Pubdate: Sun, 04 Oct 2015 Source: Repository, The (Canton, OH) Copyright: 2015 The Repository Contact: http://media.cantonrep.com/forms/letter_editor.php Website: http://www.cantonrep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/954 Author: Andrew Doehrel, President & CEO, Ohio Chamber of Commerce ISSUE 3 - MARIJUANA: WHY WE'RE SAYING NO Put Simply, This Arrangement Amounts to a Full-Scale Drug Cartel. Since 1893, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce has waved the banner of free enterprise by actively championing policies that promote economic competitiveness and growth. The 8,000 businesses we represent range from large international companies to small family-owned businesses. Together we share a collective desire to see all Ohioans prosper, not just a few. Unfortunately, the deep-pocketed investors supporting state Issue 3 are not working toward the same goal. For the sake of Ohio's economic health and the safety of our workplaces, the chamber's board of virectors has voted to oppose Issue 3. Issue 3 is a lengthy and complex constitutional amendment to dictate terms for the sale of recreational and medicinal marijuana in Ohio. If passed, it would confer exclusive rights for cultivating marijuana upon a small group of self-selected investors owning 10 pre-designated growing sites, including one in Alliance. By specifying the owners and addresses of these 10 land parcels, Issue 3 would cement a monopoly into the Ohio Constitution. Put simply, this arrangement amounts to a full-scale drug cartel. A system like this that enriches a few at the expense of many is a direct threat to the free, competitive markets that drive the economic growth of our state. This proposal is not a tide that will raise all boats, as the saying goes; it will raise a few yachts, leaving the rest of Ohio in their wake. This tide also threatens to flood Ohio with marijuana. Issue 3 authorizes 1,100 marijuana retail stores across the state - more than Starbucks, McDonald's, and nearly three times the number of state liquor stores. These retail stores, along with high personal possession limits, will also increase our children's exposure to marijuana. In addition to the retail stores, every adult could legally possess up to 9 ounces of marijuana - enough for 500 joints - and an unlimited amount of edible marijuana cookies, brownies, and other edible goods that appeal to children. That's why doctors, nurses, hospitals, and other health advocates are opposed to Issue 3. Issue 3 also creates a climate of uncertainty in the workplace. Business owners know the perils of uncertainty. With a new, unpredictable regulatory system on the horizon, the unknown burden of compliance weighs heavily on business owners, who become less likely to invest, expand, and create jobs. IMPLICATIONS UNCLEAR The amendment's backers claim to protect employers from having to accommodate the use of marijuana products in the workplace, but employees would still be legally authorized to self-medicate in the workplace with medical marijuana. In this situation, employers would be faced with an unenviable choice: Either they prohibit the employee from using medical marijuana on the job and therefore violate the Ohio Constitution, or they comply with the Constitution but allow the employee to be impaired on the job. Who among us would ever want to be placed in that kind of situation? We can all imagine the legal headaches that have already ensued in the few states that have legalized medical and recreational marijuana. In a recent case, the Colorado Supreme Court held that employers are justified in terminating employees who use medical marijuana even though its use is fully legal in Colorado. Without knowing how Ohio courts will rule, however, the implications for workplace safety, workers compensation, and liability in our state are unclear. If Issue 3 passed, could businesses still fire employees for testing positive in a drug test after using marijuana off-duty? Is an employee who has been terminated for marijuana use in the workplace still entitled to unemployment benefits? Given the fact that the effects of marijuana can linger up to 24 hours after use, how does an employer maintain adequate safety standards? We may not have the answers to these questions until an Ohio court case comes along, which hamstrings businesses seeking to operate with clarity and confidence in the present. AN AWKWARD POSITION The employers I talk to every day want to focus on serving their customers and growing their bottom line, not navigating the legal intricacies of marijuana legalization. Many already struggle to find reliable employees that can pass drug tests and meet a high standard of productivity. Even if the use of medical marijuana becomes legal under state law, its prohibition under federal law means that employees are self-administering a substance that is not prescribed by medical professionals or regulated by state law, which hardly inspires confidence for employers. The passage of Issue 3 would put employers in an awkward position, caught between state and federal law. We don't know how the proposed amendment's accommodation for medical marijuana in the workplace can be reconciled with the Americans with Disabilities Act, which does not protect users of federally illegal drugs. We don't know how it will interact with OSHA's General Duty Clause, the Drug Free Workplace Act requirements for federal contractors, or Department of Transportation regulations for motor carriers. What we do know is that confronting a growing list of unknowns is bad for business. To truly flourish, Ohio businesses need to operate in a free and competitive environment governed by predictable laws and regulations. The passage of Issue 3 threatens to poison this environment and slow the growth that gives opportunity to all Ohioans. When I talk to folks in the Colorado business community, they tell me that they wish they had taken a stronger stand against the policies that negatively impact their business climate, and they urge us not to make the same mistake. The policies proposed in Issue 3 are worse than anything other states have passed. We who have a stake in the continued freedom of Ohio enterprise can't afford to sit this one out. On Nov. 3, I encourage you to join me in standing firm against the passage of Issue 3 in Ohio. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom