Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jan 2018 Source: Victoria Standard, The (CN NS) Copyright: 2018 The Victoria Standard Contact: http://www.victoriastandard.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4112 Author: Carolyn Barber Page: 1 COUNTDOWN TO CANNABIS LEGALIZATION Victoria Cooperative Fisheries GM Osborne Burke says employers need more time for training and education When it comes to consuming substances that carry the risk of impairment, what employees ingest on their own time can become the employer's business. In safety-sensitive worksites, establishing a clear drug and alcohol policy is paramount. So too is encouraging employees with a substance abuse problem to seek help. Victoria Cooperative Fisheries (VCF) in Neil's Harbour has long been ahead of the curve when it comes to a comprehensive workplace drug and alcohol policy. With cannabis legalization on the horizon, VCF'S Health and Safety Committee has taken steps to ensure management and employees have a clear understanding of their roles and responsibilities post-legalization. "We're trying to stay two steps ahead of where we want to be," said VCF General Manager Osborne Burke. "I think the government made a serious mistake in pushing forward for July 1. There's been little discussion of health and safety in the workplace. The federal government needs to maybe hold back a year to take a better look at the workplace. We as employers have responsibilities to all our employees. We can't allow somebody to come into work potentially impaired. The level of impairment and the time it takes for cannabis to leave your system is totally different than alcohol," said Burke. According to the World Health Organization, "Cannabis impairs psychomotor performance in a wide variety of tasks, such as motor coordination, divided attention, and operative tasks of many types; human performance on complex machinery can be impaired for as long as 24 hours after smoking as little as 20 mg of THC in cannabis." Health Canada concurs with these findings. Last summer, the VCF Health and Safety Committee invited pharmacist and workplace drug and alcohol consultant/educator Nadine Wentzell to facilitate educational sessions for VCF employees. Topics covered included physician-authorized use of medical cannabis, how prescription/non-prescription drugs might impair work performance, and employee/employer responsibilities when substance abuse is identified. Employers already have a duty to accommodate employees with medical authorization to use cannabis. Employees in turn must provide proof of medical authorization, sufficient medical information showing the need to ingest cannabis, frequency/amount/method of ingestion and when ingestion occurs. Employees are responsible for reporting to work fit for duty. Employers in turn have a duty to assist employees suffering from substance addiction. AT VCF, this duty falls on the shoulders of its first full-time Health and Safety Coordinator Roland Michaelis who started with the company a year ago. Michaelis has worked as a safety and risk management consultant since 1994. His job is protecting VCF employees, enforcing organization's drug and alcohol policy, and maintaining a workplace culture whereby employees feel safe self-identifying if they are abusing drugs or alcohol. When a substance abuse issue arises, his job is to assist employees back to health through addiction treatment and counseling. "We're a small community. We value our employees. They're hard to replace. If we can help an employee with a substance abuse problem, we're more than happy to do that," said Michaelis, who has support from the top. "Our message to our employees is 'look we care about you folks'. If people have substance abuse issues we will work with them. That's going to cost lots of dollars. But in the long term it's a significant benefit to the individual, the community and the family," said Burke. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt