Pubdate: Tue, 11 Nov 2003 Source: Business In Vancouver (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 BIV Publications Ltd. Contact: http://www.biv.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2458 Author: Glen Korstrom EMPLOYEE ADDICTION A TWO-WAY STREET Staff as well as employers bear responsibility to recognize the problem and deal with it Employers have long known that addressing the problem of employee addiction is not as easy as saying "you're fired." But recent court and arbitration decisions are increasingly reminding addicted employees that they too have a responsibility to get over their addiction, said Ogilvy Renault partner Delayne Sartison. The pendulum of responsibility is shifting back toward the addicted employee, she said, stressing that employers still must accommodate employees with addictions. One 2003 arbitration decision found that a Riverview Hospital employee who fraudulently took funds from the institution was partly to blame because she chose to address her gambling addiction by stealing rather than by getting help, Sartison said. "This is a good example of an arbitrator saying, 'I accept that you did this in part because of your addiction but that still doesn't get you off the hook.'" That mentality is a sea change from some decisions in the late 1990s, she said. One controversial decision in 1997 saw administrators at the Castlegar and District Hospital discover that they could not dismiss a unionized drug-addicted nurse even after supervisors caught him under-dosing patients, stealing the wastage and falsifying records. The nurse regained his job twice after relapsing and continuing to steal medication, Sartison said. A five-judge panel of the B.C. Court of Appeal has yet to issue its judgment to a final appeal to whether the arbitrator in the Castlegar case erred in his judgment, she added. But the Labour Relations Board has already "hinted" that the Castlegar case would likely have a different result under the current Labour Relations Code that was revised in 2002, she said. "The board strongly implied that a future case similar to Castlegar might be decided differently," she said. Sartison said the Labour Relations Board did its hinting as it was deciding a separate case that also provides weight to the argument that the pendulum of accountability is swinging back into the employees' court. That case involved a Fraser Lake Sawmill employee who was dismissed for regularly smoking marijuana at work. The arbitrator in that case found that the employee chose to smoke pot at work and could have stopped if he believed that the penalty were severe enough, said McCarthy Tetrault partner Earl Phillips. "If someone is choosing to go out and smoke dope on their coffee break at work and it's not the uncontrollable act of an addicted employee, then it can be treated as culpable conduct," Phillips said. Phillips added that the case shows that it is harder to win using an addiction defence than it was several years ago. "People start abusing addiction as a defence and courts and arbitrators start saying we don't accept that any more," he said. One recent arbitration case involved a liquor store employee who pilfered money at the till. The employee claimed that he was an alcoholic but he had trouble convincing the arbitrator, Phillips said. But the employee had no absence or lateness problems so the arbitrator effectively said, "you're a thief not an alcoholic," Phillips said. B.C. courts will likely look to a 2003 Alberta Court of Queen's Bench decision where a judge found that Syncrude Canada Ltd. could terminate a non-union alcoholic employee because the employee continued to drink on the job despite rehabilitative efforts, he said. Syncrude spent money on psychological counselling and for a stint at an addiction centre but when the employee made a fourth breach of the no-alcohol policy within 100 days, the court said Syncrude was justified in cutting the employee loose, Phillips said. "Syncrude is unusual in that it happened so quickly but the employer did many things right and the employee failed at every opportunity during that 100 days to battle his addiction." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh