Soldier4Christ
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« on: October 20, 2006, 05:01:36 AM » |
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Discriminate against tattoos, piercings at your own risk Employers with appearance codes face suits from 'body modification' activists
You run a fashionable restaurant with a dress code for employees and customers that discourages pierced tongues and noses.
You are a personnel director at an upscale department store known for customer service and refuse to hire women with prominent tattoos.
You supervise a supermarket and require those with pierced body parts who handle food to remove the piercings before reporting to work.
According to legal experts in employment law, if you fit any of these categories, you are setting yourself up for lawsuits from members of a new activist lobby representing the ever-growing population of those into "body modification."
"Employers are getting involved in expensive legal battles as they attempt to adapt to the ever-changing workforce," said David Barron, an attorney with Epstein Becker Green Wickliff & Hall, P.C. "Long-accepted rules are now being challenged and questioned in court."
The firm cited one of the nation's largest wholesale clubs that was recently sued by a member of "the Church of Body Modification," who complained that she should not be required to remove a facial piercing.
"The employer required that all food handlers remove any such piercings for both sanitation reasons and to reflect an appropriate appearance for customers," said Barron. "This time, the company prevailed in the action, but employers in a non-food handling workplace might not be so lucky."
Laws prohibiting discrimination based on appearance and behavior of this sort already have been passed in several cities in California, and restrictions against tattoos and piercing are breaking down all over the country as the trend becomes a craze among young people.
In fact, 49 percent of Americans ages 18 to 29 have tattoos, according to a 2004 Harris Poll. A study recently published in the Journal of American Academy of Dermatology indicated 24 percent of people ages 18 to 50 have at least one tattoo. The study, based on a survey of 500 people in the United States, noted tattoos in past years "became associated with marginalized groups, signaling time spent in jail, punk status, membership in a motorcycle gang or a traveling circus." But now, it said, tattoos "have become increasingly eclectic, and the practice has become mainstream."
There are even children's books like "Mommy Has a Tattoo" and the "Tattoo Coloring Book." The topic of tattoos and body piercing is one of the hottest for campus speakers. Major corporations are working the "hip" new trend into their TV commercials and ad campaigns. And as tattoos and piercings become more common, some zealots are moving to extremes once unthinkable.
Just as "Heather Has Two Mommies" is now required reading for kindergartners in some school districts, how long will it be before the tolerance police mandate Phil Padwe's new books. He's the author and illustrator of the two new children's books on tattoos.
In "Mommy Has a Tattoo," a little boy, James, is afraid of a heavily tattooed neighbor – until he realizes his mother has one, too.
"I wanted to keep it simple," says Padwe, who is not even sure how many tattoos he has but figures it's somewhere between 25 and 30. "I didn't want to get into really heavy questions or pass judgments. It's about teaching tattoo tolerance."
Tattoos are the rage even among young teen-agers. They are becoming so common that many parents are allowing their children to make what are, in effect, lifelong decisions about indelible, permanent "body art."
Children – both boys and girls – are staining their bodies with the permanent ink for no better reason than "everybody is doing it" or "I thought the picture was cool." It's not just an urban thing any more, either.
Jon Smith, a senior at Conneaut Lake High School in Meadville, Pa., has a medium-sized tattoo of a wizard on his back. He got it last March because he just "wanted one." Wizards have no particular significance for Smith, who picked the image from a tattoo parlor book full of various designs.
"I just liked the wizard (picture)," Smith told the local paper. He had it placed on his back with the idea of adding more tattoos later.
Lindsey Galbo, 16, of Saegertown, Pa., not only got her parents permission to get a red star tattooed on her upper back, she took her father with her.
"When I got mine I didn't get it for any particular reason," she said. "It was my birthday. Something I can think back when I'm older – my dad took me to get my first tattoo."
Meanwhile, in colleges across the country, student programming boards are finding a big demand for tattoo artists to speak on campus. At Mills College in Oakland, Calif., earlier this month, Don Ed Hardy, an "internationally-acclaimed" tattoo artist, delivered a speech to a large and appreciative audience.
The tattoo taboo is definitely breaking down. One of the last states to outlaw tattooing – Oklahoma – has repealed the prohibition effective Nov. 1. In Illinois, a new law will end a prohibition on the donation of blood by those who are tattooed or pierced.
"My clientele has changed completely," said Mace Arnold, who owns Body Art in Overland Park, Mo. "Now, everybody gets tattoos. Bankers, lawyers, doctors, everybody."
Television shows are helping to make the trend more popular. One is called "Miami Ink" on TLC, the other is "Inked" on A&E.
"Every other person who walks through the door asks if we watch those shows," explains Mike Paquette, owner of Aftershock Tattoo in Olathe, Kan.
Madison Avenue is catching on to what's hot, too. Jeep's advertising campaign for the 2007 Wrangler will meld traditional and new media – including a hookup with the tattoo-parlor reality TV show "Miami Ink."
"Wrangler will be integrated" into the show, says Eileen Wunderlich, a Chrysler group spokeswoman. A Wrangler Unlimited will be decorated by the show's artists and appear in three episodes this fall, she says.
The partnership also includes Jeep sponsorship of the show's podcast, a sweepstakes and an online "Tattoo Your Own Wrangler" promotion. The Wrangler's target buyer is 25 to 35 years old. The Unlimited's target buyer is 30 to 40 years old.
But still some recognize there are plenty of downsides to tattoos and piercings – messages their not sure kids are hearing before making the permanent decision.
Dr. Betty Ann Lowe, an Arkansas pediatrician, past medical director of Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little Rock and professor emeritus at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, points out a few of the hazards:
* Tattoos are expensive and painful.
* Removal is not impossible, but it is expensive, painful and very time consuming. It is certain that the skin will never be the same.
* What is considered "in" today may turn out to be embarrassing later.
* Disease can be transmitted through unclean needles.
* Infection of the skin under the tattoo can be severe and sometimes disfiguring.
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