Pubdate: Thu, 01 Oct 2015 Source: Albany Democrat-Herald (OR) Copyright: 2015 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/HPOp5PfB Website: http://www.democratherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/7 EMPLOYERS TAKE HARD LINE ON POT Today, Oregon's experiment with legalizing recreational marijuana marks another milestone a green-letter day, if you will: Today is the first day that people over 21 can buy recreational marijuana. Well, not in Albany, or in Linn County, where governmental entities have opted against allowing the early sales of recreational pot by medical marijuana dispensaries. But the curious should be able to travel across the Willamette River to a dispensary in Corvallis that will be more than willing to sell them recreational pot. (Don't light up until you get back home, though.) In fact, there's something else you may want to consider before you light up, and it's something that has been generally ignored in the run-up to the start of legal recreational marijuana sales: Even though recreational use of marijuana is legal in Oregon, your employer still might be inclined to fire you for violating the drug-use policy at work. Employers with strong anti-drug policies haven't shown much inclination to roll back those policies, even after Ballot Measure 91 paved the way for legalization. In fact, some employers might have taken this opportunity to review and renew their drug polices to try to get out in front of legalization. Before you light up, it may be a good idea to check with your employer about the drug policy in your workplace. And you might want to keep a couple of additional points in mind: If you're thinking there's no harm in indulging in a weekend puff or two, remember that tetrahydrocannabinol (you know it better as THC, the active ingredient in pot), can linger in the body for weeks. In that regard, it's not like alcohol, which the body metabolizes in a matter of hours. So, consider this hypothetical: You light up on Saturday. On Thursday, for some reason, you're compelled to submit to a drug test. There's a good chance that the drug test will detect some THC in your body, at which point your employer can fire you if that's what the drug policy allows. Actually, this isn't a hypothetical: This is exactly how it played out for Cyd Maurer, a former weekend news anchor at Eugene's KEZI television station. She got into a minor accident while on assignment for the station, and was ordered to undergo a drug test, as required by corporate policy. She said she was not under the influence when she went to work that day, although she admitted to consuming cannabis within a week of the accident. It made no difference: The drug test revealed THC. She had violated the company's drug policy. She was fired. Don't expect the courts to offer much redress to fired workers; judges in a number of states consistently have sided with employers. A fascinating issue lurks just offstage here: While we have relatively reliable ways to determine when someone is under the influence of alcohol, no such measurement yet exists to determine when someone is under the influence of marijuana. (Drug tests will measure whether THC is in your system, not whether you're impaired.) For the time being, though, you might be well-advised to be cautious about that first puff of legalized recreational pot. Unless you hate your job. (mm) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom