Pubdate: Sun, 22 Oct 2006 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2006 Star Tribune Contact: http://www.startribune.com/dynamic/feedback/form.php?opinion=1 Website: http://www.startribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/266 Author: H.J. Cummins, Star Tribune METH'S HIDDEN COST AT THE WORKPLACE Minnesota's Rural Expanse and Abundance of Small Companies Make It A Prime Candidate for Meth in the Workplace. Another casualty of the chaos was the couple's marriage. They divorced in 2001. Early the next year, a suicidal Hauge-Johnson was admitted as an inpatient to the Dellwood Recovery Center, an Allina facility in nearby Cambridge. Johnson visited her there, and in April, while still at Swede-O, he went into a 90-day outpatient program. "I've known Fred for about 22 years," said Wilcox, who still is his supervisor. "I always thought he was a nice guy, but I have seen him go through this struggle -- come out the other side a whole lot better and happier person." Hauge-Johnson is now admissions director at Minnesota Teen Challenge, a faith-based treatment center in Minneapolis. "The job means everything to me," she said. "It's a purpose. It's giving back. It's offering hope." She also will start taking business courses in January at the Anoka-Ramsey Community College in Cambridge. Johnson and Hauge-Johnson give most of the credit for their sobriety to the support of the Abundant Life Church in North Branch. The couple remarried there July 29 last year. "We had a new beginning," Hauge-Johnson said. The powerful appeal People love meth because instead of feeling high, they actually feel more grounded. "It's not an out-of-control experience, it's a 'more-in-control' experience," Falkowski said. Until it's not any more. Krista Babolik started using meth 10 years ago when she was 22 and doing clerical work. "I doubled my data-entry speed at first," said Babolik, of Pine City. Eventually the big spiral came for her: She took so much of the drug one day that it kept her up all night, and then she had to take even more the next day to fight off the sleepless fatigue, which kept her awake another night, and on and on. "When I wasn't using I'd be in bed, sick, telling myself I picked up something from someone who was sick at work," Babolik said. To cover her absences, she told her boss that her children had chronic ear infections. Five years later she quit work, using the excuse that she wanted to be a stay-at-home mom. It took her another five years to hit bottom, which happened in March of last year. She spent the month in Dellwood's inpatient program. With a friend's help, she got a job in Rush City doing phone sales at Dennis Kirk Inc., which makes replacement parts for recreational vehicles. That was in April. Her recent three-month review, she said, "is probably the best one I've ever had." When you're addicted to meth, you do things you never thought you would, she said. "So getting recognition at work for things basically proves to you that you can do something, you can be somebody again," she said. "It's nice being able to look people in the eye." Minnesota law limited The majority of states have passed drug-free workplace laws that give employers a discount on their workers compensation or health insurance premiums if they fulfill certain requirements, said Sherry Green at the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws in suburban Washington, D.C. Those include: a written drug policy, some form of drug testing, employee assistance and drug education programs, and supervisor training. In Minnesota, Sen. Julie Rosen, R-Fairmont, plans to introduce similar legislation in the upcoming session. "It's the medium-size to small employers who are suffering," Rosen said. The state now requires employers to have a written drug policy only if they do drug testing, Minneapolis employment lawyer Joseph Schmitt said. It also says employers can fire workers if they have drugs at work but not if they test positive for a drug -- unless they then refuse or fail treatment, Schmitt said. Part of the problem for rural employers is the small workforce around them, said Deborah Durkin, coordinator of the methamphetamine program for the Minnesota Department of Health. She said that's why one remote factory agreed to stop drug testing when employees said they'd prefer to accept lower health benefits in exchange. Clow Stamping Co. in Merrifield is a remote employer that has a comprehensive policy on chemical dependency problems. The 300-employee company, which fabricates metal components for equipment manufacturers, does universal pre-employment drug screening, personnel manager Twyla Flaws said. "We're highly industrialized, and working impaired is not safe," Flaws said. "We have very large equipment here." Clow also tests employees under the conditions allowed by Minnesota law, including workplace accidents or "reasonable suspicion" -- usually someone making a lot of mistakes or missing a lot of work, Flaws said. The company's vigilance may be one reason Flaws remembers finding only two meth users on staff in her 25 years at the company. "It's prevalent in our area, but we know that and we watch for it," she said. Getting back to work Most addicts stop working, because regular jobs usually don't cover their $50- to $100-a-day habit, said Robin Ringer, program manager at the Dellwood Recovery Center. They see that as one of their biggest blunders, Ringer said. "In treatment, they talk a lot about the job they lost, or they talk about hoping they have their job when they get back," she said. "Next to the relationships with their significant others, it's the biggest topic in group [sessions]. "They are people who got lost and they needed to find their way back," she said, "and work is part of that." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine