Originally Posted by
rwanttaja
I gotta admit, I'm curious, too. This was billed as a "Protect the children from predators" action, but you're collecting other data NOT RELATED TO CHILD PREDATION???? Who is making the decision as to what is sufficient to ban someone from YE?
What does EAA get from the background check agency? I had assumed it was a go/no go as to child predation history. But sounds as if EAA receives a full dossier on each individual. Who at headquarters has access to this data? What specific criteria is used for elimination of someone from Young Eagles?
Y'know what's scary about this? Imagine the chapter Young Eagles coordinator contacts a pilot, and asks him to participate. The pilot, never having abused a child in his life, agrees and enters his name. But, 30 years ago as a teen, he shoplifted and got caught. An arrest record? EAA rejects him.
Everyone in the chapter will believe he was rejected as a sexual predator...because THAT'S what EAA claims the program is supposed to detect. (emphasis added)
OK, time for some answers, EAA staffers:
1. What are the specific criteria used to reject someone as a Young Eagles pilot?
2. SPECIFICALLY, what information about each applicant does EAA receive from the background-investigation company?
3. Who at headquarters has access to this data?
4. What protections are in place to prevent other employees from accessing this data?
5. What are EAA's PII Protection policies? Do they specifically address this data?
6. What procedures are in place for EAA members to review their Dossier, and correct faulty information?
Ron Wanttaja