Santa Fe New Mexican

Employment drug tests on the decline

- By Rebecca Greenfield and Jennifer Kaplan

Employers are struggling to hire workers in tightening U.S. job market. Marijuana is now legal in nine states and Washington, D.C., meaning more than one in five American adults can eat, drink, smoke or vape as they please. The result is the slow decline of pre-employment drug tests, which for decades had been a requiremen­t for new recruits in industries ranging from manufactur­ing to finance.

As of the beginning of 2018, Excellence Health Inc., a Las Vegas, Nev.-based health care company with around 6,000 employees, no longer drug tests people coming to work for the pharmaceut­ical side of the business. The company stopped testing for marijuana two years ago. “We don’t care what people do in their free time,” said Liam Meyer, a company spokespers­on. “We want to help these people, instead of saying: ‘Hey, you can’t work for us because you used a substance,’ ” he added. The company also added a hotline for any workers who might be struggling with drug use.

Last month, AutoNation Inc., the largest U.S. auto dealer, announced it would no longer refuse job applicants who tested positive for weed. The Denver Post, owned by Digital First Media, ended pre-employment drug testing for all non-safety sensitive positions in September 2016.

So far, companies in states that have legalized either recreation­al or medicinal marijuana are leading the way on dropping drug tests. A survey last year by the Mountain States Employers Council of 609 Colorado employers found that the share of companies testing for marijuana use fell to 66 percent, down from 77 percent the year before.

Drug testing restricts the job pool, and in the current tight labor market, that’s having an impact on productivi­ty and growth. In surveys done by the Federal Reserve last year, employers cited an inability by applicants to pass drug tests among reasons for difficulti­es in hiring. Failed tests reached an all-time high in 2017, according to data from Quest Diagnostic­s Inc. That’s likely to get worse as more people partake in state-legalized cannabis.

“The benefits of at least reconsider­ing the drug policy on behalf of an employer would be pretty high,” said Jeremy Kidd, a professor at Mercer Law School, who wrote a paper on the economics of workplace drug testing. “A blanket prohibitio­n can’t possibly be the most economical­ly efficient policy.”

Companies are having a hard enough time hiring, with unemployme­nt hovering around 4 percent. “Employers are really strapped and saying ‘We’re going to forgive certain things,’” said James Reidy, a lawyer that works with employers on their human resources policies. Reidy knows of a half-dozen other large employers that have quietly changed their policies in recent years. Not all companies want to advertise the change, fearing it might imply they are soft on drugs. (Even former FBI director James Comey in 2014 half-joked about the need for the bureau to re-evaluate its drug-testing policy to attract the best candidates.)

Why the change? Pre-employment testing is no longer worth the expense in a society increasing­ly accepting of drug use. A Gallup poll in October found that 64 percent of Americans favor legalizati­on. That’s the most since the company first started asking the question in 1969, when only 12 percent supported changing the plant’s status. Drug tests costs from $30 to $50 a pop, but the potential costs to an employer are far greater than the actual test.

In addition to helping ease the labor market, eliminatin­g drug testing could have even broader benefits for the economy, said Kidd. Employers could hire the best, theoretica­lly most-productive workers, he said, instead of rejecting people based on their recreation­al habits. Companies have said they lose out to foreign competitor­s because they can’t find people who can pass drugs tests, a particular­ly acute problem in the areas most affected by the opioid crisis.

Not all companies are ready to change course. Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal Inc., which owns Burger King, hasn’t altered its corporate marijuana policy, said Chief Executive Officer Daniel Schwartz. Ford Motor Co. still treats pot as an illegal substance, according to a company spokeswoma­n.

Why the change? Pre-employment testing is no longer worth the expense in a society increasing­ly accepting of drug use.

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