Drugs found in the workplace
Squishypig
73 Posts
I have word that a bag of pot was found in one of our locations on the floor after closing for the night. It was dropped after we were closed so we are pretty sure it belonged to one of our employees, but we just don't know who. We do not wish to go on a witch hunt to weed out employees who do drugs, we just don't want the stuff on our premises or our employees under the influence while at work. We do have a drug policy in place that allows us to test if there is suspicion or in the case of an on the job injury.
Since we do not know whose pot it is and chaces are that no one will claim it (although one of my general managers has suggested making a sign saying, "Found, one bag of pot" lol), the only thing I can think of is to get the employees who were on duty that night and tell them that we found the bag of pot and to make sure that understand that any employee found in possession of drugs on the company's premises will be termianted. Also, I would have our managers reiterate the drug and alcohol policy in meetings with all employees. Is there anything else we should be doing?
Johnette
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Since we do not know whose pot it is and chaces are that no one will claim it (although one of my general managers has suggested making a sign saying, "Found, one bag of pot" lol), the only thing I can think of is to get the employees who were on duty that night and tell them that we found the bag of pot and to make sure that understand that any employee found in possession of drugs on the company's premises will be termianted. Also, I would have our managers reiterate the drug and alcohol policy in meetings with all employees. Is there anything else we should be doing?
Johnette
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Comments
What did you do with the pot? Flush it? Because if you turn it over to the local authorities, they may have something to say about your response.
Valentine
Johnette
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If you would like I will email you a copy of our drug and alcohol policy which addresses this very issue.
Linda, if you would email me your policy. I am "gathering them". Our current policy is very outdated and vauge and I am covering 8 states so trying to re write a generic one, but one that is complete as well.
Thanks, Ellen [email]ewarthen@newcombspring.com[/email]
You have a drug policy, and your policy states that you will do drug testing with reasonable suspicion. If a bag of marijuana found on the floor of the work location is not reasonable suspicion, I don't know what is.
If you do not drug test the employees (and supervisors, especially the one who allegedly flushed the bag) this sends a clear message to your employees that you are not in the business of enforcing your policies. I would think twice about sending that message. Next thing you know, you'll wind up with electrical wires running through water leaks and employees refusing to wear hats (see post entitled "Fire 'em all!"). If you don't want a slacker workforce, you need to enforce your policies.
Anne Williams
Attorney Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers, LLC
You need to enforce your Anti-Drug Policy and do a full lock down random testing.
Your message needs to be loud and clear to all. ZERO tolerance.
ps - I only used the Santa Claus reference as an example of how it could belong to anyone (the post wasn't completely sure it belonged to an employee). FOR THE RECORD, in no way do I believe that Santa Claus is a pot smoker. I'm pretty sure he's drug-free, unless you classify the sugar in cookies as a drug....
First off, the drugs were found in one of our restaurants. While the manager is pretty confident that it might have belonged to an employee, he is not 100% sure although our general managers have an idea who it might be.
Second, you would be surprised at the number of people who smoke pot in the restaurant industry, especially in a college town. I am not condoning it nor rationalizing it but it is a fact. The reason why I do not want to do random drug testing is because I don't want to have to replace half of my workforce for off duty recreational drug use which would show up in the testing. Most are good workers and know not to come to work under the influence or bring it to work. We have terminated a couple of employees for being in possession of pot on our premises.
We are going to stick with our original plan, which is to isolate the employees who were on duty that night, let them know we found the bag and that we will be watching them closely. Then we are going to reiterate our drug and alcohol policy with ALL other employees. The only other thing I can think of is to bring some of the deputies that moonlight security with us to scare the bejezus out of the employees with the consequences of being in possession of pot.
And just an FYI, when the manager on duty told me he flushed it, I believed him 100%. He is a pretty straight edged kid who freaked out that he had even handled the stuff. He thought at first it was oregano in a bag and brought it to the kitchen. lol
Johnette
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With all that has already been said on this matter, the one point that really stands out and concerns me is the quote above. If you have a drug policy, then it must be enforced, equally and across the board, and if you lose half your workforce, then that is what has to be done. It seems like the restaurant industry would have many guidelines (safety and health) that they must adhere to and having an enforced drug policy would seem inline with this industry. I would not go back and try to pinpoint any one person, but to begin random testing, maybe stated as a result of this incident, would be a good idea. I think random testing should have been going on already. I think that the main drive behind drug testing is not to limit a persons freedoms on their personal time, but to enforce safety, health and other policies that may be affected by impairment. When out city's utility company went to random testing, I was glad to hear it. Think of these guys up high, on power poles, handling electricity, I would hate to think of one of these guys working impaired.
On another note, my husband worked at a retail lumber company who put a Drug-Free Workplace into effect in order to save on WC premiums. Well, they instituted a random testing policy, and what do you know, the only positives that came up were the Corporate VPs and the company did not want to get rid of them. They figured that since they were not "out on the floor" of a store (maybe working saws etc. ) then it was okay to ignore their test results. This information was of course spread throughout the company and morale dropped. The company decided to get rid of the Drug-Free Workplace instead of the VPs. I am glad mmy husband is no longer with that company.
I'm no wild-eyed pothead. I don't use drugs or tobacco and don't drink much. But I value my privacy and personal freedoms very highly. When I was in law school and drug testing was a new fad, I spent six months researching and writing an article for the Vanderbilt Law Review ("Government Drug Testing: A Question of Reasonableness," 43 Vand. L. Rev. 1343 (1990)).
I concluded that drug tests, especially random ones, were unreasonably overinclusive and underinclusive at the same time. They're underinclusive because they don't test for conditions that are just as dangerous as being high at work, such as the misuse or side effects of legal drugs or sleep deprivation, which is a serious safety problem.
And drug tests are overinclusive because they reveal information that's nobody's business, like pregnancy, other medical conditions, and the use of prescription drugs. Tests also reveal if you used illegal drugs at home over the weekend, even if you're unimpaired at work. If employees' off-duty conduct is really that important to you, then I think you should also conduct random searches of their homes for drugs, stolen goods, and other evidence of illegal activity.
Now that I have that off my chest, let's look at Squishypig's situation. The evidence is that SOMEONE possessed marijuana. Probably an employee, but we're not sure. There's no evidence that anyone smoked pot at work or was under the influence at work. Yes, you should discipline or fire someone who brings drugs to work, but do these facts justify a "witch hunt"?
If Squishypig's employees are in safety-sensitive positions, like operating heavy machinery, big rigs, or nuclear power plants, then I'd say that safety justifies testing everyone who was on duty at the time, including all members of management.
But if we're talking about an office or retail establishment, I don't think the facts justify forcing dozens of innocent people to pee into a cup. If I were an employee in this situation, I honestly don't know whether I'd take the test. Maybe I'd bet the boss a thousand bucks that I'd pass the test. Or maybe I'd take the test and watch my morale go down the toilet.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
It seems not to boil down to a political position on the intrusiveness of drug screens or one's personal opinion on recreational use, but rather what your policy is and, as an employee in a responsible capacity, the degree to which you are expected by your employer to enforce it. If we're allowed the personal political flexibility to define and dismiss 'recreational use', go for it. If not, you'd be well advised to find out from your top officials just how much attention you should pay to the policy, if there is one. Otherwise, bring in a renta-cop and prop him up in the corner and send a message that there's a blind eye to certain forms of drug use. Selective enforcement of policies may be what we're talking about here, so, while we're doing that, let's consider not 'really' enforcing our sexual harassment policy with some of the guys who are 'recreational abusers' and are 'harmless' and not enforcing our discrimination policy in some of the 'meaningless situations'.
The original question was, "Is there anything else we should be doing?" Maybe the question should have been, "What's your opinion on marijuana use in the restaurant industry where to enforce a policy might mean losing our employees?"
And, no James, pregnancy and other unrelated things that tests could show are not ascertained and if they are, they are not reported to the employer.
So, stating my opinion, jumping to the conclusion that it was definitely an employee when NO ONE KNEW FOR SURE - what kind of gestapo tactic is that? Don't lecture on skirting policies and the like, from the nature of the post & the consequent new postings from squishypig, I think the situation was handled just fine. Geez, it could have been a customer - it could have been kicked from under a table...
1. appears to be under the influence, intoxicated, or otherwise too mentally or emotionally impaired to be fit for duty; or
2. when reasonable belief exists that an employee is in violation of this substance abuse policy.
I would not test an entire shift for pot found in a restaurant based on that oblique second statement.
Pinpoint the shift, re-educate the whole damn place, and explain to your young supervisor that oregano goes in sauce...pot doesn't.
I expected to ruffle some feathers with my Libertarian/contrarian viewpoints. But really I'm just giving my opinion about the way employers should treat employees. All of us have railed against bosses who were unfair or abusive to their employees. I think it's unfair to force me to pee in a cup because one of my co-workers may or may not have violated a rule. And I wouldn't want to be strip-searched because a hundred bucks is missing from the cash register.
I never said Squishypig should ignore the pot. In fact, I wrote "Yes, you should discipline or fire someone who brings drugs to work." I simply object to a drug test as a means to investigate a murky situation. There are many ways to investigate misconduct without using a medical lab. What if they found a gun instead of drugs? We'd figure out a way to investigate that.
You dismissed the possibility that an employer would have employees' urine tested for things other than drug use. I thought you were more cynical than that, Don. x;-) There was indeed a lawsuit against a police department that required employees to give urine samples for a drug test and secretly had female employees' samples tested for pregnancy.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
On this topic, I think we should agree to disagree. If I were the boss of a company (which, for some strange reason, I'm not), I would use drug testing rarely or not at all, but I would enforce our drug policies by other means. You would do things differently, and I respect your opinion.
Sorry to create such a ruckus, but drug testing is one of my pet peeves, right alongside spam and people who back into parking spaces. #-o
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
What I hate is the people who drive willy-nilly through the parking lots and you never know when one is going pop out at you from the side or head on!
>
>Sorry to create such a ruckus, but drug testing is one of my pet
>peeves, right alongside spam and people who back into parking spaces.
>#-o
>
>James Sokolowski
>HRhero.com
Agreed. Switching horses, I love spam, fried, but cannot find on the label what it actually is. And I always try to back into parking spaces, or at least pull through to the other side of those double lined parking space, like those at Wally World, so I can get out without backing. But, I won't do it again. x:-)
And I wish God would give me special authority to write tickets to all the people who park in handicapped parking spaces who are not. That and my kids coming by weekly are my only two wishes.
Whether one thinks that drug testing is demeaning and an invasion of privacy, its a personal opinion. When you let that opinion cloud your judgment to the point it affects the way you do your job, it is time to find another home.
I think that my tarantula tatoo is gorgeous, but my employer has a silly rule which states that it must be covered at all times. Guess what. I keep it covered. Go figure.