Waterloo Region Record

Opinion: Workplace monitoring gets personal, and some fear it’s too much

- ROBERT REED

As you work, Big Business is watching.

Companies are increasing­ly tapping into new technology designed to keep a close eye on employees. This monitoring goes beyond traditiona­l security cameras to include portable devices worn by workers.

Amazon recently won patents for high-tech wristbands that could be used by its e-commerce warehouse and distributi­on staffs. Designed to track worker hand movements as orders are filled, the products — if made — could eventually be integrated throughout Amazon’s ranks.

A few companies are toying with implanting microchips under workers’ skin. With a wave of the hand, employees could get into secured plants, office campuses or food courts — no more fumbling with electronic cards or passes.

Scared yet? You probably should be. When it comes to security and workplace privacy, employees don’t enjoy many protection­s and these emerging biometric and other devices can make matters worse.

“Generally in the workplace, there isn’t a right to privacy,” says Melissa Ventrone, regarding life in the United States. Ventrone is a privacy attorney in the Chicago office of law firm Thompson Coburn.

That’s for sure.

Without getting into too much legal nitty-gritty, management can look at most anything a worker creates on the job or with company equipment. That means emails, social media posts, internet searches, text or instant messages and GPS devices that track employee whereabout­s.

Now, however, employers are beginning to take a much more intimate approach to following workers. One growing method is using time clocks that scan an employee’s fingerprin­t, retina or iris.

Some workers are ticked off about it and fighting back. Up to 30 class-action lawsuits were filed by late 2017 accusing companies of violating the Illinois Biometric Informatio­n Privacy Act, which governs how such sensitive informatio­n is collected and used.

Illinois is among a handful of states with a law that polices biometric monitoring in the workplace.

These lawsuits typically argue that employers didn’t give workers enough advanced notice of the new work rule, or didn’t ask their permission to collect their data, according legal research presented by the Society for Human Resource Management.

While these are serious issues, the workplace concerns travel farther than providing proper notice. Biometric and motion monitoring also open up a panoply of possible abuses and misuses that have to be recognized and hashed out.

For instance, let’s say employees are provided Fitbits or another portable health monitor as part of a corporate wellness program. Can the personal data gleaned be used to alter, or deny, access to employer-provided insurance plans?

And there are settings, like a Boeing defence system plant or design operation, that require greater workplace security.

The workplace is changing. New approaches are inevitable and should be welcomed.

 ?? BRYAN ANSELM NYT ?? Amazon has won patents for high-tech wristbands that could be used to track worker hand movements as orders are filled, to help determine efficiency. Such technology can improve security and draw attention to poor workers, writes Robert Reed.
BRYAN ANSELM NYT Amazon has won patents for high-tech wristbands that could be used to track worker hand movements as orders are filled, to help determine efficiency. Such technology can improve security and draw attention to poor workers, writes Robert Reed.

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