It sounds like his jobsite's safety committee decided they needed to, you know, appear to promote safety and otherwise look like they do things other than drink coffee and munch donuts for an hour every couple of weeks.Napoleon the Clown wrote:You might be able to hit them with the ADA, over that. If you actually care, anyway. Being deaf does not prevent you from getting a driver's license anywhere in the country, so it's pretty clear the government doesn't consider a sense of hearing vital to operating a motor vehicle. That was not always the case, however. The Stand has a deaf character who never learned to drive because, at one time, the deaf were unable to get a driver's license.Elheru Aran wrote:
At my work, recently they got a bug up their nose about deaf people working the equipment. So now I can only drive after the lights go down. It's been waived on occasion when they really needed someone to get something from the overhead, and I could always drive in the receiving area since that's not a customer zone, but it was pretty damn annoying.
So, in that spirit, they come up with something that looks like safety, while hindering workers' ability to do their jobs, without promoting any actual safety, since actual safety would interfere with management working their people like the proverbial Hebrew slaves.