(C) Common Dreams
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New Jersey Passes New Law Regulating Employers’ Ability to Test for Marijuana in the Workplace [1]
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Date: 2021-02-24 20:50:28+00:00
Is the Ordinary Blood, Urine or Saliva Test Still Permissible?
No. Cannabis remains detectable in bodily fluid for a longer period of time than most drugs. As a result, a positive blood, urine or saliva test result only indicates the likelihood of prior use, without revealing when the cannabis was actually consumed. Therefore, these tests cannot differentiate between employees who permissibly consumed cannabis outside of work hours and those who impermissibly consumed cannabis during work hours.
For this reason, a drug test to determine whether an employee used cannabis while performing their work responsibilities must include both (1) a form of scientifically reliable objective testing methods and procedures, such as testing of blood, urine, or saliva, and (2) a physical evaluation to determine the employee’s state of impairment.
The physical evaluation has never been required before. This requirement was intended to balance employees’ right to use cannabis recreationally outside of work hours while still allowing employers to prohibit use or intoxication while working. Employers may rely on the drug test in conjunction with the physical evaluation when making a determination about disciplinary action. The issue is that the physical evaluation itself is not known, but will require much more than an employer’s own, untrained, visual examination.
What Does the Physical Test Require?
The physical test must be conducted by an individual who has completed a Drug Recognition Expert program provided by a Police Training Commission approved school, or another program or course with substantially equivalent requirements. Upon completion of this program, the individual will receive a Workplace Impairment Recognition Expert certification. The individual can either be an employee or someone the employer contracts with to perform the test on the employer’s behalf.
Added to this new complexity is the fact that the training and certification process has not yet been developed. The Cannabis Regulatory Commission in consultation with the Police Training Commission will issue regulations describing the standards for the certification, including the minimum curriculum courses of study. Until those are developed, it seems highly risky for an employer to take action against what appears to be an employee intoxicated by marijuana.
What about Employees in Safety-Sensitive Jobs?
Despite lobbying efforts, there is no exception in NJCREAMMA for employees in safety-sensitive job positions. New Jersey law has created an exception to a general prohibition against random drug testing for employees in safety-sensitive job positions, such as employees working in chemical plants, operating machinery, etc. However, the final version of NJCREAMMA did not exempt those employees from the law, so those employers must follow the same rules as all employers in allowing employees using marijuana outside of work to remain employed.
What if NJCREAMMA Impacts my Federal Contract?
If compliance with the NJCREAMMA results in a provable adverse impact on an employer who is subject to the requirements of a federal contract, then the law permits employers to revise employee prohibitions consistent with federal law, rules and regulations. In other words, cannabis is still an illegal drug, as far as the federal government is concerned. NJCREAMMA allows New Jersey employers to test and take action against employees with marijuana present in their system, if this is a condition imposed by a federal contract.
Can I Conduct Random Drug Tests?
It depends. As most employers already know, random drug tests of employees is not permitted except for employees in safety-sensitive positions. However, NJCREAMMA has created a special rule for cannabis testing — employers may conduct random drug testing, for cannabis only, as part of a pre-employment screening or regular screening of current employees to determine use during an employee’s work hours. And, as is recommended even outside of cannabis, New Jersey courts have imposed a number of limitations on an employer’s ability to implement a drug testing policies. For example, employers must ensure that:
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[1] Url:
https://www.archerlaw.com/new-jersey-passes-new-law-regulating-employers-ability-to-test-for-marijuana-in-the-workplace/
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