Guest guest Posted June 22, 2001 Report Share Posted June 22, 2001 Hi -- Sorry, I wasn't clear. No, it wasn't that anyone was " blackballed " -- of course we could just say " F**k you " to the EAP and quit. But jobs (decent-paying, with benefits!) don't grow on trees. I work on a railroad. Many if not most employees do not have marketable skills -- maybe they could get factory jobs, or delivery van driving, etc.-- very uncertain employment -- get the picture? In my own case, I had 17 years toward a pension on the job -- I'd have been nuts to throw it away -- and jobs really are not plentiful around here. I followed the only reasonable course open to me to protect my son and keep our little family intact. But the point is that, while under suspension and in the " treatment " , some of the guys were getting graveyard-shift jobs loading vans, or night clerking in a 7-11, etc. -- if they started to get drowsy in the treatment sessions, and the counselors got wind of the fact that they had taken night jobs, they were reported to the EAP (how's that for a therapeutic atmosphere -- the tx counselors were constantly threatening to " report " us to the EAP, who had the power to extend the suspension) and the EAP's rule was, we were to concentrate ONLY on " recovery. " One woman was denied permission to miss two days (and make them up later) to go to a funeral of a close relative in another state. She was told " Your recovery must come first. " She went anyway, and was " sentenced " to an entire extra month of suspension and treatment. I used to think our EAP was extreme in their perversion of the supposed concept of what an EAP should be -- but I've heard other horror stories, and now I just think it's part of the larger picture -- that 12-step philosophy lends itself very easily into worker oppression, and may very well have been deliberately spread to the workplace with such an agenda. ~Rita > Rita tells us something that gives me the absolute willies, " In our EAP program guidelines > it specifically says that employees mandated to their " treatment " must have their > activities outside of the tx " curtailed " -- people are, in other words, not permitted to > take on substitute work, even part-time work -- yet while in the tx they are suspended > without pay for a minimum of 5 months. This is SPECIFICALLY designed to maximize > " powerlessness " -- the EAP director has actually laughed at people who have been forced to > go on Welfare or give up their homes and move back in with their parents because of his > mandate to be without income. " > > This is a horror! Rita, this really blows me away! These clowns have the right to forbid > you to earn a living? > > I do get that you wanted to keep your job, that particular job. And not working was what > you had to do to keep that particular job. > > But what happens to people who leave that job rather than go into treatment? What happens > to someone who says, " If that's what it take, then to hell with the job. I'll go and look > for work elsewhere, " and simply quits? > > Does the EAP at one particular job have the power to follow a person around prevent that > person from finding work somewhere else? Can the EAP insure that a person will never get > work anywhere else until that person has capitulated? > > Regards, > > nz > > Are such people blackballed? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 22, 2001 Report Share Posted June 22, 2001 Hi Rita, As ever your story fills me with horror and disguted outrage. One would have thought these restrictive practices alone would be illegal regardless of the religious issues. Good God, they wont even allow yourself to work? What on earth good can it do for someone to be forced to loaf around doing nothing with no money coming in? All the evidence is that ppl's health is better, including overcoming alcohol/drug problems, when they are employed and are free of financial worries - yet they are deliberately creating the very problems that exacerbate them! Also presumably " recovering " is about being able to function successfully in life, doing a job well if working away from home and supporting yourself and dependents, and they are prteventing you from doing the very thing they are supposed to be helping you achieve! Absolutely out of sight. P. > > > Rita tells us something that gives me the absolute willies, " In our EAP program guidelines > > it specifically says that employees mandated to their " treatment " must have their > > activities outside of the tx " curtailed " -- people are, in other words, not permitted to > > take on substitute work, even part-time work -- yet while in the tx they are suspended > > without pay for a minimum of 5 months. This is SPECIFICALLY designed to maximize > > " powerlessness " -- the EAP director has actually laughed at people who have been forced to > > go on Welfare or give up their homes and move back in with their parents because of his > > mandate to be without income. " > > > > This is a horror! Rita, this really blows me away! These clowns have the right to forbid > > you to earn a living? > > > > I do get that you wanted to keep your job, that particular job. And not working was what > > you had to do to keep that particular job. > > > > But what happens to people who leave that job rather than go into treatment? What happens > > to someone who says, " If that's what it take, then to hell with the job. I'll go and look > > for work elsewhere, " and simply quits? > > > > Does the EAP at one particular job have the power to follow a person around prevent that > > person from finding work somewhere else? Can the EAP insure that a person will never get > > work anywhere else until that person has capitulated? > > > > Regards, > > > > nz > > > > Are such people blackballed? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.