Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jul 2001 Source: Daily Comet (LA) Copyright: 2001 Comet-Press Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://dailycomet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1505 Note: Letter writers must provide phone number for verification ON TAKING DRUG TESTS, JUST SAY 'NO' Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that drug testing is 100 percent accurate. The Boss Man and the insurance company can tell absolutely whether a particular worker or insuree has smoked marijuana within the past month or so. Cocaine use can be detected with certainty if the test is done within days of the drug's use. The relics of other drug use can be plucked from the worker's urine as if it were so much gold. The Boss Man can be sure. The insurer can be sure. And the parole officer can be sure. So what's the problem? The problem is that it still doesn't tell anyone anything other than the fact that some drug was consumed within the past X number of days. Even a test that is 100 percent accurate cannot pinpoint when or how the drug use took place. A person who attends a concert or passes a pot-smoker on a sidewalk gets marijuana smoke in his or her system, and it would show up on a completely accurate test. That means the innocent passerby will be denied a job or insurance coverage or will be fired simply because of some arbitrary rule about what chemicals can and can't be present in his or her bloodstream. Of course, it's even worse than that because drug tests are absolutely not 100 percent accurate and are, therefore, one of the most invasive violations of our rights without any countervailing benefit. There are false positives, false negatives and inconclusive results. Yet each result is treated as Gospel truth, and each person who - God help him - - tests positive is treated as a criminal. In addition to the troubling privacy implications (most of which pass without comment because, after all, it only affects the guilty, right?), drug testing is becoming more and more ingrained in the employment culture. I had time to think about these and other issues as I waited more than two hours Wednesday to take a drug test. On weekends, I bartend in the French Quarter and pull down enough money to enable me to pursue my writing hobby. For varied reasons, I never passed fully through the employment process until recently, and the last step of that process was the drug "screening." I couldn't help but notice the irony of my employer giving a drug test to an employee whose primary function is to make and serve alcoholic beverages. Yes, alcohol is legal and marijuana is illegal, but which causes more deaths each year? Fortunately, I don't have to worry about failing the test (unless I fall victim to the dreaded false positive), but that's no reason not to be offended at being asked to take it. It's surprising in this age of privacy (At many companies, it is a violation of policy to even give recommendations because to do so might violate the former employee's right to privacy.) that prospective employees are subjected to an inspection of their bodily fluids. But, I guess we have the insurance companies to thank for all of that foolishness, much like the disappearance of diving boards from most swimming pools. And everyone knows insurance companies don't take notice of a problem unless lawyers bring their attention to it. So, at the bottom of it all, who can we blame for having to urinate in a cup before serving a beer? The lawyers. This column probably suggests I've given this matter way too much thought, but as I mentioned, I had about four hours to kill while waiting for my rights to be violated. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D