Pubdate: Tue, 24 Feb 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) 2-4e6d-b04c-2e68215559d2 Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Gordon Hamilton DRUG-TESTING POLICY GOES TO ARBITRATOR Workers' rights are being trampled by a new drug-testing policy introduced in British Columbia this month by Weyerhaeuser Co., says IWA Canada. The union is taking Weyerhaeuser's policy, introduced Feb. 1, before an arbitrator, claiming workers should not have to provide urine tests to their employer. Testing of union members at Weyerhaeuser operations across Canada has been put on hold until the issue is settled. However, Weyerhaeuser is continuing to test staff outside the union. Employees are only required to provide a urine sample if there has been a safety-related incident, said Weyerhaeuser director of safety Al Dewar. Since Feb. 1, only one staff member in the company's B.C. operations has been tested, following a workplace incident. Dewar would not elaborate on the situation, citing confidentiality, other than to say no drugs or alcohol were found. The union objects to Weyerhaeuser's policy, saying the company is taking the issue of drugs and alcohol too far. Under the policy, a worker is not permitted to have alcohol eight hours before going to work, said Wilf McIntyre, IWA second vice-president. That means a graveyard shift worker who has wine with dinner could be disciplined if tested at midnight. Also, if a worker does test positive, he or she can be ordered to take counselling and can be randomly tested afterwards. If workers do not cooperate, they can be fired, he said. "You could smoke a joint on Friday evening and Monday morning, if you were tested, you would still probably show that you have it in your system. So this is the fight that is on: How do you tell when somebody is impaired; if somebody has a problem?" McIntyre said drug-testing is more a part of U.S. corporate policy than it is in Canada and the IWA does not want to see it introduced here to the extent it is in place in the U.S. "This isn't about safety. It's about instituting a policy out of the U.S. head office," McIntyre said. Weyerhaeuser says its policy is entirely consistent with drug policies now in place in Canada in the oil and gas industry. Dewar said the company introduced testing to improve worker accountability on safety issues. "We do have to do some things differently and I think drug-testing is just one small part of that, but it is part and parcel." A Weyerhaeuser poll of its workforce showed one in five think drugs and alcohol are a workplace problem. "The whole intent is to give people a chance to do something about it if drugs or alcohol is found in their system," Dewar said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman