- (1) Directors of state and local entities, in consultation with applicable state agencies and employee organizations, may develop and administer a voluntary state employee wellness program.
(2) A director may:
- (a) Develop and implement state employee wellness policies, procedures, and activities;
- (b) Disseminate wellness educational materials to agencies and employees;
- (c) Encourage the establishment of wellness activities in agencies;
- (d) Provide technical assistance and training to agencies conducting wellness activities for their employees;
- (e) Develop standards by which agencies sponsoring specific wellness activities may impose a fee to participating employees to help defray the cost of those activities;
- (f) Monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of this program, including the collection, analysis, and publication of relevant statistical information; and
- (g) Perform other duties and responsibilities as necessary to carry out the purpose of this section.
- (3) No wellness program or activity that involves or requires organized or systematic physical exercise may be implemented or conducted during normal working hours.
[ 2010 c 128 s 4; 1987 c 248 s 2.]
Notes:
Legislative findings—Purpose—1987 c 248: "The legislature finds that:
(1) Improved health among employees will result in a more productive workforce, better morale, reduced stress, lower injury rates and absenteeism, and improved recruitment and retention rates;
(2) A substantial amount of illness and injury in the workforce is preventable because it results from lifestyle decisions;
(3) Illness and injury among state employees can be reduced if employees engage in healthier lifestyles.
The state, as an employer, desires to foster a working environment that promotes the health and well-being of its employees. Therefore, it is the purpose of this act to establish a state employee wellness program. "Wellness program" means those policies, procedures, and activities that promote the health and well-being of state employees and that contribute to a healthful work environment." [ 1987 c 248 s 1.]