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Drugs & Alcohol who has Rights?Drugs and alcohol are a major problem for many business owners and raise serious issues of liability, duty of care for both the affected worker and his workmates who may be harmed as a result of his/her actions. It is a really important thing to have a policy about this is you even suspect that this could be a problem in your workplace. When I found this article on the web, by a lawyer and covering the most up to date information I decided it would be a really useful resource for employers. I have included it unedited with the authors details. "Is workplace drug and alcohol testing an employer’s right, or an invasion of your staff’s privacy? An HR manager approached me recently following difficulties with his business’s drug and alcohol policy. He was confused about what he could and couldn’t do. Illegal drug and alcohol use are an increasing phenomena in Australian workplaces. The use of drugs and alcohol by employees creates obvious hazards, to themselves and to others. It also causes lost production, reduced quality and a broken work culture. So what can you do? Can you test employees for drugs and alcohol? Employee habits outside of work hours are their own choice. Testing regimes should be directed at detecting the employee’s fitness for work during work hours. Any policy should not require zero tolerance unless it is reasonable to require it. If so, what is the test you use? The case went on to say oral fluid testing was a less invasive process and detected drug use in the previous few hours, a more appropriate measure of impairment at work. The “Australian standards” are a set of documents which reflect progress in science, technology and systems. Australian standard 4670 (AS4670) is a recognised way for detecting the presence of drugs in oral fluids and the level of drug that is accepted to be threshold. AS4670 sets out details for the collection, testing and storage of specimen. The problems for AS4670 are: For alcohol testing there is a range of comparatively cheap breath test machines. These need to be recalibrated regularly. What does affected and under the influence mean? Zero tolerance levels in some areas of the workplace may result in the overturning of the dismissal of an employee by a court or commission because the employee was able to safely carry out work. Affected by drugs means where the employee has a level of drug in their system above a threshold level that would make them unable to work safely or carry out their duties. The mere presence of a drug does not mean an employee is impaired. Similarly, the presence of alcohol does not mean someone is unable to safely carry out their duties. “Under the influence of alcohol” in most workplaces means where an employee has a blood alcohol content level above a reasonable threshold level. This will be zero for those operating heavy machinery or employed as drivers. You need to be careful to state what test you will apply – words like “affected” and “under the influence” do little to assist employees or courts/commissions dealing with disputes. Positive tests may result in a number of consequences for employees. The employee may be offered counselling, education, treatment programs, written warnings or dismissal. The discipline dished out should consider circumstances such as the type and amount of drug detected, the work history of the employee, and any explanation given by the employee. The appropriate punishment will vary from case to case, so a uniform approach should be avoided. For now, employers should include a clause for drug and alcohol testing in the employee’s contract of employment and use the AS4670 as a guide for testing." Andrew Douglas is the founder, principal lawyer and managing director of Douglas Workplace & Litigation Lawyers. Andrew is an experienced commercial litigation and workplace lawyer, who acts both as a solicitor and advocate. |
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