Pubdate: Wed, 08 May 2002 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2002 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Anne Saker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) NO 'REASONABLE CAUSE' IN FIRINGS The state Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday that two state employees at John Umstead Hospital in Butner were wrongfully dismissed when they refused to submit to a drug test, a demand based only on another employee's suspicions about them. In a 2-1 decision, the court said that although the government had an interest in maintaining a drug-free workplace, it was obligated to protect its workers against unconstitutional searches. Only when the government has "reasonable cause" can it order an employee to take a drug test -- although, the court said, "What is 'reasonable' depends on the privacy and governmental interests involved in the individual case." The case began Feb. 15, 1997, at Umstead. When Amanda Blanks, a therapist, arrived at the hospital that day, she saw technicians Yolandra Best and Roy Hudson leave a small chart room. Blanks said when she entered the room, she saw a pack of cigarettes, a set of keys and a straw about 3 to 4 inches long with white residue on one end. She said Hudson later went back into the room and collected the items. Blanks said she never saw Best or Hudson using the straw. Blanks told her supervisor about the incident. A public safety officer searched Hudson and his truck. Best was subjected to a strip search, court records said. The officer found a straw on Hudson, but Blanks later said it wasn't the same one she had seen earlier. Hospital officials asked Best and Hudson to take drug tests, which they declined. Two days later they were fired. They appealed the decision through administrative channels, which upheld their dismissals. They took their case before Wake County Superior Court Judge Abraham Penn Jones, who ruled in October 2000 that Umstead officials did not have reasonable cause to order the drug tests. The state Department of Health and Human Services appealed. In its ruling Tuesday, the appeals court said that under state law, state employees always have the burden of proving they have not used drugs. But to demand drug tests, the state must have reasonable cause, which state policy defines as that based on "specific objective and articulable facts and reasonable inferences drawn from those facts in light of experience." The court agreed with Penn that the state did not have reasonable cause in the cases of Best and Hudson. Judge Robin Hudson wrote the opinion, with Judge Patricia Timmons-Goodson in agreement. Dissenting was Judge John Tyson, who said there was reasonable cause to order the tests, and the refusal by Best and Hudson "was insubordination that justified their termination of their state employment." The split decision gives the state the right to appeal to the Supreme Court. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh