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Some Americans Are Gun Shy

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Americans with Disabilities Act covers ‘bashful bladder syndrome,’ could cost employers billions



It could cost U.S. employers between $2 billion and $4 billion to comply with an obscure Americans with Disabilities Act regulation meant to protect workers who are gun-shy in public restrooms.

According to an informal discussion letter the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission issued in August 2011, “paruresis” — more commonly known as “shy bladder syndrome” — qualifies as a disability under the amended Americans with Disabilities Act.

The International Paruresis Association defines the odd affliction as the “inability to urinate with others present.” The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the gold-standard of psychiatrists, categorizes it as a social phobia that affects roughly seven percent of the population — approximately 17 million Americans.

The Association alleges that thousands of people who are afflicted by paruresis have been unfairly fired because of their inability to urinate in a public restroom during random drug screening tests.

And while the EEOC suggests that providing alternative drug-testing methods is one way to accommodate these sufferers, the next frontier could be the claim that they are entitled to pee in privacy during the normal course of daily work.

If every employer large enough to be subject to the ADA were to hedge against future lawsuits by adding segregated restrooms for timid tinklers, the cost would exceed the gross domestic product of many small nations.

Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990 to protect people with severe handicaps such as blindness, deafness or paralysis. It was updated by the Americans with Disabilities Act Amendment Act (ADAAA) in 2009 to accommodate far more disabilities and now also covers a plethora of other afflictions — including bashful bladder syndrome.



In an August 12, 2011 response to a constituent’s inquiry, the EEOC wrote that although the fear of peeing in a public restroom is not specifically mentioned in the act, people with paruresis should find it easier than ever to prove their syndrome qualifies for ADAAA coverage as a legitimate disability.

“The ADAAA and its implementing regulations make this showing much easier,” the letter reads, ”by including bladder and brain functions as major life activities, lowering the standard for establishing that an impairment ‘substantially limits’ a major life activity, and focusing the determination of whether an individual is ‘regarded as’ having a disability on how the individual has been treated because of an impairment.”

If the EEOC concludes that an employer has discriminated against someone covered under the ADAAA, employers could suffer serious financial consequences. The commission did not respond to The Daily Caller’s request for comment on how many businesses would be affected by the obscure regulation, but said the ADAAA covers businesses with 15 employees or more — in cases of age-related discrimination, the minimum number would be 20 — as well as labor unions and employment agencies.

In 2008, there were 655,587 companies that had 20 or more employees, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. An estimate on ehow.com suggested that converting floor space into a small bathroom in 2009 cost between $3,000 and $6,000.

Failure to comply with EEOC regulations could open businesses up to potential lawsuits from shy leakers because, according to the commission, employers must provide reasonable accommodation for employees with disabilities. The EEOC reports that the median cost of complying with an ADAAA-covered disability is just $240 – substantially less than the thousands of dollars it could cost to accommodate a social phobia by building a new bathroom.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/05/10/americans-with-disabilities-act-covers-bashful-bladder-syndrome-could-cost-employers-billions/#ixzz1uSzJswCg

Surely there are cubicles for use, with WCs, that have doors?

Give the candidate a little bottle and shut him in the cubicle until he produces a result.

Mark the bottle so that the drug-tester knows that the same bottle is used.

Son of a gun.

I thought this article was going to be about people pissing their daks at the sight of gun. :lol:

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Surely there are cubicles for use, with WCs, that have doors?

Give the candidate a little bottle and shut him in the cubicle until he produces a result.

Mark the bottle so that the drug-tester knows that the same bottle is used.

Doesn't the tester have to watch the testee perform in case he has a little bottle of someone else's weewee stashed away? (And pours it into the bottle of the first instance?)

when in the late 60s in Pasadena with some pals we were cruzin' and all on acid and drinkin' cheap red wine and then the driver stopped for a roadside whiz...and we all lined up to participate from the copious amount of red wine ingested and then one associate declaimed in despair and agony: 'I can't piss...I can't piss...' and then we understood and we comforted him to say: 'it's OK, man...you can whiz when you get home...'

and then, the salutation was created: 'what it is, whiz?...'

mind, only in southern California in the late 60s...

later in Vietnam when on return during the over 1 hour drive from the supermarket in Ha Tinh to the digs at the Deo Con, drinkin' Bier Hanoi all the way on the main north-south Vietnam route AH 1 I'd say to the driver to pull over by a rice paddy fer a whiz...and I would relieve meself and then the driver would join me in companionable silence then we'd zip up and move on down the road...

John Hammond couldn't have sung it better...

In Australia, we call it 'stage fright'. It's a very real condition. unsure.png

later in Vietnam when on return during the over 1 hour drive from the supermarket in Ha Tinh to the digs at the Deo Con, drinkin' Bier Hanoi all the way on the main north-south Vietnam route AH 1 I'd say to the driver to pull over by a rice paddy fer a whiz...and I would relieve meself and then the driver would join me in companionable silence then we'd zip up and move on down the road...

John Hammond couldn't have sung it better...

It is a very regular thing for the bus (or buses) carrying the Saigon Hash back to city centre after a Sunday run in the jungle to stop for a whiz.

As this is a mixed sex hash we had certain principles to guide us - such as front of bus for Harriettes, back for Hashers, kids to choose.

This was often on National Road 1 - the main road from HCMC to Hanoi - with three lanes of traffic whizzing (yes, pun) past.

Don't think anyone had problems, but then we were all full of Tiger. And there were 40-50 people on the bus.

later in Vietnam when on return during the over 1 hour drive from the supermarket in Ha Tinh to the digs at the Deo Con, drinkin' Bier Hanoi all the way on the main north-south Vietnam route AH 1 I'd say to the driver to pull over by a rice paddy fer a whiz...and I would relieve meself and then the driver would join me in companionable silence then we'd zip up and move on down the road...

John Hammond couldn't have sung it better...

It is a very regular thing for the bus (or buses) carrying the Saigon Hash back to city centre after a Sunday run in the jungle to stop for a whiz.

As this is a mixed sex hash we had certain principles to guide us - such as front of bus for Harriettes, back for Hashers, kids to choose.

This was often on National Road 1 - the main road from HCMC to Hanoi - with three lanes of traffic whizzing (yes, pun) past.

Don't think anyone had problems, but then we were all full of Tiger. And there were 40-50 people on the bus.

whew, humph...the idea of a 'run through the jungle' near Saigon is hard to bear...especially with westerners...

I always preferred my hotel room on Thi Sach Street and the lady from the bar or a cafe/bar near the opera house with a cheroot and an absinthe...'say babe, let's go back to the hotel; they got some good movies on the TCM channel...' and the lady she sez: 'does that mean that I haveta get undressed again?...' tutsi: 'go on, babe...I'll make it up t'ye with a nice anchovy pizza and a new telephone...'...

There was jungle on many runs, although most runs had paddy and monkey bridges as the main features.

Viets appear to have smaller feet than Thais or Indonesians, as the little paths between the various rice paddies are narrower than in those countries and ensured more muddy trainers than any other hash I've run.

post-15852-0-54469600-1336738721_thumb.j post-15852-0-20875900-1336738743.jpg post-15852-0-60455400-1336738766.jpg post-15852-0-50152800-1336738782.jpg post-15852-0-88731100-1336738800.jpg post-15852-0-14362300-1336738969.jpg

In Australia, we call it 'stage fright'. It's a very real condition. unsure.png

I'm sure it is....whistling.gif

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