July 23rd, 2009
Dear Hiring Manager: Would You Hire Michael Vick?
Here’s a question I’d love to have some hiring managers answer: Would you hire (or even consider hiring) an individual with superior talent but a troubled past who might be a game-changer for your organization? Yes, he’s a convicted felon, but he has served his time, expressed remorse on numerous occasions, and seems generally contrite for his past actions.
Would you give this person a chance? Does talent outweigh the negative baggage, especially if the person in question has the ability to really, really help your business?
In other words, would you take a chance and hire former star pro quarterback Michael Vick?
“For Michael Vick to have any prayer of resuming his NFL career, he has to show true remorse for dogfighting, something he now admits doing as young as 8 years old,” writes Sam Farmer in the Los Angeles Times. “He made that confession recently to Wayne Pacelle, chief executive and president of the Humane Society of the United States, when Pacelle visited him at his home in Hampton, Va.”
The details of Michael Vick’s involvement in dogfighting are well-documented and abhorrent to just about anyone. And, Vick has paid a heavy price for his actions: “Although he remains on probation, Vick on Monday completed his federal dogfighting sentence, which included 18 months in prison and two more under home confinement,” the Times story points out.
“He [also] forfeited an estimated $70 million when the Atlanta Falcons released him from his 10-year, $130-million contract, [and] Vick filed for bankruptcy protection a year ago, listing $16 million in assets and $20 million in debt.”
Yes, Vick has paid the price, but his crimes clearly warranted the penalty. Ed Sayres, president and chief executive of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said it was Vick’s “barbarism that sets the crime apart,” and that Vick admitted he electrocuted and beat dogs to death after they lost fights. “This was not a one-time transgression or crime of passion—this was a multi-year pattern of behavior that demonstrates a startling lack of moral character and judgment,” Sayres said.
But whether you decide to hire Vick also comes down to something else—do you believe in redemption? Can people atone and make up for their actions? Do the Michael Vicks of the world deserve a second chance?
I believe Vick deserves another chance, and I think that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell—the guy who ultimately will make the decision—will eventually come to that conclusion too.
However, I also believe the discussion over whether Vick should get another chance is one we wouldn’t be having if he wasn’t a big-time, highly talented athlete. Is there any profession in America other than the performance-driven world of professional athletics that would consider hiring someone who served time for torturing animals?
Although I believe in the power of redemption, of serving your debt to society, and of getting another chance, I also don’t believe there is a hiring manager outside the NFL who would take a chance on a convicted felon like Vick no matter how talented or game-changing he might be.
Pro football writers are split on this.
John DeShazier in the New Orleans Times-Picayune feels that “Vick has paid enough to regain admission to the league if a team will have him,” while Mike Lopresti in USA Today says that “the thinking here is [that Vick] probably merits one more year of sanctions, for wanton cruelty, but I could be talked into ending his suspension now. He’s been gone two seasons. That’s forever to a professional athlete.”
For hiring managers and recruiters who like to crow that it’s all about hiring superior talent, that’s only true up to a point, because I don’t believe there is a talent manager outside of the Oakland Raiders willing to go to the boss and make a pitch for hiring a game-changing individual with off-the-board talent who also happens to have a rap sheet that includes torturing animals.
So I ask again: Would you give Michael Vick a second chance?
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I would have to think long and hard before I would present someone like Michael Vick to my hiring committee. I believe in redemption.\
Posted by: Dean Bramlett | July 28th, 2009 at 8:21 am
Should he be given another chance? My logical part says yes. He has paid his debt and should be given another chance. His actions, while horrible, were not job related and as long as he is free and able to play he should be allowed to. That said, personally (and probably emotionally) I don’t want him playing for my favorite team and I will not be cheering for him.
Posted by: Michelle | July 28th, 2009 at 8:53 am
Most of us like to say we could think rationally and fairly about a situation like this and for those that are religious - to forgive is considered divine, but the truth of the matter is - forgiveness is not easy for most of us. This particular situation plays on a couple of my emotions - one I’m an animal lover and two - I think a great many professional athletes think they are immune to following the rules. This situation with Vick and more recently with Plaxico Burris may have some of them beginning to get the message that us regular folk are tired of watching these highly paid athletes act however they want and get away with it. If he was not an athlete he would have to fill out a job application and most all job applications ask if you’ve ever been convicted of a felony. Check yes and see how fast your application lands in file 13.
Posted by: Traci | July 28th, 2009 at 1:19 pm
I agree..rationally, he has paid his debt to society. Emotionally, I couldn’t work with someone, or expect others to work with someone, who has physically tortured an animal and felt that was the cost of doing business. Let’s face it, this isn’t someone with a mental illness. This is someone who felt that this was the purpose of these dogs. I admit I am irrational in my love for all dogs especially my own. I would even go so far as to quit my job if someone told me that I had to hire him. That type of behavior is not one that his easily set aside. It isn’t for me to judge how remorseful Michael Vick is, but I wonder how much remorse he has over the fact that he brutalized dogs versus remorse over the fact that he may have lost the lifestyle.
Posted by: RDM | July 29th, 2009 at 7:00 am