ACS Herbal Tea Co. - How to beat a urine test? -
DRUG TESTING IN THE WORKPLACE
From the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
Transcribed and HTMLed by Erowid, July 24, 1998
There was a time in the United States when your business was also your
boss's business. At the turn of the century, company snooping was pervasive
and privacy almost nonexistent. Your boss had the right to know who you
lived with, what you drank, whether you went to church, or to what political
groups you belonged. With the growth of the trade union movement and
heightened awareness of the importance of individual rights, American
workers came to insist that life off the job was their private affair not to
be scrutinized by employers.
But major chinks have begun to appear in the wall that has separated life
on and off the job, largely due to the advent of new technologies that make
it possible for employers to monitor their employees' off-duty activities.
Today, millions of American workers every year, in both the public and
private sectors, are subjected to urinalysis drug tests as a condition for
getting or keeping a job.
The American Civil Liberties Union opposes indiscriminate urine testing
because the process is both unfair and unnecessary. It is unfair to force
workers who are not even suspected of using drugs, and whose job performance
is satisfactory, to "prove" their innocence through a degrading and
uncertain procedure that violates personal privacy. Such tests are
unnecessary because they cannot detect impairment and, thus, in no way
enhance an employer's ability to evaluate or predict job performance.
Here are the ACLU's answers to some questions frequently asked by the
public about drug testing in the workplace.
Q: Don't employers have the right to expect their employees not to be
high on drugs on the job?
- A: Of course they do. Employers have the right to expect their
employees not to be high, stoned, drunk, or asleep. Job performance is
the bottom line: If you cannot do the work, employers have a legitimate
reason for firing you. But urine tests do not measure job performance.
Even a confirmed "positive" provides no evidence of present intoxication
or impairment; it merely indicates that a person may have taken a drug
at some time in the past.
Q: Can urine tests determine precisely when a particular drug was used?
- A: No. Urine tests cannot determine when a drug was used. They can
only detect the "metabolites," or inactive leftover traces of previously
ingested substances. For example, an employee who smokes marijuana on a
Saturday night may test positive the following Wednesday, long after the
drug has ceased to have any effect. In that case, what the employee did
on Saturday has nothing to do with his or her fitness to work on
Wednesday. At the same time, a worker can snort cocaine on the way to
work and test negative that same morning. That is because the cocaine
has not yet been metabolized and will, therefore, not show up in the
person's urine.
Q: If you don't use drugs, you have nothing to hide -- so why object to
testing?
- A: Innocent people do have something to hide: their private life.
The "right to be left alone" is, in the words of the late Supreme Court
Justice Louis Brandeis, "the most comprehensive of rights and the right
most valued by civilized men."
Analysis of a person's urine can disclose many details about that
person's private life other than drug use. It can tell an employer
whether an employee or job applicant is being treated for a heart
condition, depression, epilepsy or diabetes. It can also reveal whether
an employee is pregnant.
Q: Are drug tests reliable?
- A: No, the drug screens used by most companies are not reliable.
These tests yield false positive results at least 10 percent, and
possibly as much as 30 percent, of the time. Experts concede that the
tests are unreliable. At a recent conference, 120 forensic scientists,
including some who worked for manufacturers of drug tests, were asked,
"Is there anybody who would submit urine for drug testing if his career,
reputation, freedom or livelihood depended on it?" Not a single hand was
raised.
Although more accurate tests are available, they are expensive and
infrequently used. And even the more accurate tests can yield inaccurate
results due to laboratory error. A survey by the National Institute of
Drug Abuse, a government agency, found that 20 percent of the labs
surveyed mistakenly reported the presence of illegal drugs in drug-free
urine samples. Unreliability also stems from the tendency of drug
screens to confuse similar chemical compounds. For example, codeine and
Vicks Formula 44-M have been known to produce positive results for
heroin, Advil for marijuana, and Nyquil for amphetamines.
Q: Still, isn't universal testing the best way to catch drug users?
- A: Such testing may be the easiest way to identify drug users, but
it is also by far the most un-American. Americans have traditionally
believed that general searches of innocent people are unfair. This
tradition began in colonial times, when King George's soldiers searched
everyone indiscriminately in order to uncover those few people who were
committing offenses against the Crown. Early Americans deeply hated
these general searches, which were a leading cause of the Revolution.
After the Revolution, when memories of the experience with
warrantless searches were still fresh, the Fourth Amendment was adopted.
It says that the government cannot search everyone to find the few who
might be guilty of an offense. The government must have good reason to
suspect a particular person before subjecting him or her to intrusive
body searches. These longstanding principles of fairness should also
apply to the private sector, even though the Fourth Amendment only
applies to government action.
