Yesterday’s Advisor looked at alcoholism in the workplace. Today we continue with specific accommodation tips and an introduction to a program that has already written your alcoholism policy, plus 100s of others.
Yesterday, we noted that under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), if alcoholism limits any of an employee’s major life activities, it could be considered a disability. Once classified that way, the ADA’s reasonable accommodation rules kick in. That means conducting the same interactive dialog with the employee and, perhaps, others that any disability accommodation requires. Here’s what the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) sees as typical alcoholism accommodations:
Attendance
- Allowing use of paid or unpaid leave for medical treatment
- Allowing use of paid or unpaid leave or flexible scheduling for counseling
- Providing a self-paced workload or the ability to modify the daily schedule
Maintaining Concentration
- Reducing distractions in the workplace
- Providing space enclosures or a private office
- Planning for uninterrupted work time
- Allowing for frequent breaks
- Dividing large assignments into smaller tasks and steps
Poor Personal Organization and Deadlines
- Providing clerical support
- Making a daily to-do list
- Use of electronic organizers
- Maintaining a current calendar
- Scheduling a weekly meeting with supervisor to determine goals and address the employee’s questions, concerns, and work progress
Difficulty Handling Stress
- Providing praise and positive reinforcement
- Referring to counseling and employee assistance programs
- Not mandating attendance at job-related events where there would be exposure to alcohol
For additional ideas, contact the Job Accommodation Network, a free consulting service that provides information about job accommodations and the employability of people with disabilities. Toll Free: 800-526-7234, TTY: 877-781-9403.
BLR’s Encyclopedia of Prewritten Personnel Policies supplies 350 HR policies–including “Alcohol and Drugs”–prewritten for you, and ready to customize or use as is. Examine it at no cost or risk. Click to learn more
The easy way to keep up with policy writing needs
The place to begin solving HR problems, like alcoholism on the job, is always with your policies—carefully crafted, legally reviewed, and regularly updated. But it’s no light task to write and update the dozens of policies that any organization needs. What’s more, the nearly constant changes made necessary by new laws or business practices make managing the situation that much harder. Our editors, however, have a suggestion that will help you do it, with a minimum of cost and effort.
It’s a remarkable program called Encyclopedia of Prewritten Personnel Policies. Its expert authors have already worked through the critical issues on some 100 critical policy topics, prewritten the policies for you, and tested them at thousands of companies over time.
Why write your own policies when we’ve already done it for you … at less than $1 each!
Inspect BLR’s Encyclopedia of Prewritten Personnel Policies at no cost or risk. Click for details.
In all, Encyclopedia of Prewritten Personnel Policies contains some 350 policies arranged alphabetically from Alcoholism and Blogging to Voicemail and Workers’ Compensation. (To see the complete Table of Contents, click the link below.) Many are presented in several versions from conservative to progressive. That makes it easy to simply select those that you need and that match your organization’s culture, then to add your company specifics or use as is. In a fraction of the time usually needed, your policy work is done.
Importantly, as regulations and court decisions clarify your responsibilities on workplace issues, the policies are updated with new ones being added as needed every quarter, as a standard part of the program.
Encyclopedia of Prewritten Personnel Policies. is available to HR Daily Advisor subscribers on a 30-day evaluation basis at no cost or risk … even for return postage. If you’d like to have a look at it, click here and we’ll be happy to arrange it.