The owner of a Michigan company
who forced his employees to either quit smoking or quit
their jobs said he also wants to tell fat workers to
lose weight or else.
A ban on tobacco use
-- whether at home or at the workplace -- led four employees
to quit their jobs last week at Okemos, Michigan-based
Weyco Inc., which handles insurance claims.
The workers refused to
take a mandatory urine test demanded of Weyco's 200
employees by founder and sole owner Howard Weyers, a
demand that he said was perfectly legal.
"If you don't want to
take the test, you can leave," Weyers stated. "I'm not
controlling their lives; they have a choice whether
they want to work here."
Next on the firing line:
overweight workers.
"We have to work on eating
habits and getting people to exercise. But if you're
obese, you're (legally) protected," Weyers said.
He has brought in an
eating disorder therapist to speak to workers, provided
eating coaches, created a point system for employees
to earn health-related $100 bonuses and plans to
offer $45 vouchers for health club memberships.
The 71-year-old Weyers,
who said he has never smoked and pronounced himself
in good shape thanks to daily runs, said employees'
health as well as saving money on the company's own
insurance claims led him to first bar smokers from being
hired in 2003.
Last year, he banned
smoking during office hours, then demanded smokers pay
a monthly $50 "assessment," and finally instituted
mandatory testing.
Twenty workers quit the
habit.
Weyers tells clients
to quit whining about health care costs and to "set
some expectations; demand some things."
Job placement specialist
John Challenger said Weyco's moves could set a precedent
for larger companies -- if it survives potential legal
challenges.
"Certainly it raises
an interesting boundary issue: rising health care costs
and society's aversion to smoking versus privacy and
freedom rights of an individual," Challenger said.
So far no legal challenges
have been made to Weyco's policies.