Quote from: itsxandrea on December 05, 2012, 12:24:25 PM
Hey everyonee 🙂
HUGE worry of mine has finally come ... getting my first job as I'm full-time (and pre-op).
I'm concerned because, I *know* it's harder statistically for a trans person to get a job and because the job market in the US isn't great anyway. I am very qualified and have a good resume, but, also I know I may not be taken too seriously if someone doesn't agree with me being trans.
THE PROS:
- I live in Boston, Massachusetts... I can't think of a more liberal area to find a job as a transgendered person
- My voice is 500% passable (it's the only thing I feel very confident about), so I feel a phone interview or maybe even sitting across from the interviewer, they won't have a very obvious red flag to discriminate.
- I have a lot of work history but it's through my own company that I was doing for about 5 years. I also have a great degree. So, they won't find me as a different name anywhere before.
Thank-youuu!
Here are a few things I did. When I went to come out to an employer I was fired from my job and found myself looking for a new one. Of course I had no work history but I did have a valid court ordered name change. I went to my former employers, including the one who fired me, and showed them the court order and asked them to change my name for employment purposes. No one objected or said boo. I figured it took some kahunas to go back to an employer who just canned me for transitioning on the job and asking them to update my personnel file but they did it no questions.
In fact, in the end, the action of going back turned out to be just the thing I needed. I come from the world of engineering and there are not many women engineers out there. Long story short, I have an excellent set of references and a former manager who liked me a lot gave me an employment tip and 2 weeks later I as back in the work force. Yes it was a monetary drop of 50%, but hell I was working and my transition didn't die off in the process. It took me a few years to get back to where I was.
I will say this, that the longer I live full time, the more I am caught off guard with places where I forgot to change my name. Some minor detail somewhere and 8 years later I get the "I see Mr So and so in the records, not {me}?". MOst of the time they assume it's an ex husband, which suits me fine.
I wouldn't worry about background checks. A few years ago I was working for a defense contractor and had to go through the whole giant background check stuff. They collectected tons of material, but not much interest in my name change. The absolute lucky part is that I actually got to see and read the results of my background check. It never said anything about other names, or anything like that. It showed pages of criminal record searches (clean what I expected), college education verification (my degree was still in my old name at that time but showed in my new name on the background check).
Most of the time I think background checks are looking for education validation, prior salary information, and making sure you don't have a prior criminal record. I'm assuming that you have already done a court ordererd name change and changed your social security info and your drivers license. If I recall when I did my change at social seurity I got my new ID card in a week or so.
For the new job I believe that you can have your social security card with your new name and your drivers license for your form I-9 and you should be fine.
Hope that helps!