Most Law & Legal Jobs on Earth - LawCrossing

     

Forgot Your Password?    Remember Me

Try It Now!

EMPLOYERS, POST LEGAL JOBS FOR FREE

ATTORNEYS LAW STUDENTS LEGAL STAFF
Feature
 
Butting In: Employers Penalize Smokers and Overweight Workers

By Ursula Furi-Perry

Some companies are enticing employees to lead healthier, more productive lives with a variety of ''wellness'' initiatives, including smoking-cessation counseling and products, weight maintenance plans, and exercise programs. Companies are promoting everything from a discount on smoking replacement aids and health club memberships to substantial discounts on health insurance premiums.

Recent Articles
+ Archives
Butting In: Employers Penalize Smokers and Overweight Workers
Butting In: Employers Penalize Smokers and Overweight Workers
+ Enlarge
Companies enticing employees to lead healthier lives with a variety of ''wellness'' initiatives.
But in recent months, some companies have gone further, imposing what some critics say are stiff and unfair penalties against smokers and overweight workers.

A handful of companies, for instance, are charging employees who smoke higher insurance premiums. In states like Minnesota, that choice is protected by legislation. State law expressly allows employers to charge different premium rates as long as the differences reflect actual differential costs to the company.

Sandra Sandell, director of the Secondhand Smoke Resource Center at the Association of Nonsmokers in Minnesota, said that employers who are self-insured—those that offer health insurance to all their employees and bear its costs—may determine that it costs more to insure its smokers and then charge the extra amount to their employees who smoke.

"Smokers are not a protected class," she said. "If the employer determines that it costs more to insure its smokers, it can charge the extra amount to its employees who smoke." In fact, the laws of the state expressly allow employers to do so.

Nonetheless, employers must square their decision to provide different health premiums with the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA,) which prohibits employers offering health insurance from requiring similarly situated individuals to pay higher premiums on the basis of any health-status-related factor.

"Employers may offer special discounts, rebates, and incentives in return for employees' adherence to wellness programs," said James McElligott, a partner practicing employer benefits law at McGuireWoods, LLP, in Richmond, VA. "To do so, they must meet some standards: the program has to be reasonably designed to promote health and prevent disease; the rewards must be proportionate; the employer must measure the reward strictly based on employees' adherence to the program; employees must have the opportunity to qualify for the program at least once a year; and employers must provide a reasonable alternative to those employees whose entry into the program may be unreasonably difficult."

Statutes such as Minnesota's may appear to be contradictory to HIPAA's standards, but states have the ultimate trump card in enacting insurance legislation. "The Minnesota statute is an attempt at balance," said Douglas N. Silverstein, partner at Kesluk & Silverstein in Los Angeles, who has substantial experience representing both employers and employees in labor and employment suits. "It reflects the legislative intent to protect lawful off-duty conduct while recognizing that smoking results in higher costs, which should be shared by employer and employee." Depending on interpretation, smoking in particular may or may not qualify as a health-status-related factor.

"Laws dealing with discrimination have traditionally made a distinction between immutable characteristics and (voluntary) behaviors," Mr. McElligott said. "Smoking is a mixed bag. While it is addictive and a difficult habit to break, it's also a behavior," rather than an innate characteristic. "It's also important to recognize that HIPPAA is fairly new," said Mr. Silverstein. "The issue may ultimately be resolved through the courts."

A growing number of companies are even beginning to refuse to hire candidates who smoke. Union Pacific Corporation reportedly recently implemented a trial program in several of the 23 states where it does business, vowing to hire only nonsmokers wherever possible.

The Pinellas Sheriff's office in Florida reportedly will not consider applicants who are smokers or have used tobacco products for six months prior to employment. In Washington State, the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department not only refuses to hire smokers, it even asks employees to sign an affidavit promising not to smoke.

The reasons behind not hiring smokers are manifold. Simply put, experts say, smokers can be a great nuisance-and expense-in the workplace. In a recent survey of 47,000 workers in six companies, the MEDSTAT Group, a market resource and intelligence firm specializing in healthcare, determined that smokers cost employers $1,714 more per year than nonsmoker employees. Smokers also take more sick days and breaks during the workday, experts say. Furthermore, in a world of growing awareness about the detrimental effects of both smoking and secondhand smoke, employers simply do not want to project an image of endorsing tobacco use.

