Pubdate: Wed, 15 Feb 2006 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Jonathan Fowlie, CanWest News Service REHABILITATION UP TO EMPLOYEES, NOT JUST EMPLOYERS, COURT RULES VANCOUVER -- Two B.C. Court of Appeal rulings involving drug-addicted workers who had been dismissed will better define the role of an employer in dealing with addicted employees, and will likely require employees to take more responsibility for their recovery, a lawyer involved in both cases said Tuesday. "They are both important decisions because they go a long way to clarifying the law in this area," said Peter Gall, who represented two companies seeking to appeal arbitration decisions to reinstate dismissed employees. Gall said that up until now the issue of dealing with drug-addicted employees seemed to be "one-sided," with many arbitration decisions leaning towards reinstatement. "Now we know it is not never ending and we know there are mutual obligations," Gall said in an interview. "[We know] that an addicted employee also has a responsibility to take all reasonable steps to deal with his or her addiction," he said. In one of the two written rulings, Chief Justice Lance Finch upheld an appeal by the employer's association at Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital, finding in essence the hospital was right to dismiss a nurse who was stealing drugs to feed his addiction. An arbitrator had initially found the hospital was wrong to dismiss Ron Bergen, a registered nurse who had been addicted to drugs since 1996. In his ruling, Finch overturned that decision, saying the arbitrator did not properly consider the responsibility Bergen had to participate in his own rehabilitation. "The employer's duty to accommodate Mr. Bergen was matched by his duty to facilitate the accommodation process," Finch wrote. "Addiction, as a treatable illness, requires an employee to take some responsibility for his rehabilitation program." Finch went on to say that Bergen, who encountered addiction problems twice with previous employers, did not live up to that responsibility. As a result, Finch ruled, the employer's duty to accommodate Bergen and his addiction was "exhausted." In the second case, which was heard at the same time as the first, Finch upheld an arbitrator's ruling to reinstate an employee of Kemess Mines Inc. The mining company dismissed Mark Gardiner from his job at an open pit mine in Northern B.C. after he was found smoking marijuana in his room at the mine site. The company has a documented "zero-tolerance" policy on drug use, which it said Gardiner broke by using drugs. Gardiner had worked at the mine in alternating two-week shifts for almost seven years, and would take enough marijuana each time he went to work to last his entire stint. In Gardiner's initial appeal, an arbitrator found that Gardiner should be suspended from his job at the mine for 10 months without pay but not dismissed. In that decision, the arbitrator said the company should take back Gardiner with several conditions -- including that he remain abstinent and complete a treatment program -- because it had not fulfilled its duty to accommodate him and his addiction. In his written ruling, Finch upheld that finding, saying it struck an acceptable balance of responsibility between Bergen and his employer. "The arbitrator's award does not absolve Mr. Gardiner of all personal responsibility for his failure to comply with the drug policy or his failure to seek assistance when he knew he had a problem,"Finch wrote. "In considering the culpable elements of the conduct, the arbitrator dealt with the fact that Mr. Gardiner knew he was breaching the employer's drug policy every time he possessed marijuana at the mine site," he added, pointing to the 10-month suspension. "In my view, the arbitrator did not err in holding that the employer had not accommodated Mr. Gardiner to the point of undue hardship," he added, explaining his reasons for denying the company's appeal. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek