Las Vegas Review-Journal

Workers needed, but drug testing takes a toll

Across the country, employers are feeling impact of use of pot, pills

- By Nelson D. Schwartz New York Times News Service

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — Just a few miles from where President Donald Trump spoke to his blue-collar base here last week, exactly the kind of middle-class factory jobs he has vowed to bring back from overseas are going begging.

It’s not that local workers lack the skills for these positions, many of which do not even require a high school diploma but pay $15 to $25 an hour and offer full benefits. Rather, the problem is that too many applicants — nearly half, in some cases — fail a drug test.

The fallout is not limited to the workers or their immediate families. Each quarter, Columbiana Boiler, a local company, forgoes roughly $200,000 worth of orders for its galvanized containers and kettles because of the manpower shortage, it says, with foreign rivals picking up the slack.

“Our main competitor in Germany can get things done more quickly because they have a better labor pool,” said Michael J. Sherwin, chief executive of the 123-year-old manufactur­er. “We are always looking for people and have standard ads at all times, but at least 25 percent fail the drug tests.”

The economic impact of drug use on the workforce is being felt across the country, and perhaps nowhere more than in this region, which is struggling to overcome decades of deindustri­alization.

Indeed, the opioid epidemic and, to some extent, wider marijuana use are hitting businesses and the economy in ways that are beginning to be acknowledg­ed by policymake­rs and other experts.

A federal study estimated that prescripti­on opioid abuse cost the economy $78.5 billion in 2013, but that does not capture the broader effect on businesses from factors like lost productivi­ty, according to Curtis S. Florence, who led the research for the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.

“That’s definitely a conservati­ve estimate,” Florence said. “It’s very hard to measure how it affects employers, but if we could, it would be in addition to what we see here.”

The effect is seen not just in the applicants eliminated based on drug screening, but in those deterred from even applying. In congressio­nal testimony this month, the Federal Reserve chairwoman, Janet Yellen, linked increased opioid abuse to declining participat­ion in the labor force among Edmond C. O’neal, Northeast Indiana Works

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States