MORE OF YOUR RIGHTS TAKEN AWAY
WHAT I DO ON MY TIME IS MY BUSINESS! WHAT ABOUT YOU?
Cocktail server
OFF-DUTY BEHAVIOR CAN EFFECT YOUR JOB
Some companies are cracking down on employees' off-duty behavior, raising questions about how far employers should go in policing what workers do on their own time.
Employees are being disciplined or fired for such behaviors as drinking on their own time, using competitors' products and displaying political bumper stickers. No one tracks the number of such cases, but some workers rights' groups are concerned that the practice is on the upswing.
"The shock is that there's no legal protection," says Lewis Maltby, of The National Workrights Institute, a non-profit based in Princeton, N.J., that focuses on employee rights. "You can get fired just for having a bumper sticker the boss doesn't like."
For example:
• At the Atlantic City, Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, bartenders and waitresses can be fired if they gain more than 7% of their body weight. They are first given a 90-day unpaid suspension to lose the weight. Officials say it is a recent clarification to the company's appearance policy.
About 200 cocktail servers and bartenders, known as "Borgata Babes," are covered by the policy, and have to submit to weigh-ins. Weight gain for valid medical reasons, such as pregnancy, are exempt, but the waitresses have 90 days to comply with the target weight upon return.
"We believe the policy in place is not only legal and non-discriminatory, it is also fair," spokesman Michael Facenda said in a statement.
• Lynne Gobbell was fired from her job packing insulation by her Moulton, Ala.-based employer for displaying a John Kerry bumper sticker on her car, according to the Associated Press and numerous media reports. Gobbell could not be reached for comment.
• Ross Hopkins, who worked for a Budweiser distributor, sued after he says he was fired for drinking a Coors at a Greeley, Colo., bar after work.
But Jeff Bedingfield, attorney for American Eagle Distributing, says Hopkins was fired in 2003 for making disparaging comments about the company while at the bar wearing a company uniform. The case is expected to go to trial.
While about half the states have laws preventing employers from firing workers who smoke off duty, questions remain about other legal, off-duty activities. Some states have passed broader protections, says Kary Moss, executive director of the ACLU in Michigan.
"It's a growing trend," Moss says. "But whether or not they will go further to protect workers is an open question."
Cocktail server
OFF-DUTY BEHAVIOR CAN EFFECT YOUR JOB
Some companies are cracking down on employees' off-duty behavior, raising questions about how far employers should go in policing what workers do on their own time.
Employees are being disciplined or fired for such behaviors as drinking on their own time, using competitors' products and displaying political bumper stickers. No one tracks the number of such cases, but some workers rights' groups are concerned that the practice is on the upswing.
"The shock is that there's no legal protection," says Lewis Maltby, of The National Workrights Institute, a non-profit based in Princeton, N.J., that focuses on employee rights. "You can get fired just for having a bumper sticker the boss doesn't like."
For example:
• At the Atlantic City, Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, bartenders and waitresses can be fired if they gain more than 7% of their body weight. They are first given a 90-day unpaid suspension to lose the weight. Officials say it is a recent clarification to the company's appearance policy.
About 200 cocktail servers and bartenders, known as "Borgata Babes," are covered by the policy, and have to submit to weigh-ins. Weight gain for valid medical reasons, such as pregnancy, are exempt, but the waitresses have 90 days to comply with the target weight upon return.
"We believe the policy in place is not only legal and non-discriminatory, it is also fair," spokesman Michael Facenda said in a statement.
• Lynne Gobbell was fired from her job packing insulation by her Moulton, Ala.-based employer for displaying a John Kerry bumper sticker on her car, according to the Associated Press and numerous media reports. Gobbell could not be reached for comment.
• Ross Hopkins, who worked for a Budweiser distributor, sued after he says he was fired for drinking a Coors at a Greeley, Colo., bar after work.
But Jeff Bedingfield, attorney for American Eagle Distributing, says Hopkins was fired in 2003 for making disparaging comments about the company while at the bar wearing a company uniform. The case is expected to go to trial.
While about half the states have laws preventing employers from firing workers who smoke off duty, questions remain about other legal, off-duty activities. Some states have passed broader protections, says Kary Moss, executive director of the ACLU in Michigan.
"It's a growing trend," Moss says. "But whether or not they will go further to protect workers is an open question."
10 Comments:
Depending on the company and your job there, in a way you "represent them". Take for instance an NBA player. Now he might not be working (playing a game) one night and he says some comments about how corrupt the organization is. Well that could very well come back to haunt him. Is it right? Maybe not, but I've seen it happen just like the examples you gave.
I suggest to play it safe and don't go shooting your mouth off about a business or co-worker you despise because you never know if karma will come back to bite you in the ass...right or wrong, it happens. Same rule can be applied to office gossip. It's best to just not do it - that's the safe bet if you ask me.
Oh, now I absolutly agree with you on that, and I also agree that if you take a job that comes with certain criteria (on and off) the job, then you should abide by them or don't take the job.
But I do not agree that if I choose in my private life to (for example) drink a different brand of drink then the company I work for, eat a different brand of food, where a different brand of cloths etc. that is my business. Because this kind of thing can be taken to far. It can end up happening to any old Joe working in some factory.
Like the manufacturer (sorry can't rem. what state) didn't allow smoking. That's fine right, his call. But when he told his employees they would be fired if he even found out they had been smoking in there own house or yard, sorry that is just an infringement of rights and should not be allowed.
Here's something funny for ya, a very close young friend of mine (30ish)was working (so he can take some classes) in a place that called for a uniform (a hotel) the minute he got off of work he joined a party, Still in uniform, of course he got fired. I still can't believe he did that, he knows better?? I thought, but it's a good example of what you are saying.
That is a straight up "INVASION OF PRIVACY"
Employees activities outside of work should be strictly off limits to employers!
A part of me agrees with both of you. Your business should be your own. The exception for me would be if you take a job full well knowing what they expect of you and they do have on the job off the job rules (and many places do) then you need to abide by those rules or don't take the job.
damn I guess I would be in trouble if I tried to get a job as a waitress there.... but Yes what you do on your own time should be your own business but if you work in the public you have a certain reputation that you have to up hold I have to be very carefull when I am goin home off of work and I haven't made it to the house to change out of my uniform if I stop for gas and a mt.dew or what ever it is I have to be very careful and always on my toes. there are people out there just waiting for someone to mess up. have to watch how I drive to *yeah right* but if I get a speeding ticket I am in alot of trouble the company will try there best to help and sometimes they can and sometimes they can't most of the time though if ems personel gets pulled over we are let go. but that is because all of us work together and know that at some point and time we will need one another so we give eachother a chance.
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Nice article very knowledgeable. Keep Posting more.
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