Pubdate: Thu, 23 Oct 2008 Source: Prince George Citizen (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Prince George Citizen Contact: http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/350 Author: Gordon Hoekstra Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUGS IN THE FOREST DISCUSSED B.C. Forest Safety Council official MaryAnne Arcand showed a video clip to the audience at the opening of the B.C. Council on Substance Abuse's conference in Prince George on Thursday. She asked the audience to count how many basketball passes the three young women and three young men in the clip made. The answer was irrelevant, because when the clip was finished, she asked how many people saw anything unusual. Only about half did. The remainder were surprised to see a person in a gorilla suit walk through the basketball passers in the middle of the clip. The point was obvious: You only see what you are looking for. It's also a theme in substance abuse in the workplace, Arcand told the audience of more than 50 managers and workers. "You don't want to know they are impaired, not safe. You don't want to look at it," she said. In the sector that Arcand works in -- the forest sector, and specifically the logging and hauling sector -- she said there is even an accepted culture of work hard, play hard that ignores substance abuse. She said it can be hard for managers to see that the culture exists and that they are promoting it. She recounted how a business owner had explained to her how he had a problem establishing a dry treeplanting camp, so kept the workers in camp on a Friday night and bought the beer and pizza himself. The owner didn't see this as promoting an unhealthy and unsafe atmosphere, she said. Arcand says she's also been to conferences -- filled with industry leaders -- where alcohol is served at receptions in the middle of the day. Even if the attendees at the conference are driving home the next day and are hungover, there is a safety concern, noted Arcand. It's why awareness must be raised to "wake up the sleeping giant," she said. Arcand didn't provide specific substance-abuse figures for the province or Canada, but pointed to U.S. figures from 2005 from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration showing the use of illicit drugs as high as 15 to 17 per cent of the workforce in sectors like food services, construction, mining and energy. She said she expected the figures would be similar for the forest sector. Substance use has played a role in some forest sector fatalities in north and central B.C. Between 2003 and 2006 marijuana use was listed as a contributing factor by the B.C. coroner's office in the deaths of four logging truck drivers and a faller. Prescription drug use was listed as a factor in another logging truck death. Central Interior Logging Association manager Rick Publicover said a lot of attention needs to be paid to increasing awareness, even though some companies are already dealing with the issue of substance abuse effectively. There are others that are still in the mode of having never thought about it, he said. Publicover noted the issue is a complex one as problems outside the workplace, perhaps at home, can spill into work, and vice versa, fueling substance abuse. There are some things companies can put in place to help deal with the problem: a policy, supervisor training, awareness and education and an employee-family assistance plan, said Publicover, who attended the conference's opening day at the Civic Centre. The CILA has a health benefits program for its member companies that now includes an employee-family assistance plan, he noted. The conference continues today with a focus on drug-testing. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom