T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
127.1 | | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Tue May 27 1986 16:17 | 21 |
| I hope that DEC does not start a drug testing program.
I don't like most testing programs. My biggest problem with
these programs is that they usually ignore the drug that is
responsible for the majority of the drug related problems:
alcohol.
Bloom County did a parody of these tests in a recent Sunday
comic strip: Berke Breathed was recommended for execution
as an addict because he ate a marijuana brownie six years ago
while the bureaucrat that ran the tests was judged `clean'
despite the fact that he lived on alcohol. That is obviously
an exaggeration, but testing for marijuana and not alcohol
is an establishment prejudice that I hope DEC does not follow.
The next largest problem with drug testing programs is that
they only test for the use of the drugs, they don't determine
if the drug use has any effect on the subject's ability to
perform their job.
B.J.
|
127.2 | { | ACE::BREWER | | Tue May 27 1986 22:11 | 3 |
|
Now THIS topic deserves its{own note (-1)
|
127.3 | Urinealienable pights | VENTUR::PREVIDI | Glory Jee to Besus | Wed May 28 1986 09:01 | 2 |
| Anyone who told me to take a drug test would have to wring out the
test sample from his clothes.
|
127.4 | A pointer to hard facts | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Wed May 28 1986 13:08 | 12 |
| In a recent article about drug testing in the Nashua Telegraph, (that
bastion of truth and credibility) a DEC personnel person was quoted as
saying point blank that DEC had NO plans to institute drug testing. A
few other local companies waffled: Sanders said that they were
"studying" the issue, for example.
I suggest that someone look up the article, get the person's name and
contact her so that we can squelch this rumor with hard facts.
I believe it was from either last Sunday or the Sunday before.
Burns
|
127.5 | must be complete... | ARGUS::COOK | Let there be Metal | Wed May 28 1986 20:35 | 9 |
|
I for one cannot see a basis for such a policy, unless of course
someone has been injured or has done some uncorrectable harm to
the company or it's equipment while on the influence of drugs.
If such a policy was implemented, the testing must include testing
for alcohol or it would be a contradiction. I cannot see this policy
being brought into corprate policy. However if it is, I'm not worried.
Pete
|
127.6 | | SNOV17::NICHOLLS | Michael Nicholls | Wed May 28 1986 21:33 | 3 |
| And also test for caffeine, nicotine, steroids .....
- michael
|
127.7 | | CLT::GILBERT | Juggler of Noterdom | Wed May 28 1986 23:16 | 8 |
| re .-1 (-: I liked that :-)
If you...
test positive on nicotine, DEC'll relocate your office, ...
test negative on caffiene, DEC'll give you a coffee cup, ...
test either way on steroids, DEC'll give you an even mushier keyboard!
|
127.8 | Did you know.... | TBD::ZAHAREE | Michael W. Zaharee | Thu May 29 1986 13:19 | 17 |
| ... that certain non-prescription drugs you can buy will cause you
test positive for other illegal ones?
Yep, Advil and Nuprin, both of which contain ibuprofin(sp?) will
make you look like a druggie. I find this VERY concerning as during
several portions of the year, I have to take more aprin/tylenol/nuprin
that most would take in a lifetime due to a very bad allergy induced
sinus condition.
Would I be able to survive without it? Not sure.
Would such a policy be a hassle? You bet. But at least I understand
why. I wonder how many people would test positive for certain drugs
(because of taking ibuprofin) and have no idea why. Ibuprofin is also
very commonly used by people with arthritus.
- M
|
127.9 | Are you a good drug or a bad drug? | COIN::CICCOLINI | | Fri May 30 1986 14:02 | 41 |
| Wow, this is WILD! I can't believe this actually happens in our
country much less here at DEC! In reading a general article about
this sort of thing a few weeks ago, it was noted that marijuana
takes two months to clear completely from the blood, (or urine,
or earwax or bellybutton lint or whatever they decide to examine!).
It didn't say how much had to be in the blood to start with tho...
If DEC did decide to invade the private lives of each and every employee,
(below the level of the decision makers, of COURSE!), I wonder if
they WOULD give advance notice. I wonder if this "rumour" itself is
"advance notice". But wouldn't advance notice be self-defeating?
Anyone on a witch hunt certainly wants to end up with a few witches
to burn!
And I'm with the previous noters who feel if they're going
to test for drugs, then they ought to test for DRUGS. All of them.
Caffeine, Sine-Aid, Dristan, Prednisone, Hydrochlorothiazide, ethanol,
(ESPECIALLY ethanol), etc. But my feeling is they're really testing
lifestyles. This is America? "Yes, we like THESE drugs, but we don't
like THOSE drugs so let's just see where YOU fit in!" And then
they shove a large platter of Hostess Twinkies under your nose.
Grab 'em and "AHA! a marijuana user!" Refuse 'em, and "AHA a cocaine
addict!".
Excuse the exaggeration but the hypocrisy of this type of thing
slays me. I suggest we all patrol the cafeterias in the morning
and see who downs the juices and LARGE cups of milk or pays with
trembling hands. Then we'll know who's been out drinking the night
before. How about the nicotine addict who rants and raves in the
office cuz the nearest butt machine is broken, or they're trying to quit
or... well, you get the picture. Drugs aren't the issue. Fitting
in is the issue. Doing the RIGHT drugs is the issue.
Of course don't let MY ranting and raving here be misconstrued as
fear... I mean I have nothing to worry about - I drink DECAF!!!!!
0 0
^
\ /
Sandy
|
127.10 | Faulty Testing | USRCV1::CARNELLP | Fanmail from some flounder | Sun Jun 01 1986 16:08 | 30 |
| Re: .9
> It didn't say how much had to be in the blood to start with tho...
And therein lies the biggest problem with the tests currently in
use today. There are two tests; a $5 dye test kit used by a
non-professional that serves as a screening test (and often the
only test, but that's another topic) and a spectrum analysis test
done at a lab for about $80. The catch is that neither of the tests
will indicate the amount of drug taken at the time of use or the amount
of time the drug has been in the system. So there will be no difference
between someone who smoked one joint at a weekend party three weeks
ago and the guy who comes to work stoned everyday.
I have also read where the US Army (they test everyone all the time)
EXPECTS a one percent error rate in the testing. The army performs
more than 5 million tests per year so that's 50,000 people in jeopardy
of loosing there jobs, or worse being court marshaled and jailed,
because of an "insignificant error". BTW - many experts believe
that the error rate is closer to 20 percent but that the army is
pretty good about retesting positive results.
BTW - not that we will ever need this but... The current tests can
be beaten by adding salt and/or water to the urine sample.
Source for all of the above was the "Syracuse New Times" for the
week of May 28th.
Paul.
|
127.11 | U.S. Military Strength = 2 135 900 | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Sun Jun 01 1986 22:21 | 9 |
| re: The army performs more than 5 million tests per year...
Paul,
There's something wrong with that number, unless the Army is testing
everyone in the Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marines at least twice a
year.
/john
|
127.12 | Calm Down! | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Jun 02 1986 13:21 | 9 |
| I can't believe the paranoia being shown in this topic! No one--not
ONE SINGLE REPLY here--has substantiated the rumor or given even the
slightest indication that there will be drug testing at DEC. Not even
the base note! There is even some evidence to the contrary! And yet
.-2 says ~"I can't believe this is happening...at DEC". IT'S NOT! If
it were, I would be upset. But IT'S NOT! CALM DOWN!
Burns
|
127.13 | Just in passing | RAINBO::HARDY | | Mon Jun 02 1986 13:48 | 10 |
| Of course it's a nasty rumor.
However, just in case anybody should know of anyone who needs help,
I would like to point out that the Massachusetts Civil Liberties
Union, and its parent the ACLU, take considerable interest in this
issue, and should be contacted if necessary. The most recent issue
of their newsletter, THE DOCKET, contained an article on urinalysis.
Pat Hardy
|
127.14 | Calm down? CALM DOWN???!!! | COIN::CICCOLINI | | Mon Jun 02 1986 19:00 | 19 |
| Calm down? Just relax and wait for it to happen? If rumor becomes
reality, and I agree it's only an IF, then it will be too late.
IF this gets implemented, it will have already been decided how
to deal with your protests. Collecting information and other peoples'
feelings on the subject will be too slow and too late to do any
good then. I say we begin protecting ourselves against the POSSIBILITY
by educating ourselves about the subject. It's not nervous nellie
reactionary panic, it's simply being smart enough to protect yourself
against what may happen. And since "protection" at this stage only
involves knowledge and information gathering, I say why the heck
not? Running out and hiring a lawyer would be a little pre-mature
but I don't think it's EVER too early to learn about something -
particularly something that may affect all of us. I wouldn't wait
until I had cancer to learn about it - I want to know NOW how I
can protect myself against the possibility.
Keep writing!
Sandy
|
127.15 | No need to shout :-) | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Mon Jun 02 1986 19:13 | 8 |
| This is beginning to sound like Soapbox.
I agree with Jim Burrows and Burns Fisher, doubtless others too,
that there's been a bit much negative thinking in this conference
lately.
--Simon (not speaking as the moderator)
|
127.16 | | SHOGUN::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Tue Jun 03 1986 16:44 | 21 |
| Yeah, and tomorrow the x's may decide to shoot all women on
sight, so I'd better start gathering information on them right away!
Really!
I think this is classic paranoidal thinking. (Well, they might
be out to get me!) Must be awfully wearing having to live your
life with an eye out for who's gonna "get" you next. You can waste
your life away worrying about what might happen.
tlh
PS. I'm afraid I have no sympathy for those who indulge in drugs
and then don't want to pay the price. (I'm not well known for keeping
to the speed limit but I don't bitch about my rights being violated
when I get caught by radar. I take my chances, I pay the price.
If I really want to avoid a ticket, I won't speed.) I'll debate
false positives ONLY when there if we get word that testing will
take place.
|
127.17 | I see no problem here | VIKING::HARDY | | Tue Jun 03 1986 21:01 | 16 |
| Re .16: Tracey, you overplay the role. :^) Just for the record, we
civil libertarians call it "vigilance".
I didn't hear any requests for sympathy. None of the respondents here
seem to be looking to escape paying a "price". I reckon, from the tone,
that a few of them are engineers, who as a class have always been notorious
critics of mickeymouse. If a manager sees that a subordinate's work
is falling off, he or she must address that employee, and deal with it,
rather than hiding in an office and hoping that some chemical witch-finding
test will do their job for them. Bottom line.
The Corporation, by policy, treats people according to their merit, and I
do NOT expect this to change.
Pat Hardy
|
127.18 | | COIN::CICCOLINI | | Wed Jun 04 1986 16:21 | 35 |
| Thanx, Pat for coming to my rescue! I don't think I'm paranoid,
and I don't live my life looking for someone who may be out to get
me. I don't think my comments constitute a desire to do drugs and
not pay the price.
To use Tracey's parallel, if she were to exceed the speed limit, she
wouldn't gripe about getting a ticket, but I'd bet she'd gripe plenty
if the local blues decided to "test" all cars, (if there were a way
they could), to see if they'd ever been driven over 55 and if so,
"punish" the owner. THAT's the right parallel. The issue isn't
whether she speeds or I do drugs, but that our *choice* to do so
is inhibited - choices that we may make fully prepared to accept
the consequences as we knew them to be!
A corporate invasion of their private life is far beyond the
consequences someone accepts when he/she chooses to smoke a joint at
a party. Breaking the law, (and for perspective here, in this state
engaging in oral sex makes you a lawbreaker!), does NOT make you
vulnerable for anything anybody now wants to subject you to. You
do not relinquish your basic rights as guaranteed by our constitution
because you drove too fast, smoked a joint or got head.
This erosion of the fundamentals of democracy is a pet peeve with
me and THAT's what I'm attacking. Think of the seat belt law.
Think of road blocks. Our loss of personal freedom is subtle and
insidious and every seeming inocuous event serves to lull us into
gradually increasing acceptance of loss of our right to privacy.
And for the record, I am NOT worried about the outcome of a drug
test - I'm outraged that someone has the audacity to try and exert
that kind of control on my life.
Ever vigilant,
Sandy
|
127.19 | | FREMEN::RYAN | Mike Ryan | Wed Jun 04 1986 18:24 | 7 |
| The real question is, does an employer have the right (or, some
might even say, the responsibility) to try to identify employees
who engage in illegal activities? That's a question better
addressed in FORUM (as a matter of fact, drug testing was
discussed there recently).
Mike
|
127.20 | I just don't BELIEVE it... | MMO01::PNELSON | K.O. is O.K. | Wed Jun 04 1986 22:32 | 11 |
| I have been around this company for 8 years, admittedly a much shorter
period of time than some of you. I have seen many, many changes,
and strongly disagreed with a lot of them.
However...
I do not believe for a minute that Digital would invade the private
lives of its employees in the manner being discussed in this note. I'd
have to see it happen before I'd believe it.
Am I terribly naive?
|
127.21 | Bring on your car tester. | SHOGUN::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Wed Jun 04 1986 22:42 | 39 |
| I still think it's a waste of energy to get all het up about something
in all likelihood is NOT going to happen. Unless you can't afford
to be under threat of the test for even one day (i.e. you've been
doing drugs and don't want to pay the price), there's plenty of
time to deal with the threat WHEN IT BECOMES A THREAT, instead chasing
shadows.
And oh by the way, you lose that bet. What's the difference
in testing the car to see if it's been driven too fast (while I
owned it anyway) and catching my by radar? They are both proof
that I broke the law (Assuming of course that this hypothetical
car test existed). As for inhibiting our personal choice in the
matter.... HUH? I didn't quite catch that. You're saying that
laws and enforcement of them shouldn't discourage people from doing
illegal things? I kinda thought that was the whole point.
Actually I think Mike hit it on the head when he said the real
question is whether or not it's an employer's business to do this
testing. When the employee's work suffers is when the company should
worry. (I mean it's not like somebody's going to go out in a drug
induced frenzy and program someone to death and we have to catch
them before it happens.)
Your statements about democracy and the American Way lead me to
believe that think the old innocent until guilt holds some water
with you. All I'm saying is let's calm down, extend that principle
to the management of DEC and not spread panic about such an
unsubstantiated rumor. The only word we've heard from management
is that they WON'T be testing. If you're truly concerned and want
to vigilant and gathering data rather than rumor mongering and
spreading panic, why don't you contact Corp. Personnel and ask them
where they stand?
I'm sorry if my notes on this subject have been argumentative.
I'm really trying my hardest for them not to be. I'm just SO tired
of everyone always assuming the worst. Give someone the benefit
of the doubt every now and then for heaven's sake!
tlh
|
127.22 | ** Its my life, and I'll do what I want ** | ACE::BREWER | John Brewer Component Engr. @ABO | Wed Jun 04 1986 23:09 | 21 |
|
Re: -1
Yes I DO think that the right of "innocent until proven guilty"
holds water!
Regardinganother of your analogies, I dont think that DEC would
punish me for a traffic ticket. Should they punish me for a similarly
minor legal infraction... if it didnt affect my job performance?
Cohabitation is illegal in many states, should DEC punish me for
that infraction?
I think the point is moot as : a) I dont think DEC would do such
a thing.
b) In the long term , I think the courts will prevail on the
side of the populace.
-Doing nothing stronger than a beer,
-John
|
127.23 | Haven't I heard this somewhere before? | CYCLPS::BAHN | | Thu Jun 05 1986 00:03 | 9 |
| I tend to agree with .20. I've only been with Digital for about
3 years, but, with three degrees in Psychology and a good sixth
sense about people and their organizations, I have a good feeling
about DEC. (I tried to express a similar feeling in 111.204 or
111.205 ... I'm not sure which.) My three years here have been
a lot more relaxed and pleasant than my 4 in Academia ... those
people are crazy.
Terry
|
127.24 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Thu Jun 05 1986 00:21 | 18 |
| Don't be so sure DEC wouldn't punish you for a traffic ticket, especially if
you somehow, possibly stupidly or unwittingly, involved DEC in that ticket.
Does drug testing prove that you have broken the law?
If we're going to have drug testing, shouldn't we have other forms of
testing, too, for illegal sexual activity, maybe?
What about states where consumption of, for example, marijuana, is
legal? What about employees who have visited those states?
What if DEC has data that says that you have drugs in your system and
chooses not to do anything? What if the legal authorities want to see
data that DEC has collected?
I think there are issues here DEC wouldn't want to get involved with,
and I don't believe we're going to see drug testing.
/john
|
127.25 | Wait a minute... | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Thu Jun 05 1986 00:41 | 7 |
| "Don't be so sure DEC wouldn't punish you for a traffic ticket, ..."
Uh, John, I don't know of anyone who got into trouble for _getting_
a ticket. What one does with a ticket is something else again.
--Simon
|
127.26 | | HITECH::BLOTCKY | | Thu Jun 05 1986 03:36 | 32 |
| 1) All evidence (including the Nashua Telegraph article, which I saw too)
indicates that DEC has no plans for drug testing.
2) That doesn't mean that it isn't reasonable to discuss drug testing in
relation to DEC.
There is a lot of action happening in this area, and someday DEC may feel
pressure to institute drug testing. Remember that many people at DEC deal
with hazardous equipment at our manufacturing plants; I don't find it
inconceivable that the insurance companies (or workman's compensation plans,
which are controlled by state and federal governments) would require some sort
of drug testing. If workman's comp got involved, it would probably affect
everyone; I am currently receiving medical payments from workman's comp as a
result of spraining my ankle in the ZK01 parking lot.
However, before this causes anyone to panic, remember there are different
kinds of drug testing programs. The worse kind, and the kind that all the
stories I have seen about employees suing to get their jobs back are "you get
one test - if you fail, you are fired - you can't get another test, you can't
get an independent test - we don't care if you want to stop using drugs." I
can't imagine DEC ever adopting such a policy.
A progressive sort of policy, as adopted by a number of companies, provides for
more than one test, and the results of those tests are treated as a indication
that a problem may exist, not a ground for firing. If there is a reason for
false results, it can be determined. The results of the testing can treated
confidentially. Counseling is required, but you continue at your job unless
the drug use actually effects it. This is the only kind of program I can
imagine DEC adopting. DEC already offers such counseling on a voluntary
basis.
Steve
|
127.27 | Other drugs. | NIPPER::HAGARTY | The Penultimate Rat... | Thu Jun 05 1986 05:47 | 11 |
| Ahh Gi'day...
I wonder whether the company loses far more money from people smoking,
or drinking coffee at work than a few heads getting into a coupla
joints over the weekend.
I've just spent half the day cleaning the cigarette ash out of an LK201
keyboard that I've inherited. How many DEC machines need fixing because
of coffee and/or ash down the keyboard?
{dennis{{{ -- Ex-smoker.
|
127.28 | More cynicism | COIN::CICCOLINI | | Thu Jun 05 1986 12:20 | 37 |
| re 127.24 John, in WHAT states is marijuana legal????? This is
new to me!
Tracey, you don't sound argumentative. I like people with fire
in them. That's what makes the notes files so interesting! But
you do admit that you wouldn't want to be held accountable if your
car was "tested" and found "deviant" because there certainly could
be extenuating circumstances. You mentioned that maybe a previous
owner could have exceeded the speed limit. And you're right. That's
one of the reasons people don't want to be held accountable for
the results of a drug test. Too many variables to be conclusive.
It just so happens that Dear Abby dealt with this issue just yesterday,
and the reader's position was, and I'm paraphrasing, "So what's
the big deal, Abby, if you're clean you've got nothing to worry
about, right?" Wereupon Abby said "WRONG!". She stated that she
was indeed "clean" but still felt it would be an infraction of her
basic right to privacy.
I believe too that Digital has faith in and respect for its employees
but that other things may supersede that. As a previous noter
said, those "other things" are insurance companies. I believe they
were the driving force behind the seat belt law because medical
claims cost them money. We are legally bound to wear our seat belts
to protect our insurance companies. Bottom line. If the law was
institued out of a sincere desire to protect US, then why doesn't
that desire deal with our number one killer, nicotine? We can
continue in our nicotine addiction because that gives the state
government a good amount of tax revenue and so far, medical claims
from THAT haven't touched the insurance companies too badly yet.
The point is, that the powerful insurance companies may well insist
that Digital begin drug screening before they'll issue group coverage,
and if that happens, Digital's philosophy matters little. Money
talks. What's the driving force behind the organizations that already
DO employee drug screening? Anyone know?
Sandy
|
127.29 | Alaska? | LATOUR::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Thu Jun 05 1986 13:08 | 5 |
| I believe that some amount of private use and consumption is legal in
Alaska. Someone else will have to post things about other states.
Don't light up on my account; consult a lawyer first.
/AHM
|
127.30 | Should this continue in FORUM? | MOSAIC::HARDY | | Thu Jun 05 1986 13:32 | 18 |
| Yes, "pot" possession and cultivation for *personal* use are
legal in Alaska. The state courts struck down the relevant
laws as an invasion of privacy. Quite a few more states are
"decriminalized", where possession is treated as a ticketable
civil offense. This year the people in Oregon will be voting
on the question of possession and cultivation for personal use.
It's probably no accident that Tektronix, one of the larger
high-tech companies in that state, discarded its drug testing
program recently as a waste of time and a source of trouble.
FORTUNE and other business magazines have stated that employee
assistance programs appear to be the most successful means of
salvaging employees with *real* problems, whatever the source.
Should this discussion be moved to FORUM?
Pat
|
127.31 | | COIN::CICCOLINI | | Thu Jun 05 1986 15:22 | 4 |
| Where's FORUM and why shouldn't this discussion continue here?
Sandy
|
127.32 | Nightline | ARGUS::COOK | Let there be Metal | Thu Jun 05 1986 17:43 | 12 |
|
The topic of Drug testing was discussed on Nightline last night.They
had a lawyer, a consultant of the government on drug testing and
Peter Uberof (sp?) on. The general consensus was (except for the
baseball commisioner) that it should be for people who's job requires
the utmost safety and that a treatment program should go along with
it. This point seems logical to me. As the lawyer said, it is an
enfringement of rights and it does say that your guilty until proven
innocent which goes against this countries constitution.
PC
|
127.33 | keep it here... | DEREP::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Thu Jun 05 1986 18:08 | 12 |
| re: move to FORUM?
No. The network link to NY1MM is too sloooowwww! I'm scads behind
in reading it, and may give up. Bad reason, perhaps, but you've
got all these interesting conferences and a slow link!
re: insurance co.
Digital's medical carrier and small-claims liability carrier is
Digital. We self-insure quite a bit, so we aren't as pressured
by insurance cos. as some other firms.
fred
|
127.34 | | MOSAIC::HARDY | | Thu Jun 05 1986 18:20 | 8 |
| RE: 127.31, 127.33:
Only a suggestion. It seemed that we were getting into issues
which were not directly DIGITAL-related, and of more general scope.
But the discussion is useful wherever.
Pat
|
127.35 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Thu Jun 05 1986 18:20 | 10 |
| Two examples of legally driving your car faster than 55:
1. Outside the United States.
2. On a private road.
For these reasons testing a car to see if it had been driven faster than
55 wouldn't prove that a law had been broken.
/john
|
127.36 | NY1MM::FORUM note 54.* | IMMI::NOURSE | Andy Nourse | Thu Jun 05 1986 18:52 | 14 |
| FORUM is on NY1MM. The note is 54, for discussion on drug testing
in general, as opposed to the threat of it at Digital.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Examples of smoking marijuana legally:
o In Amsterdam
o In some parts of India
o In Alaska
o In Oregon, after the OMI referendum passes this fall!
Note that Digital does business in all of those places, but one can
fail an EMIT test up to 2 MONTHS after even getting NEAR someone
smoking marijuana. Yet another reason Digital would never do it.
|
127.37 | Enough! | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Jun 05 1986 19:44 | 14 |
| I still don't see the point in either worrying about drug
testing at DEC or worrying other people about it. Face it, DEC
says it isn't going to do it. Everybody in this discussion has
said they don't believe DEC would ever willingly do it. The only
scenario by which it could happen is if the insurance companies
or the courts forced DEC to--in which case we couldn't do
anything about it--and that doesn't appear to be at all likely.
This is just another DUMB RUMOR, that isn't worth worrying about
and which only hurts morale. If it were the only one going, it
would be fairly harmless, but every time I turn around people
are panicking and over-reacting.
JimB.
|
127.38 | SET TOPIC/NOWRITE | VMSINT::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Thu Jun 05 1986 23:57 | 12 |
| Moderator here. As far as I'm concerned, there's no basis in this
rumor. Drug testing is not an issue at Digital, and discussion
of this issue doesn't belong in this conference. If that should
ever change, then we'll discuss it.
Meanwhile, NY1MM::FORUM is open for this kind of discussion.
--Simon a.k.a. "Absentee Moderator"
P.S. I'm intentionally not setting this topic to /NOWRITE, but
please consider this topic closed.
|
127.39 | Amsterdam - not quite... | FNYFS::WYNFORD | | Fri Jun 06 1986 05:39 | 10
|