posted on Jan, 3 2009 @ 10:01 AM
I saw a friend over new years eve and he told me about these new rules his office is setting up for smokers. Being a small business owner myself, I
thought they were interesting enough to share.
1. His company is not going to hire anyone who smokes. Period. The feeling is that smoking is an addiction and hiring addicts goes against company
policy when the addict is prone to harm himself (or others around him with second hand smoke). It’s really no secret smoking is physically harmful
to others when they have to inhale it, let alone to oneself. It’s also a psychological matter of self-concept, that is continuing to engage in an
activity that is self-destructive. The idea of hiring someone with this form of low self-concept is really not what any company wants. Any employer
(and fellow employees) would want the best person, all around intellectually, physically and emotionally, for the job.
2. When salary increase time comes around for each employee, smokers will have small or no raises so their base salary is adjusted so that it will
be less than non-smokers. Here’s the reasoning:
Let’s say the average smoker takes 2-4 smoking breaks during the day. For this example, lets go easy and say 2 breaks. It takes anywhere from
10-20 minutes for a smoker to take his/her break. They need to put their coat on, take the elevator down, go through the lobby, go outside around the
corner to the designated smoking area, light up and enjoy their cigarette, chat for a bit with fellow smokers, and then go back inside, up the
elevator, hang up their coat and get back to their desk. It doesn’t happen in less than 15 minutes; usually more. But lets say 15 minutes per
smoking break. 2 breaks per day at 15 minutes is a half-hour every day. A half-hour per day is 2-1/2 hours of smoking breaks every week. 2-1/2 hours
per week x 50 weeks (52 weeks – about 2 weeks vacation) is 125 hours or 15-1/2 8-hour days or more than 3 weeks of standing around smoking and
chatting per year! And that’s for just 2 breaks a day. 4 breaks a day would be about 6 weeks of breaks while others are working.
When it comes time for their reviews, the smoker’s raise will either be reduced or eliminated (based on their work performance) and the non-smokers
will have larger salary increases.
At first, I was appalled by this new policy, but on thinking about it more, it began to really make some real sense. I’m wondering if others have
adopted similar policies.