As an employer, you always have a fiduciary duty to protect your personnel and assets. You already understand the importance of having a drug-free workplace and conducting pre-employment drug screenings for new hires, and in some professions you might also need your new hires to undergo a physical examination. If the job is physically demanding, you have to make sure that your new hires are up to the task. You also need to know if you’re inheriting any former injuries with your new personnel. Even if those old injuries don’t substantially affect the staff member’s ability to do the job, you’ll definitely want to know about them to protect your exposure to a workers’ compensation claim.
News & Updates
Worker’s compensation insurance is an important part of ensuring a safe working environment. It provides relief to workers who are involved in workplace accidents, and it protects your business from lost productivity. But worker’s compensation claims are expensive, and as an employer you owe it to yourself to make sure that your employees are physically up to the job.
There’s nothing quite like making a great new hire, and that’s never been as true as it is right now! It was already hard enough to find good people before the pandemic, but employers must now often limit their hours and services until they get fully staffed.
If you’re in the Human Resources profession, you probably spend a lot of time wondering what your prospective employees aren’t including on their resumes. If they don’t have anything to hide, they might simply be leaving irrelevant experience out to make their resumes easier to review quickly. But if they left a job under questionable circumstances they’re going to gloss over that part of their career on their resume. Sometimes they’re just going to leave it off entirely.