Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jun 2002 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2002 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Sheila Burke Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) METRO WILL ALLOW DRUG TESTING BASED ON 'CREDIBLE' TIP OF ABUSE Drug testing can now be ordered for Metro employees solely on the basis of accusations of fellow employees, as long as a supervisor considers the sources credible, under a new city policy. Previously, a trained supervisor had to independently document certain behaviors before a drug test was ordered. In some cases, employees had reported seeing co-workers using drugs, but tests weren't ordered because supervisors didn't see signs of drug use. Under the policy, Metro officials say, the accusations must include specific information about the alleged drug use, including the location, time and details of the activity. The change follows two cases in which drug testing was applied differently. In one, a test wasn't ordered for firefighter Richard Majors despite two written reports that employees had seen him with drugs and paraphernalia in a fire hall. Majors died of natural causes Jan. 11 before an internal investigation was finished. He had no drugs in his system when he died. In another case, police fired a sergeant who refused to take a drug test that was ordered based on a tip from an unnamed informant. On Monday, Chancellor Carol McCoy ruled that the Metro Police Department violated the old drug-testing policy when it ordered a test for Sgt. Philip Clark in 1998. McCoy said the call for a drug test was improper because no trained supervisor had independently observed and documented "appearance, behavior, speech or body odors of an employee which are characteristic of the use of alcohol or controlled substances." "The incident that led to this was four years ago, almost exactly, and it's a shame that any Metro employee has to wait that long to get justice," said Clark's attorney, John M.L. Brown. Under the new guidelines, the supervisors must document why they think the accusers are credible, said Veronica Frazier, assistant director of Metro personnel. An employee's refusal to take a drug test under both the new and old guidelines is treated as a positive test, which could lead to termination. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel