More companies than ever won’t hire people who smoke. But is that legal —
and is it worth it for employers?
The University of Pennsylvania Medical System is the latest employer to announce it will no longer hire smokers.
The firm joins a number of companies who’ve closed their doors to tobacco
user, as Molly DiBianca of the Delaware
Employment Law Blog pointed out in a recent post.
But just because these organizations have decided not to hire smokers doesn’t automatically mean that you can.
Banning smokers – is it legal?
First, you and your supervisors should understand there’s no federal law
that protects smokers or entitles them to equal protections when it comes to
hiring, promotions, etc. That’s because the Equal
Employment Opportunity
Commission doesn’t recognize smokers as a protected class.
That said, there are 29 states (along with the District of Columbia) that
do offer protections for smokers.
If your company is in one of those states, you can’t refuse to hire people
just because they smoke (although you can turn them down for other, legitimate
reasons).
Here’s the list of states that provide employment protections to smokers,
according to the American Lung
Association:
§ California
§ Colorado
§ Connecticut
§ District
of Columbia
§ Illinois
§ Indiana
§ Kentucky
§ Louisiana
§ Maine
§ Minnesota
§ Mississippi
§ Missouri
§ Montana
§ Nevada
§ New
Hampshire
|
§ New
Jersey
§ New
Mexico
§ New
York
§ North
Carolina
§ North
Dakota
§ Oklahoma
§ Oregon
§ Rhode
Island
§ South
Carolina
§ South
Dakota
§ Tennessee
§ Virginia
§ West
Virginia
§ Wisconsin
§ Wyoming
|
If you’re not located in one of those states, you’re likely permitted to
enact a smoke-free hiring policy and keep people who smoke out of your
workplace.
But is a ban on hiring smokers really the right way to go? Opinions differ.
On the one hand, a 2009 study by the Journal of Tobacco Policy & Research did
find that smokers take more sick days than their non-smoking co-workers.
It also found that even if a smoker is in relatively good health (isn’t
obese, doesn’t have chronic health conditions like diabetes, etc.), there’s a
good chance he or she will still have higher medical costs than a comparable
non-smoker over a three-year period.
But a smoking ban is worthwhile only if smokers quit for good. If the
prohibition causes people to quit until they’re hired — and then they take up
smoking again as soon as they pass the nicotine test — it’s not an effective
cost-cutting tactic.
The results point to a need for constant testing to ensure former smokers
don’t fall back into the habit after they’re hired — which can get expensive.
Cons of a ban on hiring smokers
Another study from anti-smoking journal Tobacco Control found
that a tobacco-free hiring policy might not be a good idea. Here’s why:
§ It’s a
slippery slope. If the decision were based on health-related costs, couldn’t a
case be made for banning people with with weight-related problems, such as high
cholesterol or diabetes? And wouldn’t that raise discrimination concerns?
§ Would you
be turning away good talent because of a smoking addiction — an addiction that
could be licked with some help?
Sure, when unemployment is high and lots of people are job hunting, you can be choosy. But do you really want to lose that top salesperson or IT manager to a competitor because of smoking?
And what about when the employment market turns around, and you find yourself scrambling for good people?
Sure, when unemployment is high and lots of people are job hunting, you can be choosy. But do you really want to lose that top salesperson or IT manager to a competitor because of smoking?
And what about when the employment market turns around, and you find yourself scrambling for good people?
Researchers at Tobacco Control instead say employers
should push hard to get employees into smoking-cessation programs, especially ones sponsored at work.
Every analysis of such programs shows they’re cost-effective in improving
absentee rates and time lost because of smoking-related illnesses.
Source : HRmorning.com
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