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Employer GPS Usage On A Rapid Upswing
Employer
use of global positioning system (GPS)-based employee monitoring
is a wave that hasn't even begun to crest. But privacy experts are
saying it's the prime workplace issue to watch in 2005. As GPS use
grows, so do questions over whether or not GPS infringes on employee
privacy.
Employers,
system providers, privacy experts and unions have just begun squaring
off on the issue of GPS and privacy, offering what promises a heated
debate in the coming months.
"Use
of GPS in the workplace is already significant, and it's growing
even more because the cost has dropped," said Michael Swiek, executive
director of the U.S. GPS Industry Council. "And it's extraordinarily
reliable: There's never been an outage. But does it violate employee
privacy? It's
a receive-only system. It just tells you a position. What the recipient
wants to do with the information is another ballgame."
Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) technology is a navigational
system consisting of 24 satellites orbiting the earth, sending information
to receivers on its surface. The satellites, launched by the U.S.
Department of Defense, are now controlled by a joint civilian/military
board of the federal government. They transmit radio signals which,
when received by a device mounted in a vehicle, calculate the vehicle's
position on the ground and relay that information to a computer
at a business' home base.
Federal
law requires all cell phone carriers to offer GPS capabilities,
and many consumers who use GPS do so through their cell phones.
The information is a boon to boaters, lost drivers, worried parents
and employers whose businesses depend on having employees on the
road.
A
fast-growing market
Experts estimate that the number of mobile workers in the United
States will grow from 92 million in 2001 to 105 million in 2006.
With that big an employee base outside the four walls of the workplace,
more and more employers are using GPS to monitor the movement and
flow of employees, goods, services and transactions.
GPS
has caught on in the cable/broadband industry, among construction
employers, courier and delivery services, employers in facility
and waste management, security and fire prevention firms, carpet
cleaners, plumbers, painters, the transportation industry, landscaping
contractors, pest control companies and distributors of everything
from beverages to building supplies.
"We
started using GPS about four years ago, and we do it for two reasons,"
said Jason Kast, operations manager of Fleetwing Corp., a wholesaler
of petroleum products in Lakeland and Cocoa, Fla.
"First,
we wanted better control and knowledge of where our trucks were
going and how long they were there. That helps us with customer
service. If a customer calls, we can pinpoint the driver's location
(and) tell customers where the truck is and how soon it will be
there. "And second," Kast explains, "GPS eliminates use of log books."
Fleetwing hauls hazardous materials, which are regulated by the
U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), and recordkeeping is part
of the business. "If a driver didn't fill out a log book and the
DOT did an audit, we could get into trouble," said Kast.
Better
customer service also motivated Linda Wallace, co-owner of Ultra
Modern Pool and Patio of Wichita, Kan., who employs 35 to 50 people
driving a fleet of seven trucks. "I decided to use it for better
tracking," she said. "I wanted to see how much time was spent on
each job. We've had a few problems in the past-people weren't where
they said they'd be. With FleetBoss GPS, we can defend ourselves
to the customers. We know how fast the drivers drove, what route
they took, and how long they spent on each job."
John
Carlisle, a spokesman for the Massachusetts Highway Department,
which keeps state roads clear of snow and ice, described how GPS
helps the department monitor its resources. "It allows us to increase
accountability, and to make sure our plows are spread evenly throughout
the state," he said.
A
legitimate employer tool
Of course, employers can also use GPS to monitor employee malfeasance
in the form of unauthorized moonlighting, unnecessary stops, inefficient
routing, poor use of time, speeding and excess overtime. Even privacy
experts say that employer use of GPS tracking as a basis for adverse
employment action is legitimate. There aren't a lot of statutes
or court decisions on the use of GPS as a workplace monitoring tool.
So far, only Connecticut requires employers to give advance notice
of electronic monitoring.
Legal
experts say that a court presented with an employee claim of invasion
of privacy based on workplace use of GPS would probably rely on
the analysis used in other types of workplace privacy claims and
would likely balance the needs of the employer with employees' expectations
of privacy. The needs of the employer start with an analysis of
whether the monitoring is sufficiently related to a job function
or the employee's fitness to perform that function. If there is
a sufficient relationship with either factor, the court might balance
the need for the information with the employee's right of privacy.
Factored into the decision are the nature of the job and the degree
of importance of the information.
The
employee's expectation of privacy could depend on the degree to
which the employee has notice of the monitoring and the times of
the monitoring. Monitoring that extends into private time, such
as breaks, lunch periods and non-work hours, and into private places,
such as rest and changing rooms, likely would raise more significant
privacy concerns, say the experts.
The benefits are clear
The benefits are clear," said Jeremy Gruber, legal director of the
National Workrights Institute of Princeton, N.J. "The problem is
that there's no law limiting the use of GPS in relation to work-related
activities. If an employee is required to keep a cell phone on at
all times, the employer would know where the employee went, all
their off-duty activities, even the organizations they belong to.
Even during the workday--does the employer need to know where the
employee goes for lunch?"
Mark
Rowe, senior research associate at the Center for Business Ethics
of Bentley College in Waltham, Mass., agrees that GPS use "seems
fair and reasonable when you're trying to get a package from one
place to another. If the employer's aim is to improve customer service,
it seems quite legitimate. Employers have a valid expectation that
employees will adhere to the rules.
"But
the employer should understand that GPS shouldn't be used to monitor
the extent of an employee's personal business. There clearly has
to be some kind of policy delineated and a lot of careful thought
balancing the interests of the employer and the employee," commented
Rowe.
"The
most important detail of putting in a GPS system is communication,
which is the underpinning of trust," said Rowe. "There needs to
be consultation between employer and employee to establish a reasonable
ambit for the monitoring process. With that foundation of trust,
it's easier to manage."
Note:
The majority of the content for this article originally appeared
in "GPS Use Rising", by Dian Cadrain, J.D., February
14, 2005.
© 2005 FleetBoss Global Positioning Solutions, Inc.
All rights reserved.
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