name: Thomas
Hoffman, Esq.
Telephone: 212
581 1180
Email: thoff93452@aol.com
Website: www.registryclassaction.com
FEDERAL JUDGE
APPROVES CLASS ACTION
New York, N.Y.
February 19, 2010
A class action
legal settlement has been reached that could restore the employment
rights of up to 25,000 New Yorkers. According to the settlement
agreement—reached between Class Counsel Thomas Hoffman Esq. and the
New York State Office of Children and Family Services
(OCFS)—thousands of people listed on a statewide “Abuse and
Maltreatment Register” could receive hearings to have their names
cleared.
The Abuse and
Maltreatment Register, which is maintained by the OCFS, a New York
State Agency, contains the names of individuals accused of
maltreating children. Most
child-related employment and licensing agencies must check the
Register before hiring. As a result, prospective hires generally
cannot work with children until their names are cleared from the
Register.
Since placement
on the Register restricts employment rights, people listed have a
constitutional right to a name-clearing hearing. The class action
lawsuit alleges that this right was violated between January 1, 2003
and December 31, 2007 because a large percentage of 25,000 requested
hearings were terminated, with no hearing held. Citing statistics
that show that 50% to 70% of those who receive hearings are
exonerated, Mr. Hoffman says that the difference between a hearing
and no hearing is often the difference between a steady job and
unemployment.
Under the terms
of the settlement, the State will send notices to the roughly 25,000
people on the Register whose Requests for Hearings were terminated
between 2003 and 2007. The notice will inform people that they may
have a right to request a new hearing. Those who respond by
expressing interest in a hearing will have their records reviewed by
OCFS, which must produce documentation of a hearing decision. If the
State agency is unable to produce a decision, a new hearing will be
scheduled.
OCFS also agreed
not to re-institute a project that terminated Hearing Requests when
an employer or licensing agency lost interest in an applicant. The
right to a hearing, according to Mr. Hoffman, is independent of an
employer’s interest in an applicant. This is especially true since
most employers cannot afford to maintain interest in job candidates
unable to work while they await hearings.
Judge Shira A.
Scheindlin of the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
gave preliminary approval for the settlement on February 17, 2010. A
Fairness Hearing will be held on April 20, 2010 in which Judge
Scheindlin will decide whether to grant final approval. If she does
grant final approval, Class Counsel Thomas Hoffman will monitor the
implementation of the terms of the settlement for up to three years.
Judge Scheindlin
must still determine how swiftly the state must schedule and decide
requested hearings. Currently, an average of 8 to 10 months or
longer pass before hearing requests are decided. “This is much too
long a time period while the individual is waiting to become
employed,” says Mr. Hoffman. During these difficult economic times,
Mr. Hoffman said, it is particularly important that people receive a
prompt hearing to decide whether their name belongs on this list.
A website (www.registryclassaction.com)
has been established to provide information for people who have not
received a requested hearing. The attorneys who negotiated the
settlement on behalf of OCFS are Assistant Attorney General Robert
L. Kraft and OCFS Senior Counsel Emily Reeb Bray.
For more
information:
Thomas Hoffman, 250 W. 57 St., New York, N.Y. 10107
Tel. 212 581 1180 or 917 589 6156
Email:
thoff93452@aol.com