Posted on 10/16/2014 10:46:19 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
How should employers respond when they learn that an employee is planning a trip to West Africa to visit family? What if other employees refuse to come to work because they fear that the returning employee may have been exposed to Ebola Virus Disease? How can employers prepare in advance for such situations?
Based on extensive news media coverage of the spread of Ebola in West Africa, and the recent transmission of the virus in the United States, many employers are scrambling to answer these questions. The right response depends on several factors and there is no one-size-fits-all solution. However, employers can get out in front of these issues and reduce potential liability by taking some proactive steps:
Communicating with Employees and Customers. Even if the domestic spread of Ebola is contained, many employers will still face questions from employees and customers about how the company is handling this situation. To help reassure workers, companies should prepare managers to: (1) give employees and customers pertinent information from the CDC and other health organizations; (2) explain steps the company is taking to protect its employees, customers, and the general public; and (3) reaffirm that the company takes health and safety very seriously and will take appropriate, lawful action to protect them. Companies should also consider appointing a manager to develop a protocol for handling employee complaints and concerns.
Asking Employees About Travel Plans. If an employee travels to West Africa, or is otherwise potentially exposed to Ebola, employers can and should ask certain questions. For example, they may inquire about the employees travel plans, whether he had contact with anyone who was exposed to Ebola, and whether the employee is experiencing any flu-like symptoms....
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
> How should employers respond when they learn that an employee is planning a trip to West Africa to visit family?
Shoot the idiot.
That's easy. First day back from West Africa, you fire the employee for poor performance. Whether that is lateness, gossiping instead of working, or something else, you give a warning in the morning and catch the employee again not working productively in the afternoon. There is a 100% chance that someone just back from those three countries will have nonproductive time on the first day, even after a warning. Then you fire him for cause.
I am more than tired of the government getting into the employer-employee relationship, and I can completely understand finding ways around unjust laws. A whole lot of what FedGov does has no legitimacy, and we have no moral obligation to comply, just to make sure we cannot be caught.
1. Fire the person for other reasons, always job-related (the same when you choose not to hire someone - NEVER give a reason, not even in a private conversation with a third party).
2. Never disclose to anyone, not even your lawyer, your business partner, or your spouse, why someone was fired . . . if the real reason is anything other than performance.
3. Solve the problem quickly if it can affect the bottom line (and spreading a deadly disease to your customers or employees certainly qualifies).
1) Recheck his citizenship and right to work here
2) Fire him for whatever reason will satisfy a court
There is no reason for anyone going into the hot zone unless they are there to provide medical support.
Unlike Soviet Russia where disappearance was a known fact, there are relatives and friends in our society who would report the disappearance. They all be bought off or brought to concentration camps.
Many of these bad laws came about due to the coddling of AIDS victims. For example, the right to be anonymous while carrying a deadly disease, while the feds ask you but don’t require you to tell a partner or dentist or caregiver.
The other cause of the insanity on medical privacy is due to abortion. Like the privacy laws so your spouse or parents cannot find out you had an abortion or STD, though they may have to pay the bill for “medical services”.
While I can sympathize with the sentiment the cops would tend to frown on that option.
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