Pubdate: Mon, 25 Apr 2005 Source: Pacific Daily News (US GU) Copyright: 2005 Pacific Daily News Contact: http://www.guampdn.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.guampdn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1122 Author: Gaynor Dumat-ol Daleno Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) ZERO TOLERANCE SOUGHT Random drug testing for government of Guam workers who hold critical jobs is required, but some agency heads or department directors have had the discretion not to order such tests right away because of budget constraints. Gov. Felix Camacho's administration acknowledged such a problem exists, and is about to stop agency -- or department-level financial difficulties from getting in the way of drug tests. The governor is taking the discretion away from agency and department officials by consolidating directly within the Department of Administration the funding approval and payment for drug testing, said Lou Perez, the department's director, by phone yesterday. Perez explained the plan when asked to elaborate on a press release from the governor's office. The move is in line with the Camacho administration's "zero-tolerance" anti-drug policy which the governor is expected to discuss today at the "Mandatory Drug Testing Symposium: Do we Pass? Do we Fail?" The anti-drug symposium, which will also involve the judiciary and the Guam Chamber of Commerce, starts at 8 a.m. at the Hilton Guam Resort & Spa and will go on through this afternoon. "I am excited by the collaborative efforts among the executive branch, the unified judiciary, federal officials and local and off-island professionals in putting together a united front against drug use in our schools and work place," the governor said in a press release. "As governor, but more importantly as a parent, we cannot sit idly by as narcotics threaten to destroy the lives of our younger generations," he added. Perez said random drug testing is conducted on GovGuam workers who hold critical positions, such as school bus drivers and employees who operate the cranes at the seaport. Employees who raise suspicion and those who are hired to work for GovGuam also go through drug testing, she said. Drug testing for all GovGuam new hires is being done, Perez said. But there have been instances in which random drug tests were not done on current employees because an agency or department director would say they don't have the budget, Perez. By amending an executive order on drug testing, Perez said, the governor would take the drug-test payment process from agency and department officials. She said it costs under $100,000 a year to pay for GovGuam drug tests. - ---