Senate Bill 526 overwhelmingly passed the
Missouri Senate on February 13, (26-7). Not exactly a predictable outcome based on what we know about Missouri.
The bill calls for the development of a database of
work comp claims that could be accessed by employers when hiring job candidates. It will next be
considered by the state House, and if passed the database would be implemented
on July 1, 2015.
Creating a database of work comp
claims could potentially allow employers to assess in a
pre-employment screening process whether their prospective employee has
submitted work comp claims. It’s not the same as asking your age or your
marital status that could potentially be used to discriminate, but that past
history could certainly influence an employer’s willingness to hire you. I’m
all for transparency in the hiring process so you can make a well-informed
decision on a very expensive process.
Here's the odd part: if Missouri is willing to
create this database, why are they
unwilling to create a PDMP (prescription drug monitoring program) that could
yield very important information about an individual’s entire drug regimen
that has potential life and death consequences? The primary obstacle to the PDMP in Missouri has been state senator Rob Shaaf, who has argued that "letting the government have your very personal and sensitive medical information on a government database, it's just wrong and Big Brother shouldn't have that effect on our lives." He voted in favor of SB 526, perhaps because the bill includes a provision that requires employee consent for an employer to search the database. Nonetheless, the database will be contain sensitive information on Missouri citizens, will be run by the government, and will have a much wider potential audience (all employers) than a PDMP (clinicians and law enforcement).
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