Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jun 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Jeff Gray Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) TTC WORKER'S DEATH ON JOB SPURS CALLS FOR DRUG TESTS A transit worker who died in a subway tunnel accident last year was high on marijuana when the work car he was driving crashed, according to a high-ranking Toronto Transit Commission source. The information, contained in a report to be made public later this month, the source said, is expected to amplify calls for drug and alcohol testing that have surfaced after a TTC bus driver was charged with drunk driving this week. The April, 2007, accident that killed Tony Almeida, a 38-year-old father of two, shook the transit agency and gave renewed impetus to a wide-ranging safety review. That review had already put drug and alcohol testing on TTC management's agenda before this week's incident. Mr. Almeida was crushed to death in an early morning crash north of Eglinton station. An improperly stowed piece of equipment on his work car caught the side of the tunnel wall and the vehicle derailed. The TTC later pleaded guilty to Ministry of Labour charges of failing to maintain a safe workplace and paid a $250,000 fine. Adam Giambrone, the city councillor who chairs the TTC, would not confirm the results of the investigation, but acknowledged that he expected the report to prompt calls for drug and alcohol testing. "We take these issues very seriously," Mr. Giambrone said, adding that, although he had concerns about the privacy issues it raises, he would not rule out the idea. Bob Kinnear, leader of Local 113 of the Amalgamated Transit Union that represents 9,000 TTC employees, said he could not comment on the report on Mr. Almeida's death without seeing the document. But he said he would fight any move to force his workers to submit to drug and alcohol testing. "They're out to lunch," he said of TTC management, calling the idea an invasion of privacy and vowing to instruct all TTC workers to refuse to submit to any such tests. Mr. Kinnear said TTC management told him two weeks ago in writing that this month they would be proposing drug and alcohol testing to the commission of city councillors that oversees the TTC. Drug and alcohol testing for transit operators is mandated by law in the United States, but has been contentious when raised in Canada both for intercity bus drivers and in other industries. "I'm telling you right now that it is not going to happen as far as I'm concerned," Mr. Kinnear said, arguing that testing would not stop such an incident from happening again. Mr. Kinnear, whose union was blamed for a wildcat walkout in 2006 and for a surprise legal strike in April of this year, said there would not be a strike to fight the tests. In the latest case, the TTC said yesterday the driver charged with impaired driving would be fired, although Mr. Kinnear said the union is obliged to take up his case. Mr. Giambrone said bus drivers must sign in and pick up a fare box at their bus garage before heading out on the road and, at that point, TTC employees are supposed to spot anyone who looks impaired, or simply too tired or ill to drive. He said a handful of TTC employees are caught showing up for work intoxicated each year. The TTC and its union are currently in arbitration after the union rejected a contract offer and went on a surprise weekend strike at the end of April, only to be legislated back to work by the province. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin