Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jan 2004 Source: Daily Mississippian (MS Edu) Copyright: 2004 The Daily Mississippian Contact: http://www.thedmonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1345 Author: Michael M. Newsom Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) OLE MISS SEARCHES FOR DRUGS The Department of Housing and Student Life is conducting a drug investigation after an incident occurred Jan. 13 at the department's warehouse located behind Kincannon Hall. A custodian at the facility smelled what was believed to be marijuana smoke and reported it to his supervisor. The police were called to the scene, questioned everyone inside the building and detained one member of the staff. No arrests were made. "Detained can mean anything., That can mean held for questioning, but they were not arrested," said Bobby Black, chief of investigations for the University Police Department. "It was one person that we were looking at for sure." Black said his department was not investigating the case anymore, because no marijuana or drug paraphernalia was found. After an investigation by the housing department, the Department of Human Resources will decide what sort of punishment, if any, those involved in the incident will face and make a recommendation to the housing department. Under the university's drug policy, which applies to faculty and staff members, the Department of Human Resources can test employees who have been suspected of drug use while at work. The policy also states employees may be suspended while an investigation is conducted. If the employee tests positive for drugs, the test results would be sent to the Department of Human Resources for verification. Associate Director of Housing and Student Life Vanessa Rodriguez would not say whether or not the drug tests had been administered, or whether or not anyone had been suspended. Rodriguez filed the police report, but would not comment on the incident. She said only that it is a personnel issue. "I'm reluctant to say anything about it," Rodriguez said. "The housing department will have no comment on this issue." The university drug policy, implemented to comply with the 1988 Federal Drug Free Workplace Act, specifically prohibits faculty and staff members from "possessing, using, manufacturing, selling, distributing or in any other way involving themselves with controlled substances both on and off campus." The policy has provisions to test all employees who are suspected of using drugs under two conditions: "There is a reasonable suspicion that the employee may be under the influence of alcohol or controlled substances while at work," or "the employee is involved in a vehicle accident while operating a university owned, assigned or leased vehicle" whether or not the employee is at fault. Also, those faculty and staff members working on grants funded by the U.S. Department of Defense are subject to stricter regulations because they may have access to classified materials. Those with commercial driver's licenses are also subject to more drug screenings than other employees. Drug testing is required, before and after hiring, of all university employees who are required to have a commercial driver's license. Any potential employee who tests positive for drugs will not be hired. The policy has few specific punishments listed for drug violations, but leaves the punishments up to the Department of Human Resources. If a university employee is involved in an accident while driving a university vehicle and someone is killed, that employee must take an alcohol-screening test within two hours of the accident. The policy also has provisions to require employees to enter treatment programs. The University of Mississippi's drug policy, as well as other policies are available at www.olemiss.edu . - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin