CRST Expedited settles claim it pulled job offer over criminal history
California's Fair Chance Act requires employers to show a direct relationship between the duties of a job and an arrest or conviction before rejecting an otherwise qualified candidate, the department said in a news release on Thursday.
CRST, which admits no wrongdoing in the settlement, will pay $100,000 to the unnamed job candidate, train employees involved in employment decisions on the Fair Chance Act and ensure company policies comply with the law, including a provision that convictions more than 7 years old are not considered.
The California law forbids most employers from asking about criminal history before making a job offer and limits disqualifying convictions to those that have a 'direct and adverse' bearing on the job. According to the Civil Rights Department, almost a third of adults in California have an arrest or conviction that can harm their ability to get a job.A CRST Expedited applicant in Southern California claimed to have been rejected for a senior leadership role based on the candidate's criminal history, the department stated. The company, a subsidiary of Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based CRST The Transportation Solution Inc., allegedly did not conduct an individualized assessment of the criminal past and 'failed to consider the nature and gravity of the offense, the time that had passed, and how the offense related to the job being sought.' The department did not state the nature of the conviction.
'Everyone deserves an opportunity to make a living,' Civil Rights Department Director Kevin Kish said in the release. 'The Fair Chance Act helps ensure every Californian can work and contribute to their communities.'
CRST did not immediately respond to a FreightWaves email seeking comment.
Family-owned CRST is a $2 billion nationwide enterprise, according to the company's website.Related:
Court rules CRST team drivers must be paid for some hours in sleeper berth
CRST, back in the acquisition game, buys Larkin's BCB Transport
The post CRST Expedited settles claim it pulled job offer over criminal history appeared first on FreightWaves.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
25 minutes ago
- CNBC
TikTok took the world by storm. Now, Chinese companies are taking videos further with AI
BEIJING — China's video-heavy entertainment world has yielded a trove of data for companies — and they're now ramping up money-making artificial intelligence tools for generating ads and film clips. TikTok parent ByteDance holds the first and third spots in research firm Artificial Analysis' top-ranked text-to-video generative AI models, which were launched in the last two months. Google holds the second and fourth spots, while Beijing-based short video app Kuaishou's Kling AI ranks fifth. Despite some consolidation in other parts of the AI industry, "competition in AI video generation models is at an earlier stage, and some Chinese companies have emerged as early leaders in this space," said Wei Xiong, China internet analyst at UBS Securities. "We believe AI video generation has the potential to reshape the content industry," she said, "by enhancing production efficiency, lowering barriers to creation and unlocking new monetization models." With such AI tools, users can upload a single image or multiple ones, and direct the AI to generate a video clip based on them. Other tools allow users to enter text, from which the AI will generate the video clip. More than 20,000 businesses from advertisers to movie animators already use Kling AI for generating video, the Beijing-based company claimed this week during the World AI Conference in Shanghai. The latest version, Kling 2.1, can automatically add relevant sound effects to match the AI-generated video. It's not just for users in China. "Whether it's user scale or commercial revenue, overseas accounts for the majority," Zeng Yushen, head of operations at Kling AI, told CNBC in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. She said the company plans to enhance its support for the tool in places such as Japan, South Korea and Europe. "This is something we've observed, AI big models are increasingly globalized," she said. "People don't seem to care which country's product it is." Kuaishou claimed Kling AI made over 150 million yuan ($20.83 million) in revenue in the first three months of the year, and that daily advertising spend on generative AI tools was 30 million yuan during that time. The company has yet to announce when it will release second-quarter results. Zeng declined to share Kling AI's model training costs. While the reduced production cost implies a "sizeable" market, UBS' Xiong said, "current model capabilities remain constrained by clip length, motion consistency and controllability." Chinese video AI companies also face competition from the U.S., beyond the Trump administration's restrictions on China's access to advanced semiconductors needed for training AI models. Amazon and Google have launched tools for generating video from images or text. The releases come as Microsoft-backed OpenAI launched its video generation model Sora to ChatGPT subscribers in December — nearly a year after it had revealed its capabilities in February 2024. However, Kling AI had already launched to the public in June 2024. Users subscribe and buy credits to generate videos. Vidu, a rival tool from Beijing-based startup Shengshu, launched to global users roughly 12 months ago, and around March this year said it expected annual revenue of $20 million based on user subscription fees. "Chinese firms tend to attempt to first identify a commercial 'pain point' ..., areas where companies will pay for services, which has been a challenge for AI applications," said Paul Triolo, partner and senior vice president for China at advisory firm DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group. He pointed to how Chinese startup 3DStyle uses generative AI to design new clothing styles and integrate them with internet-connected, automated manufacturing. U.S. companies have also been applying AI to specific industries, Triolo said, but Chinese businesses are often able to integrate AI more quickly because they face a very competitive environment and can recruit from a "very qualified" local base of software engineers. Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has also stayed on top of the trend by releasing the latest version of its video generation AI model this week called Wan2.2. The company claimed that with the open-source model, users can control lighting, time of day, color tone, camera angle, frame size, composition and focal length. Open source allows users to download a model for free, and customize, if not commercialize, products with it. Alibaba claimed that since open sourcing the "Wan" model series in February, the models have been downloaded more than 5.4 million times from the Hugging Face platform and a similar one in China called ModelScope. "The age of AI in film is over. We've entered the age of AI as filmmaker," said Winston Ma, adjunct professor at NYU School of Law. He pointed out that China's 1.4 billion population has given local companies "enormous" amounts of video-watching data to work with. "Just like TikTok took the global markets by storm with short videos in the mobile internet age, Chinese AI companies could well lead the Generative AI revolution in visual digital entertainment," said Ma, author of "The Digital War: How China's Tech Power Shapes the Future of AI, Blockchain and Cyberspace." Chinese companies are also building AI tools for more than just generating videos. In the past week, Baidu announced that its newest AI-powered digital human technology — which powered sales of $7.65 million during an interactive livestreaming session of over six hours in June — would be released for broader industry use in October. In 3D visualization, Tencent released its Hunyuan World model for creating digital panoramic images of scenes, generated from text and visual prompts. The visuals use a "mesh" file format which gamer developers can then use to edit specific parts of the image. "Beyond supporting [Tencent's] internal development teams, the platform demonstrates Tencent's ambition to standardize high-fidelity game asset generation and expand its influence across China's game development landscape," said Daniel Ahmad, director of research and insights at Niko Partners. Niko found that more than half of game development studios in China already use AI for content generation and reducing development time and costs. But game development reflects broader challenges in using AI at scale for generating videos and graphics. "While interest in AI is high," Ahmad said, "we've already seen some backlash to games that have poorly implemented the technology."


Bloomberg
25 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Alibaba, Meituan Vow to Cease Price War After Beijing Warnings
Meituan and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. vowed Friday to curb 'disorderly competition' and cease the price-based rivalry that's threatened to pressure margins and prompted warnings from government agencies. Shares in both companies rose more than 2% after they issued statements within minutes of each other pledging to promote a fair business environment. Rival Inc. gained more than 1% in late morning trading.


CNBC
3 hours ago
- CNBC
CNBC Daily Open: Trump's (new) new tariff rates are here (again)
The first time U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled his "reciprocal" tariffs on the rest of the world, the April 2 event had a cinematic, even grand, quality. It took place at the White House Rose Garden. There was a live band playing, according to The Wall Street Journal. Trump hoisted huge physical charts of his tariff rates, which were helpfully color-coded for visual clarity. This time, Trump's updated "reciprocal" tariffs, released the night before they come into effect on Aug. 1, seemed in comparison stripped of pomp and glamor. The White House's executive order popped up around 7 p.m. ET, just as people in the U.S. were getting off work. There was no live event, no big chart and certainly no entertainment — just a stern website with a black-and-white table. That austerity — and, one might even say, stealth — surrounding the recent announcement suggests two things. First, the White House could be aware that the dramatic shock of tariffs has less power to sway trade deals when staged a second time. The "90 deals in 90 days" that trade advisor Peter Navarro had promised in April are, after all, nowhere in sight. Second, the U.S. might actually be fine not making trade deals with some countries, leaving them with higher-than-hoped-for tariffs. In June, the U.S. Treasury Department reported an unexpected surplus thanks to tariff revenue, which were more than four times higher from a year ago. And economists aren't as alarmed by tariff-driven inflation as they once were. All that's speculation, of course. Little else is known about the latest tariffs except the numbers — it's been barely two hours since they were out and there have been no other official communication thus far. The order could have been released in this low-key fashion simply because the Rose Garden is now more like a Concrete Path. Or perhaps Trump doesn't want the penguins on the Heard and McDonald islands to hear about his levies this time. The U.S. rejigs tariff rates ahead of Aug. 1 deadline. Trump's executive order imposed tariffs ranging from 10% to 41% on dozens of countries, and subjected all goods considered to have been transhipped to an additional 40% duty. The S&P 500 falls, retreating from an intraday high. Microsoft shares, however, rose around 4% to push the company's market cap above $4 trillion. The Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.75% amid a flurry of earnings from companies such as Rolls-Royce and AB InBev. Apple beats expectations for profit and revenue. The Cupertino-based company's iPhone sales grew 13% year over year, while overall revenue rose 10% in its fiscal third quarter, the fastest growth since December 2021. Amazon's gloomy guidance overshadows its earnings. Even though the company surpassed Wall Street's estimates for its second-quarter results, its expected operating income for the current quarter wasn't as high as analysts had hoped for. [PRO] Novo Nordisk's stock plunge isn't that surprising. On Tuesday, the firm's shares fell as much as 26% after it slashed its full-year guidance — and appointed a new CEO. Here's why companies tend to make both announcements simultaneously. Tariff turmoil: How global CEOs are shifting gears In interviews with CNBC this earnings season, CEOs across industries sent a clear message: tariffs are no longer just a political tactic. As trade rules grow more uncertain and tariffs resurface in policy discussions, business leaders say they're rethinking everything from where factories are located to how products are priced. The old "just in time" model is giving way to something more cautious: make goods closer to the buyer, ask for exemptions where possible, and stay alert to shifting consumer habits. —