| One
more important reason to quit smoking!
Healthy
Habits And The Bottom Line
(CBS) - Jan. 20, 2006
| Fast
Fact:
30%
or 1,590 of Scotts' 5,300 U.S. workers smoke. And it's estimated
that smokers cost an extra $4,000 a year each for health care
and lost productivity.
|
Scotts has already banned smoking
on the job. Next October workers must stop altogether or find
a new job. (CBS) |
SFSC
estimates the extra cost to be as high as $9,300 per smoker.
(click
here for details)
Putting the total costs for all Scotts' employed smokers at
$14,787,000 a year!
|
It's lunchtime at the Scotts Miracle-Gro
headquarters near Columbus, Ohio, and the eating is healthy.
"I'll have some salmon,"
a worker said.
That's because the company that helps
Americans grow their gardens is trying to trim its workers waists
— and $24 million per year in health care costs.
So there's a full time doctor and
a new clinic, which is free to workers and families enrolled in
the company medical plan. There is a drive through pharmacy with
generic drugs — and right next door: the new gym. It's also
free to those who work out more than twice a week. Otherwise, it's
just ten dollars a month.
Presiding over this $5 million gamble
is CEO Jim Hagedorn.
"It's partly about money and
keeping our costs under control," Hagedorn told CBS News correspondent
Jerry Bowen. "And it's partly about saying, 'Why would you
wanna work a whole career here at Scotts, retire and die?'"
It all sounds so good — and
if it works it may become the national model for curbing corporate
health care costs. But it's a carrot and stick approach.
The stick is what happens
to smokers. If they won't quit, they won't have a job at Scotts.
Thirty percent of Scotts'
5,300 U.S. workers smoke. And it's estimated that smokers cost an
extra $4,000 a year each for health care and lost productivity.
Scotts has already banned smoking on the job. Next October workers
must stop altogether.
People like pack-a-day smoker Kim
Creviston.
"You're drawing the line here,"
Creviston said. "But he is giving me a choice. If you choose
not to quit, then you choose to get a different job. And I truly
believe we will forsee other companies doing this."
And that worries employment law attorney
Marvin Gittler: "Once you leave, once you conclude your eight
hours, frankly it's none of the employer's business what you do,"
Gittler said. "I think letting the employer go beyond those
eight hours is much too dangerous."
Hagedorn, once a two-pack-a-day smoker,
quit after his mother died of lung cancer. He says workers will
get help to stop. And as long as they really try, they won't be
fired, which they can be in Ohio and 19 other states.
In states where they can't be fired
because of smokers' rights laws, they'll pay extra for health insurance.
"This is not trying to take
things away from folks," Hagedorn said. "This is about
trying to keep our costs so that they're not rising sort of in excess
of the rate of inflation. And I think we can do that if we run our
wellness programs properly."
Change is never easy, but it's the
new reality for these workers. And if it works, everybody's bottom
line will look better.
Click
here for another story on this subject
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