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25 Lab. L.J. 270 (1974)
The Confidentiality of Personnel Records: A Legal and Ethical View

handle is hein.journals/labljo25 and id is 272 raw text is: The Confidentiality of Personnel Records:
A Legal and Ethical View
By MORDECHAI MIRONI*
The right to be let alone is indeed the beginning of
all freedom.-Mr. Justice William 0. Douglas'
W HEN AN EMPLOYEE'S personnel records are in the hands of
his employer one might assume they are confidential. One might
base this assumption on the legal privilege held by physicians, lawyers,
clergymen and others. Like these persons, an employer may possess
confidential information and one may imagine that a personnel manager,
too, should have a duty not to disclose it. In fact, the whole issue
might seem so clear that only academicians would debate the extent
of the privilege.
Yet, the two spontaneous assumptions are both wrong. The issue
is really a practical question of great import to both employers and
employees. And surprisingly, according to present legal doctrine,
the personnel records of employees are not confidential at all.
To the best of my knowledge the issue has been entirely neglected
in professional literature. Therefore, it will be the purpose of this
article to emphasize the importance, the practical nature, and the seri-
ousness of the problem at present. This will be contrasted against the
complicated and ineffectual devices the law presently offers to protect
the individual employee. Finally, some new methods will be suggested
in order to protect the employee against unwarranted dissemination
of information in his personnel file.
Confidentiality of Personnel Records-
Definitions and Scope of Study
Definitions
Personnel records refer to all recorded information about employees
kept by an employer, usually in the form of and under the name per-
sonnel files. Files may include medical reports, criminal records,
counseling protocols, and personal inventories. One writer has given
just a taste of the thoroughness with which some organizations keep
such files:
*The author gratefully acknowledges Mr. Stephen D. Gordon for his
research contribution and Mr. Timothy D. Kelly for his valuable editorial assistance.
'Public Utilities Commissioner v. Pollack, 393 U. S. 451, 467 (1952).

May, 1974  *   Labor Law Journal

270

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