| I can't wait until people are fired for being overweight. After all, being overweight does increase health risks and health costs. I'm sure nobody who agrees with the anti-smoking policy of this company will disagree with my anti-fat policy. Are health costs also higher for women? |
There is a big difference in the examples that you gave from smoking.
Smoking is not needed to live. You can quit completely, or never start, and there is no adverse reactions. There is no medical condition that causes you to start smoking, and you are not born with a "smoking" gene. You have the absolute choice to smoke or not.
With being overweight, you have to eat to live. People who have a problem can not simply "quit". There have been many studies that show that obesity is hereditary (like high cholesterol), and there are a few medical conditions that cause weight gain (like various endocrine problems).
Being female isn't something of choice. Yes, it is more expensive to insure women, but until men can figure out how to have babies, I think that the world will just have to deal with that. 
Michigan is an "at will" state when it comes to employment. Our employment laws are quite in favor of the corporation.
If I had to guess, I am thinking that this health care related firm is trying to set a precedence. Currently, people who are addicted to certain drugs or alcohol can weasel into the American with Disability act. They may be setting a precedence so that tobacco addiction will not fall into that.
It's funny, people complain left and right about the cost of insurance and how corporations should cover people. But, the moment that somebody tries to reform the system in the slightest (which could be a step in lowered health care costs if more people followed suit) people complain.
Telling an employee that they can not smoke and be employed at your company is not against any constitutional right. Doing something that could kill you is not a constitutional right. There is nothing in the constitution that says that an employer has to employ you for any reason.
| if we expect our employers to foot the bill for our healthcare coverage, it's kind of hypocritical to then say, "pay for my healthcare, but don't tell me how to live". |
I think that their better approach would have been a corporate policy change. Anyone who smoked would have 6 months to quit (funded by the corporation, which I think they were doing) or they would no longer be offered benefits from the corporation. But, in general, I do agree with you.
The other point to think about- at work, if you don't smoke, do you take "smoke breaks" like the smokers do? If you don't smoke, do you really enjoy going to work and sitting by 2 pack a day Ted who smells like an ash tray? There are lots of reasons why corporations are against smoking, especially ones who have health care related businesses.