Urine tests are body searches, and they are an unprecedented invasion
of privacy. The standard practice, in administering such tests, is to
require employees to urinate in the presence of a witness to guard
against specimen tampering. In the words of one judge, that is "an
experience which even if courteously supervised can be humiliating and
degrading." Noted a federal judge, as he invalidated a drug-testing
program for municipal fire-fighters, "Drug testing is a form of
surveillance, albeit a technological one."
Q: But shouldn't exceptions be made for certain workers, such as airline
pilots, who are responsible for the lives of others?
- A: Obviously, people who are responsible for others' lives should be
held to high standards of job performance. But urine testing will not
help employers do that because it does not detect impairment.
If employers in transportation and other industries are really
concerned about the public's safety, they should abandon imperfect urine
testing and test performance instead. Computer-assisted performance
tests already exist and, in fact, have been used by NASA for years on
astronauts and test pilots. These tests can actually measure hand-eye
coordination and response time, do not invade people's privacy, and can
improve safety far better than drug tests can.
Q: Drug use costs industry millions in lost worker productivity each
year. Don't employers have a right to test as a way of protecting their
investment?
- A: Actually, there are no clear estimates about the economic costs
to industry resulting from drug use by workers. Proponents of drug
testing claim the costs are high, but they have been hard pressed to
translate that claim into real figures. And some who make such claims
are manufacturers of drug tests, who obviously stand to profit from
industry-wide urinalysis. In any event, employers have better ways to
maintain high productivity, as well as to identify and help employees
with drug problems. Competent supervision, professional counseling and
voluntary rehabilitation programs may not be as simple as a drug test,
but they are a better investment in America.
Our nation's experience with cigarette smoking is a good example of
what education and voluntary rehabilitation can accomplish. Since 1965,
the proportion of Americans who smoke cigarettes has gone down from 43
percent to 32 percent. This dramatic decrease was a consequence of
public education and the availability of treatment on demand.
Unfortunately, instead of adequately funding drug clinics and
educational programs, the government has cut these services so that
substance abusers sometimes have to wait for months before receiving
treatment.
Q: Have any courts ruled that mandatory urine testing of government
employees is a violation of the Constitution?
- A: Yes. Many state and federal courts have ruled that testing
programs in public workplaces are unconstitutional if they are not based
on some kind of individualized suspicion. Throughout the country, courts
have struck down programs that randomly tested police officers,
fire-fighters, teachers, civilian army employees, prison guards and
employees of many federal agencies. The ACLU and public employee unions
have represented most of these victorious workers.
In Washington, D.C., for example, one federal judge had this to say
about a random drug testing program that would affect thousands of
government employees: "This case presents for judicial consideration a
wholesale deprivation of the most fundamental privacy rights of
thousands upon thousands of loyal, law-abiding citizens...."
In 1989, for the first time, the U. S. Supreme Court ruled on the
constitutionality of testing government employees not actually suspected
of drug use. In two cases involving U. S. Customs guards and railroad
workers, the majority of the Court held that urine tests are searches,
but that these particular employees could be tested without being
suspected drug users on the grounds that their Fourth Amendment right to
privacy was outweighed by the government's interest in maintaining a
drug-free workplace.
Although these decisions represent a serious setback, the Court's
ruling does not affect all government workers, and the fight over the
constitutionality of testing is far from over.
Q: If the Constitution can't help them, how can private employees protect
themselves against drug testing?
- A: Court challenges to drug testing programs in private workplaces
are underway throughout the country. These lawsuits involve state
constitutional and statutory laws rather than federal constitutional
law. Some are based on common law actions that charge specific,
intentional injuries; others are breach of contract claims. Some have
been successful, while others have failed. Traditionally, employers in
the private sector have extremely broad discretion in personnel matters.
In most states, private sector employees have virtually no protection
against drug testing's intrusion on their privacy, unless they belong to
a union that has negotiated the prohibition or restriction of workplace
testing. One exception to this bleak picture is California, in which the
state constitution specifies a right to privacy that applies, not only
to government action, but to actions by private business as well.
In addition to California, seven states have enacted protective
legislation that restricts drug testing in the private workplace and
gives employees some measure of protection from unfair and unreliable
testing: Montana, Iowa, Vermont and Rhode Island have banned all random
or blanket drug testing of employees (that is, testing without probable
cause or reasonable suspicion), and Minnesota, Maine and Connecticut
permit random testing only of employees in "safety sensitive" positions.
The laws in these states also mandate confirmatory testing, use of
certified laboratories, confidentiality of test results and other
procedural protections. While they are not perfect, these new laws place
significant limits on employers' otherwise unfettered authority to test
and give employees the power to resist unwarranted invasions of privacy.
The ACLU will continue to press other states to pass similar statutes
and to lobby the U.S. Congress to do the same.
A.C.L.U. American Civil Liberties Union, 132 West 43rd Street, NY, NY 10036
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