Wellness Programs : Health Promotion Programs – Smokers Beware.

In the last few years, there’s been a rising trend for public employers – not just private businesses – to ban tobacco use. Here’s what your peers are doing.

What’s New in Benefits and Compensation recently surveyed 374 of our readers from both the private and public sectors to find out their organization’s policy on permitting staff to smoke onsite and hiring smokers in the first place. Here is what we found –

• 11% have developed a policy of hiring only non-smokers

• 17% allow workers to smoke offsite, but ban it on all corporation property

• 39% restrict smoking to designated areas outside the building

• 30% allow use of tobacco anywhere outside the building, and

•  3 percent allow tobacco use in break rooms or other indoor areas.

Public corporations get aggressive

While much of the publicity about no-hire policies for smokers centers on private corporations, it’s actually public corporations in certain states who have been the most assertive of late.

For  instance, Florida is among the states at the forefront of the movement. Sarasota County recently became  the third Florida county to take a no-hire stance for control health care costs.  

New hires must take a drug test that detects nicotine and sign a pledge certifying that they haven’t smoked in the past 12 months.

The ban won’t affect current workers, but the county has undertaken tobacco use cessation programs aimed at employees’ wallets.

Non-smokers pay less for coverage through various incentives and the county covers the cost of participating in smoking cessation programs.

The reason why Florida public employers can take these steps –  the state supreme Supreme Court has ruled that refusing to hire smokers doesn’t break discrimination laws.

But your state laws may vary, so proceed with caution before considering similar policies.

This entry was posted on Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 at 8:55 am and is filed under Employee Wellness, Wellness Programs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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