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Marijuana-testing-workplace

Colorado Supreme Court: Employers can fire for off-duty pot use

Employers’ zero-tolerance drug policies trump Colorado’s medical marijuana laws, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Monday.

In a 6-0 decision, the high court affirmed lower court rulings that businesses can fire employees for the use of medical marijuana — even if it’s off-duty.

With the ruling, which was a blow to some medical marijuana patients and a sigh of relief to employers, Colorado became the first state to provide guidance on a gray area of the law.

The decision came nine months after the state’s highest court heard oral arguments in Brandon Coats’ case against Dish Network. Coats became quadriplegic in a car accident and used marijuana to control leg spasms. He had a medical marijuana card and consumed pot off-duty. He was fired in 2010 after failing a random drug test.

Brandon Coats listens as his attorney talks Monday about his case. Coats said he is disappointed in the state Supreme Court ruling that businesses can fire
Brandon Coats listens as his attorney talks Monday about his case. Coats said he is disappointed in the state Supreme Court ruling that businesses can fire employees for the use of marijuana even if it’s for medical purposes and even if it’s done off-duty. (Kathryn Scott Osler, The Denver Post)
Coats, who was a customer service representative for Dish, challenged the Douglas County satellite TV company’s zero-tolerance drug policy, claiming that his use was legal under state law. His firing had been upheld in both trial court and the Colorado Court of Appeals.

DOCUMENT: Colorado Supreme Court affirms ruling

When the case went to the state Supreme Court, legal observers said the case could have significant implications for employers across Colorado. They noted that the ruling also could be precedent-setting as Colorado and other states wrangle with adapting laws to a nascent industry that is illegal under federal law.

At the crux of the issue was whether the use of medical marijuana — which is in compliance with Colorado’s Medical Marijuana Amendment — was “lawful” under the state’s Lawful Off-Duty Activities Statute.

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That term, the justices said, refers to activities lawful under both state and federal law.

“Therefore, employees who engage in an activity, such as medical marijuana use, that is permitted by state law but unlawful under federal law are not protected by the statute,” Justice Allison H. Eid wrote in the opinion.

Current Colorado law allows employers to set their own policies on drug use.

Coats’ attorney Michael Evans, of Centennial-based The Evans Group, called the decision “devastating.”

He said he does not plan to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

“You need the Colorado Supreme Court to stand up for its own laws,” he said. “The U.S. Supreme Court is not going to do that.”

Resolution at last

On Monday, Coats and his mother, Donna Scharfenberg, spent all morning refreshing the Colorado Supreme Court’s website. When they finally read the ruling, there was 10 minutes of silence.

“It was just kind of shocking,” Coats said. “There was a silent moment there for a long while.”

It was a disappointing resolution to what has been a five-year battle for Coats, who is unemployed.

“This is a controversial issue,” he said. “This is a hard case, and it was going to be a hard case to win. I was definitely hoping it would go the other way around.

“I was feeling like maybe, maybe, but it didn’t go that way.”

Officials with Douglas County-based Dish lauded the decision.

“We are pleased with the outcome of the court’s decision today,” the company said in a statement. “As a national employer, Dish remains committed to a drug-free workplace and compliance with federal law.”

Colorado Attorney General Cynthia H. Coffman said the decision gives companies the freedom to craft their own employment policies concerning marijuana.

“Not every business will opt for zero-tolerance, but it is important that the latitude now exists to craft a policy that fits the individual workplace,” she said.

A question for the legislature

When Colorado legalized recreational marijuana last year, employers across the state increased their drug testing, said Curtis Graves, an attorney for Mountain States Employers Council, referencing a workplace survey at the time. A year later, and with an unemployment rate below 5 percent, some employers have loosened the reins.
“We’ve seen a number of employers, particularly in hospitality … who are actually omitting THC from a pre-employment drug screen,” he said.

The market might dictate a further shift in the future.

Until then, people like Coats will have to consider other treatments or find a position that does not enforce a zero-tolerance drug policy, said Austin Smith, managing shareholder of employment law firm Ogletree Deakins’ Denver office.

“It puts employees in a tough spot,” said Smith, who watched the case closely but was not involved.

Sam Kamin, a University of Denver law professor, said the justices’ decision comes as no surprise.

“It’s easy to make too much of this decision,” he said. “It really comes down to interpreting this one word (‘lawful’) in this one statute.”

As a matter of statutory interpretation, the court got it right, he said.

But for Coats and medical marijuana advocates, this is a blow, Kamin said. He said he thinks the state legislature will take up the issue.

“I think (Coats’) case is very sympathetic, and I think his case would be quite compelling before the legislature,” Kamin said.

Six of the seven justices decided the case. Justice Monica Marquez recused herself because her father, retired Senior Judge Jose D.L. Marquez, was on the Court of Appeals panel that upheld Coats’ firing.

Alicia Wallace: 303-954-1939, awallace@denverpost.com or twitter.com/aliciawallace

Excerpts from the Colorado Supreme Court decision

• “Colorado’s ‘lawful activities statute,’ the term ‘lawful’ refers only to those activities that are lawful under both state and federal law.”

• “Nothing in the language of the statute limits the term ‘lawful’ to state law. Instead, the term is used in its general, unrestricted sense, indicating that a ‘lawful’ activity is that which complies with applicable ‘law,’ including state and federal law. We therefore decline Coats’s invitation to engraft a state law limitation onto the statutory language.”

• “Coats does not dispute that the federal Controlled Substances Act prohibits medical marijuana use. The CSA lists marijuana as a Schedule I substance, meaning federal law designates it as having no medical accepted use, a high risk of abuse, and a lack of accepted safety for use under medical supervision.”

• “Having decided this case on the basis of the prohibition under federal law, we decline to address the issue of whether Colorado’s Medical Marijuana Amendment deems medical marijuana use ‘lawful’ by conferring a right to such use.”

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DOT Drug Testing

FMCSA to lower random testing rate for controlled substances

FMCSA conducts a random survey to ensure compliance with the set testing rates, known as the Management Information System (MIS) or MIS survey.

The Trucker News Services

WASHINGTON — The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Monday announced that it will lower the random testing rate for controlled substances from the current 50 percent to 25 percent for the upcoming calendar year, effective January 1, 2016.

FMCSA conducts a random survey to ensure compliance with the set testing rates, known as the Management Information System (MIS) or MIS survey.

According to federal regulations, when the data received in the MIS for two consecutive calendar years indicate that the positive rate for controlled substances is less than one percent, the FMCSA administrator has the discretion to lower the minimum annual testing rate.
While the MIS survey resulted in a positive rate of less than one percent for the 2011 and 2012 testing years, the acting administrator chose to maintain the 50 percent rate for another year. The 2013 testing year also showed a positive rate of less than one percent, so after three years, the acting administrator approved a lower testing rate. If at any time the positive rate for controlled substances exceeds one percent, the testing rate will revert back to 50 percent.

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Authorities In Dallas Texas Seize Hundreds of Pounds of Methamphetamine and Cocaine

March 4, 2016
Authorities in the Dallas-Fort Worth Texas area have been busy recently, taking more than 50 people into custody on methamphetamine Drug testing centers Dallasdistribution conspiracy charges. Several members of the methamphetamine drug ring were sentenced in December after being arrested for their crimes that date back to 2013.

A surgence of methamphetamine plagued the Dallas-fort Worth area dating back to 2013. Methamphetamine has become a real problem in the area because of its proximity to Mexico. Federal authorities are still apprehending suspects to try and keep the illegal drugs off the streets.

Methamphetamine, also known as meth, crystal meth, crystal, and ice, is an incredibly addictive stimulant closely related to amphetamine. Meth alters the dopamine levels in the mind that gives users a euphoric rush feeling that builds dependency, and easily becomes addictive. Chronic use can lead to substantial brain damage. Meth can be easily detected in a 5-panel drug screening.

Most the methamphetamines distributed in the United States are manufactured in labs in Mexico. These “superlabs” are usually linked to the Mexican drug cartels, that are responsible for heinous crimes across North America. Most ingredients made to use meth are inexpensive and can be bought over the counter, making its accessibility incredibly easy.  The levels of toxicity from the production of methamphetamines can remain in the environment for a long time, causing health issues for those around the area.  

Pharmacies and other retail stores are taking action to prevent abuse of the ingredients used to make methamphetamine, by limiting supplies of products known to make meth. Lawmakers are also taking action against distributors with increased prison sentencing ranging from 10 to 30, or even more years of incarceration.

Due to Dallas-Fort Worth’s proximity to Mexico, authorities have seen an increased amount of methamphetamine related issues.  

With drug and alcohol testing centers throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Accredited Drug Testing Inc. is available to answer all of your drug and alcohol testing questions and needs. For more information contact:

Andrew Gormally
Marketing/Industry Relations Assistant
Andrew@accredtiteddrugtesting.com
http://accrediteddrugtesting.net/
(800) 221-4291
Accredited Drug Testing Inc
Health Screening USA Inc

Related Article: http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2015/12/08/methamphetamine-distribution-conspirators-from-dfw-sentenced/

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Ecstasy Drug Outbreak Plaguing the Greater Los Angeles Area

February 13, 2016
The Los Angeles County coroner has determined the recent death of an 18-year-old UCLA student, was caused by an overdose of Ecstasy Ecstasy Drug Testing(methylenedioxy-methamphetamine). Ecstasy, or Molly/MDMA, is a psychoactive synthetic drug that alters mood and perception.

Ecstasy gained popularity in night clubs and raves, but is now reaching a broader range of users because of it’s ease of accessibility and low cost. Last month authorities in the Riverside area intercepted over 1,000 Ecstasy pills hidden in a jigsaw puzzle box sent through the mail.

Ecstasy can affect the body’s ability to regulate spikes in the body temperature, that can occasionally result in liver, kidney, or heart failure, and possibly death. Many users will take a combination of Ecstasy with other drugs and or alcohol not knowing the possible dangers.

Concerned someone you know or love has been using Ecstasy? Accredited Drug Testing is the premier source with local locations across the entire state of California to answer all of your drug and alcohol testing questions and needs!

Molly, which refers to the alleged “pure form,” often comes in powder form sold in capsules. These capsules, are cheap and generally sold in bulk. It is not uncommon for dealers to have large quantities of Molly, for the sole purpose of distributing to the masses. A popular venue for the distribution are at concerts or multi-day music festivals, known as raves.

With the surge in popularity of Electronic Dance Music, or “EDM”, many venues are hosts to these multi-day festivals. Most venues are equipped with on hand medical staff to assist with emergencies, but many festival goers camp onsite, and are subject to being left unattended. Another major issue that arises are the sheer mass of crowds that attend these festivals. On site medical staff are only equipped to handle a few cases of medical emergencies, and with the ease of Ecstasy’s mass distribution some overdose cases may be overlooked, resulting in death.   

The Los Angeles County Fair Association is taking action against this outbreak, and stated that there will be no raves at the fairgrounds this year. Raves have stopped being held at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and Sports Area in 2011 after several Ecstasy overdoes.

Although, there are fewer raves in the Los Angeles area, many events continue to arise outside the city that draw big crowds. This outbreak has sparked debate with authorities and law makers on how to reduce drug-related problems at raves.

With drug and alcohol testing centers throughout the Los Angeles area, Accredited Drug Testing Inc. is available to answer all of your drug and alcohol testing questions and needs. For more information contact:

Andrew Gormally
Marketing/Industry Relations Assistant
Andrew@accredtiteddrugtesting.com
http://accrediteddrugtesting.net/
(800) 221-4291
Accredited Drug Testing Inc
Health Screening USA Inc

Related Article: LA Times: http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-hard-summer-rave-deaths-20150803-story.html

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Federal Investigators Bust Orlando Heroin Drug Ring

February  21, 2016
A joint two-year between federal, state, and local authorities have busted a drug trafficking ring along International Drive in Orlando. The suspects Heroin Drug Testingcalled themselves La Compania and sold heroin twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

 

Authorities report that the suspects sold the opioid over a “heroin hotline” along the busy tourist district. The suspects reportedly made $3.5 million in one year of operation. Eleven suspects were arrested, and are all facing federal drug charges.

Heroin is an opioid, that is synthesized from morphine. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse in 2011, 4.2 million Americans (aged 12 or older) had used heroin once in their lives. Prescription opioid pain medications such as Oxycontin and Vicodin have similar effects to heroin, and when abused, are common gateways to chronic heroin use. Heroin and similar opioids can be easily detected in a 10 panel drug screening.

Many young people who have previously used heroin, reported abusing prescription opioids before turning to the incredibly addicting drug. Others say they took up it because heroin is cheaper and more easily accessible than prescription drugs.

Due to its potency, many users continue and even increase use of the drug to “chase the same high,” to ease the physical dependency. Chronic users become physically dependent on the drug to avoid withdrawal symptoms.

Users would use the “heroin hotline” to buy the drugs, then turn around and sell or use them. Most of the customers were locals who sold the heroin for profit.  Authorities believe busting the suspects were a mid-level organisation, that take players out of an even larger drug trafficking operation.

Orange County officials have taken initiative after a reported 90 heroin-related deaths in the Orange and Osceola county area. In August, leaders in law enforcement, health care and education created a multi-agency Heroin Task Force to eradicate the heroin problem. In January and February alone Orange County Sheriff’s Department has responded to seventy-five heroin overdose related calls. Accredited Drug Testing can easily schedule a drug test that detects the use of heroin and similar opioids, potentially saving someone you know and love.

With drug and alcohol testing centers throughout the Orlando area, Accredited Drug Testing is there to answer all of your drug and alcohol testing questions and needs. For more information contact:

Andrew Gormally
Marketing/Industry Relations Assistant
Andrew@accredtiteddrugtesting.com
http://accrediteddrugtesting.net/
(800) 221-4291
Accredited Drug Testing Inc
Health Screening USA Inc

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Can You Reverse the Long-Term Effects of Drugs by Being Healthy?

Aug. 8 2016

Can You Reverse the Long-Term Effects of Drugs by Being Healthy?

As society’s grown more concerned with “clean-eating” and counting calories, we’ve become obsessed with how to burn those calories off. And since the dawn of Fitbits and Meat Free Mondays, “eat less, run more” no longer cuts it. We want quantifiable data—preferably something we can share on social media, between posting our daily 5K run times and endless photos of our moist, rippling, post-workout biceps.

What the world’s content farmers have come up with are those snackable online factoids that tell you how to burn off your favorite junk food via absolutely implausible methods. A man has to lift weights for five hours and 53 minutes to work off a large Big Mac meal, a woman has to rollerblade for four straight hours to burn off a Chipotle chicken burrito, that kind of thing.

Of course, this represents a pretty unhealthy way to be healthy: a binge-purge approach that favors extremes over moderation. That said, I love Big Macs and bizarre physical punishment, so who am I to swim upstream? If it theoretically works for Food That Is Bad for You, could this “offsetting” tactic be applied to other vices, like regularly taking way more drugs than you ever should?

Are there ways to negate the effects of narcotics over time? Could I mitigate the harms of casual alcoholism by drinking more celery smoothies? Can you repair a cocaine-damaged heart by doing 900 press-ups every single morning for the rest of your life? To find out, I spoke to a handful of drug and exercise experts.

FOUR CANS OF BEER

Following my transition from late teens to late 20s, my fears over alcohol have shifted. Where I once worried, Will I get too shitfaced and puke on a dog at this girl’s house party? I now wonder, Will a fourth can on a Tuesday bring forward my early death from heart disease?

To see if exercise could reverse the effects of a four-pack, I called up Joseph Van Der Merwe, a personal trainer and strength and conditioning coach from London. “There are about 600 calories in four tins, depending on the brand, so you’re probably looking at 30 to 40 minutes of pretty hard running [to burn it off],” he said.

According to Dr. Adam Winstock, founder of the Global Drug Survey (GDS) and a consultant psychiatrist, there’s one demographic that regularly practices this sort of approach. “The group of people that I’ve seen do this most would be gay guys who go out chemsex-ing,” he said. “They will party hard Friday, Saturday, Sunday; then Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday they’ll be in the gym.” Does that offset the weekend? “The answer is no it doesn’t. But if you’re going to cane it at the weekend, is it better that the rest of the time you’re living a happy and healthy lifestyle—you’re exercising, not smoking, and going to the gym? Absolutely.”

Van Der Merwe agrees that it’s better to gym than not gym, but adds, “The idea that you’re gonna protect yourself from drugs and alcohol through nutrition and exercise is like trying to fight a house fire with a wet sponge.”

A TEN BAG OF WEED

Guy Jones, a chemist working for harm-reduction and drug- testingorganization the Loop, explains that the THC in weed affects the endocannabinoid system in the brain, which is responsible for many things, including hunger control and sleep regulation. A few years ago, during a particularly heavy assault on my endocannabinoid system, a friend started choking on whipped cream. The prospect of my friend dying at the hands of a dessert topping really shook me, and I remember my high being totally erased by the ensuing panic.

I can’t remember exactly how much I’d smoked, but I asked Jones if fear was a viable way to counteract the effects of an occasional ten bag, or about a gram. “The adrenaline won’t stop the cannabis from being in the system,” he said, “but it will absolutely affect what we call downstream signaling from the cannabinoid receptors… so yes, it is entirely possible to generate a moment of clarity [while you’re high].”

Of course, the primary issue with cannabis is the fact you’re sucking burning plant matter into your lungs—and if you’re European, there’s most likely some tobacco in the mix. As Jones says, “Tobacco is a phenomenally toxic and carcinogenic drug. The number one harm-reduction tip for cannabis is to not smoke it with tobacco.” Unfortunately, according to Van Der Merwe, spring-cleaning your lungs through exercise is just not a thing. “The idea that you can, say, run for ten miles to clear your lungs of carcinogens… it’s not going happen.”

A GRAM OF COKE

One big thing about cocaine—everywhere outside of South America, at least—is that it’s cut with all sorts of nasty stuff because dealers are cheap bastards, and that stuff has varying effects on the body (although it’s unlikely any of it will make your skin rot away, as was reported last year). But no matter how diluted your cocaine, it’s going to “cause problems in the heart because it blocks nerve signals, interrupting the electrical rhythm that causes it to beat nicely,” said Jones.

Everyone I spoke to said there’s no surefire way to mitigate this side effect. “People think drinking alcohol with coke is quite a useful way of offsetting that jittery effect you get,” said Winstock. “But that combination itself is actually much more dangerous, because of course you end up doing more coke and more alcohol, which is bad for your heart and liver.” Jones agrees: “The harm-reduction tip that I would give for cocaine, rather than focusing on its own specific effect on the heart, is to keep alcohol intake low.”

How about, I asked Van Der Merwe, if your heart is a well-tuned machine with a resting rate of 30 bpm, like Lance Armstrong? “He wouldn’t recover from it quicker, but he’d probably be less likely to die.”

Long-term regular cocaine use can also lead to heart tissue swelling and scarring, and while the swelling is reversible via exercise and not doing loads of gear all the time, the scarring—which results in permanent damage to the heart and a potential early death—is not.

A GRAM OF MDMA

Unlike cocaine, MDMA doesn’t directly interfere with electrical impulses in the heart. But, as Jones explained, “It does put extra stress on the heart because it constricts blood vessels, raising blood pressure and making the heart work harder.”

Again, it’s difficult to combat damage to the heart—but of all the drugs I asked about, MDMA was the only one where nutrition seemed to play a role in helping with the psychological comedown. Over-the-counter supplements, like the amino acid 5HTP, can help replenish serotonin—the “joy chemical” sapped from your brain during MDMA use, making you feel depressed the day after—as can amino acid-rich food like turkey, salmon, and quinoa.

Thing is, said Winstock, it’s always better to eat healthily, whether you’re on drugs or not. Ruth Kander, a consultant dietician, agreed with this slice of common sense—”It’s always better to have spinach and a banana than a fry up”—and dismissed the notion that a good diet could outweigh the destructive nature of these drugs: “If you’re drinking huge amounts and you’re taking drugs, you’re wreaking havoc with your body, and nothing is going to fix that.”

A GRAM OF KET

Given the harmful nature of these drugs, coupled with variables like purity and personal tolerance, tuns out there really aren’t many ways to reduce the damage they cause. Weirdly, though, the one drug most likely to totally and completely fuck you up is also actually kind of, vaguely, relatively safe. Here’s Jones to tell you how ketamine works:

“Ketamine blocks nerve signals from the brain to the body and vice versa. In a very small amount, it produces what many describe as a pleasant disassociation—almost a generic feeling of being high. Higher doses will eventually cause the user to enter a completely anesthetic state, where they’re unable to move and they ‘exist’ entirely within their head—commonly referred to as the K-hole.”

And even if you’re one of those weird idiots who does monster lines specifically so you can K-hole, you’re using a drug that comes in pretty low on the harm scale—way below alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis. “Ketamine is a surprisingly safe anesthetic, to the extent that it’s on the World Health Organization’s list of essential medicines,” said Jones. “And the doses it would be administered as an anesthetic would be much higher than the typical recreational dose.”

Of course, this shouldn’t be any sort of justification to hammer a gram of ket every weekend. The long-term damage of heavy use includes scarring of the bladder, which can become so severe that you may need a transplant. Everyone I spoke to said the only way to limit the long-term effects of K is to stop doing K.

FIVE NOS BALLOONS

According to the Global Drug Survey, NOS is now the seventh most popular drug in the world. Given the short high and small price, you can see why.

As I’ve previously done balloons and felt absolutely fine seconds later, I asked Winstock if there are any long-term effects of nitrous. “Data from over 16,000 nitrous oxide users recruited as part of Global Drug Survey 2015 and 2016 showed that about 4 percent of users reported symptoms that were consistent with developing a peripheral neuropathy—nerve damage—persistent tingling in their feet and fingers,” he said. “And that’s due to inactivation of vitamin B12.”

So is there any way to protect yourself from this kind of damage? “The easiest thing? Take less balloons,” said Winstock. “But you could also supplement yourself with vitamin B12.” If you read all that and you’re now thinking of popping out to the drugstore for a bottle of B12 and some 5HTP, take note of what Winstock told me: “Taking drugs isn’t like debit and credit; there isn’t the fat-burning equivalent. What you need to do is use drugs smartly and, otherwise, stay happy and healthy. Don’t smoke, do exercise, don’t be overweight, because they’re actually way more important—the things that predict whether you’re going to die young aren’t whether or not you do a bit of coke on the weekend or have the odd spliff—it’s whether you’re fat, whether you smoke, your family history, and your socioeconomic status.”

That last point stuck out. Speaking to Winstock, it seemed that one of the few ways to prevent “the ravages of drug use” is to not be poor. Winstock knows this better than anyone. “A lot of the people I treat have had very disadvantaged lives and very little resources. It makes them more vulnerable and less likely to go and see a GP, less likely to be able to afford to buy vegetables and salad and fresh fruit,” he said.

“A very middle-class, Guardian-reading clique like the idea that they go to yoga, and they’re vegetarians, and therefore they can do these drugs and they’re more protected. But it’s not that they’re protected; it’s just that they’ve got more physical and social capital, so drugs are less likely to knacker them.”

Sorry to be a giant buzzkill, but the long-term effects of these drugs are just too destructive to be abated by the addition of some organic food and a bit of exercise. So if you’re looking for the best ways to minimize harms, just do drugs sensibly and in moderation, or don’t do drugs at all.

“Everything you do—every decision that you make—has an impact on your life. So, yes, you can potentially increase your lifespan by eating more healthily, exercising more healthily, and sleeping more healthily,” said Jones. “But if you were truly dedicated to your own personal health, then you would probably never take drugs. Mind you, you might also never leave the house, because crossing the road is pretty dangerous.”

VICE News


For information regarding the effects of drug abuse – Click Here
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Popular Drug Test Used for Drivers, Pilots Doesn’t Screen for Abused Prescriptions

Aug 19 2016

James Greer, the president of testing company Accredited Drug Testing, said agencies like the Federal Aviation Administration and the federal Department of Transportation only require drivers and pilots to take a five panel drug test, screening for THC, illicit opiates, PCP, cocaine, and amphetamines.

“There’s an assumption… that the five-panel is good enough for the federal government so it ought to in fact cover everything we need to know,” said Greer.

A New Jersey bus driver had only been on the job for 13 days when he pulled out in front a dump truck, resulting in a crash that killed 11-year-old Isabelle Tezla.

The National Transportation Safety Board was brought in to investigate the 2012 Chesterfield crash, which caused the bus to spin around like a top before slamming into a light pole. The driver had recently passed the nation’s most commonly used drug test, but the investigative body ultimately said the driver’s “reduced vigilance” due to fatigue and the “sedative effects from his use of prescription medications” contributed to the crash.

The I-Team found that the test the driver passed – a five-panel drug test – didn’t screen for the drug he was using, the powerful prescription opiate Tramadol. The test, which is the federal standard for commercial drivers and pilots, checks for illegal drugs but not the most commonly abused prescription drugs.

“The industry standards need to change, it’s not just what the federal government requires,” said Heidi Villari, the Tezla family’s attorney.

He said an enhanced test, or a 10- or 12-panel test would catch more drug users, but it is rare that companies pay more for the more thorough test.

Dawn Nappi, a spokeswoman for Mothers Against Drunk Driving, has devoted her life to pushing for stricter drugged driving laws after her daughter 14-year-old Angelica was killed by a drugged driver when she was just 14 years old. She said it was disturbing that prescription drug addicts could slip through the cracks.

 “It’s very scary because you are eliminating testing for drugs that a lot of people are taking,” Nappi said.

She added, “They are taking your life in their hands.”

The Department of Health and Human Services, which sets drug testing policy, says they issued proposed changes last year to expand testing to include four additional prescription medications.

But drug testing experts say that proposal may take up to two years yours to go into effect. In the meantime, they say, the public is in danger. As for Tezla’s case, the driver never faced criminal charges and the bus company settled a civil case with the family.

 


For information regarding the effects of drug abuse – Click Here
For  information on a drug free work place – Click Here
For  information on substance abuse programs – Click Here
For information on DOT Drug / Alcohol Testing requirements – Click Here

Brandon Rains
Director Of Online Marketing
https://accrediteddrugtesting.net
(800) 221-4291
Accredited Drug Testing Inc
Health Screening USA Inc

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A NJ Commuter Train Crash Kills 1 Injures 100 Passengers

Oct. 10 2016

A NJ Commuter Train Crash Kills 1 Injures 100 Passengers September 29, 2016 – HOBOKEN, N.J. — A NJ Transit commuter train plowed through the barrier at the end of the tracks and crashed into a wall at the terminal killing one person, injuring more than 100 others and unleashing chaos as part of the station’s roof came tumbling down in a jumble of metal.

This accident hurled commuters around on the crowded train and created enough force to knock bystanders to their knees, transforming a historic station into a disaster area around 8:45 a.m. The person who died was a woman standing on the platform, who was hit by falling debris.

Officials said they had not determined why the train, which was carrying an estimated 250 passengers, was traveling at a high speed and failed to halt on the track.

The crash sent passengers flying out of their seats in a violent tumble. Then the lights cut out. Shouts and cries underscored the sense of panic. And after passengers managed to escape from the train, many crawling through its windows, they emerged to find the station a mess of metal beams, smoke and treacherously hanging wires. Water poured from ruptured pipes. The most seriously injured were carried out. Others emerged on their own with blood staining their clothes.

A New Jersey Transit worker said a train is typically supposed to come to a stop about 10 to 20 feet in front of the bumper. Its speed limit while entering the station is 10 miles per hour. Instead, this train barreled over the bumper and onto a concourse, coming to rest at a wall near the station’s waiting area.

The train’s engineer, who was released from the hospital, was Thomas Gallagher, 48, according to Nancy Snyder, a spokeswoman for New Jersey Transit. Mr. Gallagher has worked for New Jersey Transit for 29 years, Ms. Snyder said.

“An extraordinary tragedy,” Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey said, flanked by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York and transportation officials at a news conference near the station on Thursday afternoon.

In all, at least 114 people were injured in the crash, a flood of victims sent to hospitals that forced at least one to set up a triage area for some patients in its cafeteria.


For information regarding the effects of drug abuse – Click Here
For  information on a drug free work place – Click Here
For  information on substance abuse programs – Click Here
For information on DOT Drug / Alcohol Testing requirements – Click Here
John Burgos, CPC
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FMCSA Establishes National Drug and Alcohol Testing Clearinghouse for Commercial Truck and Bus Drivers

cdl-clearinghouseOn December 2, 2016, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) announced a final rule that would establish a National Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse for commercial truck and bus drivers.

The clearinghouse database will serve as a central information warehouse that will contain records of violations of FMCSA’s Drug and Alcohol Testing Program (Part 40) which is required for commercial driver’s license (CDL) holders. The National Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse Final Rule goes into effect in January 2020, which is three years after its effective date.

Once the clearinghouse database is established, motor carrier employers will be required to query the database for information regarding current or prospective employees who have unresolved violations of the Federal Drug and Alcohol Testing Regulations that prohibit them from operating a commercial motor vehicle (CMV).  The Final Clearinghouse Rule also requires employers and medical review officers (MRO) to report drug and alcohol testing program violations.

“This is a major safety win for the general public and the entire commercial motor vehicle industry,” said FMCSA Administrator Scott Darling.  “The clearinghouse will allow carriers across the country to identify current and prospective drivers who have tested positive for drugs or alcohol, and employ those who drive drug- and alcohol-free.  Drivers who test positive for drugs or alcohol will no longer be able to conceal those test results from employers and continue to drive while posing a safety risk to the driving public.”

The final rule requires motor carriers, medical review officers, third-party administrators, and substance abuse professionals to report information about drivers who:

  • Test positive for drugs or alcohol;
  • Refuse drug and alcohol testing; and
  • Undergo the return-to-duty drug and alcohol rehabilitation process.

Additionally, motor carriers will be required to annually search the clearinghouse for current employees, and during the pre-employment process for prospective employees, to determine whether a driver violated drug or alcohol testing requirements with a different employer that would prohibit them from operating a CMV.

 

Federal safety regulations require employers to conduct pre-employment drug testing and random drug and alcohol testing.  Motor carriers are prohibited from allowing employees to perform safety-sensitive functions, which include operating a CMV, if the employee tests positive on a DOT drug or alcohol test.

In accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. § 552a), a driver must grant consent before an employer can request access to that driver’s clearinghouse record and before FMCSA can release the driver’s clearinghouse record to an employer.   After registering with the clearinghouse a driver can review his or her information at no cost.

Congress directed FMCSA to establish a national drug and alcohol clearinghouse as mandated by the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21).

To learn more about the drug and alcohol clearinghouse, click on this link.

 

Read the full FMCSA press release.

John Burgos, CPC

Business Development Manager
https://www.AmericanrugTesting.com
(855)919-3784
American Drug Testing Inc

Read the full FMCSA press release.

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