It's great that the Arizona-based U-Haul company cares about the well-being of its more than 30,000 employees. It's commendable that it has adopted programs and offered benefits to promote their nutrition, fitness and overall health. But its newest "wellness" policy for employees goes way beyond the promotion of good health and into the land of creepy intrusion.

Starting Feb. 1, the company says it will no longer hire people who use nicotine, or at least that it will do so in the 21 states where it is legal to have such a policy, which does not, thankfully, include California or North Carolina. Job applicants will have to disclose whether they smoke, vape or chew nicotine products and must agree to be tested for nicotine as a condition of employment. The company says it won't be testing employees initially, but will likely begin nicotine screening sometime in the future in the states that allow it. Current employees are not subject to the new policy, at least not yet.