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Before you perform that DOT reasonable suspicion drug test

Before you perform that DOT reasonable suspicion drug test – a check list

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So you have a federally regulated employee you think may be displaying the signs and symptoms of drug or alcohol use while on duty, but you’re concerned about the liability and potential consequences of getting it wrong. What to do? Fear not we’re here to help…

Realize you not only have the right to intervene, but you are required to do so by DOT federal regulations

We won’t cite the specific regulations for each DOT regulatory agency here but know that all DOT CFRs contain language such as “An employer shall require a driver to submit to a controlled substances test when the employer has reasonable suspicion to believe that the driver has violated the prohibitions of subpart B of this part concerning controlled substances.” (example – FMCSA) Notice the language does not say “may require” or “might require”..it states plainly “shall require” and as such if you are reasonable suspicious then you MUST act.

Are you authorized to order reasonable suspicion tests and have you been trained to spot the signs and symptoms?

If you supervise employees who perform safety sensitive duties then you absolutely have the power to initiate reasonable suspicion drug tests, however if you haven’t been formally trained on how to spot the signs or symptoms of substance abuse you should seek the help of another supervisor who has. AtHandTraining.com’s online training can have you qualified and compliant in a few short hours.

Is this a crisis or performance situation?

In the event the employee showing signs and symptoms (blurred vision, loss of balance, slurred speech, violent ro erratic behavior, etc.) then it’s absolutely imperative you remove the employee from performing safety sensitive duties immediately. This is a crisis situation.  There should be no hesitation; the safety of the employee, co-workers and general public is at risk.

If your suspicions are based on things such as showing up late for work, underperformance, excessive risk taking, dramatic behavioral changes or swings, and such then you be working towards building documentation that might lead to a reasonable suspicion test at a later time. This is generally handled by conducting recurring performance reviews and setting performance goals. This allows you the opportunity to both document the history of the employee’s behavior and set performance goals that they agreed to meet. If later, they fail to achieve the goals they agreed to, it creates a stronger case for performing a reasonable suspicion drug test – assuming the signs and symptoms lead you in that direction.

When did you observe the signs and symptoms?

DOT regulations state that in order for observations to be valid they must occur ‘just before, during or just after‘ performing a safety sensitive duty.

Are your observations based on specific, articuaulable and contemporaneous information?

These are the criteria the DOT specifies supervisor observations must meet.

Specific: For ex. Specific would be “Glassy and bloodshot eyes” versus non-specicic “Seemed out of it”.

Articulable: This means you can accurately describe the specific signs or symptoms. For example, you couldn’t say that an employee “associates with the drug abusing type crowd” because there are no specific characteristics that can be described that wouldn’t be based on speculation or stereotypes.

contemporaneous: This means your observations occurred just before, during or after their work period. For example, watching an employee get drunk at a weekend softball game isn’t directly relevant for determining a reasonable suspicion test on a Monday.

Do you need a second supervisor observer?

No. For FMCSA, PHMSHA, FTA, USCG and many FAA organizations, a single supervisor can make the call. If you’re covered by the FAA and have 50 or fewer employees a single supervisor can make the call. FAA covered organizations with more than 50 employees need to have a second supervisor concur. One of the two FAA supervisors must be trained in dot reasonable suspicion signs and symptoms. However always seek a second supervior’s opionion when possible.

The intervention: Interview the employee and keep information confidential

How do you intervene? Simply remove the employee from performing their safety sensitive duty, take them into a private office or other private location (preferably with a second supervisor) and ask them for an explanation of the signs and symptoms you’ve observed. Document their responses. All information should be kept confidential. The goal of the intervention is not to get the employee to admit use, the goal is to simply document the employees responses. Employees might have reasonable explanations for some signs and symptoms, for example red or bloodshot eyes might be the result of severe allergies, but if combined with slurred speech and  loss of balance the explanation no longer holds up.

What if the employee refuses?

You simply need to inform the employee that a refusal to submit to a reasonable suspicion drug test has the same consequences as testing positive. They can refuse, so be prepared to cite your company policy or specific DOT regulations.

What if the employee has proof they have a prescription?

Whether or not an employee has a prescription is irrelevant to a reasonable suspicion drug test. Proceed with the process regardless.

What if the employee admits to use? Is a test still needed?

Yes. The regulations state the employee must submit to a test. There is no “out” for admitting use. They employee could easily change their story later and say they never admitted use.

Do not let the employee escort themselves to the collection site and do not perform the collection yourself

Employees suspect of being under the influence should not be allowed to escort themselves to the collection site and the supervisor making the reasonable suspicion test determination cannot be the person to administer the drug or alcohol test.

Document observations within 24 hours

DOT regulations specify that supervisors need to document their observations within 24 hours. In the event the employee tests positive and challenges you legally or otherwise, proper documentation of your observations will help your cause. Don’t have a checklist? Get one here.

Make sure all documentation is stored in the employee file

The employee might test negative, it’s a real possibility that the employee may actually be under the influence of a substance that 1. Isn’t part of the drug testing panel and therefore wouldn’t be detected (K2, Spice and other newer substances are common examples and 2. The employee hasn’t previously ingested the substance and therefore the body might not have the metabolites present to that would show up in a lab test. For example, if smoked pot for the first time right now and you urine tested them within a few hours, they would be unlikely to test positive whereas if the test occurred in the next day or two they would. Alcohol tests are different because they do not test for past use, rather they can tell whether or not a person is under the influence at that very moment. Documentation of employee behavior can help establish an actionable pattern of negative employee performance even if the employee tests negative.

 Remeber enabling substance abusing employees to get away with their behavior puts everyone’s safety at risk, including the employee who may need help with an addiction and transfers the consequences of their behavior to others

AtHandTraining.com provides awesome online training for DOT Supervisor reasonable suspicion training and for DOT employees for drug and alcohol awareness training.

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The problem with marijuana accident statistics

The problem with marijuana accident statistics

accident

“Statistics are like bikinis.  What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.”  ~Aaron Levenstein

Unless you’ve been in a coma tha last five years you have certainly heard many pros and cons arguments regarding the legalization of marijuana for medical and recreational use. When you consider the overall implications to society, individual’s physical and mental health, public safety, effect on minority populations, costs of enforcement, taxation, illegal markets, and so on the issue can be quite complex and difficult to come to any definite conclusions. As with most large-scale public policy issue there are valid arguments to be made supporting each side. Some arguments may never get sorted out, while others can be resolved over time as evidence builds and statistics can be compiled. A good example of this would be vaccinations. Over time we can compile reliable information regarding the safety and effectiveness of vaccinations and for the most part American society has come to accept that the pros of vaccination outweigh the cons. Even California finally caved in and passed mandatory vaccinations for public and private school students. That’s what solid, reliable, statistical data can accomplish.

In the great marijuana debate, there are a lot of claims floating about regarding whether or not marijuana use has an effect of workplace accidents. Talk to a pro-marijuana advocate and they’ll likely cite some website claiming that no or little statistical evidence exists that definitively links marijuana use to a higher rate of workplace accidents (or driving accidents). Are they right?

Many U.S. businesses are re-evaluating their workplace drug testing policies due to the rapidly changing state laws and public perception. It would be helpful for them to have conclusive evidence that marijuana either does or does not have an effect of safety. Workplace safety typically trumps all other issues. Companies can justify nearly any precaution that improves workplace safety and reduces potential liabilities.

The problem with Marijuana and workplace safety statistics

In 1987, an Amtrack/Conrail train collision near Baltimore killed 14 passengers, an engineer and car attendant. The Conrail crew failed to slow at a critical point resulting in the collision. They also tested positive for marijuana in post accident testing. The crash was instrumental in the FRA overhauling their drug and alcohol testing policy and later in 1991, Congress authorize random testing for many DOT regulated transportation industries. In 1993, in an interview with the Baltimore Sun, Ricky Lynn Gates, the Conrail engineer confessed to smoking marijuana stating that the accident would never have happened had he not been smoking marijuana. However, with all that information what was the “official cause” of the accident attributed to? It was officially listed as ”the outrageous conduct of the Conrail crew”

Where can we find reliable data?

Here’s a start…

30% of participants who consumed THC showed visible impairments in a field sobriety study – Psychopharmacology Oct 2012 223:(4) 439-446.

50% of participants showed a positive relationship between THC use and failed field sobriety tests. – 2005 Jun;180(1):107-14. Epub 2004 Dec 24.

laboratory tests and driving studies show that cannabis may acutely impair several driving-related skills in a dose-related fashion” -Am J Addict. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 May 1. Published in final edited form as: Am J Addict. 2009; 18(3): 185–193. doi:  10.1080/10550490902786934

“Drivers with blood concentrations of 13.1 ug/L THC, the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, showed increase weaving that was similar to those with a .08 breath alcohol concentration, the legal limit in most states.” – http://time.com/3930541/marijuana-impact-driving/

“laboratory research has suggested similarly that marijuana impairs tasks of selective and divided attention, time estimation, and executive function”  & ““the acute effect of moderate or higher doses of marijuana impairs the skills related to safe driving and injury risk”, particularly “attention, tracking and psychomotor skills”  – http://adai.washington.edu/marijuana/factsheets/driving.htm

“A more recent study revealed that increasing instances of driving under the influence of marijuana are associated with an increased risk of motor vehicle accidents. More specifically, after adjusting for confounding variables, young adults in a New Zealand birth cohort who drove under the influence of marijuana more than 20 times across a 4 year period had a risk of collisions 1.4 times greater than did those who had never driven under the influence of marijuana.30 Finally, driver culpability studies have suggested that drivers testing positive to marijuana are significantly more likely to be responsible for fatal car crashes than are drug-free drivers.” – http://adai.washington.edu/marijuana/factsheets/driving.htm#sthash.hioc0SLu.dpuf 

 One more consideration

Today’s marijuana is three times stronger than that of the 70’s. So most studies performed to date are likely outdated, and testing strains that have lower psychological effects of users.

AtHandTraining.com provides awesome online training for DOT Supervisor for reasonable suspicion training and for DOT employees for drug and alcohol awareness training.

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Coates v. Dish Network

 

Coates v. Dish Network – A big win for zero tolerance drug free workplace programs

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The five-year wait is over. Monday morning the Colorado Supreme Court ruled in favor of Dish, in the Coates v. Dish Network case.

What does this mean?

While medical marijuana is legal in Colorado, employers can still fire patients for using it — even if they aren’t impaired at work.

According to the Colorado court…”The Supreme Court holds that under… Colorado’s ‘lawful activities statute,’ the term ‘lawful’ refers only to those activities that are lawful under both state and federal law, therefore, employees who engage in an activity such as medical marijuana use that is permitted by state law but unlawful under federal law are not protected by the statute.”

This is a big win for companies who utilize a zero tolerance drug free workplace policy. A zero tolerance policy gives the employer the right to take action against an employee (up to termination) for simply having a detectable amount of THC in their system. This ruling establishes that it is not a requirement for an employer to prove impairment which was something many employers were concerned could be a legal gray area.

Dish Network’s drug policy clearly states termination as potential disiplinary action against users of prohibited substances. It reads, “To ensure a safe and productive work environment, Dish Network reserves the right to administer nondiscriminatory, unannounced random drug testing. No employee shall report to work or be at work with alcohol or with any detectable amount of prohibited drugs in the employee’s system. Any violation of this statement of policy will result in disciplinary action up to and including termination.”

Meghan Martinez, the lawyer for Dish Network argued “He smoked marijuana while at home, but he crossed the threshold [to his office] with THC in his system. The use is the effects, it’s the THC, it’s the whole point of marijuana. So when he came to work, he was using.” Brandon Coates, who was paralyed in most of his body due to an automobile accident, was fired five years ago by Dish even though he was a patient on the state registry for madical marijuana.

Currently Arizona and possibly Delaware are the only states which maintain state law prohibiting employers from “discriminating” against an employee who has tested positive, so long as they are a registered medical marijuana patient and are not performing a safety sensitive job.

What does this mean for your drug free workplace policy?

Employers can now incorporate a zero-tolerance policy with much stronger conviction that their program will survive legal challenge. Rapidly changing public opinion and state law have driven some employers to consider changing thier drug testing policies to be more accomodating to marijuana users, however they do so at the risk of having to define what constitutes company accepted off-duty use, or what constitutes valid medical use or when an employee might be considered impaired. All scenarios which increase the complexity of your program and cause confusion among employees and supervisors.

Tips for dealing with marijuana in your organizations drug free workplace program…

  • Review your state’s laws on discrimination against marijuana users. Make sure your policies are consistent with state anti-discrimination statutes.
  • Continue to comply with federal regulations. Remember all DOT drug testing prohibits Medical Review Officers from over turning positive marijuna laboratory tests for any reason. Marijuana remains completely illegal at the federal level and it is a prohibited substance. Any supervisor who has reasonable suspicion that an employee performing a safety sensitive duty is required to immediately remove them from their duties and initiate a reasonable suspicion drug test.
  • Review your drug-use and drug-testing policies to ensure that they clearly explain your expectations regarding impairment, marijuana use outside of company time and drug testing or that employees are aware of your zero tolerance policy (if applicable).
  • Make sure you are prepared to consistently follow your stated procedures.
  • As part of your review, articulate whether you wish to ban all employee drug use or merely impairment.
  • Communicate your policy to your employees – once as mandory as recurring as best practice.

 

AtHand Training provides awesome online training for DOT Supervisor for reasonable suspicion training and for DOT employees for drug and alcohol awareness training.

Buy now and begin training in minutes!

credit cards accepted

 

Buy DOT Supervisor Course

Buy DOT Employee Drug Awareness Course

Buy DFWP Supervisor Course

Buy FAA Recurring Course