Overweight - Safety Issue
HR in TX
9 Posts
We have an employee who has gained a lot of weight in the past year. His weight was no problem when he was hired in terms of the physical requirements of his position. However, he now is too heavy to SAFELY do that part of his job. It is time for his performance review and his supervisor would like to discuss this with him. Does anyone have suggestions about this? I think there are legal implications, but I am not sure what they may be. Any advice or comments will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Comments
Hopefully by now all of you have figured out that I am just kidding. :-) LOL.
Tough question actually, depends on what the hazard is, and if weight/ size truely creates a hazard. Like body odor, just a tough area to deal with. How does his weight create a safety hazard?
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
Unless you have some documented, valid reason to fear that this EE's weight is indeed safety related, tread lightly. I have an outdoor camping chair that says something like "good up to 230 pounds." Someone weighing more than that should obviously not use the chair. Is the EE standing on a peice of equipment that will collapse? Are the aisles in his work area to narrow for his girth? What kind of safety issue arises because of his weight? If you cannot get defendable answers that indicate weight is a safety issue, tell the supervisor to back off.
Perhaps the supervisor is biased and is covertly targeting the EE through a made-up safety issue.
If you don't have any weight restrictions established and the risk has not been previously identified, then you're out of luck this time around. First, the appraisal is not the time to 'surprise' someone with this type of information. Second, if your company does not have any safety issues identified with weight, it's not in a job description, it hasn't been an issue brought up by the safety manager, then where does the supervisor get off? Don't give the supervisor the 'greenlight' to discuss during the appraisal - you'll only get blamed. Do, however, if it really is an issue at your company and there are legitimate concerns, meet with the safety folks & see if there's a way to incorporate the weight factor into the job requirements. Also, before implementation, meet with your employment attorney, so they are aware of your new requirements.
If the employee has acquired the weight problem over time, it can only be addressed as a performance or safety issue.
Crout: Surely you jest. Obesity is for a fact covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act. If and when the gentleman cannot perform the essential functions of his job (entering what are referred to in safety terms as 'confined spaces') then it is time to discuss performance. If it leads to a discussion of weight/size, then it does. We cannot simply arbitrarily make judgements that people cannot do jobs when they're fat. When I worked in the trucking industry, I was amazed on a daily basis that some of the drivers, men and women, could get into the cab of a hundred thousand dollar Freightliner without a forklift and pry-bar. Didn't our predecessors used to say people couldn't work after a certain age or a certain trimester or if they were (gasp!) women?