Pubdate: Fri, 16 Dec 2016 Source: Telegram, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2016 The Telegram Contact: http://www.thetelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/303 Author: Cory Hurley Page: B7 JUDGE ORDERS REVIEW OF MUSKRAT FALLS EMPLOYEE'S FIRING Man secretly smoked medical marijuana All may not be lost for a Muskrat Falls worker fighting his dismissal last year for secretly smoking medicinal marijuana on the job. Brendon Uprichard - a structural assembler of the transmission line for Valard Construction on the Lower Churchill project - had a prescription for medical marijuana to control chronic back pain and anxiety since December 2014. The 37-year-old hid this from his employer, and discontinued its usage to pass the mandatory physical examination and testing for drug and alcohol use upon being hired. His doctor advised him on the amounts he could use, and cautioned him not to operate machinery for four hours after taking the drug. While on the job from April to August 2015, he brought his supply of marijuana with him to the worksite on each 21-day rotation, he told the court. He kept it off camp, hidden in a ditch, and would regularly go to smoke the prescribed amount after his shift. He claims he was careful not to smoke it at the site or during working hours. A manager later smelled marijuana in the truck, and the employees were questioned. Uprichard confessed to what he was doing. He was allowed to continue working, but was fired five days later. His termination was grieved in an arbitration hearing in November 2015. In March of this year, the arbitrator upheld the termination and dismissed the grievance. The arbitrator's decision was based on Uprichard failing to report and disclose the usage, violating the standards set by his employer and the Canadian model for providing a safe workplace. Uprichard also admitted to possessing marijuana at the camp on the days he reported. The arbitrator ruled the dismissal was just, despite no indication of impairment at work and not accepting the allegation Uprichard smoked marijuana on the worksite. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1620, continued to fight for Uprichard. The union sought a judicial review of the decision, asking for it to be quashed and the termination reversed. To reverse the firing, the union sought to have the matter sent back to an arbitrator for reconsideration. Justice Alphonsus Faour oversaw the judicial review Nov. 28 in St. John's, and presented his decision Dec. 5. Although he concluded the arbitrator's decision met the standard of reasonableness with respect to the elements of the misconduct alleged, Faour said the arbitrator failed to provide justification, transparency and intelligibility with respect to the appropriateness of the dismissal. Therefore, he sent that issue back to the arbitrator for further assessment. Faour said there was clear evidence Uprichard followed his physician's advice conscientiously and used the prescription only for its intended purpose, his work record disclosed no problems, he had been working safely on the project and the employer had no concerns about safety as he was allowed to continue working for five days. Faour ruled the arbitrator should have considered whether a lesser penalty would have been appropriate. He may have determined the sanction appropriate regardless, according to the justice, but without an analysis that can't be determined. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt