Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 2015 Source: Bulletin, The (Bend, OR) Copyright: 2015 Western Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.bendbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/62 CAREFUL, POT LAW DOES NOT PROTECT EMPLOYEES Thursday is liberation day for users of marijuana. Legal recreational marijuana sales begin. Employees, please be careful. It doesn't matter that its recreational use is legal; marijuana can still get you fired. The law legalizing recreational use doesn't change workplace rules on drug use and drug testing. Show up at work impaired and employers can fire you. Show up at work with marijuana in your system and employers can fire you. Oregon law enables almost all employers to terminate workers at will for lawful cause. Recreational marijuana use is not protected. The new law doesn't change that. The key is that marijuana is still on the list of drugs that the federal government deems illegal. Maybe that federal listing will change. Many argue it should change. But Oregon courts have already ruled that a person taking medical marijuana to help with some sort of disability can be fired. A recreational user will not be better off under the law than that. It seems a likely scenario that someone will show up at work in Oregon having used recreational marijuana on their own time. They will not be impaired. They will be fired. They will challenge the law. And the law might change. But that is not the law now. Check out the website for the Oregon Liquor Control Commission for more information. Employers have drug policies to keep their workplaces safe. They have them for liability reasons. They may be required to have them because of a federal contract or regulations. Fundamentally, they have them so employees can do their jobs with clear heads. Many employers may not want to get involved in what an employee does with marijuana if it does not interfere with work. The best protection employees have is to follow their employer's policy. The law doesn't offer protection. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom