The Marijuana Exception
Vol.    55        No.    11    People who use marijuana for medical conditions, as permitted in 14  states and Washington, D.C., may be shielded from prosecution—but  employers can still enforce zero-tolerance policies. 
| 11/1/2010 | By Diane Cadrain | 

Joseph Casias, a  30-year-old father of two, began work in 2004 as an entry-level grocery  stocker at the Wal-Mart in Battle Creek, Mich. By 2008, he had  progressed to inventory control manager and was recognized as Associate  of the Year, an honor given to only two of 400 employees. 
In November 2009, Casias twisted his knee  at work; because Wal-Mart policy requires drug testing after a  workplace injury, he underwent a urine test. Before the test, he showed  the testing staff a registry card stating that he was a medical  marijuana patient under Michigan law. He explained that he had been  diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer at age 17, and the marijuana,  prescribed by his oncologist, helped alleviate severe daily pain. 
When the drug test revealed marijuana  metabolites in Casias’ system, the store manager told him that Wal-Mart  would not honor his registry card—and Casias was terminated. Now the  American Civil Liberties Union has taken up his cause with a case before  the Michigan Supreme Court. Casias claims that his discharge violated  public policy and Michigan’s medical marijuana law.
The case raises legal and policy  questions for employers in 14 states and the District of  Columbia—jurisdictions that allow use of marijuana for medical purposes.  The states are Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan,  Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont  and Washington.
State medical marijuana laws typically  require a patient to obtain a doctor’s written statement that the  patient suffers from a condition whose symptoms may be mitigated by the  use of marijuana. Because marijuana use remains illegal under federal  law, though, doctors cannot prescribe it. Patients present the  statements at state-authorized dispensaries. 
The state laws are designed to protect  users from state-level prosecution, and prosecution on the federal level  in those states is unlikely. In an October 2009 directive, the U.S.  Department of Justice said the federal government would not use its  resources to prosecute patients who use marijuana or those who  distribute it for medical purposes in "clear and unambiguous compliance"  with state medical marijuana laws.
The core issue for employers in the 15  jurisdictions: whether to discipline or discharge an employee found to  be using marijuana for medical purposes, or whether to carve out a  narrow exception for such employees.
Even for HR professionals in other  states, the questions are pertinent. Ballot initiatives to allow medical  marijuana use are pending in Arizona and South Dakota, and legislation  is pending in Ohio and Pennsylvania. In California, where medical use of  marijuana is already legal, voters will cast their ballots Nov. 2 on  whether to legalize recreational use of marijuana.
There are no clear solutions, but employers can consider several factors in crafting their responses.
Opponents of medical marijuana use  maintain that shielding users from state prosecution is the state laws’  only function, and that the laws confer no workplace rights. But medical  marijuana advocates are pushing back. They argue that the laws should  protect medical marijuana users from adverse employment actions based on  marijuana use and should trigger the protections of state disability  discrimination laws. Such issues are in litigation in at least two  states.
Without the leverage of possible state or federal prosecution, what’s an employer to do?
Before taking action, determine whether  your company is affected. Only those in the 15 jurisdictions that allow  medical marijuana need to decide how to treat employees’ lawful use. And  in those 15 jurisdictions, affected employers would exclude federal  contractors as well as companies in the transportation and commercial  nuclear power industries; workers at those employers are required by law  to be drug-free.
Then, recognize that opponents and  proponents are divided on the best course for an employer to take.  Consider four approaches. The first two—maintaining a zero-tolerance  policy, and placing the marijuana user on disability leave—are the most  legally defensible, experts say. Some maintain that the third and fourth  options—carving out limited exceptions for medical marijuana users, and  treating marijuana like any other drug—may present legal problems.
Zero Tolerance
Michael McClory, an attorney with Bullard  Smith Jernstedt Wilson in Portland, Ore., recommends a zero-tolerance  policy such as the following:
"The company prohibits employees from  reporting for work with an illegal drug, including marijuana (medical or  otherwise), in his or her system. The company enforces this policy  consistently with respect to all drugs, including medical marijuana, as  the law allows the company to do."
Zero tolerance enforces workplace safety and provides "the best notice to employees about what is expected," McClory says.
Attorney James Shore, a partner with Stoel Rives in Seattle, represents the employer in Roe v. TeleTech Customer Care Management, No. 38531-7-II, before the Washington Supreme Court. 
In that case, a job applicant who had  successfully worked for the company in the past reapplied for the  position of customer care consultant. In the meantime, she had begun  medical marijuana treatments for migraines after legal pharmaceuticals  failed to offer relief. The company allowed her to work 10 days and then  rescinded the offer based on the results of a drug test.
According to Shore, "Marijuana, no matter  what state law says, is still illegal under federal law, so employers  would be well-served to prohibit all drugs that are illegal under state  and federal law." A zero-tolerance policy "leaves no room for doubt." 
McClory adds, "When an employee comes to  you with a medical marijuana card, you tell him that you have a  zero-tolerance policy, that you will enforce it and that the result will  be termination."
Yet there are two sides to zero  tolerance: "You rule out good employees who are capable of doing the  work," warns Michael Subit, an attorney with Frank Freed Subit &  Thomas LLP in Seattle, who represents the plaintiff in the Roe case.
Applying Disability Leave
A vice president of human resources, who  asks not to be named, says that if an employee presents him with a  medical marijuana card before any testing has taken place, he puts the  employee on disability leave.
"We have 250-pound presses and roll  formers that make corrugated metal," says the HR executive at a sheet  metal fabricator with 2,000 employees nationwide. "All our employees  operate heavy equipment except those in the offices. We’re very open  about our no-tolerance policy; employees can’t come to work under the  influence." If an employee has a card, he puts the worker on leave under  the Family and Medical Leave Act or disability leave, so "they can use  that time to decide what they want to do."
Permitting Limited Exceptions
The high courts of California, Montana  and Oregon have ruled that employers have no obligation under state  disability discrimination laws to accommodate employees lawfully using  medical marijuana. In some states, including Colorado and Michigan, the  laws specify that no workplace accommodations are required.
Those rulings and statutes  notwithstanding, experts say that if the underlying medical condition is  a disability, an employee might qualify for the protection of  disability discrimination laws if the employee can show that the  underlying disability was a motivating factor in the employer’s  decision, or that the employee was "perceived as" disabled. As a result,  employers may choose to carve out limited exceptions for medical  marijuana use.
The ruling in an Oregon case, Emerald Steel Fabricators Inc. v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,  SC S056265, (Ore. 2010), held that the protections of Oregon’s  disability discrimination laws did not extend to medical marijuana  patients. Nonetheless, employers may not be off the hook, one expert  says. "I don’t think employers are completely free from potential  liability for disability discrimination under state law when taking  adverse employment action against a medical marijuana user asserting a  privilege under state medical marijuana laws," says David Black, an  attorney in the Seattle office of Jackson Lewis. 
"When an employee brings you a card for  medical marijuana before, after or independent of a company-sponsored  drug test, first ask why the person is presenting it," Black adds. "Nine  times out of 10, it will be because the employee expects an upcoming  drug test and would like to be excused. The employer should inform the  employee of its drug-free workplace policy and its equal employment  opportunity policy, then wait for the results of the drug test.  Meanwhile, the company should analyze the employee’s job function,  finding out more about the employee’s use of controlled substances and  whether the person has the potential to be impaired at work."
If an employer carves out a limited  exception for medical marijuana use, McClory says, "the company should  do a fitness-for-safe-duty analysis to find out whether the employee can  do the job safely. Ask a doctor about the duties of the position. If  the doctor says the employee can’t do the job safely, the employer  should ask why. If, for example, the doctor says the employee can do  some things but not drive a crane, the company can figure out what to do  to alleviate the safety issue, first within the job held, then in other  open jobs."
Such reasonable accommodations, if the  employer chooses to make them, are subject to concerns about whether  they would create an unreasonable hardship for the employer or would  compromise safety. "Creating a new job is per se unreasonable," McClory  observes.
Consistency is important. If an employer  allows an exception or an accommodation in a medical marijuana state,  then employees who are found to have marijuana in their systems and who  work in other states could potentially complain about inconsistent  policy. "Once you start making exceptions, especially in companies that  operate in many states, you may run into problems," Shore says. 
Just Another Drug?
Advocates on both sides point out that  other legal drugs might impair ability just as marijuana can. Why fire  employees with marijuana in their systems but not those on painkillers  or antihistamines that could cause impairment? "From an employer’s point  of view, standards for marijuana use should be the same as the  ever-evolving standards for alcohol," says Allen St. Pierre, executive  director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.  "Opponents have to acknowledge that the current drug-testing system  doesn’t address impairment. If an employer wants a workplace that isn’t  impaired, it should test for impairment, not for marijuana metabolites."
Says Subit: "Employers should treat a medical marijuana card no differently from any other prescription medication."
Attorney Daniel W. Grow, who represents  plaintiff Casias, the manager terminated from a Michigan Wal-Mart, adds,  "There’s no rule against a person taking Benadryl. A person who takes  Benadryl can have a beer at lunch and fall asleep on the job."
There are no easy answers. Zero-tolerance  policies may offer clarity but lack compassion. And the alternatives  create cloudy issues. An employer’s approach will depend on company  culture, the nature of the jobs and the state laws. All are in flux. 
 The author is an attorney and writer  based in West Hartford, Conn., and a member of the Human Resource  Association of Central Connecticut.
Marijuana abuse in the workplace is now a big and serious issue for almost all companies. These problems caused by the use of marijuana can be avoided with the help of a faa drug testing program. In my opinion, every organization should conduct these drug tests.
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ReplyDeleteI am totally agree with you Diane Cadrain,more people uses marijuana for medical conditions , so it is too much necessary.
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