Pubdate: Fri, 14 Mar 2014
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Steve Raabe
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)

COMPANIES ARE CRACKING DOWN

A Survey Shows Firms Are More Stringent With Pot Legalized.

Some employers are taking a tougher stance against workers' drug use 
since recreational marijuana became legal in Colorado, according to a 
new workplace survey.

One in five Colorado employers reported that they have implemented 
more stringent drug-testing policies in the wake of passage of 
Amendment 64 in 2012.

Only 2 percent of responding companies said they have relaxed their 
testing for marijuana; 71 percent reported no changes in screening 
since legalization.

The survey, by Denver-based Mountain States Employers Council, 
queried 1,648 members of the organization. Responses were sent by 334 
companies.

"There seems to be a movement toward more testing," said Curtis 
Graves, a staff attorney with the employers group. "A lot of people 
are freaked out" about the prospects of employees' legal marijuana use.

Graves said increased testing may be a result of several factors, 
including aggressive marketing to Colorado employers by drug-test 
vendors and a campaign to make companies aware that costs for 
workers' compensation are lower for businesses that test.

Advocates for legal marijuana say it should be treated the same as 
alcohol, with no workplace sanctions if employees consume it 
responsibly off the job.

Despite marijuana's legal status in Colorado, courts have ruled that 
employers have the right to fire workers for using pot, even off duty.

In a split decision last year, the Colorado Court of Appeals upheld 
the dismissal of a Dish Network employee who admitted he used medical 
marijuana off the job but said he was never impaired at work.

The court said Colorado's Lawful Off-Duty Activities Statute, which 
protects workers from being fired for engaging in legal acts, did not 
apply because of marijuana's illegal status under federal law. That 
decision is under appeal to the Colorado Supreme Court.

Fairfield & Woods employment law attorney Michelle Magruder said the 
appeals-court ruling gave assurance to employers that their 
drug-testing policies are valid and enforceable. She said that may be 
reflected in the survey results indicating a more stringent testing approach.

The court case showed employers that "it's OK to continue your 
policies on drugs and alcohol, and to implement drug-free 
workplaces," Magruder said.

Among other findings of the Mountain States Employers Council survey:

77 percent of respondents said they test for drugs either in 
pre-employment screenings or during employment.

Of those that test, 97 percent screen for marijuana and cocaine, 96 
percent for opiates and 95 percent for amphetamines. Seven percent 
test for alcohol.

53 percent of testing employers said they would fire a worker for a 
first-time positive test for marijuana, and 12 percent would allow an 
employee to return under probationary conditions.

Mason Tvert, of the pro-legalization advocacy group Marijuana Policy 
Project, said the survey had suspect methodology that produced biased results.

He said the 20 percent response rate to the survey was "abysmal," and 
noted that members of the Mountain States Employers Council are more 
inclined to have stringent testing policies than employers in general.

"The people most likely to respond to something like this are the 
ones that are far more likely to conduct testing in the first place," 
he said. "I don't think there should be a conclusion that businesses 
are cracking down more, based on a survey that has flawed methodology."

Graves, of the employers council, agreed that the group's membership 
is highly focused on workplace issues and may be predisposed toward 
drug testing.

Marijuana Industry Group executive director Michael Elliott said 
employers "continue to have the power to have any marijuana policy 
they want, including zero tolerance.

"Coloradans can be fired from their jobs for failing a drug test, 
even if the drug test reveals only trace amounts of marijuana that 
could have been consumed in a legal place outside of the workplace," 
he said. "The question remains whether employers are justified in 
having that much control over the private lives of their employees."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom