Calgary Herald

Legalized marijuana in the workplace: Just another day at the office

Many employers already have policies, protocols in place, Howard Levitt writes.

- Financial Post Howard Levitt is senior partner of Levitt LLP, employment and labour lawyers. He practises employment law in eight provinces. The most recent of his six books is War Stories from the Workplace: Columns by Howard Levitt. Twitter.com/HowardL

Oct. 17 has come and gone; recreation­al marijuana has now been legal in Canada for almost a full month.

In the lead-up to it, there were those who prophesied that the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana would open the door to myriad headaches for Canadian employers, and that HR department­s from coast to coast would find themselves in crisis.

Yet none of that has come to pass.

Not one of my clients called me on Oct. 17 to report that hippies had taken over the workplace, that half their staff had reported for work stoned or that the office had become thick with the smell of marijuana. For most employers, Oct. 17 was essentiall­y business as usual. Why? Because, contrary to the doomsayers who predicted calamity (and offered employers the “antidote” of costly policy overhauls and training programs), many employers already had the policies and protocols in place, including:

Drug and alcohol policies that forbid bringing any drugs (except for prescripti­on drugs, to be used as prescribed) or alcohol into the workplace, and which also prohibit being under the influence at work or while otherwise on duty;

Reporting mechanisms for employees who believe that a co-worker may be intoxicate­d or impaired, training for managers on how to deal with suspected impairment, and investigat­ion protocols to be followed in the event of accidents and “near miss” scenarios; and

Smoke-free workplace policies — which have been mandatory in Ontario for more than 10 years.

Also, of course, common sense did not go up in smoke on that day. What intelligen­t (or even semi-intelligen­t) employee would construe the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana as a licence to show up high for work? Or to smoke a joint at his or her desk? Or to bake cannabis into cookies for an office pot luck?

The fact is that Oct. 17, 2018 did not usher in any new rights for employees; and there are no new obligation­s on employers to permit, condone or forgive cannabis use in any work-related context. The no-nonsense advice that we’ve been providing to employer clients in regard to these issues is essentiall­y as follows:

Start with the propositio­n that — for all intents and purposes — recreation­al marijuana is illegal in the workplace. Ontario’s Cannabis Act expressly forbids the consumptio­n of cannabis (except for medical marijuana) in “a public place” and in “a workplace within the meaning of the Occupation­al Health and Safety Act.”

Remind employees of the obvious, that the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana is only relevant to their off-duty lives. As far as work and the workplace are concerned, they have no new rights to possess, use, share and/ or be under the influence of cannabis.

As necessary, tweak and update workplace policies and training protocols. But unless the company’s policies and protocols were deficient before, there is no need to reinvent the wheel.

All of this is a far cry from spending thousands of dollars on replacing existing policies, and on sending personnel on costly and time-consuming training programs. Such expenses are — in most cases — grossly unnecessar­y.

Yet I have seen this before, and I will no doubt see it again.

Every time employment legislatio­n changes or there is a new legal developmen­t, there are opportunis­ts standing ready to exaggerate the implicatio­ns of the change, to proclaim that the sky is falling, and, of course, to proffer solutions — usually at a cost commensura­te with the hype that has been stirred up.

So lucrative are such service offerings that many firms invest in and promote them heavily. In fact, some employment law firms have noticeably shifted their focus away from providing a traditiona­l slate of legal services so as to focus more heavily (or even exclusivel­y) on policy review and/or training mandates. (Or, as the case may be, on costly “workplace investigat­ions”, which, as regular readers of my column will know, I consider unnecessar­y in most circumstan­ces. Usually, a well-planned and profession­ally executed internal investigat­ion, which can be conducted for a fraction of the cost, will amply suffice.)

Some of the firms offering such services are reputable. Others less so. That being the case, I offer the following words of advice to my business readers: caveat emptor.

When it comes to dealing with any new developmen­t that could impact on the company’s rights and obligation­s as an employer, remember that advertisin­g a new developmen­t as a “game-changer” does not make it so.

Consider the source of such publicity and promotion — and think about where their selfintere­st lies. Would you put your car out to pasture just because an auto dealer tells you that you need a new one, or would you want to check with your mechanic first?

In regard to employment law advice — and as is the case in so many other contexts — the old maxim is apt: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” And this is particular­ly true when the “cure” is an offthe-rack solution to an exaggerate­d problem.

 ?? COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Unless the company’s policies and protocols were deficient before, there is no need to spend thousands of dollars to re-invent the wheel, writes Howard Levitt.
COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG FILES Unless the company’s policies and protocols were deficient before, there is no need to spend thousands of dollars to re-invent the wheel, writes Howard Levitt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada