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Important Notice

West Shore Home job seekers, read more below!

Westport Building

Steps to Confirm Job Opportunities with West Shore Home

  1. Confirm Legitimate Employment Postings. West Shore Home posts all legitimate job opportunities through its secure applicant tracking system (ATS), which powers the official Careers Page and feeds job listings to Indeed and LinkedIn. These job postings may be promoted via Glassdoor, Facebook, SHRM, Plumber.com, BlueRecruit.US, Craigslist, and SEOjobs.com, but these listings will either direct candidates to apply through the official careers page or will be manually processed through the internal hiring system.

  2. Check for Communications Inconsistencies. West Shore Home may contact you by varying methods, but all communication will come directly from a West Shore Home recruiter or onboarding specialist. All legitimate emails will end in @westshorehome.com. Messages from scammers may have grammatical errors, unusual formatting, or suspicious sender addresses.

  3. Do Not Send Payment During an Interview. Communications from fraudsters may ask for payment from you for equipment. Regardless of the reason given, if payment of any sort is requested, it is not a legitimate employment opportunity.

  4. Be Cautious Sharing Personal Information. During the interview process, West Shore Home may ask for your full name, email address, and phone number. Additional information such as background check forms will only be requested after a signed offer, and only through our secure hiring system.

  5. Confirm Legitimate Job Offers. West Shore Home will always confirm job offers within their internal hiring system. If you receive a job offer from an individual that does not use a @westshorehome.com email address or verifiable phone number, this offer may not be legitimate.

Steps to Report Potential Scams

  1. If you believe you have applied for or received a job offer from a fraudulent posting, report fraudulent jobs directly on the job boards or through the Federal Trade Commission using this link: ReportFraud.ftc.gov - Assistant.

  2. If you shared your Social Security number, received tax-related documents, or suspect someone may try to file a tax return in your name you should report the incident to the IRS using this link: Report a tax scam or fraud | Internal Revenue Service. Additionally, request an Identity Protection (IP) Pin to prevent a scammer from using your personal information to file a fraud tax return: Get an identity protection PIN | Internal Revenue Service.

  3. For more information on job scams, please visit: Job Scams | Consumer Advice

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