Pubdate: Sat, 22 Sep 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Frances Bula, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) FAST TRACK TO TROUBLE B.C.'s Building Boom Has Brought Rampant Drug Abuse to the Construction Industry, With More Widespread Use and More Addictive Substances Albert Perrin's day used to start at 6 a.m., when he would inject himself with the first of his three or four heroin fixes for the day. By 7 a.m., he would be at his job working as a carpenter on a Richmond highrise condo project on Garden City Road. Perrin had been working in construction for more than 20 years, first in Alberta and then in B.C., and he took pride in not being late. In fact, he worked harder than some other guys because he was using. One half of his life was a mess, so it was important to him to show he had a better-than-average work ethic. At noon, the minute his lunch break came, he would go somewhere for another fix. Sometimes his dealer, who lived in Surrey, would deliver. On bad days, especially towards the end, Perrin would leave work to go to his dealer and not come back. He would do another fix after work and then again, maybe, sometime before he went to bed. He'd tried more than once to clean himself up. Back in the mid-90s, he went through the special rehab program run by B.C.'s construction unions at a house in New Westminster, a pioneer program started in 1981 that is one of only two like it in North America. In fact, Perrin went through twice, the first person ever to be allowed to do that. But, working in construction, it was hard to stay off drugs. "With the big paycheques you're getting, all the money -- I'd get drawn in again," says Perrin, a tall, spare man whose lined face with its deep-set eyes looks older than his 43 years. At the last place he worked regularly, the condo project in Richmond, he was hardly alone with his problem. The company he worked for had 40 men on that site, he recalls. The guys got paid on Thursdays and would start partying. Sometimes only 25 people would show up the next day. That all ended for Perrin on Nov. 8, 2006, when he worked his last day. By then his life was so messed up, he'd had to leave the Richmond job and was working for cash day to day doing steel-cutting -- and took his last fix before checking into the Harbour Light Detox in Vancouver. He's still there, working four shifts a week at the front desk, and studying Grade 12 math at Vancouver Community College so he can get into construction at another level, like engineering. He looks a lot healthier than when he checked in, he got 100 per cent on his last math test, and he exudes serenity as he deals with the constantly ringing phone and traffic past his door at the detox. But, as Perrin knows only too well, there are still hundreds more guys who are in the same bad shape he was, still working on construction sites all over the Lower Mainland. At the Salvation Army's Harbour Light, detox director Nancy McConnell estimates that anywhere from 50 to 75 per cent of the men they get are from the construction industry. A lot stopped being capable of work long before they get to detox because of their drug problems, but about 20 per cent come from their job sites straight into the detox to try to get clean. Illegal-drug use is hardly unique to construction workers. Lawyers, longshoremen, restaurant workers, miners, doctors, fishermen, and truckers all have legendary accounts about drug use in their professions. Nor is it a new phenomenon. Construction has always had a culture of tobacco, alcohol and drug use. That's typical for any occupation that employs mainly young, single men who are often working far from home in high-stress, boom-and-bust, low-skill jobs. But a long list of reports and surveys from both Canada and the United States indicates that the construction industry shows up regularly at or near the top of lists of occupations with the highest rates of alcohol and drug use. At the conservative end, a 2002 Alberta report on substance use in the workplace -- the only study of its kind in Canada -- found that 10 per cent of workers said they used illegal drugs. Marijuana was included in that. "While there was little variation in illicit drug use by industry and occupation, above-average rates of drug use were reported by workers in the construction industry," said the report, which relied on phone surveys and people's willingness to admit their drug use. The 2007 U.S. Department of Health report on substance use and employment, which relies on people's self-reports in computer questionnaires, found that 53 per cent of working adults who said they had a serious drug habit were working full time. In that survey, about 14 per cent of construction workers identified themselves as heavy drug users, the second-highest occupation after food-service workers. Construction is now one of the biggest sectors of the workforce in B.C. It gained 70,000 workers in the past four years for a total of about 180,000, so 10 or 14 per cent means a lot of people. On the ground, local construction workers are the first to tell you that drug use these days is more widespread, more hardcore, and involves more serious drugs than in the past. When workers are asked what proportion of people on their site they think have a problem with drugs or alcohol, they'll say anywhere between 40 and 80 per cent. John Brown, a heavy-equipment operator who has worked on sites everywhere from Squamish to Chilliwack, says when he started working in construction 20 years ago, most guys just smoked marijuana. Brown, now 40, did harder drugs, but he was one of the few. "When I was doing it, no one else was. Now everybody is," says Brown, a jittery, compact guy with a heavily tanned face and wispy black hair that curls up from under his helmet. Brown says he's clean now, but he still didn't want to give the name of the major Vancouver-area site where he is working. Gordie Klassen, the manager of the unions' rehabilitation program, says that 15 years ago, most of the men who came to the rehab centre had a drinking problem. Now, it's rare that they get anyone with only a drinking problem. For a few, it's heroin; for some, it's a marijuana-plus-drinking combination. But the majority of the 150-something men a year who use their service now come in saying they're addicted to crack. Vancouver police say they are seeing a phenomenon in the last couple of years that is new, even for the Downtown Eastside and its endless variety of human behaviour. "There's been a regular occurrence in recent years where we see construction workers early in the morning, in their boots and hats and belts and vests, and they're in the lanes doing rock and shooting up," says Const. Shane Aitken, who has been a beat cop in the Downtown Eastside for six years. A favoured place is the lane south of 100 West Hastings, which is within blocks of several of the city's largest construction sites. "There's a noticeable increase," said Aitken, who says they are spotted around 5 or 6 in the morning, before work sites kick into gear at 7 a.m. "I asked one worker and he said it's the only way they can get through the day." The increased drug use is happening for all kinds of reasons, say workers and people connected with the industry. Drugs are much more easily available, even in the dinkiest town and straightest suburb, and there's a general increase in more people everywhere doing more serious drugs. The stress in construction is higher than ever, with desperate developers anxious to get their buildings up before the condo bust they're always worried is around the corner and, in some cases, Olympics-related deadlines. So people are working harder and longer and, for some, a drug like crack helps them keep going. "All the way down the line, it's 'Hurry, hurry hurry.' The 2010 is coming up and they want a floor a week, a floor a week, and there's this push on," says Calvin Bowe, another resident at Harbour Light who's done everything from working on high-rise buildings to running his own business doing soffit construction. Even Heavy Users Don't Get Fired Like Albert Perrin, Bowe, who is 50, worked many years while supporting a $100-a-day heroin habit. "People are working longer hours or they're working at two and three jobs at once." Added to that, the current labour shortage is so extreme that even a heavy drug user won't get fired as long as he shows up on time, doesn't miss too many days, doesn't get caught using on the job, and doesn't drop anything on his co-workers. Even if someone does get fired, he can get a job on another site, no questions asked, within days. Only the ones who spin completely out of control can't get work and end up on the streets or in detoxes. Construction companies and temporary-work agencies are regularly recruiting out of the region's shelters. The Beacon shelter, on Cordova Street near Main, had a hand-lettered sign on the door all this week, saying PCL Constructors is looking for 400-500 workers, paying $20.31 an hour for general labourers, and to call Dave at the number listed. Agencies like Labour Ready and WorkForce call at Harbour Light routinely, looking for men interested in work. And everyone has an apocryphal tale from this new work environment. A crane operator was using cocaine every day until, one morning, his detox sponsor found him strung out and stopped him from going up any more. Dealers hang around the sites, waiting to collect their money from guys they sold to on credit the day or the week before. People are coming to work after they've been up all night and, you bet, they're accidents waiting to happen. The son of a construction company owner was selling drugs to people on the site. Those kinds of stories circulating in the industry, plus reports of exploding drug markets in boom towns like Alberta's Fort McMurray, have everyone connected with construction concerned. Industry concerns about drugs have nothing to do with morals and everything to do with the bottom line. More drugs mean not just money lost through more absences and more turnover, but through accidents and even deaths. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that more drug use might possibly have something to do with more accidents, and accidents are a big concern these days. American studies indicate construction has one of the highest injury rates of all occupations and that workers' compensation claims are higher by five times the normal rate in the occupations where drug use is more prevalent. A Washington State study showed that substance users had an injury rate of 15 per 100, while it was only 11 per 100 for non-substance-using workers. The B.C. construction industry made headlines earlier this year when WorkSafeBC reported that there had been a 36-per-cent increase in construction-related accidents in 2006, with 21,000 accidents reported for the year, even though the workforce had grown by only seven per cent. That was a surprise after years of declining injury rates in the business. Last spring, for the first time, the Construction Labour Relations Association ran a pilot training program for construction supervisors in how to deal with drug use among their workers. It's now planning more. "It's a program we're going to need to expand," says association president Clyde Scollan. "There is a heightened concern everywhere about the use of drugs and alcohol in our industry." Those managers are also getting trained because everyone is bracing for a new work environment this fall. That's when construction unions and the industry expect to come out with a new, agreed-on policy for drug-testing, something that companies have been pushing for. Added to that, WorkSafeBC is about to launch a study, comparable to the Alberta one, to try to get a handle on the rates of drug use in the workplace. That's in part because of its own investigators raising concerns about the effect of drug use, along with companies pushing for more information. At the same time, says WorkSafe investigations vice-president Roberta Ellis, the organization will also be studying the prevalence and effects of fatigue, which is frequently cited as a cause of accidents by both investigators and unions. But all of those initiatives are not as easily carried out as they might sound. There are complex legal and research issues when it comes to trying to figure out when a worker is too impaired to work, which workers really need to be tested, how you tell the difference between the effects of drug use and fatigue, what drugs need to be tested for, and what rights both workers and companies have. A major case is going to the Alberta court of appeal this fall, one being closely followed by B.C. employers, over some of those issues. According to WorkSafe reports obtained through freedom-of-information requests from The Vancouver Sun, there were 13 construction-related fatalities reported to WorkSafe in 2006 in the Lower Mainland. Four were due to natural causes. Of the remaining nine, five showed positive results for drugs. However, only one investigation report even alluded to the possibility that drug impairment played a role. That was the case of Mike Greer, the blaster for Murrin Construction who was killed in June 2006 as he was trying to detonate an explosion for the Sea to Sky Highway construction project. "Some of the blaster's actions are consistent with the indicators of . impairment," said the report, which blacked out details of the toxicology report. "He was performing the blasting work in a systematic way but was missing steps in the process, probably due to impairment." The WorkSafe investigator didn't totally discount the impairment issue, unlike Greer's father, who angrily told a Vancouver Sun reporter this summer that his son's cocaine use had nothing to do with the accident. But investigator Paul Orr did not name it as a definitive cause, saying in his conclusion that the causes included lack of proper equipment, lack of control in the operation, ineffective application of safety policies and, finally, the "possible impairment" of Greer. That kind of caution is typical of WorkSafe. Ask Ellis what WorkSafe knows about the relationship between drug use and accidents and she'll be frank. "The frustrating but honest answer is 'We don't know,'" says Ellis. Hard to Pinpoint Effect on Performance Even when a toxicology report shows the presence of a drug, that doesn't tell the investigator what effect, if any, it had on the worker's performance. That's especially true for marijuana, which, as Olympic medallist Ross Rebagliati knows, isn't flushed completely out of the body for weeks. Added to WorkSafe's difficulties in figuring out the drug-accident connection, it can get toxicology reports only for deaths, not for any of the other thousands of accidents that happen in construction every year. Even if investigators could order toxicology reports for living workers, though, the current debate over drug-testing suggests that the answers would still be unclear. "The problem with drug-testing is that it's not identifying whether people are fit for work," says Scott McDonald, a researcher with the University of Victoria's addictions centre. Testing only shows what is in someone's system, not what their performance level is. "Whether it achieves the goal of improved safety, I'm very skeptical." People who know the construction industry say what would work better is if companies invested more in their workers -- watched out for signs of drug problems and tried to persuade them to get help. But for many stressed supervisors, it's a lot more tempting to push their teetering-on-the-edge but still-productive guys to stay on the job, instead of taking time off to go to rehab, or to fire their worst-case drug users. They can always hire a new batch off the street. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake