Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2000
Source: The Herald-Mail (MD)
Copyright: 2000, The Herald-Mail Co.
Contact:  301-714-0245
Address: The HERALD-MAIL Co., 100 Summit Avenue, Hagerstown, MD 21742
Website: http://www.herald-mail.com/home.html
Author: Brendan Kirby

COMMITTEE SUGGESTS EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTS

Hagerstown business leaders who are pressing for more widespread use of 
drug testing in the work place fired every piece of ammunition they could 
muster during a forum Tuesday morning - law enforcement officers, 
politicians and even recovering drug addicts.

The substance abuse forum at the Four Points Hotel in Hagerstown, sponsored 
by the Greater Hagerstown Committee, focused on the use of testing to 
combat illegal drug use.

Special Agent Dave Miller of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, 
praised the cooperation among police departments in Washington County.

He said three DEA agents, a Maryland State Police trooper, four Washington 
County sheriff's deputies and five Hagerstown City Police officers work out 
of the same office to fight the drug trade.

Miller said, however, that police officers, even in large numbers, cannot 
eradicate the blight of illegal drugs on their own.

"The base has to come from you all," Miller told the business executives 
gathered at the hotel. "We have to have your support."

Other speakers echoed that thought, citing statistics showing some 85 
percent of drug abusers hold down permanent jobs.

"Government can't do it all," said Baltimore County Executive C.A. Dutch 
Ruppersberger, who gave the morning's keynote address.

The Greater Hagerstown Committee is conducting a survey of Washington 
County businesses to determine how many conduct drug testing on their 
employees.

The most recent statistics showed that fewer than 10 percent of businesses 
conducted drug testing in 1992 and 1993, said Art Callaham, executive 
director of the Greater Hagerstown Committee.

Callaham said the organization wants businesses to test potential employees 
to help police crack down on the drug problem.

In addition, he said the group plans a high-profile campaign in the 
county's schools warning students that drug use could hurt their chances of 
landing a good job.

Some civil libertarians question the use of drug tests, however.

Susan Goering, executive director of the Maryland affiliate of the American 
Civil Liberties Union, criticized drug testing as inaccurate and invasive. 
She said companies that want to ensure their workers can function on the 
job should test job performance.

"There's this myth that it helps," said Goering, who was not at Tuesday's 
forum. "There are all sorts of questions about morale. What does that say 
to the employees? There's a whole privacy issue."

Participants at the seminar defended both the legality and morality of 
testing employees for drugs.

"If a person doesn't want to take the test, it's because they can't pass 
the thing," said Washington County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Wright III.

Leroy Mell, lab director at Hagerstown Medical Laboratory Inc., said drug 
tests are highly accurate, registering positive results only when a certain 
level of drugs are measured in the body.

Mell said employers have the right to provide a safe working environment 
for their employees. He urged both drug tests for prospective employees and 
periodic tests for current workers.

"You really need to do pre-employment testing," he said. "If you're really 
interested in getting rid of druggies in your employment, then random 
testing is a good way to do that."

Tony Dahbura, corporate vice president of Hub Labels in Hagerstown, 
questioned whether drug testing could cost companies workers in a tight job 
market if some companies test while others do not.

But Dahbura said in an interview that his company is committed to a 
drug-free work environment. He said Hub Labels has long used drug testing 
for job candidates and recently began random tests of current employees as 
well.

"We've had our head in the sand. We thought (with) pre-employment screening 
everybody in the building must be clean," he said.
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