good googly mooglyhttp://www.cnn.com/2011/12/30/us/pennsylvania-nicotine-testing/index.html?iref=allsearch
12/31/2011 2:49:22 PM
12/31/2011 2:52:01 PM
I think its bullshit
12/31/2011 2:52:40 PM
Bullshit as in you are calling nans?.....Or Bullshit as in you disagree with the policy?
12/31/2011 2:54:10 PM
I think private institutions should be able to make any kind of hiring decisions they want
12/31/2011 2:55:36 PM
I don't see how it's any different from other drug testing, which I also don't agree with, but if you can test for other vices I don't see why you couldn't test for nicotine.
12/31/2011 2:55:54 PM
My work place does not hire smokers. Any smokers already on staff were "highly encouraged" to quit.
12/31/2011 2:58:04 PM
wolfpackgrrr, id imagine the difference is that cigarettes/nicotine are currently legal drugs.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 2:59 PM. Reason : D]
12/31/2011 2:58:30 PM
If you're on a prescribed opiate painkiller and are applying for a job at a drug testing workplace I wouldn't be surprised if you didn't get the job.My feeling on it is what you do in your free time is not your workplace's business. If you're a recreational drug user and you're doing it on your own time and it's not affecting your job performance then why should your employer care? The only time I worked at a place that did drug testing, I thought they had a good policy. They would only drug test you if there was an accident in the lab to make sure you weren't stoned or something while working.
12/31/2011 3:03:13 PM
whats next can't get a job if you're cholesterol is too high, what about if your boss doesn't like the fact that you occasionally drink on your off time, or hell high impact recreational sports are dangerous don't want my surgeons breaking their hands or arms.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 3:07 PM. Reason : ...]
12/31/2011 3:05:02 PM
12/31/2011 3:08:33 PM
yepit's their company they should be able to do whatever they want
12/31/2011 3:10:39 PM
12/31/2011 3:11:51 PM
12/31/2011 3:13:06 PM
I'd have no problem with this if they proved that it actually saved costs -- meaning that shit like healthcare was cheaper AND they could afford to lose the talent.If your star doctor smokes, it would be stupid to fire him. If the janitor smokes and you are paying for his health plan, it's smart to fire him.Creating a different culture is just fucking stupid. What next -- no drinking? I guess this is Amish and Quaker country we are talking about.
12/31/2011 3:13:35 PM
My company is smoke free, and they INCENTIVIZE not smoking. I think this is probably the better route to go.
12/31/2011 3:16:19 PM
I think that it is absolutely fine for a work place to make such a decision. I don't see it as being any different than a morality clause or organizational code of conduct. Everyone knows that they can be hired or fired based on how they help or harm company image without regard to legality as long as it does not infringe on the rights of a protected class. I also don't see it as being any different than being required to pass a physical in certain lines of work. Honestly, it makes perfect sense from a business perspective when you think about the impact of smoking on the worker and the workplace.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 3:25 PM. Reason : .]
12/31/2011 3:24:33 PM
Only question I have is what about the one-off occasions? Maybe you're not a smoker, but you used to be one, and during a drunken decision decide to have one. So, you're screwed out of a job because of that?How long does nicotine stay in your system anyway?
12/31/2011 3:38:26 PM
12/31/2011 3:40:26 PM
Have they not heard of esmoking? all the goodness of nicotine and smoking without the actual harms of smoking. Although the ecigs are $100 for the device and $30 for a flavor pack, which actually lasts quite a long time, most of my snobbish friends use it now.Also, if they are on this "health and wellness plan" then they shouldn't hire fat people, but only white Europeans who have blue eyes and blonde hair.
12/31/2011 3:40:45 PM
12/31/2011 3:41:10 PM
^^^At my work place, incentives include bonuses and paying for the patch, or whatever method of quitting.Same way my husband's work pays for gym memberships and weight loss programs.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 3:42 PM. Reason : ]
12/31/2011 3:41:14 PM
What if you chew nicorette? Or any other non smoking form of nicotine? I hate big brother telling you what is for your own good. Make it against company policy to smoke at work or work functions, but dont tell me i cant do something perfectly legal in my own house. This is the trans fat thing all over again
12/31/2011 3:43:11 PM
I don't smoke and I think it's a pretty fucked up hiring policy. I mean they should just do what a number other companies do and give incentives to people who actually live a healthy lifestyle by making your monthly health insurance cost lower. I know BBT does this, they actually will pay you to eat well and go to the gym.
12/31/2011 3:48:24 PM
this is a great ideaYa know, companies should just start paying their employers in "employer-bucks" to be used at company stores. this will stop employees from driving to the mall, to the grocery, and downtown to shop, putting their health at risk by driving on dangerous roads, which drives up the cost of insurance premiums while also, in many cases, provides money to competing business. The companies can also buy land and build houses, requiring their employees to live in company housing. This keeps employees from making poor land investment choices, which lead to money problems and divorce that then lead to crippling depression, and thus, higher insurance premiums due to the high cost of psychiatric treatment.The companies know what is best for us. Why choose how you live your life - if it effects their bottom line, the choice is theirs. Rightfully so... they own you, you're their slave, and you'll bow to your master's wishes.
12/31/2011 3:50:21 PM
My company just reimburses for things: Nicotine Cessation programs, gym memberships (up to $250 annually), computer purchases (20%), etc.
12/31/2011 3:54:56 PM
I love how some of you are touting that "big brother" or "the company" shouldn't be able to tell you what to do, but you're just telling an employer what they should or should not do.If an employer wants to hire nonsmokers, then let them hire nonsmokers. You don't have to go work for them. And if their policy is reprehensible to enough people, then they won't be able to find employees and their public image will suffer. Maybe they'll even go under. And that's how it should work.
12/31/2011 3:55:30 PM
I will gladly abstain from alcohol and even caffeine if it means $5,000 / year more in pay.Amish me all you want but you have to pay the price. I'll even be black for another $3k.
12/31/2011 3:56:59 PM
12/31/2011 4:02:46 PM
It's how the system is supposed to work. I say, fuck it. Who care? Let them hire who they want to hire. You don't have to work for them. And if you want to work for them badly enough, then you fucking quit smoking. Duh. Smokers are not a protected class. Get over it.The school system doesn't hire teachers who like to strip in their free time. The church doesn't hire ministers who bang it out on the regular. And the hospital doesn't want to hire smokers. Big damned deal.
12/31/2011 4:08:53 PM
yeah, bottombaby is just trolling at this point and doesn't really understand how the world works beyond her sheltered, picture perfect idealistic virtual reality.Smoking is not illegal and not demonized as a moral choice so you can't even compare your teacher or ministers analogies. While smokers shouldn't be considered a class of "protected people" it does signify a sort of discrimination towards a particular habit that has no bearing on job performance. While I dislike people who smoke, I can tolerate it. I do get pissed off for people who don't follow the 25 ft rule from the door since it is a law, but I'm not going to penalize them if they are completely qualified for a job position.
12/31/2011 4:16:10 PM
12/31/2011 4:18:33 PM
12/31/2011 4:22:22 PM
I sometimes thought of taking up smoking so I can take 5 minute breaks every hour too, but then I realized I'd be pretty inefficient at my job doing that.
12/31/2011 4:22:52 PM
12/31/2011 4:23:14 PM
Also, I don't smoke or drink because I find it a waste of money. Do it right and invest it...on whores, blow and SLI.
12/31/2011 4:24:48 PM
12/31/2011 4:25:59 PM
Ok, I realize that it's pointless to debate the issue with you folks.Have you ever thought that you're just whittling away the rights of the employer? If I run a spa and I don't want to hire smokers because the smell of smoke in their hair, on their clothes, in their skin, and nicotine stains are unappealing to my customers. I should be able to do that. It's my business. And I figure that if you want to work for me badly enough, you'll quit smoking. If you're unwilling to quit smoking, then fuck you because you obviously don't want or need my job badly enough. I'll just find someone else.You have the right to smoke and I have the right to set my own hiring guidelines.
12/31/2011 4:26:31 PM
12/31/2011 4:28:20 PM
^^I think it's reasonable to ask employees to not smoke on the job or smell like smoke, but unreasonable to ask them to refrain from smoking altogether.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 4:29 PM. Reason : .]
12/31/2011 4:28:38 PM
I actually think private employers should have the right to do this. Private employers should also have the right to allow smoking indoors if they so choose (like a bar for instance) regardless of state law.
12/31/2011 4:29:23 PM
^^^^ Employee rights are generally given greater weight (or at least should be) than employer rights because employers generally have stronger bargaining positions than employees.]
12/31/2011 4:29:26 PM
12/31/2011 4:30:38 PM
irrelevant and untrue
12/31/2011 4:32:14 PM
^x6 bet you don't want them coming in drunk either[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 4:35 PM. Reason : ^]
12/31/2011 4:34:10 PM
12/31/2011 4:36:10 PM
I smoked for approximately 5 years. The smell even gets in your skin. It can be pretty bad. You would have to be extremely fastidious about not smoking in your house or your car or in the clothes you wear to work and bathing before going into work and not having a cigarette between showering and work. Most smokers have something like a pack a day habit. That's just not going to happen.
12/31/2011 4:39:20 PM
Thats a pretty big assumption BB. Id argue that many smokers smoke and you just dont know about it because they take the necessary precautions to not smell horribly.[Edited on December 31, 2011 at 4:45 PM. Reason : L]
12/31/2011 4:44:53 PM
^^If you're a massage therapist, smelling like smoke affects your job. If you want to be a massage therapist and also smoke, you have to be diligent about it. Just like if you're a doctor on call, you can't drink. Plenty of people are capable of smoking and not smelling like it all the time.If it doesn't necessarily affect your job, it shouldn't be a caveat for employment.
12/31/2011 4:46:34 PM
A hospital hiring smokers is like the military hiring peaceniks.Smoking is one of the leading causes of death, and the leading cause of cancer. It makes ZERO sense for hospitals to support this habit in any way.
12/31/2011 5:09:54 PM