Employers are not barred from excluding smokers, experts say, because smoking is considered a lifestyle choice, not a disability or health problem. Therefore, smokers are technically not a protected class under anti-discrimination statutes, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act. In those states where smokers are not expressly protected by statute, not hiring tobacco users is basically legal. "Smokers are not a protected class," said V. James DeSimone, partner at Schonbrun DeSimone Seplow Harris and Hoffman, an employment rights law firm in Venice, CA.

In fact, some courts have found for employers on the issue. "Where job applicants had to sign an affidavit of nonsmoking for a year, the Florida Supreme Court upheld that policy," explained Mr. Silverstein. "In effect, the court said that because smokers are constantly required to reveal whether they smoke, they do not have (a reasonable expectation of privacy)."

But not every state offers employers free reign to decline hiring smokers. Many states have enacted "lifestyle discrimination" statutes, prohibiting employment discrimination based on smoking, and even obesity and moderate alcohol use in some cases.

In New Jersey, for instance, the law prevents employers from denying employment or discharging from employment or taking any other adverse action against smokers unless the employer has a "rational" employment-related reason for doing so. New Jersey's statute explicitly prohibits employers from deciding between applicants on the basis of smoking.

California, Maine, New Mexico, New Hampshire, and Kentucky also have enacted legislation to protect smokers. "In those states, employees would probably have a pretty strong argument against adverse discrimination," Mr. Silverstein said.

Most of these "smokers' rights" statutes do allow employers some leeway: for example, employers may declare a smoke-free workplace and have smoke-free policies during work hours.

Some measures also protect against other forms of lifestyle discrimination, shielding those who may overeat or drink alcohol in the privacy of their own homes. In fact, obesity is becoming a growing concern among employers, so much so that employer-based weight management plans are becoming the next wave of smoking cessation programs.

But employers may not get away with charging obese employees higher health insurance premiums. Obesity is likely to be considered a health factor protected by HIPAA, even a disability in some instances.

"Chronic obesity has been recognized as a disability. Here, more clearly defined standards apply," said Mr. McElligott.

"Whether obesity is considered a medical condition may depend on its medical causes," Mr. DeSimone explained.

It is important to recognize the wider societal issues behind smoking and the workplace, experts say. "On one end of the spectrum, there's an individual's constitutional right to privacy," Mr. Silverstein explained, "on the other, there's well-accepted scientific data that smoking causes maladies, costs employers more, and makes healthcare more expensive. It's tough to resolve disputes when societal behaviors stand otherwise."

The effectiveness of employers' tough-arm smoking cessation techniques remains to be seen, although some experts prefer milder solutions. "Investing in employees through counseling programs and other methods is a better solution than charging higher health premiums as a type of punishment," said Dawn Robbins, Health Policy Coordinator for Tobacco Free Oregon, a statewide smoking cessation initiative. "I would rather see laws that encourage individuals than employers prohibiting people from seeking employment" based on smoking, Mr. DeSimone agreed.

  • Share this story:
  • BlinkList
  • blogmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • Sphinn
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Simpy
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Print this article!
  • Faves
  • Furl
  • Netvouz
  • Slashdot
  • Spurl
  • Yahoo! Buzz
SHARE IT: Del.icio.us  Del.icio.us Digg  Digg Newsvine  Newsvine
Printable Version    Printable Version PDF Version    PDF Version Email to a Friend    Email to a Friend
Comment    Post A Comment View Comment    View Comment Discuss    Discuss
Popular Tags
 Washington State  legislative intent  Health Insurance Portability  discrimination  plans  wellness  Disabilities Act  benefits  costs  smoking  Accountability Act  Florida Supreme Court  Americans with Disabilities  maintenance  diseases  experts say  state laws  job applicants  Minnesota  management plans  choices  employment  VA  workers

Featured Testimonials

I signed up for LawCrossing a couple of months ago and have obtained a few promising leads.
Mark

Facts

LawCrossing Fact #180: Our career articles provide some great job insights!

Comments

Article ID: 416    

Article Title: Butting In: Employers Penalize Smokers and Overweight Workers

Comment not found for this article.

Comment Comment
Rate This Article
   Current rating: 10   |   View top rated articles
Related Article
Sign Up Now

Enjoyed reading this article?
Click here to sign up for News Wire, our weekly newsletter, and you'll receive articles just like this right in your inbox.

Jd Journal - Send Tips
JDJournal

Enter your email address and start getting breaking law firm and legal news right now!



Every Alert

Alert once a day

 

Total Legal Jobs
106,772
New Legal Jobs in Last 7 Days
11,401
LEGAL JOB SEARCH

Job Type:



Browse Jobs by Location:



Employer Type:



Keyword Search:



Show Recruiter Jobs  What's This?
Show Refreshed Jobs  What's This?


+ Advanced Search    + Browse Jobs

+ Search Tips
LawCrossing Job Search
Add to iGoogle
What is LawCrossing?
Who Else Is Ready to Never Have to Worry About Recessions and the Legal Job Market Again?
Why Job Boards Are Evil!
Blow Away Your Competition with LawCrossing
Get More Employers to Respond to Your Applications and Hire You
Why You Are Not Aware of 95% of the Jobs Out There
Why LawCrossing's Marketing Problem is Good For You
Why It is Important to See Every Job Site There is
Private Versus Public Job Boards
Why You Need to Manage Your Job Search in One Place
Who Else Wants Their Phone Ringing Off the Hook With Quality Job Interviews?
Do Not Use Another Job Board Until You Read This
SIGN UP NOW
*Email:  
Only LawCrossing consolidates every job it can find in the legal industry and puts all of the job listings it locates in one place.

  • We have more than 25 times as many legal jobs as any other job board.
  • We list jobs you will not find elsewhere that are hidden in small regional publications and employer websites.
  • We collect jobs from more than 250,000 websites and post them on our site.
  • We do not charge employers to post their listings.
  • We are private, and therefore far fewer people are applying for the jobs on our site than are applying for those on public job boards.
LEGAL JOBS NEAR YOU

Map Search  What's this?

New search feature using US map.  + click here

Looking for a new legal job in your city?
+ click here

Where do you want to work?  + click here
FREE NEWSLETTER
+
A CHANCE TO WIN A NEW BMW
BMW
"The Legal Job Market Researcher" is a weekly newsletter that's absolutely jam packed with jobs, career advice, stories, webinars and more. PLUS, a chance to win a new 2010 BMW 328i sedan in Employment Research Institute's annual car giveaway.
Attorney
Law Student
Legal Staff
  CAREER CONNECT  (From Our Career Blogs)
Your life is a great and exciting adventure.
WHAT MEMBERS ARE SAYING

Andrew

LawCrossing was very useful to me in finding a new job. I am going to tell all of my friends to check it out.

Scott

LawCrossing is a great service. I ended up getting several good leads and it really helped me in my job search.

+ More success stories
+ Share your success story with us
Submit GET FREE
JOB ALERTS
BE THE FIRST TO KNOW
Learn about jobs before everyone else does. Studies prove the first people to apply to jobs are the most likely to get them. Sign up for job alerts today BMWand be entered to win a new BMW!
USEFUL LINKS

  US News Law School Rankings 2010

  Lateral Attorney Report
   The Recruiters of BCG Attorney Search


  Legal Job Market: Facts and Figures

  Add LawCrossing to My Favorites
Facebook Twitter
Top 101 Reasons to Sign Up for LawCrossing
Reason 4: Want to help the overall good of the public? LawCrossing has just about every public interest job in the country.
  Click here for 100 more reasons  
LawCrossing is a one-stop shop for your legal career needs.
Tell Us What You Think   
BCG Attorney Search
Real-Time Job Updates
Sign up free and receive new jobs by email as soon as they become available.

First Name


Email


Areas of Practice


Regions of Interest


Search Jobs Direct from Employer Career Pages
 Keywords:
 Location:
 
Free Webinar by Harrison Barnes
Harmonize with the People in Your Environment

Friday, September 3, 2010 at 1:00 PM PDT.
BCG JOB OF THE DAY
Sponsored by
BCG Attorney Search

Location:
California - San Francisco

Description:
San Francisco office seeks corporate associate with 3-6 years of experience in advising public and private companies in any or all of the following areas: mergers & acquisitions, securities offerings, corporate governance and securities reporting obligations. The candidate will be working on domestic and cross-border transactions and counseling public and private company clients with respect to ongoing matters.
"Although the San Francisco office of this full-service, multi-na...
BMW FREE NEWSLETTER  +  A CHANCE TO WIN A NEW BMW
"The Legal Job Market Researcher" is a weekly newsletter that's absolutely jam packed with jobs, career advice, stories, webinars and more. PLUS, a chance to win a new 2010 BMW 328i sedan in Employment Research Institute's annual car giveaway.

      Attorney   Law Student   Legal Staff    
Today at LawCrossing

312 - Jobs found in last 12 hours 707 - Jobs found in last 24 hours 106,772 - Total Jobs Found
I Love LawCrossing
Your privacy is guaranteed. We will never give out, lease, or sell your personal information. Whitelist LawCrossing
Home  |   Attorneys Channel  |   Law Students Channel  |   Legal Staff Channel  |   About Us  |   History  |   Our Mission  |   Post a Legal Job Opening  |   FAQ  |   Core Values

Browse Jobs  |   How We Help You  |   Our Promise  |   What We'll Never Do  |   Why You Need Us  |   Why We're Not Free  |   Testimonials  |   Career

The LawCrossing Guarantee  |   Press Room  |   Audio Room  |   Videos  |   Benefits of Working with LawCrossing  |   Privacy Policy  |   Terms of Use

Refer A Friend  |   Site Map  |   Law Firm News  |   Career Advice  |   Legal Recruiter  |   Resume Service  |   Resume Distribution Service  |   Post Resume  |   Job Search Course
Employment Research Institute
Our Company Sites:
100KCrossing | AccountingCrossing | AccountManagementCrossing | ActuarialCrossing | AdminCrossing | AdvertisingCrossing | AerospaceCrossing | AgriculturalCrossing | ArchitectureCrossing | Attorney Resume | AuditorCrossing | AutomotiveCrossing | AviationCrossing | BCG Attorney Search | BilingualCrossing | BiotechCrossing | BlueCollarCrossing | BusinessAnalystCrossing | BusinessDevelopmentCrossing | CallCenterCrossing | ChefCrossing | CivilEngineeringCrossing | CLevelCrossing | ClinicalResearchCrossing | ComplianceCrossing | ComputerAidedDesignCrossing | ConstructionCrossing | ConsultingCrossing | ContractManagementCrossing | CounselingCrossing | CPlusPlusCrossing | CustomerServiceCrossing | DBACrossing | DentalCrossing | DesigningCrossing | DiversityCrossing | DotNetCrossing | ECommerceCrossing | EdFed | EditingCrossing | EducationCrossing | EmploymentAuthority | EmploymentCrossing | EnergyCrossing | EngineeringCrossing | EntryLevelCrossing | EnvironmentalCrossing | EnvironmentalSafetyHealthCrossing | SAPCrossing | ExecCrossing | FacilitiesCrossing | FinancialServicesCrossing | FoodServicesCrossing | FundraisingCrossing | GISCrossing | GovernmentCrossing | Graduate School Loans | HealthcareCrossing | HelpDeskCrossing | HospitalityCrossing | Hound | HRCrossing | HVACCrossing | InformationTechnologyCrossing | InsurCrossing | IntellectualPropertyCrossing | InternshipCrossing | J2EECrossing | JD2B | JDJournal | JournalismCrossing | Judged | Law Firm Staff | Law School Loan Report | Law School Loans | Legal Authority | Legal Authority Financial | LogisticsCrossing | ManagerCrossing | ManufacturingCrossing | MarketingCrossing | MediaJobCrossing | Medical School Loans | MilitaryCrossing | NursingCrossing | OccupationalTherapyCrossing | OperationsCrossing | PartTimeCrossing | PharmaceuticalCrossing | PhysicalSecurityCrossing | PhysicalTherapyCrossing | PlanningCrossing | PostdoctoralFellowCrossing | PRCrossing | ResumeApple | ProcurementCrossing | ProductManagerCrossing | ProjectManagementCrossing | PublicInterestCrossing | PublishingCrossing | PurchasingCrossing | QAQCCrossing | RadioCrossing | RealEstateAndLandCrossing | Recruit Attorney | RecruitingCrossing | ResearchingCrossing | RetailCrossing | SciencesCrossing | ScientistCrossing | SellingCrossing | SQLCrossing | TeenagerCrossing | TelecomCrossing | TradingCrossing | TrainingCrossing | TransportationCrossing | TravelingCrossing | TruckingCrossing | TVCrossing | UnderwritingCrossing | VeterinaryCrossing | VolunteerCrossing | WorkAtHomeCrossing | WritingCrossing