Lodi News-Sentinel

Marijuana, now legal in California, can still prevent workers from getting a job

- By Samantha Masunaga

LOS ANGELES — Since election day, Ellen Komp of cannabis advocacy group California NORML said she’s received at least a dozen emails and calls from employees asking whether marijuana is now exempted from employer drug tests.

The closing line in almost every email response: “I wish I had better news.”

Recreation­al use of marijuana is now legal in California, but the new law states that employers still have the right to maintain a drugand alcohol-free workplace and can keep policies that prohibit the use of cannabis by employees and prospectiv­e workers.

Employment lawyers say most companies they’ve spoken with plan to maintain their current drug screening procedures, which prohibit cannabis.

“The problem that California employers will have ... is you have a state law that allows uses for recreation­al purposes, but of course you still have the federal law that makes it illegal,” said Michael Kalt, partner at law firm Wilson Turner Kosmo and government affairs director for the state council of the Society for Human Resource Management organizati­on.

Employer drug testing first gained steam during the Ronald Reagan administra­tion, which required federal employees to get screened as part of the president’s campaign against drugs. Other employers soon followed.

A standard drug screening today for federal workers will test for five different substances — cocaine, amphetamin­es, PCP, opiates and marijuana, said Barry Sample, senior director of science and technology at Quest Diagnostic­s Employer Solutions, which handles drug testing for many employers.

But advocates and even drug-testing experts say marijuana poses unusual challenges for a job applicant. Marijuana can show up in urine or saliva tests several days after use, and those concentrat­ions found aren’t necessaril­y indicative of usage patterns, Sample said. There’s also no clear consensus on how much marijuana is considered too much to drive safely.

“In the case of alcohol, we have a roadside test,” said Mark A.R. Kleiman, professor of public policy at New York University. “Not true for cannabis.”

Even medical marijuana, legal in California since 1996, is not exempted under employer drug testing policies. In 2008, the California Supreme Court ruled that because marijuana is still considered illegal under federal law, employers do not have to accommodat­e their employees’ medical marijuana use, even if it is during non-work hours.

California NORML, the cannabis advocacy group, is currently lobbying for legislatio­n to change that, said Komp, the group’s deputy director.

“The situation is more extreme and urgent for medical patients who don’t have the option of using it or not,” she said.

Later, the group will push to exempt recreation­al marijuana use from employer drug screenings as well, Komp said.

Until then, employees should be familiar with their companies’ drug policies and not just assume that procedures have changed, said Tamar Todd, director of legal affairs at Drug Policy Alliance, an advocacy group and major backer of Propositio­n 64, which legalized recreation­al marijuana use in California. Employment lawyers are telling companies to update their employee handbooks to clarify that drug screenings will still test for marijuana.

Companies in “safety-sensitive” transporta­tion industries, such as trucking, as well as fields that deal with heavy machinery, like constructi­on firms, are especially unlikely to loosen policies, as well as businesses that contract with the federal government, lawyers said.

Aerospace giant Boeing Co. said in a statement that its policies on marijuana usage are not affected by state laws that have legalized marijuana, citing its work with the government.

“As a federal contractor, The Boeing Company’s Drug Free Workplace policy is based on federal standards which define marijuana as an illegal drug,” the company said. “Therefore use of marijuana by Boeing employees is prohibited.”

The company, which employs about 14,000 people in California, said it conducts pre-employment drug screenings and can also test employees after accidents, based on “reasonable suspicion” or randomly when it is required by Department of Transporta­tion regulation­s or contract.

Boeing said it has not experience­d “significan­t difference­s” in attracting or hiring job candidates in other locations where marijuana has been legalized, such as Washington state. Boeing’s Commercial Airplanes division is based in Seattle. But that has been a problem for some companies in pot-legal states.

Bob Funk, chief executive of staffing agency Express Employment Profession­als, said finding skilled workers such as electricia­ns and welders is already a nationwide problem and is further compounded by alcohol or marijuana tests.

Screening for marijuana has always been an issue, he said, but it has become “more acute because of the legalizati­on of it.”

“We’re having a challenge finding those good people in those states,” Funk said.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Employee donor samples are collected for all street drugs, including alcohol and marijuana, at Quest Diagnostic­s on December in Upland.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Employee donor samples are collected for all street drugs, including alcohol and marijuana, at Quest Diagnostic­s on December in Upland.

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