- No more than 2 convictions may become spent;
- The conviction-free periods that must be served before a conviction will become spent range from 3 years for a small fine to 7 years for a 12 month prison sentence;
- Anyone seeking to work with or provide services (care and accommodation) to children (under 18) or vulnerable adults will have to declare their convictions;
- A range of employments, including those relating to the security of the State, the administration of justice and other sensitive positions, are excluded;
- Convictions will have to be disclosed when applying for certain licences (taxis, private security, etc);
The Employment Equality Acts 1998 - 2011 currently provides for nine equality grounds, namely gender, age, race, sexual orientation, civil status, family status, disability, religion and member of travelling community. In recent interview minister Aodhán Ó’Ríordáin, has stated he has no intention to add criminal convictions to the list of discriminatory grounds rather the issue is best dealt with under the new Spent Convictions Bill.
Spent Convictions Bill
The Spent Convictions Bill was proposed in 2012 and has passed all stages to date and is currently awaiting report stage at the Dail. The aim the Bill is to provide for the rehabilitation of offenders into the employment market. Having a criminal conviction and securing employment can sometimes prove difficult given the concern employers have with reputational damage as well as issues of trust and confidence.
The Bill provides for a system whereby certain convictions can be omitted after a number of years (7 years) have elapsed since the conviction(s) were imposed. The Bill is awaiting report stage in the Dail when further amendments are likely to be introduced with a view to the Bill’s early enactment afterwards. Pending this an Administrative Filter for Garda Vetting Disclosure has been introduced which provides that certain minor offences that are over 7 years old are no longer disclosed through Garda Vetting.
The main provisions of the Bill are as follows: