Pubdate: Fri, 12 May 2017 Source: Telegram, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2017 The Telegram Contact: http://www.thetelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/303 Author: Glen Whiffen Page: A1 THROUGH THE CRACKS Torbay man's job is in limbo as workplaces wrestle with marijuana policies Scott Tizzard has been wrestling with a two-pronged dilemma for the past seven months. And like the north poles of two magnets trying to meet, they repel each other in his mind. The first is his fight for his legal right to medical marijuana - the only thing that works to ease the chronic pain from his diagnosed osteoarthritis after trying a long list of medications his doctors have prescribed over the years. He also has Crohn's disease, and many medications for osteoarthritis burn his stomach and cause a flare-up of the Crohn's. The second battle is an inner, emotional one. Should he throw in the towel, give up medical marijuana and try to get back to work, and again endure the workday pain and sleepless nights? He has been denied work because of issues surrounding medical marijuana, and the long wait for his arbitration case to be heard is daunting and mentally frustrating. He just wants to be back on the job. "I did everything right. I followed the process," said Tizzard, who is from Torbay. "I have been at this seven months now, and I tell you, there are days I just don't know if it's worth it. I feel like I'm really being treated unfairly." Tizzard's union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 1620, is expected to go to arbitration on Tizzard's behalf with the companies involved during a hearing later this month. Tizzard has worked with companies under contract with Nalcor Energy, the provincial energy corporation leading the Lower Churchill development. Nalcor has alcohol- and drug-program requirements in place for contractors bidding on Lower Churchill-related work, as well as its own drug and alcohol rules for the Lower Churchill project. "The drug and alcohol standard is based on the Canadian Model for Providing a Safe Workplace," Nalcor said in a statement. "Contractors must ensure that all workers deployed to any project site are fit to safely and reliably perform their work duties, and that these workers must remain fit for duty throughout their work shift and free from impairment due to alcohol and/or drugs." Tizzard has no problem with that. He says he would never risk being impaired on a worksite, and is prepared to go above and beyond the restrictions set by his doctor regarding his medical marijuana use. His prescription is for 1 1/2 grams per day of herbal cannabis, with THC (the active ingredient in marijuana) of less than 20 per cent, and vapourized. After taking medicinal marijuana, Tizzard is restricted by his doctor from driving or working for four hours. He says he takes it only in the early evening after his shift ends - more than double the four-hour time required before heading to work the next morning. Nalcor says its job site restriction policies on medical marijuana pertaining to contractor employees are in accordance with the guidelines set by Health Canada and the Government of Canada. "Currently, Nalcor's Alcohol and Drug Program contains provisions such that any employee required to use a prescribed or over the counter medication (including medical marijuana), while on duty, would be removed from safety sensitive positions," Nalcor said. "We will also work with individual employees and their physicians on a case-by-case basis to ensure the right restrictions or accommodations are put in place for the safety of the individual employee, other employees and the public." Tizzard's problem is that most areas of the industrial sites he works on are deemed safety sensitive, and employers still seem uncertain how medical marijuana - and the pending legalization of marijuana - should be handled in those workplaces. Complicating the situation is the fact that there's no test to show a person's precise level of impairment due to marijuana. Pre-employment urine tests, or random urine tests, can only show the presence of THC - - which, of course, would likely result in a positive test result for medical marijuana users. In an April 3 decision by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 113 vs. the Toronto Transit Commission, a 10 nanograms per millilitre of blood cutoff level for impairment by marijuana was approved. The level can be obtained by a simple cheek swab test. However, the swab has to be sent to a lab for testing and, meanwhile, the employee being tested has to remain off work - not an ideal situation for employer or employee. Once the legal recreational use of marijuana comes into play - which the federal government says should happen by July 2018 - the situation will become even more challenging for workplaces. Tomorrow: The legal in legalized weed - --- MAP posted-by: Matt