Pubdate: Sun, 13 Feb 2000 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2000 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Interact.html Author: Calvina Fay WORKPLACE DRUG TESTING IS BENEFICIAL To the editor: Re: Junk science drove America to drug testing, by Robyn Blumner, Jan. 30. Blumner obviously knows nothing about drug testing in the corporate sector, let alone anything about the tragedies that have affected millions of families due to drug abuse. I founded one of the first companies in the country that provided drug-testing services to employers and have worked with hundreds of employers over the past 15 years in establishing drug-free workplaces. I am certified by the courts as an expert in workplace drug testing and have lectured on the topic nationally and internationally. When testing began to develop in workplaces in the early '80s, I saw 38 percent of the work force in a small Texas town unable to pass a drug test. This was a petrochemical town where the average worker could, by a simple human error, literally blow up the entire town. After several years of aggressive drug and alcohol testing, the rate of employees who could not pass a drug test dropped to less than 10 percent. Along with that, employers experienced a dramatic reduction in accidents, workers' compensation claims, health care claims and absenteeism. At least one corporation received a 50 percent reduction in its workers' compensation premium due to the reduction of workplace accidents. During that time I also conducted surveys with employees who were subjected to drug testing in their workplaces and learned that most employees supported employers' rights to conduct testing in the workplace and considered a drug-free workplace as one of the best benefits provided by their employer. Further, my surveys with employees revealed that many casual drug users had ceased to use drugs for fear of being caught on a drug test. By ceasing to use, these employees will never become addicted! One other benefit of drug testing in the workplace is that many employees have been intervened upon through a positive test and pushed into drug treatment. As a result, they are now drug-free, productive employees and family members. It is also important to remember that drug-free workplace programs offer drug treatment and counseling not only to the employee but the employees' families. Before such programs were implemented, the average parent had no idea where to turn for help when he thought he had a child using drugs. Today employees can utilize their employee assistance program, which is a part of their drug-free workplace program, to find answers to dealing with their child's drug or alcohol problem. Robyn Blumner's reliance on the American Civil Liberties Union as her resource about workplace drug testing shows her lack of understanding of the problem. The ACLU has been opposed to drug testing from its inception. Of course, its "investigations" or "reports" would not show drug testing in a positive manner. Blumner needs to look beyond the ACLU filter at some valid, unbiased studies. Corporate America does not invest in programs that do not provide a return on its investment. - -- Calvina L. Fay, executive director, Drug Free America Foundation Inc., St. Petersburg - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson