T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
716.2 | | SALEM::RIEU | Quayle's IQ: Is it up to Par? | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:17 | 3 |
| I think you're confused. The cow wa on property we own in Lancaster
and somehow got on Rte. 2. That's when the lady hit it.
Denny
|
716.3 | real shaft job | BPOV02::MIOLA | Phantom | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:27 | 8 |
| RE .1
.2 IS RIGHT. The cow belonged to the previous land owner, who DEC
let keep his cows on their property. The driver didn't work for
DEC. After the cow's owner, our old beloved mayor, lost the law
suit to the girl, he and the girl joined forces and sued DEC.
DEC paid off to avoid the hassles.
|
716.4 | continuing the rathole | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:49 | 3 |
| Did anyone check the deceased cow for drugs?
/s/ Jim Williams
|
716.5 | | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:59 | 7 |
| I wonder if this rumor has anything to do with tomorrow's DVN
broadcast, in which, according to the announcement, KO and senior
management will be talking about financial results, the new benefits
package, and increased pressure for employee drug testing?
Steve
|
716.6 | Please -- no speculation, stick to facts | DR::BLINN | But wait! There's more! | Thu Feb 02 1989 16:08 | 24 |
| If there is any truth to the rumor, it is likely to come out
in the DVN broadcast, or through discussions with Field Service
management. I doubt that Field Service management would answer
the question in this conference.
If anyone has concrete information regarding this, one way or the
other, and can *confirm* it by posting a memo or some other
*official* statement, they're welcome to do so.
However, in my opinion as a co-moderator, spreading rumors through
continued speculation is inappropriate. The example of replies .1
through .3 shows how easy this is, since one reply asserts that
Digital lost a lawsuit due to a motor vehicle accident that
involved an employee with a history of drug use, and other replies
tell a different story altogether.
This topic would probably be more appropriate in the Field Service
conference at FINALY::FIELD_SERVICE, provided it sticks to facts.
Opinions on drug testing belong in the SoapBox at PEAR::SOAPBOX.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Tom
|
716.7 | This topic is entirely appropriate here. | BENTLY::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Thu Feb 02 1989 16:34 | 51 |
| Re: < Note 716.6 by DR::BLINN "But wait! There's more!" >
> -< Please -- no speculation, stick to facts >-
> If anyone has concrete information regarding this, one way or the
> other, and can *confirm* it by posting a memo or some other
> *official* statement, they're welcome to do so.
I agree completely, what is needed is a definitive answer, and
the sooner we can get one, the sooner the issue can be understood,
if not resolved. I see that as one of the central purposes of this
conference: When one hears a rumor, this is a good place to try
to find confirmation or denial, and thus avoid just spreading rumors.
> However, in my opinion as a co-moderator, spreading rumors through
> continued speculation is inappropriate. The example of replies .1
> through .3 shows how easy this is, since one reply asserts that
> Digital lost a lawsuit due to a motor vehicle accident that
> involved an employee with a history of drug use, and other replies
> tell a different story altogether.
That is your personal opinion. The fact that you are co-moderator
has nothing to do with it. In my personal opinion, replies .1 -
.3 are exactly why this sort of discussion is appropriate and
productive in this conference: in a short period, another rumor was
debunked and put to rest. NOT spread, put to rest.
> This topic would probably be more appropriate in the Field Service
> conference at FINALY::FIELD_SERVICE, provided it sticks to facts.
If the policy were limited to Field Service, then I would agree
with you. However, there are lots of other Digital employees that
have company cars, and any policy implemented for one group is likely
to (eventually) apply to many others. Thus the topic is of interest
to the Digital audience at large, and germaine to this conference.
> Opinions on drug testing belong in the SoapBox at PEAR::SOAPBOX.
...Except when they constitute a major change in Digital's attitude
towards its employees and their privacy, as this policy would.
That is a topic that deserves clarification and discussion in this
conference. NOT random flames about the practice of drug testing
anywhere, but reasoned discussion of how this policy affects and/or
changes "life at Digital".
> Thank you for your cooperation.
Thank you for listening to opinions other than your own.
Kevin Farlee, SWS, Santa Clara, Calif.
|
716.8 | | NRPUR::VIOLA | Keep the Chaff, give me the Wheat | Thu Feb 02 1989 16:47 | 8 |
|
Re: .4
>> Did anyone check the deceased cow for drugs?
They should! I'd suspect the cow was a heavy "Grass" user.
-Marc
|
716.9 | Here's the source of the "rumor" | DINSCO::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Thu Feb 02 1989 17:23 | 123 |
| From: NAME: HARVEY WEISS
FUNC: GSG
TEL: 297-2526 <WEISS.HARVEY AT A1 AT DCMHUB AT MRO>
Date: 06-Jan-1989
Posted-date: 07-Jan-1989
Precedence: 1
Subject: DOD Drug-Free Workforce Clause
To: See Below
CC: See Below
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
THIS MESSAGE IS FROM HARVEY WEISS, V.P., GOVERNMENT SYSTEMS GROUP, AND
ERLINE BELTON, CORPORATE EMPLOYEE RELATIONS MANAGER.
Managers should make further distribution as appropriate and discuss
its contents with affected employees.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The Department of Defense (DoD) is now requiring a new clause, DFARS
252.223-7500, "Drug-Free Work Force'" be added to contracts involving
access to classified information. This clause may also be included in
unclassified contracts where the DoD contracting officer determines
that the clause is necessary.
Digital Equipment Corporation is now accepting contracts containing
this new DoD clause. Specifically, Digital has accepted the inclusion
of the Drug-Free Work Force clause on certain work orders on WR-ALC
BOA #F09650-85-G-0001. Employees and managers assigned to a work
order from this contract should understand that the clause may affect
each individual assigned and will affect their employer, Digital
Equipment Corporation.
The Drug-Free Work Force clause requires Digital Equipment Corporation
to institute and maintain a program for achieving a drug-free work
force. Digital has begun work on this program which when completed is
expected to include, among other features, an employee assistance
program (EAP), supervisory training, provisions for referral and
provisions for identifying illegal drug users. Identifying drug users
is expected to require drug testing on a controlled and carefully
monitored basis. It is also expected that Digital's work rules
regarding drug use will be modified.
Digital is several months away from a final position on the extent to
which testing will be a required part of the drug program under the
regulation. The extent of drug testing to be conducted will be
determined by a number of factors, including the nature of the work an
employee performs under a specific contract, the resources Digital
assigns to the drug program required by the regulation and the risks
to public health, safety and national security that could result from
the failure of a Digital employee to adequately perform on a contract
covered by the clause.
Your employees are now being assigned to or are supporting a contract
that contains the new DoD Drug-Free Work Force clause. Therefore,
employees currently in these positions will be subject to the DoD
guidelines in the clause at some point in the future. It is important
that Digital make clear to these employees some of the management
considerations on drug testing that Digital has established as we
begin the design of the drug program required under the regulation:
o Digital will only accept the DoD drug clause when
required by the regulation.
o Before implementing testing as an integral part of a
drug program, Digital senior management will
carefully consider all appropriate issues and will
put in place a quality program consistent with
Digital's values.
o When Digital initiates drug testing as a part of its
drug program required by the DoD clause, prior to the
introduction of testing employees will be notified of
the details of the testing and the implications of
the requirement.
In closing, we wish to emphasize that the contract to which some of
your employees are being assigned does contain the new DoD Drug-Free
Work Force clause and that this clause has the potential to subject
certain positions to drug testing. When this possibility becomes a
reality, affected employees will be notified prior to initiation of
testing. We will also keep all employees informed in personnel
bulletins as the development of the drug program required by the DoD
clause proceeds.
Should your employees have any further questions on the new DoD
Drug-Free Work Force clause we encourage them to discuss with their
respective manager or contact Fred Beckette, FSG Human Resources
Manager, DTN 297-4818.
Harvey
To Distribution List:
AL PINK @RHQ,
RON WOLF @RNQ,
ALAN ANDERSON @RHQ,
LINDA JOHNSON @ATO,
KEN REEVES @GGO
CC Distribution List:
BRIAN MCDONALD @OGO,
JOHN HENDERSON @RHQ,
HARRY EISENGREIN @RHQ,
GERALD SELBY @ATO,
CHICK SHUE @MRO,
DON BUSIEK @OGO,
BILL FERRY @PKO,
DAVE GRAINGER @OGO,
DON ZERESKI @WFR,
JIM ONEILL @EKO,
DAN ZOGRAN @EKO,
ERLINE BELTON @CFO,
CYNDI BLOOM @PKO,
JOHN DOHERTY @CFO,
PAUL HENRION @MSO,
JEFF SCHNEIDER @DER,
DAVE BURKE @WNP,
JACK SHIELDS @OGO
|
716.10 | | ODIXIE::JENNINGS | I may be EASY, but I'm not CHEAP! | Thu Feb 02 1989 19:14 | 4 |
| And in case anyone was wondering, WR-ALC is US Air Force's Warner
Robins Air Logistics Center. It's located in Warner Robins, GA., about
100 miles south of Atlanta. Digital has a large SWS, FS and Sales
presence on that base worth many $$$.
|
716.11 | Can someone post DFARS 252.223-7500, please? | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Feb 02 1989 20:34 | 22 |
| After reading Harvey's memo, I doubt Ken will be saying much more about *who*
will be tested during the DVN broadcast tomorrow. DEC hasn't decided yet.
Obviously people working directly on the contract are affected.
But what are the wider ramifications of the contract provision? By accepting
the provision on the contract has Digital said that the entire workforce of
the company will be drug free? Or just those affecting the contract?
Will VMS engineering be tested, because of the government's concern that a
drug-crazed VMS engineer will accidentally leave a bug in a VMS release?
Will IOSG in Reading be tested because Warner-Robbins uses ALL-IN-1? Will
European employees complain more loudly about this forcing of American law
on Europe than they do about the requirement to attend Export Controls Training?
Will we have to pee into a bottle in front of our supervisor?
Will employees who take ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin, Nuprin) be in danger of being
fired? (Ibuprofen sets off the cannabinoid indicator.)
/john
|
716.12 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Feb 02 1989 21:54 | 14 |
| re: -1
A UNION? Surely you are not suggesting that DEC cease business
with it's largest customer in order to avoid drug testing, are you?
As an employee, I feel testing is an unwarranted intrusion into
peoples private lives. As a stockholder, I expect the company to
avoid suicide.
Bottom line, the problem is not in Maynard, but in Washington.
No matter what happens, let's not forget that.
Al
|
716.13 | The prophet of doom | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Thu Feb 02 1989 22:12 | 35 |
|
I'm a bit upset here. Ibuprofen is the only over-the-counter
drug that works for me when I get back pains or headaches. Aspirin
doesn't work, neither does acytomenophin.
As a presales software specialist working out of Houston, there
is little or no chance that I will ever get involved in government
contracts in any way, especially since it's not my unit. Yet,
the way I read the memo even I will be subject to testing, as will
all employees, great and small.
The wording of the memo seems to indicate that those who are
directly involved in government contracts with this clause will
be the first to be tested. It is less clear about when the rest
of us fall prey to this ruling.
If my experience with other companies is any indication, this
policy will eventually have to take effect across the board,
in order to assure compliance with the DoD guidelines. Clearly,
nobody want to admit that yet, and perhaps some are struggling
against it actively at the higher levels. Ultimately, I fear
that we will be given two choices; comply or kiss the government
business goodbye. This assumes, of course, that the government
is not so dependent upon our services that they will alter
(or disuse) this ruling to allow our continued relationship.
I think that a fair assumption.
Given the economic pull the government contracts have, I
sincerely doubt Digital will be able to put up much of a
fight.
Welcome to the New Improved America.
- Greg
|
716.14 | Drug testing is an unacceptable personal liberty infringement | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Feb 03 1989 00:24 | 20 |
| RE .ALL
This is disgusting. I for one would absolutely refuse to be drug
tested unless I was paid for the inconvenience. Basically I would
only take the test if I was guaranteed a $10,000 payment if my test
were to turn out negative. If that was refused, I would refuse to
take the test. If I was told that it was take the test or be fired
I would voluntarily go somewhere have a test taken and have it
timestamped. If I was then fired I'd make as much hay as possible
over the harassment of an innocent individual. Of course my test
would have been negative.
I would hope that many others would have the courage to follow such
a course.
I find it absolutely unacceptable that an individual's privacy and
personal rights can be violated in such a way. The time to stand
up and be counted is now.
Dave
|
716.15 | This is *NOT* the SOAPBOX | DR::BLINN | Now for something completely different.. | Fri Feb 03 1989 08:59 | 19 |
| Flames will NOT be tolerated here. A debate about the merits or
demerits of drug testing, whether it's an infringement of your
personal liberties, etc. belongs in PEAR::SOAPBOX, unless it
is focused specifically on the question of what is actually
happening here at Digital and how it affects the way we work.
Discussion of the Harvey Weiss memo (in .9, which I will extract
so that if it disappears it can be reposted) is reasonable, and is
welcomed. Special thanks to the person who posted it.
Please note that the memo suggests that you talk with your own
supervisor. It also says that further information on the program
will be forthcoming. Until further information comes forth, we
are *speculating* about what will happen. Please don't start
rumors here, or use this conference to spread them. Far too many
people *believe* what they read in conferences without using any
sort of credibility filters.
Tom
|
716.16 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Feb 03 1989 09:40 | 9 |
| RE: .12
> Surely you are not suggesting that DEC cease business with it's largest
> customer in order to avoid drug testing, are you?
And who, pray tell, do you think DEC's largest customer is? What
percentage of our business is with the U.S. govt.?
|
716.17 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Feb 03 1989 10:52 | 21 |
| RE: .14
Right on! I believe very strongly that mandatory drug testing is clearly
unconstitutional. It is an invasion of my privacy as an "innocent-till-
proven-guilty" American citizen. My job description does not include
urinating into a bottle in front of ANYONE, and if Digital wants me to do
that then there will be a price over and above what they pay me to be a
Corporate Account Manager. If they'd like to ADD a clause about urinating
to my job description then I'll be happy to begin salary negotiations in
light of my new job responsibilities.
I've been with this company almost 11 years, and I've been bit with the
"DEC Religion" for most of that time. I've seen good times and bad, and
stuck with Digital through both 'cause Digital has stuck by me and treated
me fairly and with compassion. This is honestly the first thing that has
ever happened that causes me to decide beyond a shadow of a doubt that I'd
leave the company without an ounce of regret.
Pat
P.S. I don't use drugs other than an occasional alcoholic beverage.
|
716.18 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Feb 03 1989 11:07 | 11 |
| re: .16
It's pretty obvious who I "think" is our largest customer. As of
a few years ago, it was the US Government. GE was (and perhaps
still is) the largest non-government account.
What percentage of our business? I don't know. Until our investors
authorize us to give up business, does it matter?
Al
|
716.19 | Freedom is a Digital way of working! | DNEAST::STARIE_DICK | I'd rather be skiing | Fri Feb 03 1989 11:23 | 20 |
|
re .15 >Flames will NOT be tolerated here..........
This conference is about the Digital way of working. One of the
key items in Dec's culture is freedom. This discussion is about
that! I for one think that your trying to move this discussion to
Soapbox is not valid!
I think you have to fight this thru your elected represetatives,
not by placing your job at risk. I expect that a survey of Digital
employees would show at least 85% opposed. I think that 20% or so
may well respond as Pat did. I think that the company might well
have to choose between the U.S. Government as a customer and an
uncomfortable percentage of long term, valued employees. That can
be prevented if enough of us protest to our Senators. Mine is George
Mitchell, He gets a call at lunch!
This should be discussed here AND in soapbox.
dick
|
716.20 | a suggestion for ground rules | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Fri Feb 03 1989 11:30 | 17 |
| Re subject's applicability in DIGITAL:
This is a toughie, but I think it applies, _so long as it's in the
context of its impact on the Digital culture_. For instance, there's
been a no-alcohol rule for U.S. facilities since the company's early
years (if not founding), but I cannot recall the idea of mandatrory
alcohol use testing being floated.
Let's agree to tread a careful line here: As I noted earlier, some
over-the-counter medications will give false positive readings;
interestingly, some of these may be being dispensed by Health Services
in some facilities. To the extent that drug testing becomes a
corporate policy, which would be of some concern, and associated
discussions, would be appropriate; however, general philosophical
flames might indeed be best left to SOAPBOX.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
716.21 | Walk away from bad business | BOLT::MINOW | Why doesn't someone make a simple Risk chip? | Fri Feb 03 1989 11:34 | 9 |
| I wonder how long the clause would last if Dec, IBM, Sun, (etc.) all
politely informed the government that they cannot in good conscience
sign this contract, so the government will just have to buy its
computers from some other vendor.
Freeing us from dependency on Government contracts might prove to be
a very sound business strategy in the long term.
Martin.
|
716.22 | I'll do it first | WORDS::BADGER | Follow the Sun Stream | Fri Feb 03 1989 12:15 | 18 |
| I thought I'd put this here only to let those opposed to drug testing
within DEC, that there is another view by employees.
Go ahead, Digital, read my urine! I'll stand first in line. I'm
a 19year deccie who wants to help anyway I can. This country is
at war. Against an enemy that we all don't agree upon, and
for those who see it as a threat, don't agree on a battle plan.
If it were solders from another coutry bombing Boston, *few* would
mine if we drafted youngsters to kill other men, would they? This
enemy is attacking our grade schoolers, attacking all ages/wealth.
I'll stop here, but only to say if it was constitutional to draft
youngsters before into an army to fight an enemy, its constituational
to draft all of us. I see pissing into the bottle as a declaration
to my employer that I value my family and him not to be involved
with the enemy.
ed badger
|
716.23 | | WD8EHB::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Fri Feb 03 1989 12:46 | 23 |
| Re .22:
IF drug testing NEVER produced a false positive result, and IF drug
testing at work would really control the problem in society at large, I
MIGHT agree with what you say, BUT drug tests do have a significant false
positive rate and there is some serious question about the effectiveness
of drug testing on controlling the drug problem in society.
While I can't say I never use drugs, the drugs I do use are limited to
medicinal application (Asprin, Anti-biotics, Anti-histimens...) or are
legal and consumed in strictly limited quantities (Ethanol). Still, I do
not want to put my family's livelihood in the hands of some lab technician
I have never met who is more likely to be on mind altering drugs than I am.
While I agree that the 'drug' problem is a very serious one, I also
find that the proposed drug testing has MANY VERY LARGE down side risks.
If the DIGITAL management can find a way to limit all these risks, AND can
convince me that they have done so, I will be very happy to cooperate.
Until that happens, I object strongly and as a (small) stock holder would
understand giving up some government business. (There are a number of
other kinds of government business that DEC does not solicit on policy
grounds from what I have heard. Adding one more kind of business to avoid
to the group might not make that much difference.)
|
716.25 | opt out of project = opt out of testing? | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Fri Feb 03 1989 13:09 | 16 |
| I wonder how much DEC will support someone who doesn't want to be
on a project that requires drug testing? I would expect that as
long as DEC only requires people on some projects to be tested that
the option will be there for people to opt of of the project.
I would never use drugs for other then medical reasons and would
have not fear of a fool proof test but there are no such tests. I
also tend to agree that there should be some kink of reasonable cause
(poor performance, erratic behavior,etc) before making some kind of
test. If the government is going to require more then that then maybe
it is time to turn away that business. Heck the way the law makes us
handle our pricing turning away the US government might give our
margins a big boost. If IBM (with or with out anyone else) did the
same rules would change fast.
Alfred
|
716.26 | full of spit and vinegar | CADSYS::YOST | | Fri Feb 03 1989 13:37 | 17 |
|
Might as well argue about automatic income tax withholdings from your
weekly paycheck. The health and safety of the general public generally
takes precedent over individual freedom. So drug testing is instituted
for athletes, pilots, then servicemen, then train engineers, then bus
drivers,then policemen/firemen,...teachers,...you,...me,...nurses,...and
probably last doctors, food preparers, politicians (the sequence is
silly but probably factual). Times change, the public (and me) wants
assurances that those providing product or services are able. Those
providing product and services want to minimize liability and legal
expenses.
Just make it a fair and equal (everybody) test or forget it.
Someone who was nearly electrocuted in WOO by a tech with a buzz-on,
clay
|
716.27 | hand me that cup,I'll use it | WR2FOR::BOUCHARD_KE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2/T7 | Fri Feb 03 1989 15:11 | 11 |
| The replies to this note topic are very reminiscent of the replies
to 565. (the note about the car plan) In that case,DEC made a business
decision then reversed that decision because (probably) it would
have adversely affected profits.
DEC may go for drug testing because it would affect profits if they
don't...or then DEC may forego drug testing and lose contracts,again
because of money.
Whatever is decided,I'll go along with it.
BTW: There's so much competition that DEC will probably go along
with the gov't in order to keep contracts...the stockholders will
demand it.(my opinion)
|
716.28 | This IS relevent to DIGITAL.NOTE | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Feb 03 1989 15:17 | 21 |
| RE the response by Tom Blinn.
Please don't try and send me off to soapbox. My reply was very much
relevent to my employment with Digital and the Digital way of working.
Yes I know I stated it very vehmently but that is how I feel about
this issue (yes the place to debate my philosophy is in SOAPBOX).
I am glad to see that there are others besides myself who put their
personal liberty before their employment. I just hope it never gets
to the point where Digital the company forces an employee out because
he won't submit to having his personal liberty violated.
Obviously mandatory drug testing is pointless unless you have an
individual in authority physically observe you piss into a bottle.
Or somebody would have to violate my body by sticking a needle into
it. It is this aspect of it that I object to. I'll stop there because
to go further I would be getting into my view of life.
I sincerely hope that Digital doesn't implement such a policy.
Dave
|
716.29 | | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Fri Feb 03 1989 15:38 | 11 |
| RE: profitability, shareholder demands, etc.
What effect do you think it would have on DEC's profitability if 20%
of the engineering force refused to undergo drug testing and were
fired/resigned?
Steve
BTW:
Given my experience with the independent, anti-authority nature
of the engineers I know, I think 20% is a reasonably accurate figure.
|
716.30 | Just Say No | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Feb 03 1989 15:54 | 20 |
| -< To Drug Testing >-
Well, Digital's lost it. So much for "Do the Right Thing". So much
for caring about employees.
If Digital will no longer give the proper concern to its employees,
somebody else must. It is time we addressed these matters ourselves.
I think a lot of people are opposed to this. Shall we start by
drafting a group letter to Digital? We could express a conviction that
certain rights belong to us as people and Digital should not be selling
them to the government. And we would request that Digital state in
writing the extent to which it will sell obligations on its employees
to the government. This would be a preliminary letter, not a place for
demands, threats, or declaration of future action. How many people
would be willing to sign such a letter? How many would manage the task
of having copies available for signing at their site?
-- edp
|
716.31 | ready, fire, aim? | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Fri Feb 03 1989 16:52 | 10 |
| Re .30 (edp):
Eric, that's a bit premature. I cannot but believe that this
particular note is being read be people with an official interest
in the matter (and I don't mean Network Police or Network Big_Brother).
I believe DIGITAL Note 716.* is taking care of the very legitimate
concerns.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
716.32 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:10 | 22 |
| RE: .31
>>I cannot but believe that this particular note is being read be people
>>with an official interest in the matter (and I don't mean Network
>>Police or Network Big_Brother).
I disagree. I've been noting for a long time, well probably about
5 years or so. I personally know of no instance, however serious,
where anyone with any decision-making power has monitored a VAX
Notes conference and initiated any action because of it. That doesn't
mean it hasn't happened, but if it has it was well hidden.
I think the group letter to Digital is a good start. But even more
important than that is writing our Senators and Congressmen to let
them know what we think of this.
One last comment: I couldn't help giggling a little when I read
someone's idea that IBM, Sun, DEC, and all the other major vendors
should just politely decline doing further business with the government
because of the clause. It'll never happen, but it sure would be
fun...
Pat
|
716.33 | A cynical point of view | TALLME::FRIDAY | Patience averts the severe decree | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:10 | 21 |
| re .29
>> What effect do you think it would have on DEC's profitibility if 20%
>> of the engineering force refused to undergo drug testing and were
>> fired/resigned?
Gee, I don't know, but given that elsewhere I've read where DEC has
lowered hiring rates to keep costs under control, and that Wall Street
liked that, what do you think?
Might also be a good way to have more cooperative engineers, as the
rabble-rousers would leave.
NOTE: I don't want to advocate any of the previous two paragraphs, but
just show there could be a hidden agenda.
Myself, I'd probably go along with it, just to keep my job, even though
it would trouble me.
Rich
|
716.34 | divide and conquor? | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:13 | 13 |
| Well, I just got done watching the DVN broadcast that talked about
this, and despite all the beaurocratic doublespeak, I am *VERY*
concerned about what I heard.
In particular (to paraphrase) "We are not planning widespread drug
test YET".
It sounds to me like they're trying to get their foot
in the door (with people involved in government contracts), but I
expect this program to be slowly expanded company-wide.
Steve
|
716.35 | Always the prophets of doom... | DR::BLINN | Now for something completely different.. | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:16 | 50 |
| Did anyone actually attend the DVN broadcast this afternoon?
What did K.O. and the other senior managers have to say about
this matter?
Until we know what is actually being planned, we may well be
brewing a tempest in a teapot.
Think carefully about your positions on this matter. Someone made
an assertion before about "freedom". Digital isn't about freedom.
If you believe that, then you don't really understand this
company. Digital has always allowed employees a very large amount
of leeway, but Digital is very much about doing the right thing,
and accepting responsibility for one's actions, and honesty.
People have been fired from this company for using alcohol (an
addictive drug) in the workplace. Digital is taking measures to
reduce the use of tobacco (another addictive drug) in the
workplace. It's in Digital best interest to discourage the use of
illicit drugs among its workforce. This has little to do with
"freedom", or "rights".
If Digital can develop a fair and equitable drug testing program
(I understand that that's very big *IF*), are you really going to
walk out the door if you're told to participate? Especially if
Ken Olsen and the other senior managers are the first to be
tested?
I agree with an earlier note that suggested that if you want this
changed, you're going to have to approach your representatives in
congress, because the pressure is coming (at the present time)
from the U. S. Government. However, in doing so, be prudent in
identifying your affiliation with Digital; it is not Digital's
practice to attempt to influence legislation, if I'm not mistaken.
As I hope I've made clear (I'm not perfect in expressing myself),
I have no objection to discussions, here, of how drug testing,
should it come to pass, will impact the way we work at Digital.
I have a very strong objection to inflammatory rhetoric, the use
of language chosen to create controversy, and other tactics that
generate lots of heat but shed little light.
I don't own this conference, but I do own a responsibility to
Digital as an employee (and as a moderator) to discourage
statements that are not in the best interest of the corporation.
If you feel compelled to make such statements, please make them
elsewhere.
Tom
|
716.36 | | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:22 | 17 |
| RE: < Note 716.32 by DLOACT::RESENDEP >
>>> I disagree. I've been noting for a long time, well probably about
>>> 5 years or so. I personally know of no instance, however serious,
>>> where anyone with any decision-making power has monitored a VAX
>>> Notes conference and initiated any action because of it. That doesn't
>>> mean it hasn't happened, but if it has it was well hidden.
I *DO* know of such an instance. The AUSTRALIA notesfile was closed
down by the SPMC (South pacific management committee) when people
started complaining too publicly about management policies. Some
of the chief critics have since resigned from digital because their
complaints turned out to be "career limiting".
Steve
|
716.37 | Back to the future.. | DR::BLINN | Now for something completely different.. | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:32 | 6 |
| Reply .34 (and several others, as well) slipped in while I was
writing .35. If anyone can obtain a transcript of what was said
in the DVN (Steve Kallis, do you have any contacts?), it might be
helpful if you could post it here.
Tom
|
716.38 | Lets help to kill this crazy idea | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:42 | 57 |
| I have just returned from watching the DVN. A little of my concern
has been lifted but not much.
First of all Ken was not present for the drug section. There was
a high level lady from personnel and a lawyer. The personnel person
said all the right things and she sounded sincere. At one point
she said the drug testing would not be a widespread program.
Unfortunately the lawyer was obviously very much in favour of drug
testing and kept on implying it was no big deal.
It was stated that initially only people with security clearance
or people doing jobs that had a lot of safety concerns would be
subject to drug testing.
But I very much got the impression that this would be the thin end
of the wedge.
I myself would accept a drug testing program if the following employee
safeguards were WRITTEN into it:
o Any employee asked to be drug tested may refuse. If the employee
refused there would be no negative impact on his career at
Digital.
o If a drug test was mandated by law for a particular job (eg
working on a government contract) an employee may refuse
the drug test. Digital will then assist the employee to find
another comparable job in the company where the law didn't
force him to be drug tested. This may well include relocation
benefits.
What I liked from the DVN broadcast was that the personnel person
kept on saying that an employee should be validated by his
performance. Nobody would be drug tested out of suspicion unless
their performance indicated a possible drug problem (these weren't
the words exactly but it was something like that).
There was an audience question that I felt was very relevent at
the DVN. The question was:
Is the company evaluating the risk to an employee of a
false positive against the risk to the company of a drug abuser.
The questioner expressed the opinion that the danger to the
employee outweighed the risk to the company.
The answer was that this was one of things being evaluated. It was
very clear to me that this whole issue is still being debated at
a high level in Digital and I got the impression that there was
quite a lot of disagreement on how much drug testing should be done.
I also feel that they're at a stage where informed calm input could
be beneficial.
Therefore regarding the previous note suggesting an official letter. I think
this is an excellent idea. I would be more than happy to gather
signatures at the LKG site.
Dave
|
716.39 | | REORG::MURRAY | Chuck Murray | Fri Feb 03 1989 18:02 | 32 |
| [I had written this before .38 got in. I agree with his summary of the
discussion and with his call for explicit safeguards in any program
that does get adopted.]
------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: < Note 716.35 by DR::BLINN "Now for something completely different.." >
> Did anyone actually attend the DVN broadcast this afternoon?
>
> What did K.O. and the other senior managers have to say about
> this matter?
I attended the broadcast. I arrived about 5 minutes late (KO and Dom LaCava
were discussing the DECtop announcement and strategy), and I left just as the
host was saying "we're out of time" in the drug discussion; however, I think
I heard everything of consequence about the drug issue.
Ken and Dom didn't discuss drug testing (at least not in what I saw). That
discussion involved the corporate personnel manager, one of the corporate
lawyers, the host, and some audience members. The manager and the lawyer
tried to convey themes like: this will be very limited (only when there's
a need), DEC very much values its culture (respect for and trust of the
individual), and testing is only a minor part of an overall program aimed
at helping employees with substance abuse problems. [I'm paraphrasing, not
quoting exactly.]
Still, I couldn't help suspecting that DEC may get steamrollered into
a more widespread and intrusive program. As a previous noter remarked,
what's to stop the government from testing all VMS software engineers because
many defense-related systems run on VMS and some drug-crazed VMS engineer
might have inserted a bug? I sometimes take ibuprofen instead of aspirin --
is it indeed true that this could trigger a "positive" for marijuana use?
If so, I guess I'll just get tagged as a drug-crazed technical writer.
|
716.40 | | MU::PORTER | Exiled in Cyberia | Fri Feb 03 1989 19:53 | 14 |
| I'm not sure I understand how a stoned/whatever software engineer can
be hazardous in any case. It seems to me that any flaky code would
be pretty easily detected - it takes a clear head to implement those
really subtle bugs that show up just when you don't want them to!
On the other hand, if you want a guaranteed way to get some lousy
software, then a good way to do it would be to demotivate the workforce
by refusing to trust their judgement as to what constitutes reasonable
behaviour.
By the way, can "the tests" detect that last night I was present at
a talk in Cambridge by Timothy Leary?
|
716.41 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Fri Feb 03 1989 20:14 | 4 |
| Re: .40
I don't think the 1950's "guilt by association" has been resurrected.
Yet.
|
716.42 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Feb 03 1989 20:25 | 46 |
| Re .31:
Why on Earth do you think talking to Digital is premature? Are we
supposed to shut up and let others run our lives? Digital has
_already_ decided to test employees; we are being informed after the
fact. Digital did not talk to us, so let's start the dialogue.
The decision Digital has made is already unacceptable to some people --
how can reacting to it now be premature; are they supposed to wait and
see if Digital does something even more offensive?
Re .35:
I also saw the DVN broadcast. The two people were making all the
statements of proponents of drug testing. They showed only one sign
that Digital disliked the requirements -- a mention that Digital was
lobbying (not their word) to change the requirements. Although they
acknowledge people's objections existed, they never acknowledged their
validity. They just continued to give assurances about making the
program acceptable. They always spoke of abuse, as if a person testing
positive once is a drug abuser.
> Until we know what is actually being planned, we may well be
> brewing a tempest in a teapot.
As I said, we know some of what is planned, and it is already too much.
Additionally, on the broadcast it was mentioned that Digital is
preparing to accept drug testing demands from OTHER companies. The
"foot in the door" effect is ALREADY taking place.
> If Digital can develop a fair and equitable drug testing program (I
> understand that that's very big *IF*), are you really going to walk out
> the door if you're told to participate?
It is IMPOSSIBLE to develop a fair drug program for the simple reason
that the choice of what drugs to make illegal is political and not
scientific. EVEN IF absolutely perfect tests are used and EVEN IF it
is moral to subject people to such pressure and EVEN IF it is desirable
to let the government have so much control over people and companies,
it is STILL the case that people will be penalized because they chose
to enjoy themselves in an UNPOPULAR but SAFE manner because not
EVERYTHING the government happens to outlaw is actually bad.
-- edp
|
716.43 | And then there is... | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/RSTS/TOPS20 system support | Fri Feb 03 1989 23:21 | 20 |
|
In an effort to increase everyone's awareness of potential
implications and effects of drug testing, here goes.
What about the people who are LEGITIMATELY using prescribed medication
that WILL trigger positive results? Will the tests be able to filter
out the abuser from a non-abuser given that both take a prescribed
medication that ALWAYS registers positive?
Somehow I don't see myself being excused from the testing because
I'm taking prescribed medication that is KNOWN to trigger a
positive result. It's the same problem as before in a slightly
different light. Confusion of an over-the-counter medication with
an abused substance versus prescribed medication always generating
positive results.
The plot thickens...
Warren
|
716.44 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Sat Feb 04 1989 03:03 | 14 |
| RE: .43
That's a question *I* want answered. I'm a user of Naprosyn (same
family of drugs that John Covert mentioned) and if I tested
positive for pot and am persecuted as a result, someone is gonna
not enjoy my reaction cuz I've never smoked (ANYTHING!) in my life!
Now yes, I just might be jumping to conclusions BUT this is a
VERY serious subject and the ball is already rolling.
If they wanna take my urine they'll have to pry my cold, dead
fingers off the bottle.. (semi-smile)
mike
|
716.45 | Battling oppressive policies | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Sat Feb 04 1989 10:17 | 39 |
|
I made a vow with myself some time back. I have vowed
never to sign any forms which voluntarily waive my rights as a
citizen of a free country. This means I will never sign a
consent form which allows the company/government to search my
body for evidence of illegal activity without prior cause. This
may be a career-limiting decision, but I am far more willing to
live with that risk than I am to live with the risk of losing
my freedom because I sought security.
As an aside, I was out of town (at a customer site) when the
DVN was run, and would really appreciate it if someone would take
the time to enter the transcipt. Failing that, I will check out
the DVN videotape when it hits the shelves and do so myself. I
think it is important that we all know exactly what was said.
I agree with Eric that a letter-writing campaign may well be
the best way to get action on this issue, yet I further
acknowledge that it is against company policy to use this
(or any other Notes file) to organize such a campaign. Still,
if anyone feels like organizing such a campaign, please feel
free to contact me by E-mail at the above address. I would
definitely be interested in participating.
In my opinion, it's time to make a decision. We must decide
whether we will continue to let the government "of the people,
by the people, and for the people" continue to use its economic
clout to impose oppression upon the people. Policies such as
these, being born in the Pentagon instead of Congress, are
clearly not indicative of the will of the masses. While the
people may agree in principle that a drug-free America would be
a "good thing", most enlightened people would be opposed to
allowing our rights to be stripped from us without our consent.
When the government ceases to act in the best interest of the
people, it is up to the people to change the government. It is
our responsibility to make our opinions known.
- Greg
|
716.46 | Are you now, or have you ever been... | ATLS17::GRADY_T | tim grady | Sat Feb 04 1989 11:19 | 24 |
| This is such an emotional subject, it's difficult to comment without
risking the rath of the 'inflammatory comments' police, but here
goes. Just take this as one person's opinion:
Even if the testing was totally (100%) accurate, and could distinguish
which illicit drug was being abused (and what boat it came in on),
testing would still be an invasion of privacy, and a violation of
personal rights. Drug abuse and addiction are indeed serious problems,
but they are an illness, and should be treated as such. The problem
with testing is that the results are more typically used to treat
the LEGAL problem, and ignore the illness at best. Some recent
attempts have been made to give lip service to the medical aspects,
but the primary focus is on punishment in the name of deterence.
On top of all of this is the social stigma of being labelled a
drug abuser -- the same kind of stigma that people in organizations
like A.A. have been trying to fight for decades.
The bottom line: testing is unfair, and should not be allowed in
a society that is too immature to handle the results properly.
The end does not justify the means. Life just isn't that simple,
kids.
|
716.47 | Random thoughts | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Sat Feb 04 1989 12:53 | 29 |
| 1) IBM already does drug testing.
2) Such over the counter drugs as poppy seed buns can trip the tests.
This is in addition to statistical error false positives.
3) Random testing no, testing under probable cause, maybe.
4) Re other customers: Do we provide the religious affiliation of
personnel assigned to projects for the Near East? Do we provide
racial information on personnel for countries that might care about
this?
5) I'm non-user of almost everything (tobacco, caffeine, illegal
drugs), and a very moderate user of alcohol, and a heavy user of
sugar and carbonated water.
If mandatory testing came about my reaction might be a headache
and hunger which would cause me to take an over-the-counter drug
pain reliever and have a poppy seed bun in the presence of the pee
watcher. (What are they going to do with 100% positives?)
6) I have a urine test while in the US Army "many" years ago under
mild compulsion. It's not an error I'd be likely to repeat.
7) DEC's interest in my personal life should be limited to effects
on the job. They should be able to tell me that I am not performing
as expected and even remind me about EAP, but not randomly test.
/s/ Jim Williams
|
716.48 | Am I being totally silly??????? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Sat Feb 04 1989 12:54 | 19 |
| There's another issue here. Maybe most of you will consider it stupid;
maybe my being female makes it more important to me than to the male
contributors to this note string. The issue is the indignity of being
forced to urinate into a bottle in front of a complete stranger. I
don't mean to trivialize the larger ethical and moral issue of
mandatory drug testing; I've made my feelings clear about that. But
even my doctor gives me privacy when I have to give a urine sample.
Although I believe *any* mandatory drug testing is clearly
unconstitutional, I could deal with a blood test a *whole lot* better
than the demeaning methods in widespread use today.
In fact, if (a) a blood test instead of a urine test were a valid
option, and (b) I were assured I would never be asked to take a
test unless I exhibited suspicious behaviour or otherwise made the
company feel I might be a user -- if those two things were made
a part of Digital's drug testing program, then I not only could
live with it. I would support it.
Pat
|
716.49 | Employee Communications Problem | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Sat Feb 04 1989 14:48 | 49 |
| I have a problem with the employee communications process(es) involved
here.
Let me start off with a simpler example: A school principal told the
executive committee of a PTA (Parent Teachers Assn) that a proposal was
being made to terminate a program (truthfully). The principal also
asked that the exec cmte. not discuss this with the parents so the
parents would not be "prematurely" alarmed with this proposal. The
executive cmte. complied.
At the school board meeting (the seat of real power), the principal
stated that the proposal had been discussed with the exec cmte. of the
PTA. LEAVING THE IMPRESSION THAT THE PARENTS WERE INFORMED AND ABLE
TO PETITION THE MEMBERS OF THE SCHOOL BOARD IN OPPOSITION TO THE
PROPOSAL IN THE INTERVENING THREE WEEKS.
Back to Digital. With electronic mail, distribution lists, DVN's and so
forth, it's so much more complicated. I can't tell you where the Weiss
memo of January 6, 1989 stopped on its way to my desk. I ask you, did
anyone _not_ in Weiss's organization get the memo directly? I want to
thank DINSCO::FUSCI for posting the memo, I wouldn't have the guts to
do it.
I didn't receive a notice of the drug testing discussion DVN either.
Yet I am sure that senior management thinks that employees have been
informed and are taking whatever steps they should in response. So,
has this been announced? In 1989, what constitutes a timely
announcement to all employees, anyway?
Something that's missing from the quaint discussion of the Digital
culture is the notion that we are all employees with the same need for
information.
It may be convenient for managers to withold news that's sure to spark
controversy like JEC, car plans, and now drug testing, but
employee-to-employee, these policies affect all of us and it's wrong
(in the Digital cultural sense of the word) to allow a clique of
managers to be "in the know" and keep the rest of the employee
population in a state of confusion, relying on rumors and notes.
This little episode for me is the incident that has turned my mind
around on the need for some employees of the corporation to assume
direct roles in employee advocacy. Trust is a two-way street and my
trust looking up into the management pyramid is beginning to erode.
By the way, I don't care one way or the other re drug testing, but I
don't like the precedent this creates regarding employee
communications.
|
716.50 | | MU::PORTER | Exiled in Cyberia | Sat Feb 04 1989 15:29 | 8 |
| re .44: naprosyn gives a false positive? oh great, one twinge in
my big toe and it's out i go...
--
one thing, though: at least they'll have to force you to pee in
a bottle in a kind, gentle manner.
|
716.51 | Let's speak up *now* | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sat Feb 04 1989 16:24 | 92 |
| Re: .30 -- edp
I agree; even if Digital never implements a drug testing program, or if the
program turns out to be reasonable, it's important to make employees' views
known to management. I'll send you mail off-line.
Re: .33 Rich
> >> What effect do you think it would have on DEC's profitibility if 20%
> >> of the engineering force refused to undergo drug testing and were
> >> fired/resigned?
>
> Gee, I don't know, but given that elsewhere I've read where DEC has
> lowered hiring rates to keep costs under control, and that Wall Street
> liked that, what do you think?
>
> Might also be a good way to have more cooperative engineers, as the
> rabble-rousers would leave.
I think some of the rabble-rousers who would leave would include some of the
more creative and productive people working for DEC (I modestly exclude myself
;^) ), so 20% of the engineering force being fired or resigning for refusing to
take a drug test would hurt DEC far more than a 20% lay-off. In addition,
many people (like you, maybe) who went along with the test would become more
receptive to outside job offers.
Re: .35 Tom
> Think carefully about your positions on this matter.
I have.
> If Digital can develop a fair and equitable drug testing program
> (I understand that that's very big *IF*), are you really going to
> walk out the door if you're told to participate?
It depends on the policy. To me, "fair and equitable" means (a) drug testing
would only be done if there were probable cause that an employee had been
working under the influence of drugs, and (b) due consideration would be
given to respecting the privacy of the employees tested.
If Digital developed a drug testing program that did not meet those tests,
and I were forced to take a drug test, then yes, with deep regret, I'd walk out
the door. If you're interested in my reasons, see note 29.2 in
DLOACT::HUMANISM.
> Especially if Ken Olsen and the other senior managers are the first
> to be tested?
That wouldn't be relevant to my decision, but it might influence my opinion
of Digital after I'd left.
> I have a very strong objection to inflammatory rhetoric, the use
> of language chosen to create controversy, and other tactics that
> generate lots of heat but shed little light.
>
> I don't own this conference, but I do own a responsibility to
> Digital as an employee (and as a moderator) to discourage
> statements that are not in the best interest of the corporation.
> If you feel compelled to make such statements, please make them
> elsewhere.
I think discussing this issue and making clear the consequences if Digital
implements a drug testing policy *is* in Digital's best interest. I hope
you agree.
-- Bob
================================================================================
Note 1.13 Introduction 13 of 13
HUMAN::CONKLIN "Peter Conklin" 239 lines 27-MAR-1988 22:31
-< Introduction >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Speak what's on your mind, even if it's a complaint or criticism of
someone, some group, or the company as a whole.
.
.
.
This conference is moderated by a group of volunteers. We don't expect
to do much if any "moderating", as we trust that commonsense and
prudence will prevail without intervention by the moderator. Therefore,
we do not feel that any rules need to be made. If this trust be
violated, however, we reserve the right to "do what is right"
considering circumstances.
.
.
.
Lest it needs be said, we will resist attempts at censorship or
harrassment by anyone.
|
716.52 | Everyone's enlisting in the War on Drugs. | YUPPIE::JENNINGS | I may be EASY, but I'm not CHEAP! | Sun Feb 05 1989 17:58 | 14 |
| re .49:
Pat, I also don't like the way this thing has been communicated.
Several of the people on the list were Southern Area (and some were
SouthEast District) managers, yet the first I heard of this was from
this notes file. (In case you haven't guessed, I'm in the SED).
Given the near hysteria that our elected officials are making over the
'drug war', I don't think that any company that does any sort of
business with any federal, state or even local governments will be able
to escape this sort of thing for long. It just happens to be 'in'
right now to be 'tough' on drug abusers.
Dave
|
716.53 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Sun Feb 05 1989 18:26 | 12 |
| I'm sorry I did not learn of the DVN broadcast till it was past. As a
unit manager within Field Service corporate support, I am frequently
asked to send people on site to diagnose and repair software defects.
Just this week, I was asked to provide support to a task force to
determine service strategy alternatives for highly secure environments.
Where do I learn of the potential of drug testing for my employees? In
a notes conference! With Harvey Weiss directing my employees to
come and talk with me about potential drug testing, I feel ill prepared
to answer their (very legitimate) questions.
Marge
|
716.54 | Digital drug testing is a bad idea | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Sun Feb 05 1989 19:13 | 60 |
| Re:
> Where do I learn of the potential of drug testing for my employees? In
> a notes conference!
You may laugh but more and more, notes conferences are becoming the
most timely and accurate sources of information about what is going
on in the company. I wouldn't be surprised if more people learnt
about this drug testing nonsense through this note than through
the DVN.
Even though notes conferences may not be 'official' channels I'll
take them anyday over the slow 'official' channels. I especially
like this notesfile because it gives employees a chance to band
together and give their input to policies that are still in the
making.
I believe that in the long run the implementation of this drug testing
policy, without adequate written protection for employees rights,
will be bad for the company as well as potentially employees to
the charge of 'no smoke without fire' if they:
a) Refuse a mandatory drug test.
or
b) Get hit by a false positive.
Personally I believe that the only time a company should consider
drug testing an employee is if that employee's performance on the
job is not up to the required level and the supervisor suspects
that drug abuse is the reason. Even then I don't believe that is
the best way to go about the problem. I think the lack of adequate
performance is the thing that should be addressed by the supervisor
and there is a proscribed policy for corrective action. Of course
the supervisor may well say to the employee that he suspects that
the inadequate performance is due to a drug problem and suggest
means to the employee of getting help. But I maintain that it is
no business of an employer whether an employee takes drugs or doesn't.
The employer should only be concerned about the performance level
of the employee on the job.
Mark my word if drug testing becomes the norm it won't be long before
there is testing for alcohol, tobacco or anything else that at that
time is out of vogue.
In my view an employer/employee relation should go no further than
'a fair days's work for a fair day's pay'. Digital should not take
on the responsibility of a law enforcement agency. In theory law
enforcement agencies are responsible to elected representatives,
Digital and corporations are not and nor should they be.
Also this drug testing thing is putting more power in Digital's
hands than is currently in the hands of a law enforcement agency.
Today a policeman cannot walk up to a j-random person in the street
and drug test them. In order for that to happen a law would need
to be passed. So why should a corporation be allowed to do what
a law enforcement agency is not empowered to do?
Dave
|
716.55 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Sun Feb 05 1989 20:15 | 11 |
| Well, in fairness to my "chain of command", David, they were busy
playing musical organization boxes since that memo was issued... no
doubt it was not uppermost in their minds to make sure it got
circulated. :^)
In one respect, I'm glad that this is being presented for what it is, a
business decision. If it were a program in support of employee health,
I imagine it would have come out of Health Services, not government
marketing.
Marge
|
716.56 | So what was said in the DVN broadcast? | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Mon Feb 06 1989 08:14 | 3 |
| Was any hard news presented in the DVN broadcast?
Alfred
|
716.58 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 06 1989 09:44 | 9 |
| Re .56:
The "hardest" facts I can recall from the broadcast were: Digital has
already agreed to drug testing, and employees will be told more
beginning in a month or so and continuing throughout spring and summer.
The rest was basically fluff.
-- edp
|
716.59 | I hope this whole thing blows over, but just in case... | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Feb 06 1989 09:52 | 43 |
| Re: .35 Tom (again)
> Especially if Ken Olsen and the other senior managers are the first
> to be tested?
What would really impress me would be if Ken Olsen and the other senior
managers took my position and refused to submit to the test on moral grounds.
Wouldn't *that* send a message to Washington -- Ken Olsen being fired for
refusing to take a drug test! ;^)
Re: .51 (me)
What I forgot to mention is that if I were asked to take a drug test because
I was working on a particular project, I'd first ask to be reassigned to a
project where drug testing wasn't a requirement. It's only if taking the test
and being fired were the only choices that I'd choose to be fired -- leaving
Digital would be my last resort.
Hopefully I'm getting excited over nothing and the drug testing policy will
turn out to be completely reasonable. I'll just have to wait and see.
I wonder if Digital could satisfy the "drug-free work environment" clause
by having every employee sign a statement saying that they don't take drugs
on the job or come to work under the influence of drugs?
Re:.57 Monty
> Regarding actual implementation: Remember the old bumper sticker
> from the '60's: "What if they held a war and nobody showed up?"?
> Well, I'd say that if everybody popped a couple of ibuprofen and
> ate some poppy seeds on their way to their drug test (or better
> yet, AT the test!), and half the workforce tested positive,
> management/government would have to think hard about relying on
> those results.
I think it would be better if everyone simply refused to take the test, rather
than taking the test and testing positive. Even if you didn't take the test
there'd be a suspicion that you'd been taking illegal drugs; if you took the
test and failed it would be ten times worse. I suspect that your record
would say that you were fired for failing a drug test, and it wouldn't say
that you'd eaten poppy seeds just before taking the test.
-- Bob
|
716.60 | Must have compensation for false-positives | PRGMUM::FRIDAY | Patience averts the severe decree | Mon Feb 06 1989 10:55 | 7 |
| Any drug-testing program mandated by Digital should include guarantees
that if an employee tests false-positive, and can substantiate it,
that the employee is totally reimbursed for all costs (including
lost time, etc) that the employee experienced as a result of having
to prove the test false-positive.
Rich
|
716.61 | | LYRIC::QUIRIY | | Mon Feb 06 1989 10:59 | 48 |
|
Re:.57 Monty
I like your idea. I take ibuprofen at a relatively high dose for a
few days every month, and as far as I'm concerned I can't live
without it. (That's an exaggeration, but I sure as heck wouldn't be
at work without it.)
Re:.59
> I think it would be better if everyone simply refused to take the
> test, rather than taking the test and testing positive.
Me too, but everyone will not refuse to take the test. I'm willing
to bet that there is some number of people -- yes, people right here
in our lovely company -- who think drug testing is OK, and I'd bet
there are some who even think it's a good idea.
> Even if you didn't take the test there'd be a suspicion that you'd
> been taking illegal drugs; if you took the test and failed it
> would be ten times worse.
Yup, if you refused to take the test, you'd be considered suspect.
How does taking the test and having it result in a false positive
because of ibuprofen or poppy seeds make it "ten times worse"? You
submitted. You didn't resist. You were compliant. You showed
"honorable intent" or some such thing. You said, before voiding
into the bottle (if there is no official on-paper questionaire
asking about drugs and foods consumed), "I heard that some over the
counter and prescription drugs, and some common foodstuffs can
result in a false positive reading. I take ibuprofen regularly and
I'd like you to know that I took some this morning." (Or, "I love
poppy seed cake and had some for breakfast today.")
> I suspect that your record would say that you were fired for
> failing a drug test, and it wouldn't say you'd eaten poppy seeds
> just before taking the test.
Yow! I think you're jumping to conclusions here. They're going to
fire someone for a false positive?! These are the facts as I see
them: Ibuprofen is my painkiller of choice, and the only one that
works under certain circumstances. Taking ibuprofen can result in
a FALSE positive. If someone wanted to interpret that false
positive as a true positive, and fire me, they'd have a fight on
their hands. There's no way I'd allow myself to be fired for a
false test result.
CQ
|
716.62 | | WKRP::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), SWS, Cincinnati | Mon Feb 06 1989 11:02 | 22 |
| re: scope
I'm sure this will expand to more than the GSG area. In the field,
we are being pressured by some customers to either (a) allow testing
of individuals assigned to efforts for these customers, or (b) to
provide evidence of such testing in-house.
Once we "give-in" to the DoD, a precedent will exist, wherein if
any customer desires to include such conditions as part of a contract,
Digital will surely oblige (after all, then it's a business decision,
not a moral/ethical one).
re: validity
The single most relevant point to the invalidity of testing hasn't
yet been brought forward. Most of the substances which would be
tested for have a fairly short time-span (days) during which their
presence can be detected. Unless the policy is one of surprise
testing, it's easy to generate a false *negative* reading by the
simple act of abstinance for the appropriate period prior to the testing.
Dave
|
716.63 | Oh, I hadn't thought of it that way | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Feb 06 1989 12:26 | 10 |
| Re: .61 CQ
Hmmm, you have a point there (that it would be hard to fire you if you could
prove it was a false positive). However, I object to the test itself, not
just the chance of a false positive. If it comes down to taking the test or
getting fired I'll keep that idea in mind, but the "crucifiction complex" in
me says that I should take as firm a stand as possible against what I see as
governmental tyranny.
-- Bob
|
716.65 | | MU::PORTER | Exiled in Cyberia | Mon Feb 06 1989 13:00 | 8 |
| Re .63, others.
I agree. Whilst issues such as the accuracy of the test, compensation
for false accusation, privacy during sample collection, and so forth, are
very important, I think the main issue is simply whether your employer
has the moral right to act this way.
dave
|
716.66 | Shooting only causes problems | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Mon Feb 06 1989 13:16 | 24 |
| Re: .64
> -< bunch of drug pushin wimps >-
I am against drug testing in the workplace, but I am neither
a drug pusher or a wimp, and I take great offense at being
called a `drug pushin wimp'.
> If you flunk you have 1 day to turn in your supplier, and then
> you are shot.
Why do you want to kill people who had a headache and took an
over-the-counter pain killer before the drug test? Or people
who had a false positive for any number of other reasons (such
as a prescription medication)? Or people who are implicated
because of an error in processing the drug test?
A positive result on a drug test doesn't demonstrate that a
person has taken illegal drugs. Even if they are an addict, it
would be more productive to help them overcome their addiction
rather than shoot them. Corpses can't become productive members
of society.
B.J.
|
716.67 | | DLOACT::RESENDE | Pickled tink! | Mon Feb 06 1989 15:51 | 20 |
| Re: other customers requesting this as a precedent
Years ago in the Southern Area, this very request (drug testing) was made by a
large customer. At that point, I understand that Digital management made the
decision to politely "say No". It almost went the other way. And this was
back circa 1985-6, long before the "drug crisis" became as hot a topic as it is
today. I was shocked that this would be considered back then, and even more so
that it is now.
Re: logistics of taking the test
Wonder what would happen if we all went in to give the test, and repeatedly
just couldn't produce a sample ... :-) Well, it's just a thought.
Seriously, this issue demands calm, reasoned responses by employees to their
management; not hot, emotional ones, although many of us feel strongly about
it.
Tell me more of this policy noted a few replies back that notes is not a
mechanism for staging such things? That's something I've never heard about.
|
716.68 | One who's been tested! | ESD19::MOSER | Have �VAX, Will Travel | Mon Feb 06 1989 19:15 | 27 |
| >Re: logistics of taking the test
>
>Wonder what would happen if we all went in to give the test, and repeatedly
>just couldn't produce a sample ... :-) Well, it's just a thought.
I was involved in drug testing for the Air Nat. Guard. Let's just they were
buying the coffee... You bought your own soda... ;-) Even so, some
people didn't get done with the test till almost after lunch...
As too the rest of the issues, I felt very good about the Air Forces saftey
mechanisms. About the only way I could see the process messing up was if one
of the Doctors was deliberatly trying to sabatoge your sample and even them it
would have been *very* tough for them to do it.
As for false positive's, I believe the system was designed to take those into
account also although I don't remember the details of this issue.
Bottom line is if you want to protest the tests on moral grounds then so be it,
but I think the procedural part of it is very safe (assuming Digital's test has
the same safeguards as the Air Force test)
As an aside, the idea of taking substances known to trigger a false positive is
dangerous. If I were administering the test the thought that said person was
trying to mask a "real" positive result would certainly cross my mind and I
also wouldn't be inclined cut that person any slack. If you don't want to take
the test, then don't, and take the consequences or fight them as you desire, I
wouldn't recommend playing childish games...
|
716.69 | Before I get blasted %^) | ESD19::MOSER | Have �VAX, Will Travel | Mon Feb 06 1989 19:21 | 6 |
| >As an aside, the idea of taking substances known to trigger a false positive is
>dangerous.
Of course, I did not mean to imply that legitimate use of these items should be
stopped, I was referring to the suggestion that one should start popping them
in front of testers...
|
716.70 | don't let the door hit you... | WR2FOR::BOUCHARD_KE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2/T7 | Mon Feb 06 1989 20:15 | 5 |
| I've got a feeling that if a number of employees (even a large number)
threatened to quit or actually *did* quit over drug testing,there
would be a lot of people banging at the door ,eager to get hired.I
really don't think DEC would have a difficult time replacing those
people,provided,of course,that DEC *wanted* to replace them.
|
716.71 | Toffler was right | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Mon Feb 06 1989 21:13 | 8 |
| re: DEC, the universe and everything
Up until lately, I thought that "future shock" was just an interesting
idea, that Digital was a place that I could work at as long as I was
productive and felt like it, and that most people thought that there
were some things worth more than money.
-joe tomkowitz
|
716.72 | | MU::PORTER | Gout-sufferers against the test! | Mon Feb 06 1989 21:34 | 11 |
| By the way, I presume that those who think that random urine-
or blood-testing is ok will also consent to allow DEC Security
to walk into their houses, any time day or night, with no
advance notice, in order to search for drugs?
No? Why not? Body-fluid testing is not adequate in the war against
drugs (sic) since it cannot be administered frequently enough to
be certain you're getting everyone that there is to be got. Better
have a little pro-active (also sic) seaching to be sure. Why not?
Isn't it worth it for a drug-free society?
|
716.73 | small medical nit | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Feb 07 1989 09:01 | 8 |
| On popping Advil, etc., before taking a test _at_ the test:
Well, it might not hurt, but it takes time for that stuff to get
into your bloodstream, through your kidneys, and out into your
urine, if that's the test being used. That would have to be factored
in.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
716.74 | Who could be against testing school-bus drivers? | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Tue Feb 07 1989 09:10 | 19 |
| I have been in this country now many many years. I am really impressed
how people value their own freedoms and rights. Unfortunately, they
conveniently forget to respect and fight for other people's freedom or
rights. On the contrary, they almost always seem to be just too eager
to sacrifice them for the ``good of the society''.
Most people have no objections when drug testing is being mandated for
the ``other group of people''. Let that group be athletes, air-line
pilots, truck-drivers or school teachers. None of the software engineers
or engineering managers raised their collective eye brows. We start raising
hell only when _we_ are forced to pee in bottle in front of a stranger.
Drug-testing will not start from the top down i.e. you will not see
televised peeing in the bottle by the top law makers or by the top
managers, it will start from the bottom up. We will be too smug to
raise an objection when the person who drives our digital truck or the
person who cleans our office is being forced to urinate in the bottle.
- Vikas
|
716.75 | | SMOOT::ROTH | Support bovine computer literacy | Tue Feb 07 1989 09:43 | 40 |
|
Re:< Note 716.72 by MU::PORTER "Gout-sufferers against the test!" >
> By the way, I presume that those who think that random urine-
> or blood-testing is ok will also consent to allow DEC Security
> to walk into their houses, any time day or night, with no
> advance notice, in order to search for drugs?
What is in my house is none of DEC Security's business. Digital does,
however, have a valid concern if while I am doing my Digital-assigned
duties I am impaired by or am under the influence of a chemical
substance. As someone previously noted, they were nearly electrocuted
by someone with a 'buzz' on. I don't want anybody intoxicated while 'on
duty' at Digital. Do you?
It is a separate issue of whether employee drug testing is a valid
method to reduce the occurance of on-the-job drunkenness/high/buzzed/etc.
> No? Why not? Body-fluid testing is not adequate in the war against
> drugs (sic) since it cannot be administered frequently enough to
> be certain you're getting everyone that there is to be got. Better
> have a little pro-active (also sic) seaching to be sure. Why not?
> Isn't it worth it for a drug-free society?
I seriously doubt Digital desires to interfere with anybody's
after-work activities. I feel that they do have an interest in seeing
it not become a part of their job at Digital.
Fortunately or unfortunately (depends on your viewpoint) chemical
testing of employees will reveal whether a particular chemical is
present- it does not measure the employees' fitness for performing
their job. The ramifications of this are beyond the charter of this
notesfile and are (probably) best taken to another notesfile (likely
PEAR::SOAPBOX).
Lee
p.s. Close to the topic at hand... opening my dictionary at random to
check spelling on a word revealed a picture of a small plant... it was
captioned 'hemp'.
|
716.76 | Does the test show under the influence, or past use? | STAR::GRIFFIN | | Tue Feb 07 1989 09:49 | 37 |
|
If someone has a few drinks in the evening, maybe even gets a
little drunk, by the next morning there are usually no side affects
that would leave the person incapacitated. I am of course discounting
the hang-over since that usually is just a headache and does not limit
the persons ability to function.
How does it work with drugs? If someone gets a "buzz" on does that
"buzz" make an individual incapable of performing any normal duty for
days, weeks?
I know of some people that indulge in marijuana and I can honestly
saw I never know when they have a buzz on. I have also seen it affect
people in such a way that they look like they are totally drunk, but
when I see these people the next day they look straight as an arrow.
So my question is this, does the test show that someone is under
the influence NOW (like a drunk driving test), or does it say that the
individual "has had a controlled substance within the past six months"?
Personally, if the test shows that someone is under the influence
at the time a job is supposed to be done, then take whatever steps are
necessary to insure that the job is done correctly. Even if this means
terminating the individual.
However, if the test says that sometime in the past the person used
a narcotic, then that is none of anyone else's business. The only thing
I can liken this to is suppose one day they decide to outlaw alcohol,
if I have a few drinks in my home, I would affect noone but myself.
Noone should care that I had a drink or too. But if I got drunk and
then went to drive a car, there is a real danger to everyone else on
the road and I should be taken of the road (maybe even permanently by
the revoking of my license forever).
I believe a person has a right to do whatever they want as long as
it does not impact, or affect, anyone else. I believe this is called
freedom of choice?
|
716.77 | I don't want testing of school-bus drivers | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Tue Feb 07 1989 10:11 | 18 |
| Re: .74
> Most people have no objections when drug testing is being mandated for
> the ``other group of people''. Let that group be athletes, air-line
> pilots, truck-drivers or school teachers. None of the software engineers
> or engineering managers raised their collective eye brows. We start raising
> hell only when _we_ are forced to pee in bottle in front of a stranger.
Speak for yourself--you shouldn't say `none'. I am a software
engineer who has previously objected to drug testing for other
groups, and there are others in DEC who have also objected.
However, your first sentence is correct. Most people,
unfortunately, don't worry about how the loss of freedoms
and rights for other groups could affect their own freedoms
and rights in the future.
B.J.
|
716.78 | If you try to bluff, Digital might just call you on it! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Tue Feb 07 1989 10:53 | 15 |
| RE: .70
> I've got a feeling that if a number of employees (even a large number)
> threatened to quit or actually *did* quit over drug testing,there
> would be a lot of people banging at the door ,eager to get hired.I
> really don't think DEC would have a difficult time replacing those
> people,provided,of course,that DEC *wanted* to replace them.
Agreed. Refusing to take the test as a threat is *not* an intelligent way
to approach this. Those who refuse to be tested should be fully prepared for
this to end their Digital career, permanently. You don't have to *like*
the idea, but you better be ready to accept it. If you aren't prepared for
that then you better head for the bathroom... (^:
Pat
|
716.79 | More on DVN broadcast | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Tue Feb 07 1989 10:59 | 30 |
| I'd like to add a little bit more about the DVN broadcast.
In response to the "invasion of privacy/rights" issues of drug testing,
the lawyer likened it to no different than informing your employer of
your social security number, home phone number, and other private like
information of that sort. A specious analogy if there ever was one.
An attitude like that makes me a little nervous.
An audience member asked some of the questions posed here. Namely,
-what kind of test, urine or blood
-what about the realiability of the laboratories doing the testing
-will a drug test identify drugs taken only recently (and how recently)
or ever
-what will the criteria be for asking an employee to take the test
Right now, Digital has no answers for these questions, except for the
last one. The criteria is - a performance problem where substance abuse
is suspected. It's the "suspected" part that could be quite subjective.
So right now they haven't even decided if it will be a urine or blood
test. A task force has been formed out of Health Services to investigate
the above issues and report back to the corporation with recommendations.
A new policy surrounding this is supposed to come out in mid-March. For
now it appears that the testing to be initially instituted will be specific
to that required by the new DoD regulation. When asked if the testing
might expand into the general employee population, the corporate employee
relations representative said that this would not be the case now. The
"now" was subtle, but it was there.
Donna
|
716.80 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:26 | 25 |
| Re .74:
> Most people have no objections when drug testing is being mandated
> for the ``other group of people''. . . . None of the software
> engineers or engineering managers raised their collective eye brows.
You can't really believe that, do you? At first, I thought it was just
a lie, flat and simple, but maybe you really believe that view?
Ever read Soapbox? Want to tell me no software engineer or manager has
ever objected there? Want to tell me no engineer or manager has ever
expressed disapproval in any other forum?
The people who say they would quit before testing have PREVIOUSLY
objected when they decided to work for Digital instead of companies
that WOULD do drug testing. I completely excluded IBM from my job
search simply because of their corporate mentality, as reflected in
things from their dress code to the design of their products.
So the attitude you are seeing now is not hypocritical nor is it a
change -- these people wouldn't work for other companies they didn't
like and they're saying they won't work for Digital if it changes.
-- edp
|
716.81 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:36 | 31 |
| re Soliciting and Notes Conferences:
It would certainly not be a violation of policy to use this conference to
solicit employees to make their opinions on a matter of importance known to
Digital Management. It *may* be a violation of policy to use a conference
to solicit employees to make their opinions known to parties outside the
company.
re Purpose of the Testing
If the only testing at Digital will be testing explicitly required by 252.223-
0000, then the lawyers will have to interpret the clause to determine what its
scope is. That's why I asked someone who might have access to the clause (or
who might take the time to go to the library and look it up in the Federal
Register) to post it here. Until we see it, we're speculating.
Without reading the clause, we can't say for sure that the clause only requires
Digital to make sure no employees have drug related performance problems. We
can't say for sure that the clause only applies to employees directly related
to the contracts.
Based on the strong anti-drug statements made by both major U.S. political
parties, I expect the intent of the clause is to make sure that drug users be
identified and punished. Digital will not be allowed to have drug users, even
highly productive drug users, in its employ if Digital wishes to continue to do
business with the government and most other government contractors.
The tests will identify drug use within the past several days, weeks, or months,
depending on the characteristics of the drug, the test, and your metabolism.
/john
|
716.82 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:58 | 16 |
| There is more to this kind of testing than just drug testing. There is
also a risk (although I think it is very small at this point) that other
tests could be performed at the same time. For example, a urine sample
from any female employee could be subjected to a pregnancy test. The
information obtained could be very helpful in cutting health insurance
costs. How about the converse - a female who previously tested pregnant
showing up non-pregnant? This is a real can of very slimy worms and should
be closed before any of them get out!
Further, since there is a risk associated with the test and a violation
to the rights of the individual, shouldn't there be some compensation for
submitting to a drug test? How about a month's pay? How about jacking up
the price of any contract that requires employees be tested for drugs by
50%? How much is it worth to clean up the drug problem? Blast it, all
of you in favor of indiscrimenant drug testing, put your money where your
mouth is!
|
716.83 | Tone it down.. | DR::BLINN | Doctor Who? | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:16 | 5 |
| RE: .82 -- You're using inflammatory rhetoric, and you're showing
an incredible lack of trust in Digital's senior management to try
to "do what's right".
Tom
|
716.84 | | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:31 | 5 |
|
How about random alcohol testing (breathalizer) for all senior management
upon returning from lunch! 8^)
|
716.85 | testing vs contracts | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:31 | 14 |
| Re: .83 and .82
I regarded .82 as considerably less inflammatory than several earlier
notes. And it is *always* reasonable to ask what could be the side
effects from any given policy.
Which do you suppose "Digital's senior management" rates as the higher
priority: drug testing or contracts? The already-announced drug
testing program, however limited today, has answered that question. So
much for "do the right thing" when contracts are involved.
DEC may be much better than other companies, but man's powers of
rationalization can overcome almost any obstacle, particularly when
there is money behind it.
|
716.86 | Tell it to your Congressman, not your employer! 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:38 | 13 |
| Digital is doing the right thing...for Digital (the company)
Consider it part of your salary continuation plan.
This is a business, not a democracy. If you want to change the civil
liberties infringment of drug testing, you must do so in the democracy,
not the business. Digital can only assume that if the US gov't says
"thou shalt be free from drugs" to all of its vendors, then it must be
because that is what "We the People" want.
Don't blame Digital for our own political ineptness.
Bob
|
716.87 | dry lunch! | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:38 | 5 |
| Re: .84
Testing for alcohol after lunch? The analogy is WONDERFUL!, especially
in view of Digital's 30-odd year policies on alcohol. And alcohol is a
drug, however licit.
|
716.88 | "It's not my problem?" | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:45 | 11 |
| Re: .86
And don't excuse Digital from contributing to the problem by meekly
going along with whatever the government says!
Digital has extremely carefully avoided certain types of government
contracts (cost plus, et al.) for its entire life because that would
allow the government to come into Digital and have a huge say on our
accounting practices. If the company can reject contracts on that
basis, the company can surely reject contracts on the basis of a drug
testing requirement.
|
716.89 | Frightening | ARCHER::LAWRENCE | | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:47 | 29 |
|
I've read all the replies to this base note and have three points that don't
appear to be covered:
1) When I buy a toaster I check Consumer's Reports and various other sources
to insure that my choice is wise. If the company had a team of red-headed
monkeys putting those suckers together, it wouldn't make any difference to
me as long as the quality was outstanding. Do our customers really deserve
anything more than outstanding quality?
2) A few years back, when Congress was asked to undergo drug testing to 'set an
example', they nearly tore the roof of the capital building. Why should our
rights to privacy be any less valued than theirs? Certainly they are in a
position at least equal to ours in regards to national security.
3) The last, and the one that bothers me the most, is that reading these replies
brought me straight back to the days when I sat in front of a t.v. watching
the Army/McCarthy hearings. I'm old enough to remember the destruction that
man caused; in most cases to perfectly innocent people. I remember my uncle,
a minister, being TERRIFIED because 'they' might discover he'd once played
golf with Alger Hiss.
This whole subject really does frighten me. Yes, drugs are a horrible thing and
I'd like to see reasonable, legal steps taken to curb the problem. No, I do NOT
think that should include cutting holes in our Bill of Rights or the
Constitution.
Betty
|
716.90 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:56 | 23 |
| > Digital is doing the right thing...for Digital (the company)
But they are not! If they were, they would charge for the extra effort
and risks involved and there is no sign that they are doing that!
> This is a business, not a democracy. If you want to change the civil
> liberties infringement of drug testing, you must do so in the democracy,
> not the business. Digital can only assume that if the US gov't says
> "thou shalt be free from drugs" to all of its vendors, then it must be
> because that is what "We the People" want.
There are ways that a business can help -- make the civil liberties
infringements cost money. If the gov't says "thou shalt be free from drugs"
make them pay the costs, don't just give it to em cause they asked!
Re Inflammatory remarks:
Are you objecting because someone has finally suggested something that
makes sense? I have not suggested that drug testing be resisted, just that
adequate compensation be made and all the potential risks be considered.
Your suggestion that I don't trust DEC's senior management is also
misplaced. The one's I don't trust are the anonymous lower level managers
and government bureaucrats.
|
716.91 | How to pass a drug test in one easy lesson! 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:05 | 19 |
| In the "Back to Reality" and "FWIW" departments...
From past experience, DoD drug testing compliance is a one time deal for
current employees, and a mandatory part of the physical exam for new
hires. One test...non-recurring.
So if you're worried that you'll test positive, stop using drugs for 90
days, take your test, and then do whatever you've been doing once you
test clean. Without "reasonable suspicion," you won't be tested again,
and if you can't stop using drugs for a mere 90 days, then you DO have
a problem. If you CAN stop for 90 days, it a good indication that you
have less of a problem than most chain smokers, and the DoD doesn't
have to worry about you anyway.
Bob
P.S. I believe that drug testing is unconstitutional, and do not
advocate its usage. The person who made the analogy to
McCarthyism hit the nail on the head, exactly. Write your
Congressman... They do read their mail.
|
716.92 | What you don't know won't hurt you | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:16 | 16 |
| re: .83 (Tom Blinn observing that .82 showed an "incredible lack of
trust in Digital's senior management")
Tom, I wouldn't use inflamatory language, but, I think an "incredible
lack of trust in Digital's senior management" could be quite justified
by the utter failure to communicate the decision TO TEST EMPLOYEES FOR
DRUGS to all employees in a prompt and uniform way. This is matter of
calculated insensitivity or incompetence. Pick one.
As employee communications problem, doesn't this bother anyone else
besides me? Think of potential for speculation if we didn't have the
original Weiss memo to reference.
What other decisions have been made already(?) that affect all
employees which we haven't been lucky enough to have leaked in a VAX
Notes conference?
|
716.93 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:39 | 14 |
| Re .83:
I don't think an incredible lack of trust is involved. Any lack of
trust would be quite credible, because abuse of authority would fit
well into established human behavior.
However, NO lack of trust is necessary for a person to simply request
additional compensation for additional requests made of them not
already in their job description. And letting a person seek guarantees
about what explorations will be made into their most private lives is
simple human decency.
-- edp
|
716.94 | Trust in management? | SBMVAX::KYLER | | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:41 | 30 |
| re .82,.83,.92
I agree that the failure to communicate the plan is a problem, but the fact
that there is a plan indicates that we cannot have faith in Digital's senior
management to "do the right thing." If we had confidence they would "do
the right thing," this discussion would not be necessary, because drug
testing would not be an issue.
re .91
The problem with testing for new hires is that there is no defense against
false positives. An employer is not required to inform an applicant why
he was turned down for a job. When a company which tests applicants finds one
positive, they will simply inform him he does not meet the qualifications.
By telling the applicant why he was turned down, they open themselves to
potential lawsuits andthe expense of re-testing.
re me
One of the main reasons I joined Digital was the "culture", "atmosphere", etc.:
the propensity to "do the right thing". If the company stops doing the right
thing, I too will find employment elsewhere. Many have said they would support
a drug testing plan which would be guaranteed to be fair and equitable. What
fair and equitable way is there to invade someone's privacy?
If I have a performance problem on the job, I expect my manager to deal with
that problem. If I have no such problem, what I do on my own time is my own
business.
- Dan.
|
716.95 | Clarification re: new hire testing | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Tue Feb 07 1989 14:28 | 19 |
|
>The problem with testing for new hires is that there is no defense against
>false positives. An employer is not required to inform an applicant why
>he was turned down for a job. When a company which tests applicants finds one
>positive, they will simply inform him he does not meet the qualifications.
>By telling the applicant why he was turned down, they open themselves to
>potential lawsuits andthe expense of re-testing.
Let me reiterate. The testing is *of* new hires, not *for* new hires. The
testing is part of the standard DIS (Defence Investigative Service) background
check prior to issuing a security clearance. If you fail the test, you are
given another different test (blood as opposed to urine.) The second test
is significantly more expensive than the first (by a factor of ten), but it
is unlikely that BOTH tests will indicate a FALSE positive. Either test
can have erronious results, but both tests used on the same individual are
highly reliable. Accuracy of the tests is no longer a valid argument against
drug testing. Invasion of privacy is the valid concern.
Bob
|
716.96 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 07 1989 15:14 | 24 |
| Re .95:
> Either test can have erronious results, but both tests used on the
> same individual are highly reliable. Accuracy of the tests is no
> longer a valid argument against drug testing.
o How accurate are the tests?
o How often will the tests give false positives when there
was no cause? (I.e., a mistake in procedure or measurement
errors, et cetera.)
o How many items are there that will _cause_ the tests to give
false positives? Note that the existence of items that cause
false positives means repeated testing does NOT increase
accuracy.
o A 95% test followed up by an INDEPENDENT (unlikely) more accurate
99% test still leaves ten thousand people being defamed and
false accused. Is ten thousand people not a valid concern? One
thousand? A hundred?
-- edp
|
716.97 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Tue Feb 07 1989 15:59 | 6 |
| Well, I'm concerned as I've mentioned, but I'm not planning to storm
the Mill on 14 July... in my experience, DEC management has been known
to do the right thing the first time or fix it later... let's give our
upper management a chance.
Marge
|
716.98 | "Probable cause" is the key | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Feb 07 1989 17:14 | 25 |
| Re: .79 Donna
>An audience member asked some of the questions posed here. Namely,
.
.
.
>-what will the criteria be for asking an employee to take the test
>
>Right now, Digital has no answers for these questions, except for the
>last one. The criteria is - a performance problem where substance abuse
>is suspected.
If that turns out still to be true 5 years from now I'll breathe a huge sigh of
relief, and...
Re: .83 Tom
> RE: .82 -- You're using inflammatory rhetoric, and you're showing
> an incredible lack of trust in Digital's senior management to try
> to "do what's right".
...admit that I should have trusted Digital's senior management to try to
"do what's right"!
-- Bob
|
716.99 | From Wonderful Robins... | ATLS17::LOWE_B | Brett Lowe @ROB (ODIXIE::LOWE) | Wed Feb 08 1989 01:11 | 62 |
| Whew!, it's amazing how many notes can build up in a few days...
I work in the Warner Robins unit mentioned in .9+. This all started
when our contract came up for renewal around the end of October. If I
remember correctly, the new 'drug-free' clause was enacted on October
8th. Our contract was the first to come up after the new clause was
enacted, but from what we heard, new ones piled up quickly. We (the
specialists) found out about the clause right at the end of our (then)
current contract. From what we were told, the clause was passed up the
line by Legal, etc. all the way to the Executive Committee pretty
quickly. We would hear one day that DEC would accept the clause, and
then not. We didn't hear the final word until early January. We
did get a copy of the memo in .9. I'll admit, I hadn't built up
the nerve to post the memo and start WW Car Plan + 1. One of the
copies of the memo included a do not forward notice.
As for anything after the memo, we have heard nothing. As for details
of the testing, we have heard nothing. We also didn't hear about
the DVN broadcast. We were told at one point that we (the unit)
might ALL get tested as a token gesture, while Digital resolves
it's final corporate policy. We haven't been tested yet....
When this all started, I searched this file and the (then) current
SOAPBOX notesfile for related info. Everything that has been stated
in this note was talked about in our unit (including the UM). Our
UM went to meetings, at least at the Area level, and even drafted
a proposal which supposedly went all the way to the top. Most of
us talked about not taking the test. But after a few weeks of steaming
discussion, most of us decided we would prefer our jobs....
But we are in a special situation, we all have security clearances.
Each of us has accepted the possiblity of getting searched, tested,
etc when we accepted the clearance. (Personnally, I remember the
searching part, but not the testing.) In our case, if we were to
refuse to be tested, and ask for a transfer, we would most likely
lose our security clearance (for refusing the test). This might
not sound important to some of you, but to those who work in a
government unit in a government district, the clearance helps....
Locally, most of the local defense contractors have some kind of
testing... TRW tests only new hires. As far as the Air Force is
concerned, military personnel can be tested if suspected, or by
order of commander... which means whenever they want. The Civil
Service personnel have no formal testing. I heard there was a bill
before Congress last year, but the civil service union (?) succeeded
in defeating it. Didn't I also hear that one of Reagan's cabinet
members told reporters that he would refuse to be tested? Even
though I have a security clearance, I don't see how my PCSA/ALL-IN-1/
DECnet managment duties provide more of a security risk than the
drunk civil service mechanic working on an F-15. (Yes I said drunk,
_visibly_ drunk... this is the civil service, where there only
two ways to get fired, shoot someone or come in two minutes late
from lunch). I would also like to see Gen Secord, Dan Quayle, and
? Towers standing next to me in the testing room.
Back to Digital... I'll try to post a copy of 'the clause' later.
I really don't see how there is any alternative (within Digital)
to the testing. There is too much Government business to throw
it to someone else. Write your Congessman...
Brett
|
716.100 | | WELCOM::NOURSE | The Tie-Dyed Side of the Force | Wed Feb 08 1989 01:55 | 28 |
| I have been working at DEC for 13 years (as of next week).
I never thought it would come to this.
Some employees will leave angrily.
Some employees will submit quietly.
Some employees will submit quietly and circulate resumes.
Some employees will submit quietly, but not work as hard as before.
Some potential employees we will never see. They will be working
for our competition.
re .35:
The key word is, "in the workplace", not at home, not on vacation.
There is no such thing as a "fair and equitable" drug testing program.
The tests are far too inaccurate for that.
re .61: (Putting up a fight if you get fired for a false positive)
That is only an option if you have *lots* of money to spend on lawyers.
Even if you do, many employees do not.
re .76:
In the case of marijuana, the tests may detect as far back as 1-2
months. They can also detect "passive" exposure, sometimes. No
more concerts, ever.
re .97:
WHAT is happening on the 14th of JULY????????????????????????
|
716.101 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Order your rathole today. | Wed Feb 08 1989 07:26 | 5 |
| The question I want to ask is this...
Does Blood test .eq. AIDS test?
Simon
|
716.102 | | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Bop 'Til You Drop | Wed Feb 08 1989 07:47 | 2 |
| July 14 = Bastille Day (when the French stormed the palace).
|
716.103 | If IBM has drug testing, digital WILL follow | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Feb 08 1989 08:41 | 30 |
| RE: .77, .80
>> for the ``other group of people''. . . . None of the software
>> engineers or engineering managers raised their collective eye brows.
Alright, I will take the "None" back from my statement. However,
replacing it with "Few" should not change the essence of it.
As both of you have pointed out, there might be some software engineers
or engineering manager who will actively oppose the drug testing by the
employer. Unfortunately, unless they are in majority and/or are
irreplaceable to digital, they will be unable to stop the impending
changes in the tolerance of drug abuse and the resultant erosion of
privacy and freedom. And, no one, including person who might have
lion's share in digital's success is irreplacable. I hope one example
is still fresh in our mind.
As far as the SOAPBOX is concerned, I think its value lies in providing
a necessary outlet for the day to day frustration to its patrons. I
doubt if members of that conference would be prepared to be judged by
their contribution there. Voicing objections in SOAPBOX is a big NOP.
To put it bluntly, just because someone can argue passionately in
the SOAPBOX is no guarantee that when the times comes he will quit digital
rather than stand by his firm conviction. Mind you, I am not saying
there aren't any, but if there are, they are very few. Please try not
to get personal and refute the argument by saying how _you_ are
different from the rest. So let's not bring the SOAPBOX in to this
discussion.
- Vikas
|
716.104 | where's the beef? | WORDS::BADGER | Follow the Sun Stream | Wed Feb 08 1989 08:59 | 24 |
| .100>
>Some employees will leave angrily.
>Some employees will submit quietly.
>Some employees will submit quietly and circulate resumes.
>Some employees will submit quietly, but not work as hard as before.
>Some potential employees we will never see. They will be working
>for our competition.
forgot a couple cases:
Some employees will submit, "no big deal".
Some employees will submit, congratulating Digital and the country for having
an effective program for eliminating drugs in our lifetime.
The last two cases seem to be characteristic of people in my group and anyone
I've talked to other than here.
The false positives are a smoke screen. What are you *really* afraid of?
What is the bottom line. And where in the constitution does it guarantee that
you can't be tested or something can't be done for the good of the country?
ed
|
716.105 | Big shots don't submit themselves for testing | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Feb 08 1989 09:01 | 12 |
| Someone brought up the issue of security clearance. I am little bit
surprised that drug testing was not linked to it. If I am not
mistaken, government has routinely asked that the contracts be worked
on only by people having certain type of clearance. Given that, the
drug testing would have formed the integral part of getting/keeping the
clearance.
Please note that I am not advocating it, just stating that _from
the government's point of view_ that would have been the easiest to
do.
- Vikas
|
716.106 | "treat everybody the same,or forget it" | FTMUDG::RAYER | Wrapped in Fiderglass | Wed Feb 08 1989 09:32 | 28 |
| Having a wife working for IBM I have all ready heard most of these
same statements. Everybody talks about quiting but when the time
comes, no one will.
The way I understand IBM drug policy is. Every 6 months the whole
plant is tested. They have nurses for the women and male nurses
for the men.(and you got it the ol pee in the bottle.) If you are
on any medication you need a Doctor's note. They havent had any-
body come up positive because of any other drug. People watch what
they do when they know they will be tested. If you come up positive
you have to go in for treatment. If you test out positive while
on treatment or afterwards you could be terminated. They also went
one further, if you are arrested for drugs or DUI and it make the
paper you could also be terminated. The first thing that comes out
in the paper is the company you work for.
In some plant company's are coming up missing memorey chips, equip.,
and other very expensive parts that people are selling to take care
of there habits.
The one thing IBM is doing that I do not agree with on drug testing
is managment is not being tested. They also put management in charge
of saying who is to be tested. I would love to be tested for drugs
and anything else the company wants as long as management on all
levels is tested to!
Yes, Iam for drug testing but set up a fare system for everybody
on all levels.
|
716.108 | | SPENDR::CLIFFORD | No Comment | Wed Feb 08 1989 10:21 | 19 |
| What is the point of most of these replies? I understand the value
of information regarding what other companies do. I understand the
value of hard information about what DEC is doing or going to do.
What is the value of debate over rightness or wrongness of drug
testing in *this* conference? If you want to convince someone of
your view then it would appear that the person you want to talk to
is your manager and so on up the line to KO. Not grunts on the line
like me who read this conference. What problem are you truing to solve?
If the problem you want to solve is ending/starting drug testing then
writing debate style notes here isn't going to do it. These are
rhetorical questions and I hope no one answers them here (send mail if
you must reply.) I just want to get people thinking about really acting
rather then just adding me-too replies.
Lets keep this topic (and conference) with a high percentage of hard
information shall we? Thanks.
~Cliff
|
716.110 | Reagan officials refused | DLOACT::RESENDE | Pickled tink! | Wed Feb 08 1989 12:12 | 6 |
| Re: >Note 716.99> -< From Wonderful Robins... >-
> in defeating it. Didn't I also hear that one of Reagan's cabinet
> members told reporters that he would refuse to be tested? Even
Yes, it was George Schultz, Secretary of State.
|
716.111 | Trust me, the check's in the mail! Sure ... | DLOACT::RESENDE | Pickled tink! | Wed Feb 08 1989 12:18 | 26 |
| Re: >Note 716.68 > -< One who's been tested! >-
> As too the rest of the issues, I felt very good about the Air Forces saftey
>mechanisms. About the only way I could see the process messing up was if one
>of the Doctors was deliberatly trying to sabatoge your sample and even them it
>would have been *very* tough for them to do it.
>
> As for false positive's, I believe the system was designed to take those into
>account also although I don't remember the details of this issue.
>
>Bottom line is if you want to protest the tests on moral grounds then so be it,
>but I think the procedural part of it is very safe (assuming Digital's test has
>the same safeguards as the Air Force test)
Yes, and that's why CBS' 60 Minutes about a year ago ran an interesting piece
on how the Air Force's testing program was rampant with erroneous results and
people were being drummed out who were not even users. The labs were
(according to CBS) making errors all over the place, and guess who paid the
price for those errors ....
Sorry, I can not put my faith in systems with such "safeguards".
Re: What to do
Again, write a lot of letters to your Congresspeople and elected
representatives. That's where this change must begin.
|
716.112 | I only saw what I saw... | ESD19::MOSER | Have �VAX, Will Travel | Wed Feb 08 1989 12:46 | 17 |
| >Yes, and that's why CBS' 60 Minutes about a year ago ran an interesting piece
>on how the Air Force's testing program was rampant with erroneous results and
>people were being drummed out who were not even users. The labs were
>(according to CBS) making errors all over the place, and guess who paid the
>price for those errors ....
Did not see said program... The way it worked was *you* personally labeled
and sealed the sample and then personally double-checked the label with the
person collecting them... The only way you could screw it up is if you forgot
your social security number (not possible for most military people!) You then
personally witnessed the sample placed in the container which was then sealed
and put in the U.S. mail directly to a third party lab. Any positve test would
result in a second more rigourous and expensive test being done...
Would be interested in how this system broke down...
/mike
|
716.113 | IBM has precedent, Digital does not. | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Bop 'Til You Drop | Wed Feb 08 1989 13:22 | 49 |
| re: .103: -< If IBM has drug testing, digital WILL follow >-
This isn't necessarily true. IBM was, for years, a very repressive
organization. Thomas Watson Sr. and Thomas Watson Jr. both ran
IBM as an organization that could and would heavily influence
employees' lives, both corporate and private. Ken Olsen, on the
other hand ran, and runs Digital as an open, flexible company which
values employees' freedom of choice. IBM used to influence very
heavily the kinds of cars an employee could drive -- even as late
as the 1970's! Can you imagine Ken Olsen telling you that you
can't drive a 1972 Chevy Malibu because "it doesn't look
professional"?!?
For what it's worth, (and as an example of a company "overriding"
the Constitutional rights of its employees), IBM used to have a policy
of _No_Alcohol_Use_ by employees. That meant that if you worked
for IBM, you could not drink alcoholic beverages _anywhere_. Not
at work, not at home, not at the IBM private country clubs, not
ANYwhere. This wasn't during Prohibition either. Tom Watson
Sr. believed in regulating nearly every aspect of his employees'
lives, including what they wore, where they socialized, what cars
they could and could not drive, etc. How's THAT for a repressive
corporate environment?
-Monty-
p.s. Before y'all ask, one of my sources is:
"A Study of Corporate Cultures in the Computer Industry -- IBM"
Prepared for
Systems and Communications
Central Quality Group
Digital Equipment Corporation
146 Main Street
Maynard, Massachusetts
by
Reesa E. Abrams, Consultant
Unicorn Consultants, Inc.
Lower Main St.
Freeport, Maine
207-865-3891
August, 1983
(Internal Use Only)
|
716.114 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Feb 08 1989 13:22 | 50 |
| I am now collecting a list of issues that exist on the matter of drug
testing. The intent is to identify each aspect of the matter which is
of concern to anybody. If there is sufficient interest, this will then
be used to determine how much concern there is for each of the various
issues. After that, all of the common concerns could be used to draft
a letter informing Digital of these issues and requesting more
information.
Below is a list of issues I have thought of or observed from others.
Please add any others to the list. Also let me know if any can be
clarified or expanded.
-- edp
Digital did not consult with employees prior to deciding to subject
them to drug testing, but were only informed after a decision to
implement some form of testing was made.
Employees are concered about what requirements Digital feels free to
place on its employees in the future.
The requirements for some employees' jobs will be changing, but there
has been no mention of offering these employees placement elsewhere in
the company if they choose not to accept the new requirements.
There is concern about what specific tests will be made and who will
have access to those tests, and for how long. There is also concern
that tests made for specific drugs will, of scientific necessity,
reveal other confidential information about employees.
There is also concern about the right of an employee to examine their
tests results, challenge them, have errors corrected promptly and
without prejudice, and have results verified by independent
laboratories.
Some employees feel this is an invasion of privacy. Does Digital feel
it is invading its employees' privacy?
There is concern about the accuracy of tests, both from measurement and
procedural errors and from consumption or use of legal and safe
products.
We would like to know who may be tested and when.
What will happen to productive employees who test positive?
As employees and stockholders, there is concern that Digital has
yielded to undue pressure and has opened the door to additional
conditions in the future.
|
716.115 | One more... | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Bop 'Til You Drop | Wed Feb 08 1989 13:33 | 12 |
| re .114:
The major (and maybe _only_) concern I have is simply this:
The concept of drug testing presumes that all employees are guilty
until proven innocent; which is the complete opposite of the
very foundation of law in this country, and against the corporate
culture with which we've become accustomed. On Page 1 of "Digital
and You", Ken Olsen writes, "We care about the rights and dignity
of all employees...".
-Monty-
|
716.116 | and another one... | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Wed Feb 08 1989 13:49 | 12 |
| RE: .114
One more for the list:
Current drug testing methods cannot determine if the person is using
drugs currently, only whether the person has used drugs sometime
in the past. I would (I think) be willing to submit to a test that
showed whether I was using drugs *at work*. The current tests can
convict based on what you did at home last weekend.
Steve
|
716.117 | We need to see what DEC agreed to do! | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Feb 08 1989 15:00 | 8 |
| > Current drug testing methods cannot determine if the person is using
> drugs currently, only whether the person has used drugs sometime
> in the past.
But isn't this what DFARS 252.223-7500 requires? That Digital test for people
who use drugs at any time, not just currently?
/john
|
716.118 | drug-free WORKPLACE | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Wed Feb 08 1989 15:29 | 14 |
| RE: < Note 716.117 by COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" >
-< We need to see what DEC agreed to do! >-
> But isn't this what DFARS 252.223-7500 requires? That Digital test for people
> who use drugs at any time, not just currently?
I have no idea what DFARS 252.223-7500 requires, but the DVN broadcast
referred to a "drug-free workplace" which in my view does NOT have
any bearing on what we do on our own time.
Steve
|
716.119 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Feb 08 1989 15:44 | 8 |
| re .118
Define "our own time." If I have a couple of sixpacks for breakfast,
is it my own time? If I show up at work half an hour later, is it
nobody's business that I'm sloshed?
Judging from the mood of the country in regard to drugs, I interpret
"drug-free workplace" as "drug-user-free workplace."
|
716.120 | "drug-user-free workplace."? | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Wed Feb 08 1989 16:21 | 11 |
| Re .119:
> Judging from the mood of the country in regard to drugs, I interpret
> "drug-free workplace" as "drug-user-free workplace."
^^^^
That returns us to the spectre of IBM forbidding employees from consuming
alcohol at any time, even when it cannot impact their work performance. Would
that dictum apply to the sacramental use of wine during religious ceremonies?
Would you include that in the definition of "drug-user-free workplace"?
/AHM/THX
|
716.121 | Some mixed feelings | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285 | Wed Feb 08 1989 16:26 | 24 |
| I'm going to disagree with .-1
To me, a drug free workplace, means that no worker is
under the influence WHILE THEY ARE AT WORK. It makes no
difference (to use alchohol as an example) whether you imbibed
on your time, or Digital's time, IF YOU ARE IMPAIRED ON
DIGITAL's TIME! (Yes, I know the testing isn't addressing
alchohol abuse, but it is a similiar situation in terms of
employee impairment.)
If you use a drug on your time, and are impairment free
on Digital's time, I couldn't care less. If you ARE impaired on
Digital's time, then I DEFINETLY DO CARE. You may subject me to
possible physical harm, you may foul up a project, or you may
present a bad image of the company to an outsider (while on
company business). All these things affect ME as well as
Digital.
As for my opinion on the testing, I am afraid of the
possible results of the testing being misinterpreted, and/or
being used in some negative way. I haven't made up my mind about
whether or not I would agree with "perfect" testing.
/s/ Bob
|
716.122 | Article from Personnel Perspectives | JAIMES::SELTZER | Richard Seltzer | Wed Feb 08 1989 16:28 | 171 |
| The following article just appeared in the Q3 issue of Personnel
Perspectives, an internal publication for Personnel people:
**********************************************************************
DIGITAL GRAPPLES WITH DRUG ISSUE
In the U.S., changes in federal laws and regulations as well as
changes in the expectations of customers and society in general
are forcing companies to rethink their policies related to
substance abuse.
Since alcohol and chemical dependencies are treatable diseases,
Digital, through its Employee Assistance Program (EAP), makes
various resources available to employees who may have a drug or
alcohol problem. Digital also has policies that cover situations
when employees have performance problems or violate the company's
expectations of appropriate conduct.
In addition, Digital has policies that deal with employee conduct
at Digital and customer work sites. The company expects
employees will conduct themselves in a safe and healthy way. The
use, possession of or distribution of illegal substances on
Digital property or on a customer site could be cause for
termination from the company.
In other words, in the U.S., Digital's practice and policy
regarding substance abuse has been:
o No illegal drugs are allowed on Digital property or at
customer sites (U.S. Personnel Policies and Procedures 6.24).
o If substance abuse is suspected of contributing to a
performance problem, managers should focus on the performance
issue (U.S. PP&P 6.21).
o Employees who seek help for chemical dependency problems are
given confidential help through EAP.
o In the event that an employee appears to be incapacitated,
managers are to work with local Digital Health Services or
occupational health resource to seek a safe and confidential
solution. Upon return to work, the employee is required to
provide an explanation and medical documentation (U.S. PP&P
4.35)
"This approach emphasizes self responsibility," notes Erline.
"Digital believes employees should be responsible for their own
behavior outside of as well as within the workplace. Individual
responsibility and trust are basic values of the company.
Digital does not attempt to oversee what employees do on their
own time."
Now multiple outside influences are pressuring the company to
commmit to instituting an effective program to ensure a drug-free
workplace. Many such requested programs include drug testing of
Digital employees.
In the U.S., state and federal laws and regulations, and the
courts' interpretations of them, are in conflict. Legal
protections for individual rights clash with requirements
intended to protect public safety and reduce demand for and
traffic in illegal drugs.
Some state laws and provisions of state constitutions guarantee a
limited right of individual privacy and may give people with
substance abuse problems the same sort of protection as people
with other kinds of handicaps. But the federal government, (and
the Departments of Defense and Transportation, in particular)
insists that under certain circumstances drug testing is
necessary for the public welfare -- for instance to ensure that
pilots and truck drivers and people with access to classified
information are not under the influence of drugs.
"At this point, it is impossible to predict how far federal
requirements will extend into the private sector," notes Paul
Henrion, staff attorney, Personnel Law Group. "We also cannot
predict whether, in the various legal challenges to these laws
and regulations, the courts will rule on the side of individual
rights, or will decide that public safety is an overriding
concern."
Right now, Digital is wrestling with these issues, trying to
develop policies and practices that remain consistent with the
company's basic values and yet meet these complex legal
requirements.
The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988, which is scheduled to become
effective on March 18, 1989, requires that federal contractors
certify to the contracting agency that they will provide a
"drug-free workplace." Some requirements of the law are:
o publish a drug policy statement notifying employees that the
unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispensation, possession
or use of a controlled substance in the workplace is
prohibited and explaining the consequences of violation;
o establish a "drug-free awareness program" to inform employees
of dangers of drug use and available treatment programs;
In addition, the Department of Defense (DoD) now requires that a
"Drug-Free Work Force" clause be added to contracts involving
access to classified information. This clause may also be
included in unclassified contracts where the DoD contracting
officer determines this is necessary. The clause requires the
contractor to institute and maintain a program that should
include: supervisory training, provisions for referral, an
employee assistance program, personnel procedures for dealing
with users of illegal drugs, and provisions for identifying
illegal drug users. It is expected that they will require drug
testing on a controlled and carefully monitored basis, where this
does not conflict with state law.
This clause does not apply to contracts for commercial products
unless there is access to classified information, but it does
apply to all applicable contracts for commercial services.
"Digital is working directly and through industry associations to
have all commerical products and services excluded," says Cyndi
Bloom, manager, U.S. Field Employee Relations. "But it now looks
probable that some Field Service and Software Service employees,
who work on contracts that require them to have government
security clearances, may have to undergo some form of drug
testing." The extent of this testing will be determined by a
number of factors, including the nature of the work the employee
performs under a specific contract, and the public health, safety
or national security risk that could result from inadequate
performance.
Similar Department of Transportation regulations, which apply for
pilots and interstate truckers, are scheduled to go into effect
in December 1989.
This complex legal situation is still in flux.
In addition to U.S. government laws and regulations, Digital has
to respond to similar pressures from a variety of major
commercial customers, including several Corporate Accounts, who
are getting very selective about who they will allow on their
premises to do work for them. Some such customers have asked us
to do drug testing of Field Service and Software Service
employees to ensure that they are "drug-free." So far, we have,
through negotiation, been able to remove such stipulations from
commercial service contracts, because of our existing policies
and practices and our clear commitment to ensure that customers
get the best possible service.
Another kind of pressure comes from communities where Digital
does business. For instance, in Greenville, S.C., and Colorado
Springs, Colo., nearly all the major companies in the area now do
do drug testing. "In other words, we're not just dealing with
changes in federal law and regulations, but rather with a
pervasive change in public attitude," observes Cyndi.
"Drug abuse has been elevated to the position of a major public
problem, and there is a growing expectation that large companies
should help in the overall effort to deal with it," adds Erline.
"This issue will be with us for years to come.
"As a company, we are coming to grips with the fact that we are
now so large that we are a microcosm of society, with all of the
problems of society at large. And also, as one of the world's
major corporations, we are highly visible and subject to public
as well as government pressure. As we reformulate our policies
to respond to these new conditions, we have to find ways to
sustain our basic values."
In this case, the crossroads in decision-making is the point
where Digital must either change its policies or turn down
important government business. Digital is now trying to
determine what changes we must make and how to implement them
fairly and sensitively. All anticipated changes will be
communicated to employees through Personnel Perspectives, MGMT
MEMO, LIVE WIRE and local newsletters as quickly as possible. In
addition, in Q4, Digital plans to distribute a Field training
package to Field Personnel and then to Field managers. Then a
Field information package is planned for employees who deal with
customers.
|
716.123 | .121 actually refers to .119, not .120 (slow typist) | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285 | Wed Feb 08 1989 16:30 | 0 |
716.124 | Did you knock on wood? | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Feb 09 1989 08:28 | 11 |
| re: < Note 716.121 by REGENT::GETTYS "Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285" >
> . . . Yes, I know the testing isn't addressing
> alchohol abuse . . .
Oh, I don't know, Bob. I don't seem to recall seeing anywhere that
alcohol testing wasn't conceivable as part of this. (Although .122
does give the first hint that the intention is to identify "illegal"
drug use.)
-Jack
|
716.125 | At first they came to get my neighbor, I didn't say a thing ... | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Feb 09 1989 08:48 | 17 |
| It is now obvious that current social pressures are demanding quick and
dirty solution to the perceived drug problem. An obvious solution is
to mandate drug testing for a section of population which is weak tp
put up a fight. Eventually more and more of the population would be
covered.
I still stand by my earlier assertion. IBM's current policies of
testing the workers but not the management is one such example. The
Transportation Secretary is advocating the drug testing of all airline
pilots and interstate truckers but even a suggestion that he should
submit himself for such a test is dismissed with outright indignation.
BUT THE AMERICAN PEOPLE STILL DON'T GET MAD ABOUT SUCH A BLATANT ABUSE
OF POWER. We have lot to lose with a drunk and womanizing Secretary of
Defence or a drugged Transportation Secretary than with a doped crazy
truck driver.
- Vikas
|
716.126 | More additions to .114 | VMSNET::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Thu Feb 09 1989 10:36 | 17 |
| Re .114:
Add:
No compensation has been offered to offset the loss of personal freedom
and increased hazard to future employment that will result from drug
testing.
No safeguards have been provided to assure that other tests that could
reveal confidential information about the employees are not added to the
drug test battery without prior notification. [For that matter, it would
help if a list of all tests to be applied, the method used, and what the
tests detect, was provided to each person tested.]
No statement about what may be done with the results of the test have been
provided. At the minimum, drug test results should be handled in accordance
with procedures for all other personal confidential information.
|
716.127 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 09 1989 10:46 | 17 |
| re .121:
I think you misinterpreted my statements in .119.
I didn't mean that "drug-free workplace" means "drug-user-free" workplace
*to me*, I meant that's what it probably means to Congress. The
mood of the country is very anti-drug. Congress knows this, and has
passed this "tough" anti-drug law. Those of you who are having
conniptions over the possibility of drug testing are a minority in
the country as a whole. As regards constitutional issues, the
Supreme Court is becoming less and less sympathetic to individual
rights, so I wouldn't expect them to overturn this law. I predict
that drug testing will become pervasive in the United States.
To those of you who find this alarming, please don't shoot the
messenger. Despite what you may think, I haven't made up my mind
about the propriety of drug testing.
|
716.128 | U.S. only ? | RDGENG::DUNN | | Thu Feb 09 1989 10:58 | 15 |
| re .114
I'd like a statement as to how wide any possible testing net
might be. Are we talking about the U.S. only, or a Corporate
policy ?
Here in sunny Reading, as everywhere else in non-U.S. land,
(which now makes up the majority of the Corporations's
business) we are strictly controlled by Export Licensing rules
as one example. But in my opinion, it would border on paranoia
for Digital to attempt to make drug-testing a world-wide issue !
Peter
|
716.129 | Some facts, I think | DELNI::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Feb 09 1989 11:40 | 31 |
| Re: [.96]: Eric, I don't understand your math. Let me suggest these
numbers. Last year the company had 122,000 employees, and hired 11,000
people. Assuming a first-pass test (urine) is 95% accurate, a
second-pass test (blood) is 99% accurate, and assuming that the error
consists entirely of false-positive results*:
If all 122,000 Digital employees were tested once a year, there
would be 6,100 false positives requiring further screening;
of these, 61 would again be falsely labeled as drug users--about
one a week company-wide.
If all of 11,000 new hires were tested once, 550 would require
further screening, and five or six would be falsely labeled.
Presumably, a much larger number would be correctly labeled as drug
users and, eventually, terminated. I speculate that once a week, some
employee would be dragged, kicking and screaming, into a rehabilitation
program, and forced to submit to weekly testing for some extended
period to prove to the company that he or she is actually clean.
*This is a weak assumption. There can be both false-positive and
false-negative results.
Re: [.101]: Blood is a complex substance, and there are dozens
of different tests that can be performed on it. (This is my wife's
job.) AIDS testing, cholesterol testing, enzyme testing, blood-gas
testing, and drug testing are different things entirely.
Re: [.114]: To Eric's list I'd like to add the fact that drug-testing
programs have been struck down in a number of courts as
un-Constitutional. The legal precedent is shaky.
|
716.131 | For edp, who is compiling issues | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Roads? Where we're going we don't need..roads | Thu Feb 09 1989 12:06 | 16 |
| Separate from the drug testing-per se as issues:
(a) How were/is/will be Digital's decisions on this manner commuicated
to ALL employees, once decisions are made at the executive committee
level? Indeed, I have not recieved any official notice from the
corporation on this matter yet. (Although I know the Weiss memo is
over a month old.)
(b) What is the overriding issue here? Doesn't Digital reject doing
business where the customer requires as a condition of business,
contractual clauses which are repugnant to the dignity of the employee
as a person? What made DFARS-xxx different? Its size?
(c) If the government can demand drug-testing of Digital, then what's
to stop other customers, who may not even be under the DFARS-xxx terms,
to demand to be given the same contractual terms?
|
716.133 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Thu Feb 09 1989 12:44 | 14 |
| Just doing a compilation of people who seem to be at the
decision-making level regarding the drug-free-workplace policy:
Harvey Weiss, V.P. Government Systems
Fred Beckette, FSG Human Resources Manager
Erline Belton, Corporate Employee Relations Manager
Cyndi Bloom, mgr., U.S. Field Employee Relations
Paul Henrion, Personnel Law Group
Thanks to Richard Seltzer for posting the Personnel Perspectives
article in .122... I think it gives a balanced reading on the current
situation facing DIGITAL.
Marge
|
716.134 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Feb 09 1989 13:04 | 8 |
| Re .129:
The drug-testing-craze is national, not corporate. I am opposed to
drug-testing anywhere, not just in Digital, so my figures are based on
national population.
-- edp
|
716.135 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Feb 09 1989 13:42 | 17 |
| >Note 716.128 by RDGENG::DUNN -< U.S. only ? >-
>I'd like a statement as to how wide any possible testing net
>might be. Are we talking about the U.S. only, or a Corporate
>policy ?
We don't yet even have a statement about how widespread it will be within the
U.S. yet. We know it will affect people working on government contracts. We
don't know if that includes people who work in a corporate, not a field,
environment but produce system software used on the contract.
It certainly doesn't seem fair for a government site using VAX PSI to be able
to demand testing of VMS Engineers in Spitbrook but not PSI Engineers in
Reading. And since DEC is usually fair and equitable, I would expect either
both to be tested or neither to be tested.
/john
|
716.136 | What I think they're saying to us | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Roads? Where we're going we don't need..roads | Thu Feb 09 1989 14:21 | 14 |
| John, I think you've seeing things with your own "worst case" spin on
them.
The spin I see is:
(a) Digital is coping with drug abuse 'The Right Way', (ie the Employee
Assistance Program)
(b) We (ie Senior Digital Management) don't like it but, we gotta
comply with what the US goverment demands of their suppliers, but we
really don't like it, really; they got a gun to heads on this one.
(c) So we'll do what they tell us BUT we'll test as FEW of you as we
absolutely need too.
|
716.137 | Stop / Look / Think ! | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | Speaker Wright, J.R. Ewing, Daffy Duck | Thu Feb 09 1989 14:55 | 88 |
|
Re: .110 (Pat) -< Reagan officials refused >-
>Yes, it was George Schultz, Secretary of State.
could this represent a precedent for the grounds of refusal??
****
Re: .113 (Monty) -< IBM has precedent, Digital does not. >-
Hey Monty!
Is this available somewhere?
(I need some bedtime reading material, ya'know 8^)
>"A Study of Corporate Cultures in the Computer Industry -- IBM"
****
re .127 (Gerald):
> The mood of the country is very anti-drug. Congress knows this,
> and has passed this "tough" anti-drug law.
Well Gerald, I must disagree with this statement... Congress is
not owning up to it's responsibilities in this area. The rate of
interdiction of drug traffic is about 1 in 10 (ref: ABC news report
interview with a INS border guard). If 'C' were really serious
about this, then more money would be allocated to the Coast Guard,
DEA, INS Border Patrol for manpower. At present they are trying
to use high tech "toys" to provide surveillance ... which INS say's
"...isn't cutting it."
If this is a *WAR* then *WHY* are we attacking "our" own people, and not
the source?! Maybe it's time to let the CIA back into covert
assinations to take out the Columbian drug lords [whose government
is in their pocket!]...
Re .131
> (b) What is the overriding issue here? Doesn't Digital reject doing
> business where the customer requires as a condition of business,
> contractual clauses which are repugnant to the dignity of the employee
> as a person? What made DFARS-xxx different? Its size?
> (c) If the government can demand drug-testing of Digital, then what's
> to stop other customers, who may not even be under the DFARS-xxx terms,
> to demand to be given the same contractual terms?
I believe a precedent is in place for these type of requests; Does
Digital supply a resume to a customer on his/her request?? It doesn't
happen out here (SWA).
Why should a request for a drug-free condition be any different?
Will that customer _not_ take "our" word for it and request us to
submit a urine sample to "them" for their analysis?? Where do "we"
draw the line on un-reasonable requests???
One of the things briefly touched on in this note was: How far
will Digital let a customer dictate T's & C's? If "Big Bro." opens
this Pandora's box -- where will it stop?!
What about 5-10 years down the road...maybe your kids (I'm single)
will be tested for drugs upon entering kindergarten. Maybe, if
the policy of drugtesting is considered weak, Congress ups the ante
to *confiscate* your goods if you test positive (absolute)?!
This whole thing gives me the willies! There is plenty of evidence
out there, that giving away personal liberties only leads to erosion
of our basic constitutional rights.
I really hope that K.O. and Digital will have the have the faith
to abide by *HIS* company's founding doctrine [lack of a better word]
to "Just Say NO".
Re: .136
Why does Digital have to comply with a T & C for which no sound
legal precedent exists (or does it)?? Can we not say "We will hold
that condition in abeyance until we've reviewed the U.S. Supreme Court
ruling on the matter."?
Off my soapbox for now..
J(im)p
|
716.138 | The Paranoids are following me | DIXIE1::WLEE | Bill Lee | Thu Feb 09 1989 15:03 | 44 |
| As the software manager of the unit in Warner Robins, GA refered to in
.9 I thought I might be able to shed a little extra info beyond what is
in .99.
When we received the DFAR clause on the contract it caught everyone
off guard. It took Digital almost 3 months to reply and I was working
toward having to decline the contract altogether. At all levels
of Digital I was told that it was going to be very difficult for
Digital to except. The message I was consistently given was the
fact that it was against 'Digital Culture'.
All of the employees in the Unit were kept informed of the
possibilities of the testing program. I would have done this anyway
but in this case I was instructed by my management to keep the
employees informed. When the clause was excepted it was excepted
for Warner Robins only and only for those individuals with clearances
on this particular contract.
What this means is that to date there is no policy except for 10
people in GA. As far as I am concerned I conscented to the possibility
when I got my clearance.
I believe has done as best as it could in a bad situation. My
experiences with the issue so far confirms that the culture is still
intact on this.
Digital has to develop a response to this and for businees we have
to deal with it. I believe what we do personally is another matter.
I for one am firmly opposed and I will not sign the consent form
and we will do my best to avoid the test. The good news is that
I do work for Digital and I believe they will do all that they can
to protect my rights.
On last point. I have seen no mention of Abbie Hoffman's book 'Steal
This Urine Test'. I strongly recommend it to all concerned and affected
parties.
'Steal This Urine Test'
Abbie Hoffman
Penguin Books
about $6
Bill Lee
|
716.139 | | ULTRA::ELLIS | David Ellis | Thu Feb 09 1989 15:24 | 29 |
| I sent the following note to Personnel this morning:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have become aware of significant resentment developing among DEC engineers
over the prospect of mandatory drug testing required by the federal government
and agreed to by Digital. This is particularly evident from the discussion
going on in the Notes conference on HUMAN::DIGITAL, topic number 716.
Personally, I do not object to being tested for drugs. The specific issue
is of extremely low priority to me. But there is a related issue that I
wish to raise. Digital is a very special place to work, and the principal
reason for this is a corporate philosophy of respecting the integrity and
dignity of its engineers. My concern is that these corporate values
should be consistently championed from the highest levels of Digital.
The conditions that the government is imposing on its contracts with Digital
are not compatible with Digital's values. The relationship between Digital
and the government is a two-way street, and we hold more than a few high cards
in our hand. I believe it is important for Digital's upper management to
tell the government that we stand consistently behind our corporate values and
integrity. The message to Digital's employees that we trust each other and
do not intend to compromise our values will serve to reinforce the high
morale that underlines the quality of our work.
I hope that these factors can be kept in mind during the forthcoming
negotiation and planning for Digital's policies on drug testing.
David Ellis -- Secure Systems Group -- BXB1-1/D03 -- DTN 293-5073
|
716.140 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Thu Feb 09 1989 15:47 | 16 |
| re .138:
Bill, thanks for joining the discussion. I am still a bit confused.
Are you saying that the contract was signed over your protests and that
your unit must deliver against that contract? or have I read that
wrong?
Also, you seem to be saying that drug testing comes with the territory
if you are under security clearance, but you'd resist signing any
waiver form.
If someone in your unit declines to be tested, will they be taken off
the project and reassigned?
regards,
Marge
|
716.141 | A popular pastime | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Thu Feb 09 1989 18:12 | 4 |
| Re .127:
Please forgive me Gerald, I fear I also misinterpreted your .119.
/AHM/THX
|
716.142 | I brought the issue to the attention of NAC management | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Feb 09 1989 18:31 | 24 |
| This afternoon LKG happened to have a site meeting where John Adams,
the site manager gives NAC folks an update on the NAC business and
other topics of general interest.
During Q & A time I asked about the drug testing policy. I was very
surprised to hear that John had not heard of it. It scares me that
a very senior manager (reports to Bill Johnson VP) had not heard
of an issue which is probably the most significant employer employee
relations issue to come up in a long time. I think this proves Pat
Sweeney's point about the lack of communication and that policy
could well be being made in a vacuum.
I was pleased that he
didn't fudge the question and he put Al Heintz (head of LKG personell)
up on the stand to address my questions. I brought up the major
concerns that have been articulated in this note.
I was promised that at the next LKG site meeting they would come
back with more information. I was rather distressed by the fact
that Al Heintz stated that drug testing would be OK for Digital
if it was done by other companies and that it was being done by
other companies. Al did say that employee rights would be looked
at very carefully before any policy was implemented.
Dave
|
716.143 | PS I am NOT pro drugs | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Feb 09 1989 18:35 | 10 |
| Before anybody accuses me (or any of the other anti drug testing
folks) of being pro drugs. I want to say that in any official
letter to the powers that be I want to see no mention of. What an
employee does in his own time is his own business.
The crux of the issue is an employees right to privacy. And that
an employer should not have the power to conduct a witchhunt.
They may address employee performance problems but no more.
Dave
|
716.144 | Late Bloomer | NEWVAX::SGRIFFIN | Steve Griffin | Fri Feb 10 1989 00:34 | 35 |
| RE: .76
This may be true, but the amount of the chemical consummed and the
elapsed time have an effect on the individual's performance. Pilots
are restricted (required not to) from consuming any alcohol 24 hours
prior to operating an aircraft (FAR circa 1970, updates?).
RE: .81
PUNISH USERS? What about compulsive [ overeaters | gamblers |
alcoholics | smokers ] etc.? I know you are aware of recent changes
Digital has made with regard to the last group. Granted, as a smoker,
I am somewhat inconvenienced by this about twice a week. Thank
goodness you didn't have any say in the policy or the Designated
Smoking Areas would have been Designated Firing Squad Areas. (See .122
(Treatable illness))
RE: .82
I have always heard that Digital's health plans, at least Hancock,
have no "pre-existing condition" clauses. What point are you trying
to make?
RE: .122
I don't know about Greenville, but Colorado Springs is a rather
large "military industrial complex" including a large military space
control center, associated contractors, etc.
RE: .142
Sure, and because I jump in the fire, you should too? My four year-old
knows better than that, but then I taught him that so I guess you
shouldn't be blamed.
|
716.145 | Something to think about | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Bop 'Til You Drop | Fri Feb 10 1989 08:28 | 17 |
| Many, many of these replies make reference to one's "right to privacy".
I ask you to consider this question, both in terms of constitutional
law, and in terms of the Digital way of working:
"Whatever gave you the idea that one has a _right_ to privacy?"
You won't find "privacy" mentioned in the Bill of Rights, and I
very much doubt that you'll find "right to privacy" explicitly written
in any Digital policy, and you probably won't even find it written
anywhere implicitly either.
Just ponder the idea for a while: Nobody in this country, nor in
this company has a _right_ to privacy. ...and just what IS privacy,
anyway?
-Monty-
|
716.146 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Feb 10 1989 08:44 | 24 |
| Re .145:
The Supreme Court, other courts, and Congressional investigations have
found that a right to privacy exists. Supreme Court Justice Brandeis
said we all are entitled "to be let alone". Some consider Brandeis to
be responsible for establishing the legal foundations of the right of
privacy in the United Staes, in an 1890 paper (before he became a
Supreme Court Justice) examining the intent of the country's founders
and the relationship of privacy to the Bill of Rights. The Bill of
Rights does not explicitly say "privacy" because the nature of society
at the time was different -- the concepts of eavesdropping, collecting
and correlating massive amounts of information, and technological
examination of bodily fluids did not exist two hundred years ago.
Brandeis' assertion was that the authors wrote explicitly to protect
the intrusions into privacy that they knew about at the time, and they
wrote the ninth amendment to provide for what they did not know.
Remember that government power comes from the people. Whatever gave
you the idea that anybody gave the government the power to invade their
privacy? You won't find "privacy" mentioned in the Constitution, so
what makes you think the government has any powers in that area?
-- edp
|
716.147 | Corportate Need vs. Personal Will | DIXIE1::WLEE | Bill Lee | Fri Feb 10 1989 09:20 | 22 |
|
re .140
To clarify my personal statements:
My point was that I accepted the potential for testing when I agreed to
receive a security clearance. Just because I accept the potential does
not mean I, personally, will accept the test. I will continue to keep
my fingers crossed that they will not approach me with 'the cup'. This
is my own view only. I fully understand the business need and the
position of a company doing business with the Government. My hope is
that the company will support any decisions I make personally but I do
not necessary expect the company to.
As far as what will happen to those who decline to be tested, I
am not sure. My guess and my intent as the local manager is to do
my best to accomadate this and to place the person in a position
that does to fall under the jurisdiction of this DFAR or eventual
corporate policy.
Bill
|
716.148 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Fri Feb 10 1989 09:40 | 14 |
| re .147:
Thanks, Bill... I know the position this must put you in. By the way,
congratulations on the contract. It made the front page of the U.S.
Field News for January/February and looks like you folks are doing a
splendid job. (I'll try to enter the article later.) Impressive
statistics: "By leveraging both Enterprise Planning consulting and
Digital's connectability, the Government Sales Unit won a $3.2 million
contract to supply VAXstations and consulting services to the
division." "So far in 1988, the Enterprise Planning strategy has netted
the unit (Bill's unit) $8 million in systems and service revenue with
another $8 million anticipated for the coming year."
Marge
|
716.149 | Constitution does not grant rights | TALLME::KYLER | | Fri Feb 10 1989 10:04 | 14 |
| RE .145
The constitution does not grant rights. It forbids the government to
violate certain specific rights which are assumed to exist. If rights
were granted by constitutions, how could we have a quarrel with South
Africa's treatment of blacks if their costitution does not guarantee
them equal treatment? (I have no knowledge of S. Africa's constitution,
but you see my point.)
If you caught someone peeking through your bedroom window, wouldn't you
feel your rights had been violated? And if not privacy then what
right?
- Dan.
|
716.150 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Feb 10 1989 10:07 | 26 |
| I'm surprised that edp didn't quote the Fourth Amendment, which is the consti-
tutional basis for our right to privacy:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to
be seized.
Pat mentions that I've been posing a worst case scenario (testing of VMS,
PSI, and ALL-IN-1 engineers). He's right, I must say I have. But until
someone posts DFARS 252.223-7500 and also the Drug Free Workplace Act of 1988,
I have no way of guessing where it will end. And even if it never affects
anyone I know, there's the worry of "when they came for my neighbor, I didn't
speak out." Did your Senator/Representative vote for this?
And what's probable cause? Poor performance might be caused by the loss of
a loved one. Morning tardiness is one of the things I learned to look for in
the EAP training on drug abuse. Morning tardiness is also a sign of a person
who likes to stay up late at night writing code when s/he won't be disturbed.
In another conference, I learned that we can add pseudoephedrine (Sudafed) to
the list of things that cause false positives, in this case for cocaine.
/john
|
716.151 | Political Science 101 | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Fri Feb 10 1989 10:53 | 33 |
|
Please bear in mind that when discussing the Constitution, the document
describes the explicit powers of the Government. Any exclusion of
specific rights implies that the Gov't has no say in the matter. In
a Constitutional Government, only those powers EXPLICITLY expressed in
the Constitution are available to the Gov't.
The Bill of Rights was an addition to the original Constitution that
explicitly spelled out those rights which the citizens were most
concerned with at the time. It was added to aid in the Ratification
process by making even the uneducated reader aware of what was already
contained within the main document. The Bill of Rights is redundant.
The most significant single phrase involved in mattersthat could not be
forseen by the Framers of the Constitution, such as drug testing, is the
"necessary and proper" clause, which states that Congress has the power
to inact any laws "necessary and proper" to ensure the execution of their
powers. The 4th Amendment also comes up often (declaring the testing of
bodily fluids as an unlawful search), but since the amendment is redundant,
so is the argument.
It'll be interesting to see how the Supreme Court reacts to these arguments,
but the two cases currently being deliberated upon do not deal with
random drug testing per se, but with drug testing of specific public service
oriented groups (pilots, truck drivers, etc.)
Re: .144 (Pilots and Alcohol)
The rule is minimum 8 hours from the consumption of the last drink, and never
if ability is still impared. ("Eight hours, bottle to throttle")
Bob
|
716.152 | | DPDMAI::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri Feb 10 1989 11:55 | 6 |
| re: .144
In addition to 8 hours as Bob mentioned, the BAC limit for determining
'imparement' is .04%, less than half used by most states for DWI.
Bob
|
716.153 | | MU::PORTER | Exiled in Cyberia | Fri Feb 10 1989 12:20 | 8 |
|
re 716.135
More U.S. cultural imperialism, eh? We already got the hamburger
smells in Reading, now we have to have the urine tests as well?
:-) [sort of]
|
716.154 | Sources of false positives | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Feb 10 1989 13:07 | 36 |
| Swiped from another conference; many different authors:
Hamantaschen: A wonderful pastry filled with honey and *lots* of poppy
seeds. If you didn't know, eating poppy seeds causes you to test
positive for opiate use.
Ibuprofen can cause false positives for cannabis metabolites.
While we're on the subject, various cold medicines cause false
positives for other drugs. I believe that Sudofed causes a false
positive for cocaine.
Norepinephrine registers strongly positive for most members of the
amphetamine family. Norepinephrine is the active ingredient in Primatene
asthma medicine, and probably other brands of asthma stuff.
While we're on the subject, phenylpropanolamine (PPA) will cross test with
amphetamine (aka phenylpropylamine) in any test looking for metabolites in
urine (as the common radio-immunoassay tests do). PPA is used in a lot of
cold medications and diet pills.
If norepinephrine cross tests with amphetamines, and if I remember it's
structure correctly it will, then there is a chance of a false positive
without having taken any medication, as norepinephrine exists naturally in
the body (in other parts of the world, its called noradrenaline, but
adrenaline is a trademark in the US :-)
Cocaine follows a very different metabolic pathway, since it does not share
the same basic structure as the above. It is metabolised and excreted as
ecogine, which is what the RIA tests look for. Anything containing benzocaine
(aka novocaine) or lidocaine will cross test positive. I'm not certain, but I
suspect atropine based compounds could cross test as well.
So, as long you don't have a cold, or a headache, or asthma, haven't been to
the dentist lately or haven't eaten any bagels (or the delicious sounding
pastries)....
|
716.155 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Someday never comes. | Fri Feb 10 1989 14:49 | 95 |
| Yesterday I received in the mail the January/February issue of the
Colorado ACLU newsletter. The newsletter contains an interesting
article by Marsha Faulconer on drug testing in the work place that
pertains to this discussion. The following is a summary of the
contents of the article:
The article begins:
One of the greatest erosions of civil liberties in this decade
has been the transfer of police activity from the government
to the private sector. The fourth and fifth amendments of the
Bill of Rights protect the individual from unreasonable search
and seizure without probable cause by the government and from
testifying against oneself. With the advent of drug testing,
however, private companies now routinely screen for substances
in a person's body without probable cause and without having
to abide by the limits of power that the government must abide
by under the Bill of Rights.
The author then presents some general arguments against drug testing in
the work place. First, drug tests do not measure impairment per se, and
therefore are intrusions into employees' personal lives. Tests do not
measure when the drug was ingested, and in the case of marijuana the
residue can last up to three weeks; in other words, use of a drug while
on vacation or off work can still be measured by the drug test.
The author also raises the issue of false positives. The EMIT test
is the one most commonly used, and it is inaccurate 10% to 30% of
the time. Advil, Nuprin, and Midol test positive for THC with the
EMIT test. As a result, employees who test positive must prove
their innocence, in violation of the principles of the U.S. Bill
of rights.
Furthermore, the tests can be used to reveal other, non-drug related
personal information. The District of Columbia police department
used the urine samples to test for pregnancy, and promotions or
job offers were delayed if a woman tested positive. Also, legal
drugs can be screened for, and an applicant could actually be denied
a job for being on, for example, anti-depressants.
However, as the author points out:
Employers routinely search their employees' bodily fluids without
probable cause when a government body could not. (Although
these cases are still being decided by the Reagan-stacked courts
by justices who are not always wise to the Bill of Rights.)
These companies presume guilt before innocence by asking employees
to pee in a cup to prove their worthiness and ask employees
to testify against themselves by having their fluids speak for
them.
This is frightening in America, where we expect privacy to be
respected and we don't expect to check our constitutional rights
at the door when we go to work.
She goes on to mention that once an employer obtains a drug test
result, the government can then turn around and subpoena the employer
to obtain that information. This happened in Florida, where
the U.S. Attorney's office subpoenaed the University of Florida in
Gainesville for the results of drug tests given to students in the
athletic department. This is despite promises to the students
of confidentiality. As the author points out, "since private companies
do not have to abide by the limits of power set forth in the Bill
of Rights when collecting information, the government has found
this source of information too tempting."
The rest of the article deals with proposed laws restricting the use of
drug testing. The city of Boulder, Colorado, is considering a tough
ordinance that would prevent employers from requiring a blood, urine,
or other bodily fluid or tissue test unless the employer has probable
cause to believe that the employee is under the influence of an
illegal drug or alcohol on the job. The employee must be given the
opportunity to explain any results of the test, and can request a
second test. Confirmatory tests must use the most accurate testing
available by mass spectrometry or gas chromatography, and no portion
may be used to test for pregnancy or evidence of any other medical
condition. Finally, drug test results are to be confidential from
fellow employees and must not be included in the personnel file.
There are similar restrictions for job applicants. The probable
cause condition is removed, but all advertisements of such positions
must state that a drug test is required. Furthermore, such tests
may be be required unless other restrictions are met.
This law would possibly be the strongest in the country, and sounds
like a law that other communities could emulate. However, the Boulder
law has not passed yet, and it may be watered down.
The article pointed out that many businesses favor this type of
law. A woman in California won a $425,000 award by suing a company
who fired her for refusing to be tested. There was a similar award
in Massachusetts. Many in the business community do not want to
have to face this sort of lawsuit.
-- Mike
|
716.156 | background on the business decision | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Smile out loud! | Fri Feb 10 1989 14:51 | 152 |
| This is a writeup of the Robins Air Force Base contract in Warner
Robins, Ga. referenced in the Harvey Weiss memo in reply .9
Source: U.S. Field News, January/February 1989
"Enterprise Planning leverages Air Force contract"
Picture caption: "Enterprise Planning Services helped leverage a
multi-million dollar contract at Georgia's Robins Air Force Base."
As any government account manager can attest, penetrating the military
mindset to deliver the right system solution and ensure long-term
customer loyalty is no easy feat. Recently, however, the Georgia
Government Sales and Software Services units did just that by leveraging
Digital's Enterprise Services in their account strategy.
Enterprise Planning is a family of consulting services that support
customers in all phases of defining and implementing enterprise-wide
solutions. As described by Aubrey Bone, Georgia Government Sales
manager, "Selling the concept of planning is really how we can
differentiate Digital from other vendors with large accounts like the
military."
This concept proved exceptionally successful for Digital's Sales unit's
efforts at Robins Air Froce Base in Warner Robins, Ga., this year. In
October, Software Services presented its final report on a year-long
Enterprise Planning study for the base's Materials Management
Directorate. So far in 1988, the Enterprise Planning strategy has
netted the unit $8 million in systems and service revenue with another
$8 million anticipated for the coming year.
Surprisingly, the multi-year, multi-million dollar contract began just a
year-and-a-half ago with a request from the base's Vehicle Management
Division for a system to automate its vehicle specification generation.
Realizing that without any experience with computers, the division was
asking for problems by just installing systems, the Digital Sales
manager called in Software Services.
"The military tends to lag behind industry in terms of automation,"
explains Bill Lee, Software Services unit manager. "Often, they don't
have the expertise at hand to make the most of their computing
resources, so we decided to first sell them on the idea of a needs
assessment.
"Enterprise Planning is a relatively new concept," Bill continues. "As
this project was getting started a year ago, it was an even newer
concept. However, all the resources needed to implement a long-term
proposal for the Air Force were already in place."
Three-month study
To start selling the Air Force on a needs assessment plan, Bill called
on the Atlanta Solutions Integration Center (SIC). Ann Day, a
consultant working for Bill, then developed a plan. In June 1987, the
team proposed a low-cost, three-month study of the division's
operations.
Although the Air Force staff members were somewhat skeptical about
Digital's capabilities and objectivity to perform such a study, they
liked what they saw in the proposal. The division's colonel brought the
plan to the head of the directorate of which they were a part.
The timing of the request could not have been more fortunate. The
directorage had been searching for an information management system.
IBM had installed a PROFS office automation pilot system, which the Air
Force rejected two months into the six-month trial run. Given the
situation, Digital's idea of providing consulting to assess needs and
make recommendations appealed to the directorate's commanding officer.
Shortly after the first presentation, Digital was asked to expand the
initial proposal to encompass a directorate-wide study, including a
pilot installation. If the Air Force accepted the new proposal, the
contract would total $900,000 for the services of Ann Day and a
Software Services team to install a pilot system for 500 users.
"In order to be successful, the consultants had to get the directorate
command to think in terms outside the normal military mindset," says
Bill. "Ordinarily, the military tends to be conservative, preferring to
take small steps rather than large ones. The challenge was to get them
to move ahead aggressively to get them to where they needed to be. We
had to convince them their current organization was not meeting their
needs and we cited specific instances to do this."
According to Bill, Software Services' approach to the situation was
uniquely instrumental in gaining the credibility Digital needed to
convince the Air Force to move ahead aggressively. Over two months, Ann
Day interviewed 163 managers within the directorate, asking them
questions about their operation and its challenges.
Getting the go-ahead
When Ann presented her assessment of the directorate's organization, the
officers were amazed by the thoroughness and accuracy of the picture she
showed them. As a result, they gave Digital the go-ahead for a
year-long Enterprise Planning study to detail the directorate's needs
and plot a three-year implementation plan.
Beginning in September 1987, Ann started evaluating and assessing the
directorate's needs, making ongoing recommendations as the year
progressed. At the same time, the Software Services team was building
the directorate's pilot system. Combining a small VAX system with
All-IN-1 and Digital's Personal Computer Architecture, the team created
a network using much of the Air Force's existing PCs, terminals and
wiring.
By the spring of 1988, the influence of Enterprise Planning could be
seen in the directorate. At that time, another directorate division,
Systems Engineering, began shopping for engineering workstations. The
directorate command stipulated that the systems they bought had to be
able to connect with other directorate divisions.
Aubrey Bone, who worked on the sale to Systems Engineering, describes
what happened. "We took their ideas and looked at them from every angle
to provide the right solution for their needs. This division, like the
others, needed professional support to get them the most from their
computer investment and again we recommended they use Software Services'
consulting expertise.
"This wasn't difficult since there were already users in the directorate
that would endorse the idea," Aubrey explains. "Consulting really gives
customers confidence so they will more fully automate than they would
have without it. They know there is someone on hand with the expertise
to ensure the systems implementation and effectiveness."
By leveraging both Enterprise Planning consulting and Digital's
connectability, the Government Sales Unit won a $3.2 million contract to
supply VAXstations and consulting services to the division.
On the directorate level, as the year-long planning study drew to a
close this past fall, Ann Day made her final report and recommendations
to the Air Force. Due to her work and that of the entire Government
Unit, the Air Force directed that all recommendations made in the
report be implemented. In addition, they directed that the original
pilot be expanded to the entire 3,000-member directorate staff.
The Robins AFB Materials Management Directorage is now a model of
automation for other Air Force installations. Furthermore, Ann Day now
sits on two advisory committees for the government--a first for any
computer vendor.
"The real benefit of the Enterprise Planning approach is the potential
to realize significant revenue in such a relatively short time," says
Bill. "We went from an initial consulting contract with Robins to
potentially $16 million in revenue in just a two-year period. In the
process, we have given them step-by-step guidelines to make their
information management system competitive with any of those in private
industry.
"Enterprise Planning has not only opened doors to other directorates at
the base for us, it has ensured Digital's presence there for years to
come," Bill notes. "We consider Enterprise Planning to be very
successful."
|
716.157 | | YUPPIE::JENNINGS | I may be EASY, but I'm not CHEAP! | Fri Feb 10 1989 17:52 | 14 |
| re .155:
OK, the gist of the article is to lobby your elected representatives to
pass laws to properly limit private-sector drug tests. That's the only
sure way to handle this thing. It's the U.S. Government that is pushing
these tests. Since our elected officials _are_ the government, let's
get them to do the right thing and get rid of the contract clauses that
call for these intrusive tests.
As far as drug testing at Digital is concerned, it sounds like Digital
is trying to do the right thing (with the possible exception of
getting the word out about accepting the Air Force contract provision).
|
716.158 | You didn't elect the Department of Defense | DR::BLINN | There's a penguin on the telly.. | Fri Feb 10 1989 18:34 | 44 |
| A big part of the government was never elected by anyone. The vast
majority of federal government employees are employees who were
hired to do a job, not elected. The same is true of most state
and local governments.
It is not uncommon for the legislative branch of the federal
government to be unaware of some of the things that the executive
branch is doing. Did your congressperson know what Oliver North
was doing in the "Iran-Contra" affair until it became public
knowledge?
For those who either never learned or have forgotten how the
federal gummint is structured, the legislative branch is the
Senate and the House of Representatives, folks that you vote
for directly.
The executive branch is the President and all of his appointees,
including the cabinet and the massive federal bureaucracies they
manage, such as the Department of Defense and the Department of
Transportation -- and you did *not* elect these folks, except,
indirectly, the President and Vice-President. (Technically, you
voted for electors, and they elected the President and
Vice-President.)
There's also the judicial branch, including the Supreme Court, but
you don't elect them, and they aren't particularly responsive to
political pressure.
If you think what the executive branch is doing is wrong, then be
sure to let the legislative branch know about it. Letters are
effective. But represent yourself as a citizen and voter, and
focus on general issues, such as your right of privacy as a
citizen.
Unless it's your job to represent Digital to the government, you
might be wise to avoid mentioning Digital in your letter.
Since this conference is for Digital Internal Use Only, please do
not do anything foolish, such as extracting any part of this
conference and mailing it to your congressperson.
Thanks for using your good judgement.
Tom
|
716.159 | DFAR 52.223-7500 Drug-Free Work Force. | ATLS15::LOWE_B | Brett Lowe @ROB (ODIXIE::LOWE) | Fri Feb 10 1989 19:04 | 97 |
| PART 52--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
52.233-7500 Drug-Free Work Force.
As prescribed in 23.7504, insert the following clause:
DRUG-FREE WORK FORCE (SEP 1988)
(a) Definitions. "Illegal drugs," as used in this clause,
means controlled sugstances included in Schedule I and II, as defined
by section 802(6) of Title 21 of the United States Code, the possession
of which is unlawful under Chapter 13 of that Title. The term "illegal
drugs" does not mean the use of a controlled substance pursuant
to a valid prescription or other uses authorized by law.
"Employee in a sensitive position," as used in this clause,
means an employee who has been granted access to classified
information; or emplyees in other positions that the Contractor
determines involve national security, health or safety, or functions
other than the foregoing requiring a high degree of trust and
confidence.
(b) The Contractor agrees to institute and maintain a program
for achieving the objective of a drug-free work force. While this
clause defines criteria for such a program, Contractors are encouraged
to implement alternative approaches comparable to the criteria in
paragraph (c) below that are designed to achieve the objectives
of this clause.
(c) Contractor programs shall include the following, or
appropriate alternatives:
(1) Employee assistance programs emphasizing high level direction,
education, counseling, rehabilitation, and coordination with available
community resources;
(2) Supervisory training to assist in identifying and addressing
illegal drug use by Contractor employees;
(3) Provision for self-referals as well as supervisory referrals
to treatment with maximum respect for individual confidentiality
consistent with safety and security issues;
(4) Provision for identifying illegal drug users, including
testing on a controlled and carefully monitored basis. Employee
drug testing programs shall be established taking account of the
following:
(i) The Contractor shall establish a program that provides
for testing for the use of illegal drugs by employees in sensitive
positions. The extent of and criteria for such testing shall be
determined by the Contractor based on considerations that include
the nature of the work being performed under the contract, the
employee's duties, the efficient use of Contractor resources, and
the risks to health, safety, or national security that could result
from the failure of an employee adequately to discharge his or her
position.
(ii) In addition, the Contractor may establish a program for
employee drug testing--
(A) When there is a reasonable suspicion that an employee uses
illegal drugs; or
(B) When an employee has been involved in an accident or unsafe
practice;
(C) As part of or as a follow-up to counseling or rehabilitation
for illegal drug use;
(D) As part of a voluntary employee drug testing program.
(iii) The Contractor may establish a program to test applicants
for employment for illegal drug use.
(iv) For the purpose of administering this clause, testing
for illegal drugs may be limited to those substances for which testing
is prescribed vy section 2.1 of Subpart B of the "Mandatory Guidelines
for Federal Workplace Drug Testing," (53 FR 11980 (April 11, 1988)),
issued by the Department of Health and Human Services.
(d) Contractors shall adopt appropriate personnel procedures
to deal with employees who are found to be useing drugs illegally.
Contractors shall not allow any employee to remain on duty or perform
in a sensitive position who is found to use illegal drugs until
such time as the Contractor, in accourdance with procedures
established by the Contractor, determines that the employee may
perform in such a position.
(e) The provisions of this clause pertaining to drug testing
programs shall not apply to the extent they are inconsistent with
state or local law, or with an existing collective bargaining
agreement; provided that with respect to the latter, the Contractor
agrees that those issues that are in conflict will be a subject
of negotiation at the next collective bargaining session.
(End of clause)
|
716.160 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Sat Feb 11 1989 11:37 | 29 |
| One thing has been mentioned in passing, but not really discussed in
this note string.
For years Digital has declined to become a government prime,
voluntarily passing up millions, no billions, of potential dollars. The
only reason I've ever heard for this was the fact that, since
government primes work on a cost-plus basis, Digital would have to open
our books to the government in order to be a prime. Ken simply has not
been willing to do that. It has cost us untold amounts of money. I
have always respected that decision -- more than any other reason,
because the message to me as an employee was that Digital would not let
anyone, including the government, tell us how we have to do business.
Now we hear that the government is going to require drug testing,
and Digital is going to comply because not complying would cost
us a great deal of money. Drug testing is totally counter to our
culture, and is putting many if not most of our employees in a real
dilemma in terms of continuing our careers here. But the message
to us is that the potential dollars are simply too important to
let the rights of our people get in the way.
So... What I'm hearing then is that the privacy and confidentiality
of our books is more important than the privacy and confidentiality
of our people. The dollars outweigh the importance of the employees
(often touted by management as "our most valuable resource").
What is wrong with this picture?
Pat
|
716.161 | accounting vs privacy | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Sat Feb 11 1989 12:42 | 5 |
| Re: .160
I raised the issue of cost+ contracts in .88. I also would like to
hear Ken on the subject of interference with our accounting practices
vs interference with our privacy.
|
716.162 | So now that we know what we "MAY" do, what "MUST" we do? | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Sat Feb 11 1989 13:19 | 20 |
| re: .159
Thanks very much for entering the regulation. It made interesting reading.
But, seeing as how it was probably the first government regulation I've
ever read, I have some questions.
The wording of the regulation in many areas seemed pretty open ended,
specifying what a contractor "may" do, but not specifying what they
would "be required" to do. Is this a common practice in such regulations,
and if so, what does "may" really mean? Even in the last section which
spoke about "where not in conflict with currently standing labor contract
guidelines", they wording only said that contractors would have to have
this plan included in future negotiations, but not necessarily that the
contractor should then prevail in that area in said negotiations. E.G.
Contractor: "We've been asked by the gov't to implement a drug testing
program"
Labor: "No way, Jose!"
Contractor: (Pause.) "OK - let's move on to the next point."
-Jack
|
716.163 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Feb 11 1989 14:52 | 30 |
| re: .160
To be fair, not acting as a prime contractor to the government has
probably not hurt us terribly. We've still been able to sell our
services and hardware as a sub-contractor.
If we were suddenly unable to sell anything to the government because
we refused to comply with this regulation, how much would it cost?
My guess is that measured in direct government contracts, it would
be significant but perhaps suvivable.
But consider the following: What is the cost of business lost from
government prime contractors such as General Electric, Lockheed,
Boeing, Fairchild, United Technologies, Harris, RCA, Hughes, (T.I.?
I know who you are Pat, do you know me?!) etc. because of
non-compliance? I am supposing that if we can't sell a VAX directly
to the government because it was made by drug-crazed hippies (ha!),
then GE can't sell them the VAX either. My guess is we all end
up working for DG and IBM after a few months, and get drug-tested
anyway.
Speaking only for myself, I'm not going to blame DEC for wanting
to survive. I have a lot tied up in my career here and have no
desire to blow it away in a futile gesture of protest. If this was
the companies idea, I might feel quite a bit different. I'm satisifed
so far that the corporation is doing the "right thing". Part of
that includes preserving my livelyhood.
Al
|
716.164 | A promise | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sat Feb 11 1989 16:03 | 29 |
| Re: .163
> My guess is we all end up working for DG and IBM after a few months, and
> get drug-tested anyway.
Not me, Al. I'd rather flip hamburgers than submit to a drug test! Seriously.
It's more likely, though, that I'd find a job with some small company that
doesn't do business with the government.
> Speaking only for myself, I'm not going to blame DEC for wanting
> to survive.
Neither will I, I guess. My beef is with the government, not DEC. (I'll be
disappointed that DEC turned out to be "just another company", though.)
> I have a lot tied up in my career here and have no
> desire to blow it away in a futile gesture of protest.
I admit that letting myself get fired for not taking a drug test probably
would/will turn out to be a "futile gesture", but some principles are worth
sacrificing for, and I think one of those principles is the right of citizens
to be secure in their persons against unreasonable searches, whether carried
out directly by the government or indirectly through its massive bargaining
power in contract negotiations.
Yes, I'll write my senators and my U.S. representative, but I'll also make
a statement by passively resisting this attack on our freedom.
-- Bob
|
716.165 | The entire Federal Register entry | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sat Feb 11 1989 21:17 | 275 |
| Federal Register
Volume 53, Number 188
Wednesday, September 28, 1988
Rules and Regulations
Pages 37763 to 37765
Department of Defense
48 CFR Parts 223 and 252
Department of Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement;
Drug-Free Work Force
AGENCY: Department of Defense (DoD).
ACTION: Interim rule and request for comment.
SUMMARY: The interim rules states DoD's policy on a drug-free work
force and provides a contract clauses [sic] for use with solicitations
and contracts meeting specific criteria.
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 31, 1988, for solicitations and resulting
contracts issued on or after that date that meet the criteria in
section 223.7504. To the extent possible, Contracting Officers should
include the clause in solicitations before October 31, 1988.
COMMENT DATE: Comments on the interim rule should be submitted to the
address shown below on or before November 28, 1988.
ADDRESS: Interested parties should submit written comments to:
Defense Acquisition Regulatory Council, ATTN: Mr. Charles W. Lloyd,
Executive Secretary, DAR Council, ODASD (P)/DARs c/o OASD (P&L (MRS),
Room 3D139, The Pentagon, Washington, DC, 20301-3062. [Closing
parenthesis is missing in the original.] Please cite DAR Case 88-83 in
all correspondence related to this subject.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Gurden [sic] E. Drake, Office of
the Assistant General Counsel (Logistics), (202) 697-6921.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
The Secretary of Defense has issued policy concerning use of illegal
drugs by the American work force as it affects defense contracts. This
interim rule sets forth that policy and provides for use of a contract
clause in those acquisitions involving access to classified information
or where the contracting officer determines that such a clause is
necessary in the interest of National Security, health, or safety.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
This interim rule is not expected to have significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., because the impact in
context of the application criteria should be minimal on small
businesses. An initial regulatory flexibility analysis has therefore
not been performed. Comments are invited from small businesses and
other interested parties. Comments from small entities concerning the
affect DFARS Subpart will also be considered in accordance with Section
610 of the Act. Such comments must be submitted separately and cite
DAR Case 88-610 in correspondence.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act does not apply because this rule does not
impose any reporting or recordkeeping requirements or collection of
information from offerors, contractors, or members of the public which
require OMB approval under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
D. Determination to Issue an Interim Rule
A determination has been made under the authority of the Secretary of
Defense to issue this coverage. This action is necessary to implement
policy from the Office of the Secretary of Defense in keeping with
Federal goals to eliminate the use of illegal drugs and provide for a
drug-free work force.
List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 223 and 252
Government procurement.
Charles W. Lloyd,
_Executive Secretary, Defense Acquisition Regulatory Council_.
Therefore, 48 CFR Parts 223 and 252 are amended as follows:
1. The authority citation for 48 CFR Parts 223 and 252 continues to
read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 10 U.S.C. 2202, DoD Directive 5000.35, and
DoD FAR Supplement 201.301.
PART 223 -- ENVIRONMENT, CONSERVATION AND OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
2. A new Subpart 223.75, consisting of sections 223.7500 through
23.7504, is added to read as follows:
Subpart 223.75 -- Drug-Free Work Force
Sec.
223.7500 Scope of subpart.
223.7501 Policy.
223.7502 Definitions.
223.7503 General.
223.7504 Contract clause.
Subpart 223.75 -- Drug-Free Work Force
223.7500 Scope of subpart.
This subpart prescribes policies and procedures concerning drug abuse
as it impacts on the performance of defense contracts. Departments may
establish special procedures as they determine necessary to satisfy
their mission requirements.
23.7501 Policy.
It is the policy of the Department of Defense that defense contracts
shall maintain a program for achieving a drug-free work force.
223.7502 Definitions.
"Illegal drugs," as used in this subpart, means controlled substances
included in Schedule I and II, as defined by section 802(6) of Title 21
of the United States Code, the possession of which is unlawful under
Chapter 13 of that Title. The term "illegal drugs" does not mean the
use of a controlled substance pursuant to a valid prescription or other
uses authorized by law.
"Employee in a sensitive position," as used in this subpart, means an
employee who has been granted access to classified information; or
employees in other positions that the contractor determines involve
National Security, health or safety, or functions other than the
foregoing requiring a high degree of trust and confidence.
223.7503 General.
(a) The use of illegal drugs, on or off duty, is inconsistent with
law-abiding behavior expected of all citizens. Employees who use
illegal drugs, on or off duty, tend to be less productive, less
reliable, and prone to greater absenteeism resulting in the potential
for increased cost, delay, and risk to the government contract.
(b) The use of illegal drugs, on or off duty, by employees can impair
the ability of those employees to perform tasks that are critical to
proper contract performance and can also result in the potential for
accidents on duty and for failures that can pose a serious threat to
national security, health, and safety.
(c) The use of illegal drugs, on or off duty, by employees in certain
positions can result in less than the complete reliability, stability,
and good judgment that are consistent with access to sensitive
information. Use of illegal drugs also creates the possibility of
coercion, influence, and irresponsible action under pressure that may
pose a serious risk to national security, and health and safety.
223.7504 Contract clause.
The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 252.223-7500 in all
solicitations and contracts that meet the following criteria:
(a) All contracts involving access to classified information;
(b) Any other contract when the contracting officer determines that
inclusion of the clause is necessary for reasons of national security
or for the purpose of protecting the health or safety of those using or
affected by the product or of the performance of the contract (except
for commercial or commercial-type products (see FAR 11.001)).
(c) This clause does not apply to a contract, or to that part of a
contract, that is to be performed outside of the United States, its
territories, and possessions, except as otherwise determined by the
contracting officer.
PART 252 -- SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
3. Section 252.223-7500 is added to read as follows:
252.223-7500 Drug-free work force.
As prescribed in 223.7504, insert the following clause:
Drug-Free Work Force (Sep 1988)
(a) Definitions. "Illegal drugs," as used in this clause, means
controlled substances included in Schedule I and II, as defined by
section 802(6) of Title 21 of the United States Code, the possession of
which is unlawful under Chapter 13 of that Title. The term "illegal
drugs" does not mean the use of a controlled substance pursuant to a
valid prescription or other uses authorized by law.
"Employee in a sensitive position," as used in this clause, means an
employee who has been granted access to classified information; or
employees in other positions that the contractor determines involve
national security, health or safety, or functions other than the
foregoing requiring a high degree of trust and confidence.
(b) The Contractor agrees to institute and maintain a program for
achieving the objective of a drug-free work force. While this clause
defines criteria for such a program, Contractors are encouraged to
implement alternative approaches comparable to the criteria in
paragraph (c) below that are designed to achieve the objectives of this
clause.
(c) Contractor programs shall include the following, or appropriate
alternatives:
(1) Employee assistance programs emphasizing high level directions,
education, counseling, rehabilitation, and coordination with available
community resources;
(2) Supervisory training to assist in identifying and addressing
illegal drug use by Contractor employees;
(3) Provision for self-referrals as well as supervisory referrals to
treatment with maximum respect for individual confidentiality
consistent with safety and security issues;
(4) Provision for identifying illegal drug users, including testing on
a controlled and carefully monitored basis. Employee drug testing
programs shall be established taking account of the following:
(i) The Contractor shall establish a program that provides for testing
for the use of illegal drugs by employees in sensitive positions. The
extent of and criteria for such testing shall be determined by the
Contractor based on considerations that include the nature of the work
being performed under the contract, the employee's duties, the
efficient use of Contractor resources, and the risks to public health,
safety, national security [sic] that could result from the failure of
an employee adequately to discharge his or her position.
(ii) In addition, the Contract may establish a program for employee
drug testing --
(A) When there is reasonable suspicion that an employee uses illegal
drugs; or
(B) When an employee has been involved in an accident or unsafe
practice;
(C) As part of or as a follow-up to counseling or rehabilitation for
illegal drug use;
(D) As part of a voluntary employee drug testing program.
(iii) The Contractor may establish a program to test applicants for
employment for illegal drug use.
(iv) For the purpose of administering this clause, testing for illegal
drugs may be limited to those substances for which testing is
prescribed by section 2.1 of Subpart B of the "Mandatory Guidelines for
Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs," (53 FR 11980 (April 11,
1988)), issued by the Department of Health and Human Services.
(d) Contractors shall adopt appropriate personnel procedures to deal
with employees who are found to be using drugs illegally. Contracts
shall not allow any employee to remain on duty or perform in a
sensitive position who is found to use illegal drugs until such time as
the contractor, in accordance with procedures established by the
contractor, determines that the employee may perform in such a
position.
(e) The provisions of this clause pertaining to drug testing programs
shall not apply to the extent they are inconsistent with state or local
law, or with an existing collective bargaining agreement; provided that
with respect to the latter, the Contractor agrees that those issues
that are in conflict will be a subject of negotiation at the next
collective bargaining session.
(End of clause)
(FR Doc. 88-22335 Filed 9-27-88; 8:45 am)
BILLING CODE 3810-01-M
|
716.166 | Comments | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sat Feb 11 1989 21:33 | 37 |
| Last year also gave us Public Law 100-690, "Anti-Drug Abuse Act of
1988". It is 400 pages, so please forgive me for not reading it or
typing all of it in. It creates a new executive agency for dealing
with drugs and gives directives to all sorts of existing agencies.
Title V of Public Law 100-690 is User Accountability. Subtitle D of
Title V is the five-page "Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988". The
Drug-Free Workplace Act requires federal contractors and grantees to
establish anti-drug programs. However, this act seems weaker than the
Defense clause in that it does not stipulate testing. When you're done
wondering what the other 395 pages of Public Law 100-690 say, start
wondering about what the other 689 or more laws the bicentennial
Congress passed say. I have a copy of Subtitle D if anybody is
interested.
Note the Defense clause does not apply to the extent it conflicts with
state or local law. For some areas, it may be relatively simple to
have the town pass an ordinance saying "Don't do that.". Favorable
decisions in California and Massachusetts would take care of those
states.
The testing method is not specified. I submit the most effective and
accurate way to test for drug abuse that impairs productivity is to
measure productivity. The most effective way to test for abuse that
decreases reliability is to test reliability. The most effective way
to test for abuse that increases absenteeism is to count days absent.
And so on, and so on. Alternative tests might include interrogatives,
such as "Do you use illegal drugs?". Particularly appropriate to this
matter might be the use of the immersion measurement: The subject is
bound to a see-saw and forced underwater. If they live, they are using
illegal drugs and are sentenced to a counseling program.
If you wish further information, contact Gurden Drake at (202)
697-6921. If you wish to comment, send written comments to Charles
Lloyd.
-- edp
|
716.167 | Is the janitor's job "sensitive"? | HPSRAD::SUNDAR | Ganesh | Sat Feb 11 1989 23:14 | 18 |
| Re .164 (edp)
Thanks for keeping us posted. The clause regarding "Who is an
employee in a sensitive position" I find especially interesting:
"An employee who has been granted access to classified information;
or employees in other positions **the contractor determines**
[emphasis mine] involve national security, health or safety."
It would seem to me that barring those working directly on the
contract, Digital has a lot of leeway in determining who else
is in a "sensitive position" and needs to be tested. Digital
could call the shots and say "VMS engineering isn't sensitive",
for example.
- Ganesh
|
716.168 | Looks to me like it's full of loopholes | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sun Feb 12 1989 14:47 | 62 |
| Re: .165 edp
Based on this Federal Register entry, it seems to me that Digital has a
great deal of flexibility.
First, as stated in 223.7054, paragraph (b), the drug-free work force clause
does not apply to commercial or commercial-type products, which would exclude
VMS for example. (Would it include VMS packaged as part of another contract,
though?)
Second, as stated in 252.223-7500, paragraph (b), the contractor (Digital) is
"encouraged to implement alternative approaches comparable to the criteria in
paragraph (c) below that are designed to achieve the objectives of this
clause." In other words, a drug-free work force program that *Digital*
designs would meet the terms of the contract. (It's not clear who would
decide whether this program was legimately designed to meet the objectives
of paragraph (c), though.)
Third, as stated in 252.223-7500, paragraph (c) (4) (i), it's the contractor,
not the DoD, who determines "the extent of and criteria for" testing of
employees in sensitive positions. Digital could decide that only a few
people need to be tested, or it might even be able to decide that nobody needs
to be tested except when there is probable cause that the employees have
been using drugs.
Fourth, in the remaining parts of 252.223-7500 (c), it says the contractor
"may", not "shall", test employees who aren't in sensitive positions.
Fifth, although 252.223-7500 (d) says that an employee found to be using
drugs illegally (which could mean employees who tested positive and weren't
using any of the legal substances which produce false positives) are not
allowed to remain on duty or perform in a sensitive position, it also says
that it's up to the contractor (i.e. Digital) to decide when such employees
can return to work.
Sixth, nowhere in the document does it say what will happen to employees who
refuse to take a drug test, so by default this is also Digital's decision.
If this is the language used in DEC's government contracts, and we can get a
friendly judge in case there's a dispute about whether DEC carried out the
terms of the contract, it seems to me that *nobody* at DEC should have to
take a drug test unless they want to!
If Digital really has this kind of flexibility, then it's doubly important for
us to tell management what kind of policy we'd like to have. Assuming that
there has to be testing at all, here are what I think the key points of the
drug testing program should be:
1. No employee will be tested without probable cause that they have
been using drugs on the job.
2. No employee will be fired for declining to take a drug test. (An
employee may be subject to normal disciplinary action for poor
performamce caused by drug use, though.)
3. If Digital is forced to test employees working on classified
projects, an employee who declines to take a test will be given
the option of being reassigned to a project where drug testing is
not a requirement, without prejudice to the employee's future
prospects within the company.
-- Bob
|
716.169 | "Legal" drugs can cause performance problems, too | DR::BLINN | Round up the usual gang of suspects | Sun Feb 12 1989 15:08 | 18 |
| Bob, that certainly sounds reasonable. Are you going to send a
copy of your note to the relevant people in Corporate Personnel
(already identified in an earlier note)?
I trust that no one is disagreeing with the proposition (in the
portion of the DFAR that edp helpfully provided) that a drug-free
workforce is desirable in and of itself.
I agree completely with the idea that the principle measures used
should be measures of performance, absenteeism, reliability, and
other things that relate directly to doing our jobs.
There are "legal" drugs (most notably alcohol, but also tobacco)
that can have undesirable effects on performance, reliability, or
absenteeism, and they are unlikely to be addressed by a testing
program that focuses only on "illegal" drugs.
Tom
|
716.170 | We should agree on a single proposal (if possible) | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sun Feb 12 1989 16:26 | 25 |
| Re: .169 Tom
> Bob, that certainly sounds reasonable. Are you going to send a
> copy of your note to the relevant people in Corporate Personnel
> (already identified in an earlier note)?
That's probably a good idea, but what I had in mind was that a group of
employees should come up a coherent message to management, along the lines of
what edp is doing. (No, Al K., that doesn't mean that I want to start a
union!) I think we should not only say what we don't want but also offer a
positive proposal of what drug-free workplace program we do want (given that
there has to be one at all). I'm not sure how effective it would be for
each employee to fire off their own proposal to Personnel (I might do it,
though, if no one points out any serious flaws in what I said in .168).
> I trust that no one is disagreeing with the proposition (in the
> portion of the DFAR that edp helpfully provided) that a drug-free
> workforce is desirable in and of itself.
I agree that no one should be using illegal drugs or coming to work stoned or
drunk. (I have reservations about whether marijuana is more dangerous than
alcohol, though.) I think the E.A.P. we have now should be adequate as long
as both management and employees help make it work.
-- Bob
|
716.171 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Feb 12 1989 18:45 | 32 |
| Re .169:
> I trust that no one is disagreeing with the proposition (in the
> portion of the DFAR that edp helpfully provided) that a drug-free
> workforce is desirable in and of itself.
I disagree. No scientific material has been presented to me to show
that all illegal drugs are detrimental to parties other than the user,
including me or an employer. For that matter, it is not even clear
that all illegal drugs are detrimental to the user.
I feel that measures of skill and performance are entirely sufficient,
because they are objective and achieve the necessary goals -- If drugs
DO affect parties other than the user, measuring skill and performance
will prevent damage. If drugs DO NOT affect parties other than the
user, measuring skill and performance will save the user from false
accusations.
No person should make these decisions, since they are political,
emotional, and subject to media hype. Let the facts speak for
themselves.
When I weigh the problems of importance to me, I feel more intrusion on
my life from attacks on my freedom and privacy by employers,
government, information dealers, and others than I do from alleged drug
users or abusers.
I'd rather have my privacy and freedom instead of restricting other
people's right to make choices about their own bodies.
-- edp
|
716.172 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Feb 12 1989 18:53 | 23 |
| Re .158:
> Unless it's your job to represent Digital to the government, you
> might be wise to avoid mentioning Digital in your letter.
I think it is unwise to suggest any sort of censorship. Employment
with Digital is not secret; people who are employed by Digital are free
to tell anybody they like.
A more specific caution might be appropriate: Do not present an
appearance of representing Digital if you do not. For example, do not
use Digital stationary and do not mention Digital in the signature
clause -- you are not writing in your capacity as an employee.
On the other hand, I feel free to state in the letter that I am
employed by Digital. Additionally, I have skills and knowledge that I
may use outside of my employment with Digital, so I can also sign my
letter "Eric Postpischil, Software Engineer", since I am a software
engineer by virtue of completing a program of study and not by grant
from Digital.
-- edp
|
716.173 | Well put.. | DR::BLINN | No abusing the abos if anyone is looking | Mon Feb 13 1989 16:14 | 4 |
| RE: .172 -- You said that better than I did, and captured my
intent exactly. Thanks.
Tom
|
716.174 | | EVER11::KRUPINSKI | Fare well, CASTOR and GOLLUM | Mon Feb 13 1989 17:03 | 23 |
| re .159
> (4) Provision for identifying illegal drug users, including
> testing on a controlled and carefully monitored basis.
OK, we have to make provision for testing. But making
provision for drug testing doesn't mean we have to do any.
Look at all those nuclear plants that have to make provision
for evacuating the population of nearby towns. How many
have actually done an evacuation?
Could we all piss into containers marked only by, say, cost center?
If they all show clean, everyone is happy. If they don't, identification
would proceed using a performance based process. That way no
ones test is tied directly to them, but a provision has been made
for identifying them, in compliance with the contract. I admit that
I wouldn't want to admit to having a chronic headache problem in a
group that had been identified as having samples which failed.
Tom_K
|
716.175 | How to keep lawyers employed... 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | How do you know she's a witch? | Tue Feb 14 1989 11:25 | 14 |
| re : 174
>> (4) Provision for identifying illegal drug users, including
>> testing on a controlled and carefully monitored basis.
> OK, we have to make provision for testing.
Tom,
The way I read this is we have to make provision for identifying illegal
drug users INCLUDING testing... not just a provision for testing.
Bob
|
716.176 | Where is Brenden Sullivan's phone number? | BOLT::MINOW | Why doesn't someone make a simple Risk chip? | Tue Feb 14 1989 11:50 | 19 |
| re: .168:
> 1. No employee will be tested without probable cause that they have
> been using drugs on the job.
"Probable cause" is a legal term and, I believe, the deciding factor in
a grand jury's return of an indictment. If there is probable cause that
I am using illegal drugs (on or off the job), this should be reported to
the police: not to do so may in itself be illegal ("misprison of a felony").
I suspect that we would be within the requirements of the contract if we
-- did not allow employees convicted of possession or sale of illegal
drugs to work on contracts with this clause.
-- ask employees working on such contracts to sign a statement that they
are not using illegal drugs.
Martin.
|
716.177 | 3 questions: | BENTLY::EVANS | | Tue Feb 14 1989 22:37 | 19 |
| I just finished plowing through all 176 notes..... whew.
Q #1: what amount of time would be lost due to testing
versus time lost to drug effects now -- and directly related to
this: what costs??
Q #2: just exactly what are the tests that everyone is talking about??
Q #3: If i'm to be tested, then I would like to see the
customer/Digital pay for 3 simultaneous tests: One by the
company/customer specified test facility, another by my own choice
of test facility, and thirdly a government specified test facility.
One sample split 3 ways, sealed on-site by myself, and delivered
to the appropriate parties.
Observation: Digital has started doing Cost+ contracts: SMARTS,
Boeing Sheet Metal.
Bruce Evans, Santa Clara
|
716.178 | Costs of drug use and test procedures. | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Wed Feb 15 1989 08:55 | 40 |
| re .177:
So far, I have seen no estimated figures over the time or money lost
to the effects of illegal drugs in the workplace. Certainly there is some
loss, but I suspect that if it were actually collected, the whole
hysteria over drug testing would be laughed out the door, because
it would wind up being a small fraction of the loss caused by legal
drugs (alcohol and tobacco).
There are actually two tiers of testing in most reputable programs.
The first level involves a relatively inexpensive and not particularly
urine accurate test, such as EMIT. There is some dispute about the accuracy
of this test, but some of the figures I've seen indicate that the
false positive rate is as high as 10% and the false negative as
high as 20%. It is unclear whether this takes into account only
the test, or also covers errors in procedure. Normally, if you
test positive in the first test, another urine sample is taken and submitted
to a battery of (supposedly) considerably more accurate (and expensive)
tests. The degree of accuracy possible in the entire procedure
is one subject of fierce debate. At least one study cited by the
ACLU (I can dig out the name of the organization who did it if you
want) found that a sample of test labs reported 40% false positive
when supplied with drug-free urine samples.
Since the second level of tests is considerably more expensive than
the first, one area of general concern is that a lot of companies
may use the first, rather inaccurate tests without going to the
second level, particularly for new hires and low level positions.
After all, how many thousands of dollars would you expect an employer
to spend on a hiring candidate or a janitor?
Another area of concern about the testing is that a great deal more
can be learned from a urine sample than just whether the metabolitic
byproducts of (possible) drug use are present. A good deal about
your general state of health, susceptability to a number of diseases,
pregnancy, etc. can be determined. Given the current drive to rein
in health costs, that almost automatically puts an employer in a
position of temptation, if not outright conflict of interest.
/Dave
|
716.179 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Wed Feb 15 1989 15:06 | 52 |
| re .177, .178
If anyone cares about the technology...
The drug screening commonly used is based upon radio-immunoassay. A
molecule is engineered that will attach itself to the compound(s) of
interest and tagged with some radio-isotope. A known amount of this
molecule is allowed to mix with the sample under test for a specified
time. It is then flushed from the sample and a reading taken of
residual radiation from the sample. In the case of drug testing, the
tagged molecule looks for metabolites, the molecule(s) that result when
the liver deactivates the drug molecule. Compounds that have
similar molecular structures tend to break down to the same
metabolite(s) which is why many over the counter drugs will show false
positives on these tests.
RIA is conceptually very simple and very sensitive, but for this to be
at all accurate, temperature and pH, along with other test condition,
have to be carefully controlled. In a previous job, I operated an
automated RIA machine in a large hopsital lab where it was used to
monitor small changes in specific enzymes that would in turn indicate
how the healing process was proceeding. It was a very expensive process
as we would have to recalibrate before each run and include known test
samples for every 5-10 real samples. And we were aiming for
repeatability, not absolute accuracy as the useful information was not
the absolute concentration of the enzyme, but how much it had changed
in 24 hours.
I have a hard time beleiving that these problems have been overcome for
use in mass produced test kits, such as EMIT. There is another,
competing brand of test, using the same technology whose name I forget.
Both of course claim to have solved the problems with false reading etc
that they both denied existed, excecpt in the other company's kits. I
recall reading that one of Reagan's drug advisors holds some patents in
this area...
Backup tests supposedly use gas chromatography and mass spectometry.
Both require a significant amount of trained manual intervention and
are very expensive.
And there are cases of employers running other tests without the
employee's knowledge, in particular pregnancy tests.
This idiocy is spreading. In the process of applying for life insurance
recently, I was asked to sign forms consenting to the taking of blood
and urine samples and to allow them to perform any test their
bureaucratic hearts desired (including but not limited to drug testing
and HIV antibody testing) and to approve the release of such results to
some giant national insurance medical database without my ever seeing
the results. Needless to say, I didn't.
gary
|
716.180 | paranoia strikes deep | XANADU::FLEISCHER | Bob 381-0895 ZKO3-2/T63 | Wed Feb 15 1989 18:32 | 31 |
| re Note 716.179 by STAR::HUGHES:
> This idiocy is spreading. In the process of applying for life insurance
> recently, I was asked to sign forms consenting to the taking of blood
> and urine samples and to allow them to perform any test their
> bureaucratic hearts desired (including but not limited to drug testing
> and HIV antibody testing) and to approve the release of such results to
> some giant national insurance medical database without my ever seeing
> the results. Needless to say, I didn't.
I've had a similar experience. I belong to the IEEE and have
been buying the IEEE members group life insurance for about
10 years. Periodically they have a drive to get people to
sign up for increased coverage. I've almost always taken
advantage of this, since it was easy (just sign a form and
send in a few more dollars) and it tracked my family's
increasing needs fairly well.
The last time I did this (signed the form and sent in extra
money), a package of needles and vials and stuff arrived in
the mail about a month later. The only paperwork was a form
with about 20 items on it with one checked off. The rather
terse English next to the box was an "order" to take this to
a doctor to get the blood drawn and mailed to a particular
address. That was all it said.
Needless to say, I didn't. My extra money was returned. I
wonder if I'm marked in some great insurance database as
"uninsurable" or "refused"?
Bob
|
716.181 | | BENTLY::EVANS | | Fri Feb 17 1989 17:48 | 21 |
| re: 180 "...they sent a package of needles...."
Good Grief!!! They shipped needles to you!! I know diabetics can
purchase injection equipment, but I thought that was somewhat
controlled (i.e., the pharmacy had to see the doctors statement,
etc).
re: last few - drug test descriptions
Thanks... I graduated BS in Chemistry and appreciate what you are
saying. I agree, especially with the relative accuracy required
by the various instrumentation -- I'm suspicious we are letting
ourselves (as a society) get the attitude this drug testing stuff
is like the corner drugstore pregnancy kit - cheap, relatively
accurate, and foolproof [pretty much all false]
Sigh. Hopefully this will be a relatively quick fad...... but I
don't think so.
Bruce Evans
|
716.182 | A new drug test to worry about | HSSWS1::GREG | The Texas Chainsaw | Sat Feb 18 1989 03:34 | 18 |
|
A quick perusal of the "Review and Evaluation of Smoking
Cessation Methids: The United States and Canada, 1978-1985"
has revealed that there are now available tests which can
detect the use of tobacco. It further suggests that these
tests will become an integral part of the campaign against
smoking. In light of the controversy of late over drug
testing, this seems like just another expression of the same
attitude of oppression that is becoming so popular. How
long before government contracts insist on a "smoke-free
workplace"? Probably not as long as you might think.
The tests are being perfected today such that they
are "easier to administer, more accurace, and more sensitive."
The insurance companies will be the first to pick them up,
I'm sure... but big business won't be far behind.
- Greg
|
716.183 | No big suprise | CANYON::ADKINS | Insert Relevant Phrase Here | Sat Feb 18 1989 12:29 | 15 |
| Re .181:
> Good Grief!!! They shipped needles to you!!
Laws on dispensing of hypodermic needles varies from state to state.
Here in AZ, a prescription is not necessary to obtain syringes.
I have friend who does medical intake for drug and alcohol patients
here and is glad the law is as it is. Junkies are going to be junkies.
You don't just say "Stop that!" and they stop. It's better if they
can get their own needles easily and not share them to reduce the
spread of AIDS, hepatitis, etc.
Jim
|
716.184 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Sun Feb 19 1989 11:34 | 6 |
| re .182
Insurance Co's routinely test for nicotine metabolites in their urine
testing.
gary
|
716.185 | output rather than input devices | XANADU::FLEISCHER | Bob 381-0895 ZKO3-2/T63 | Mon Feb 20 1989 11:57 | 14 |
| re Note 716.181 by BENTLY::EVANS:
> re: 180 "...they sent a package of needles...."
>
> Good Grief!!! They shipped needles to you!! I know diabetics can
> purchase injection equipment, but I thought that was somewhat
> controlled (i.e., the pharmacy had to see the doctors statement,
> etc).
This was blood-drawing equipment; perhaps these needles
differ from the kind used to inject substances. (They get
used with the "vacuum filled" vials.)
Bob
|
716.186 | GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR | FTMUDG::GRANDE | | Mon Feb 20 1989 15:46 | 8 |
| What right does a BIG company have in prying into their employees
private lives? I am total against the drug testing. All I can
say is that when they do start testing for this that I'm sure they
will be amazed as to who uses drugs and who doesn't. I bet some
of the management all the way down the line, uses some sort of drug,
whether it be alcohol to cocaine. And I'm wondering how a manager
would feel knowing that his best person the one who he'd hope would
never leave his group just tested positive.
|
716.187 | Don't do the crime if you can't do the time... | BOSTON::SOHN | In my prime in '89 | Mon Feb 20 1989 16:10 | 30 |
| re: < Note 716.186 by FTMUDG::GRANDE >
> What right does a BIG company have in prying into their employees
> private lives?
Don't blame DEC; this is being imposed by Uncle Same, isn't it?
And I don't blame the government, either. Drug users are potential
security and QA risks. On a sensitive project, it is not unreasonable
(IMHO) to eliminate those risks before they become actual problems.
> All I can say is that when they do start testing for this that I'm sure
> they will be amazed as to who uses drugs and who doesn't. I bet some
> of the management all the way down the line, uses some sort of drug,
> whether it be alcohol to cocaine.
I agree. Maybe when people start getting laid off or reassigned
they'll get the message that taking drugs is stupid, bad for your
health, and illegal. I have little sympathy for those who get
caught by this.
> And I'm wondering how a manager would feel knowing that his best person
> the one who he'd hope would never leave his group just tested positive.
Yeah, too bad - but you pays your money, you takes your chances.
Hey, maybe they'll let the guys who get caught go through rehab as an
option.
eric
|
716.188 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 21 1989 08:21 | 38 |
| Re .187:
> Don't blame DEC; this is being imposed by Uncle Same, isn't it?
No, it is not. Digital was under no obligation to sign the clause.
> And I don't blame the government, either.
What, shall we just give up representative government?
> Drug users are potential security and QA risks.
On the contrary, there would be no security risk if people weren't
threatened with loss of their jobs if a blackmailer revealed their use
or abuse. And quality assurance is effected by CHECKING QUALITY, not
by checking people for things unrelated to quality. This current
government action is a result of politics and emotions, NOT SCIENCE.
> Maybe when people start getting laid off or reassigned they'll get
> the message that taking drugs is stupid, bad for your health, and
> illegal.
When people start getting laid off or reassigned, people will get the
message that they live under an oppressive and intrusive government
which acts unfairly, unscientifically, and with little regard for the
rights and privacy of its citizens. NOT ALL DRUG USE IS STUPID. Drugs
are outlawed for POLITICAL reasons, not scientific. And even if drug
use is stupid, people have a RIGHT to PRIVACY. Just as long as it does
not affect their jobs, which you can check on by CHECKING THEIR JOBS,
NOT THEIR URINE. If you want to know if a computer is working, you run
diagnostics on the computer. You don't check urine to make sure the
computer is working. And just because something is illegal does not
mean it is unethical. The government does NOT have a right to make any
law it pleases, and it's more than past time for people to recognize
they should respect other people's freedom.
-- edp
|
716.189 | YEAH! | FTMUDG::GRANDE | | Tue Feb 21 1989 10:14 | 2 |
| RE .188:
I TOTALLY AGREE WITH YOU!!!!
|
716.190 | | FTMUDG::GRANDE | | Tue Feb 21 1989 11:03 | 30 |
| RE .187
The people that do these drugs and are very good wokers;one's whom
nobody ever would suspect, probably DO NOT believe that the drugs
they do are STUPID. So what if YOU think they're stupid people
for doing drugs, do they tell you that you are stupid for not doing
drugs? These people would probably not take the option of going
to rehab. for the reason that they do not believe that as long as
they aren't hurting anybody but themselves(I'll agree that they
are hurting themselves in the long run)why should the company they
work for demand that they go to rehab. or get fired. The people
that they may offer this 'option' to could very well be a good friend
of yours whom you had no idea that they used drugs(alcohol is a
DRUG). Wouldn't it be sad to see someone you trusted and liked
very much get reassigned or laid off just because they did drugs
ON THEIR OWN TIME!!!!!!? All people aren't junkies just because
they do DRUGS. What's it to anybody what other people do with their
time whether it be legal or illegal as long as their work isn't
affected by it. I know some people who work (not here) better and
are smarter (they think more realalistic and logically) when they're
"stoned" than some of the upper management and engineers do that
have big degrees and don't do any ILLEGAL drugs, but they may have
gone out the night before and got so "wasted" from helping their
friends finish a keg of beer that they had to call in sick or come
in late because of a hang over. In my opinion, alcohol does more
damage to the one who drinks it and innocent people than does smoking
pot. How many stories have you read that say that this person killed
a family when he/she hit another car head on because he/she smoked
a joint a half hour ago? Probably not nearly anything compared to
pictures and stories you have seen about someone killing a family
due to high blood alcohol content.
|
716.191 | Bad Assumption - Positive = Drug User | FYRCAT::HOGLUND | | Tue Feb 21 1989 12:26 | 7 |
| re:187
I just hope neither you or I get laidoff or assigned to a rehab
program because of an error in testing.
I don't take drugs now, never have, and don't expect to take then
in the future. I also don't trust the testing!
|
716.192 | | BOSTON::SOHN | just shy of thirtysomething B`( | Tue Feb 21 1989 17:26 | 39 |
| re: < Note 716.191 by FYRCAT::HOGLUND >
> I just hope neither you or I get laidoff or assigned to a rehab
> program because of an error in testing.
Agreed.
> I don't take drugs now, never have, and don't expect to take then
> in the future.
2 out of 3 aint bad (statute of limitations is over, I think)
> I also don't trust the testing!
If I knew enough about the procedure, I could make a judgement
about this. My guess (yes, only a guess) that the testing will
consist of multiple tests on multiple samples, in order to minimize
the chances of false positives and negatives.
re: .188, .189, .190
Well, we disagree. I used to feel like you do, too - maybe age has
made me a bit crusty.
However, we should not continue this branch of the discussion - at
least not here. If there is/was a Soapbox, that is where this dis-
cussion belongs.
re: .188
Yes, Digital did not have to agree to the drug-testing clause. What
if they hadn't? How many contracts would they have to no-bid on?
If they *really* wouldn't have been punished for not agreeing to the
clause, I agree with you - they shouldn't have. On the other hand,
remember how they puclicly lynched Julian Bond, for refusing to take
a urine test.
eric
|
716.193 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Feb 21 1989 17:27 | 1 |
| I also very strongly agree with .188!!!!!
|
716.195 | nearing a rathole (watch your step) | BOSTON::SOHN | just shy of thirtysomething B`( | Wed Feb 22 1989 17:29 | 21 |
| re: < Note 716.194 by REGENT::LEVINE >
1) No rights are absolute (e.g. yelling "fire" in a movie theatre).
2) The courts do have the right to determine/interpret just what our
rights are. They could, for example, determine that the Second
Amendment does not give the average citizen the right to bear arms
(please avoid this rathole).
3) Yes, I could see this ending up in court.
4) Personally, as I think I stated .187, I believe that we will see our
rights redefined to a certain extent as subordinate to those of society-
that society has a right to take steps to defend itself. For example,
the right to safe streets may be ruled to be more important than that
of the Second Amendment (in order to ban AK47s from sale or ownership)
or that the right of women not to be degraded is more important than
the First Amendment. It's my personal belief that this will be a
trend in the judiciary in the future.
eric
|
716.196 | | MU::PORTER | what's in a name? | Wed Feb 22 1989 23:12 | 9 |
| re .195
That's all well and good, but Digital Equipment Corp is a computer
manufacturer, it's not the government and it isn't a police force.
Ergo, law enforecment is not DEC's business, unless DEC has
definite reason to believe that laws are being broken on its
premises.
|
716.197 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Feb 23 1989 08:20 | 14 |
| Re .195:
> The courts do have the right to determine/interpret just what our
> rights are.
No, they do not. The courts have some authorization from us, the
people, to determine exactly what is meant by our laws. If the courts
overstep that authorization, the people will exercise their rights
through civil unrest.
Government has DUTIES. People have RIGHTS.
-- edp
|
716.198 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Feb 23 1989 08:53 | 15 |
| > < Note 716.195 by BOSTON::SOHN "just shy of thirtysomething B`(" >
> 4) Personally, as I think I stated .187, I believe that we will see our
> rights redefined to a certain extent as subordinate to those of society-
> that society has a right to take steps to defend itself. ...
> .... It's my personal belief that this will be a
> trend in the judiciary in the future.
Exactly the point! And that's the argument that many in this topic and
elsewhere are arguing for. STOP THIS EROSION of personal liberty
by pushing back against those who would make the decisions you describe
for us. Hard as it may be to stop them from taking rights away,
it will be far harder to get those rights back should we lose them.
- tom]
|
716.199 | Priority 1) Money 2) Soapbox 3) Dresscode ... :-) | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Feb 23 1989 09:41 | 26 |
| > What is wrong with this picture?
...
> There's a rumor going around in my building/group. It states
> that field service people with company cars will now be tested
> for drugs. Does anybody know if there's any truth in this?
...
...
> So... What I'm hearing then is that the privacy and confidentiality
> of our books is more important than the privacy and confidentiality
> of our people. The dollars outweigh the importance of the employees
> (often touted by management as "our most valuable resource").
...
Am I the only one who noticed that there was lot more uproar over the
demise of the car plan than over the drug testing at Digital? If WE,
as employees of this coroporation, guard our pocketbooks more
vehemently than our privacy, how can we expect our employer NOT to
outweigh the dollars over employees?
- Vikas
P.S. Personally, I am amused by the number of responses generated over
a suggestion of dress code, even though all of us knew that the person
making the suggestion had zero authority to really bring about any
change in the way we dress.
|
716.200 | I like who's in charge | SSDEVO::HAMPTON | Phil Hampton, HSC Software Development | Thu Feb 23 1989 11:22 | 15 |
| I had the opportunity to sit in at a meeting yesterday where the manager of
Corporate Employee Relations was the "guest speaker" (actually, it was sort
of a small group discussion). Naturally, she outlined her responsibilities
for us. One of them was "solving the drug testing dilemma" (my quote, not
hers). The meeting had nothing at all to do with drug testing, but she did
say a couple of statements to that subject. I won't even try to quote her,
but I got the very strong feeling that she is against mandatory drug testing
for DEC employees. More importantly, this individual came across as a truly
dynamic, caring, concerned manager who wants to "do the right thing." It was
a tremendous pleasure for me to sit in and her her thoughts on the topics at
hand. I am totally against drug testing. All I can say is that I feel a
great relief knowing that this manager is in charge of resolving this issue
for the corporation.
Phil
|
716.201 | One person's "civil disobedience" | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/RSTS/TOPS20 system support | Thu Feb 23 1989 17:58 | 19 |
| Re .197:
>> The courts have some authorization from us, the
>> people, to determine exactly what is meant by our laws. If the courts
>> overstep that authorization, the people will exercise their rights
>> through civil unrest.
A fine example of this in my case is my objection to an enforced
"speed limit" for automobiles on major highways. My response is
civil unrest: I buy a radar detector and take my chances. I am
still a "law-abiding" citizen when the laws make intellectual
sense, but this one "law" I strongly disagree with.
[Belief/disbelief in the "speed limit" usually results in *HOT*
debates. My intent is not to start such a one here, merely to
point out there are other ways to pursue civil unrest than the
usual "sit-ins", etc.]
Warren
|
716.202 | Not good for the company | WELCOM::NOURSE | The Tie-Dyed Side of the Force | Thu Feb 23 1989 18:22 | 8 |
| re .199:
> Am I the only one who noticed that there was lot more uproar over the
> demise of the car plan than over the drug testing at Digital?
You are only seeing the tip of the iceberg. Many people are less likely
to respond to this in the notesfiles out of paranoia. Instead they
will quietly circulate their resum�s.
|
716.203 | | ATLS17::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Feb 24 1989 08:19 | 6 |
| Re: .200 (Corporate Employee Relations manager)
What's her name? Perhaps she'd like some opinions on the subject.
tim
|
716.204 | How do you judge priorities? | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Fri Feb 24 1989 09:15 | 29 |
| Re: .199
> Am I the only one who noticed that there was lot more uproar over the
> demise of the car plan than over the drug testing at Digital?
I've noticed the difference, but I'm not sure that the visible
uproar can be used as an indication of the priorities of Digital
employees.
The car plan change was a change in Digital policy that affected
large number of Digital employees directly. The drug testing
plan currently only affects a very small number of employees.
If Digital had announced a drug testing program that affected as
many employees as the car plan change (or even if Digital said
they were considering such a plan), then the uproar would have
been much louder.
The participants in the uproar over the car plan were, by and
large, the employees affected by the policy change. On the
other hand, the participants in the uproar over drug testing
have mostly been those that object to the idea of drug testing
but not currently affected.
Also, Digital changed its position on the car plan several
times, and each of these changes were discussed in detail. This
caused hundreds of notes to be written. There hasn't been this
fluctuation in the corporate position on drug testing.
B.J.
|
716.205 | Laurie Margolies @CFO is Corp. Employee Relations Mgr. | DR::BLINN | Life's too short for boring food | Fri Feb 24 1989 16:00 | 19 |
| RE: .203 -- The Corporate Employee Relations Manager is Laurie
Margolies, DTN 251-1370, CFO2-3/C19. If you're planning to
contact her, I'd recommend you use MTS addressing so that it
will get delivered to her ALL-IN-1 account, although ELF lists
her VAXmail address as BARTLE::MARGOLIES. You could, of course,
try calling her on the telephone, I suppose, but you're not
very likely to get through.
RE: This topic -- Please try to focus on issues around drug
testing at Digital. At least some of the recent replies have been
rather immoderate, and have little or nothing to do with working
at Digital. In my opinion, they belong in PEAR::SOAPBOX, not
here.
Tom
|
716.206 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Feb 26 1989 13:09 | 6 |
| I'm working on the letter to Digital. It's going to take me a few more
days -- there's a lot to cover; it's up to 300 lines now. I'll post a
draft here as soon as possible.
-- edp
|
716.207 | clarification | SSDEVO::HAMPTON | Phil Hampton, HSC Software Devel. | Mon Feb 27 1989 11:45 | 10 |
| Re: .205
> RE: .203 -- The Corporate Employee Relations Manager is Laurie
> Margolies, DTN 251-1370, CFO2-3/C19. If you're planning to
Laurie is *not* the Corporate Employee Relations Manager. She does, however,
work in the Corporate Employee Relations Department. This was verified with
a phone call a few minutes ago.
Phil
|
716.208 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Coffee, please. Irregular. | Mon Feb 27 1989 12:24 | 4 |
| I believe the lady who was quoted as being the DRI for resolving the
drug testing dilemma is Erline Belton. (sp?)
Marge
|
716.209 | "Corporate Emp. Rel. Mgr. -- DTN 251-1370" | DR::BLINN | Eschew obfuscation | Mon Feb 27 1989 14:31 | 16 |
| Erline is the manager responsible for the drug testing program,
and is working with a team of several other senior people.
If Laurie is not the manager, then I was lied to when I called
the number listed in the Digital Telephone Directory and asked
for the name of the manager. It's an unfortunate fact of life
that the Digital Telephone Directory leaves something to be
desired in this regard, since it lists a phone number for the
function without giving a name. However, the "personal" listing
for Laurie Margolies matches, in both DTN and mailstop, the
one for the "Corporate Employee Relations Manager", as well
as for the "Employee Relations Program Manager", in the
Departmental Listing section of the Digital Telephone Directory.
So you can imagine why I trusted what I was told.
Tom
|
716.210 | The Drug-Free Workplace Helpline | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Yaz die-hard without equal | Wed Mar 01 1989 13:24 | 18 |
| This might interest some of you:
[reprinted without permission from _Industry_Week_, February 20,
1989, p.11]
Need help on an antidrug program?
If you've decided to launch a drug-abuse program in your company
-- or you want to evaluate a program that's already in place
-- help is just a phone call away. The "Drug-Free Workplace
Helpline," operated by the National Institute on Drug Abuse,
is staffed from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Eastern time) Monday through
Friday. Staffers can provide information on: Assessing drug
abuse in an organization, implementing a drug-abuse policy,
choosing an employee-assistance program, evaluating the
effectiveness of a drug-abuse program, TECHNICAL AND LEGAL
ASPECTS OF DRUG TESTING [emphasis mine], and other subjects.
The number to call is: 800-843-4971
|
716.211 | | DELNI::MCGORRILL | Its your turn anyway.. | Wed Mar 01 1989 16:44 | 7 |
| rep ;210
That makes sense, a hotline! Well on the news last eve,
I saw a company which sells a service of infiltrating companys employee
ranks to spy on them (narcs we used to call them in school??) So
watch out for those new hires!
-d-
|
716.212 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 01 1989 17:43 | 572 |
| The following is a VERY rough draft of a letter to Digital. I have not
proofread it at all, just typed it in as I went through the outline I
had. At this point, it is a series of explanatory statements about
each of the issues I am aware of. It does not yet represent my views,
let alone those of anybody else.
I am entering this only because time is of the essence; Digital is
making plans NOW. I think it is urgent that employees have some
input into these plans, and perhaps some participation. Because
of the timing, I am considering sending this to the previously
identified personnel person tomorrow (Thursday), unless there are
objections.
I will include a strong statement that this is not a representation of
anybody's views; the paper-in-progress is only being revealed because
of the need to make Digital aware that there are serious employee
concerns which need to be addressed before plans are made. I am also
going to ask that it not yet be circulated except to those who need to
know that the final paper is on its way.
If you have comments, please make them as soon as possible. I'll be
checking spelling, formatting, and doing some rewriting and maybe a
little re-organizing. If you have suggestions for making things
clearer, presenting them in a more logical order, or additional points,
please let me know.
-- edp
PROCEDURE
Suddenness
The immediate reaction to news that there will be a drug-testing
program is "What's going on here?". Not only were employees not
notified prior to entering into a contract that affects them, but
information presented through internal memo or Digital Video Network
is that Digital is now determining what is necessary to comply with
DFARS Subpart 223.75. This is confusing, because it would seem proper to
determine the implications of a contract before signing it.
Employee Impact
The lack of employee involvement in the decision is disturbing. Digital
is attempting to add to the requirements of the jobs of some
employees. Surely employment involves two parties, and both parties
should consent to a change in the relationship. Matters of privacy
and dignity are among the many discussed below; drug testing is a
serious matter. On a matter of such importance, it is discourteous
not to ask "Would you mind?" or even solicit opinions. Instead, we are
concerned that Digital is making decisions about its employees without giving
those employees the consideration that they deserve as human beings and as
parties to the employment relationship.
Information
Announcement of Digital's agreement to a drug-testing requirement came
as a surprise, and it came after the fact. Even since that announcement,
there has been little news. We have been told that Digital is making
decisions about the implications of the DFARS requirement, but we do not
know what employee involvement or consideration there is in this
process. We would like to know what is happening. We believe that
employees have a role here, and that they should take part in deciding
what will happen to themselves.
Corporate Impact
The DFARS drug-testing requirement places obligations upon Digital, and,
like all things in this world, these obligations will have a cost. In
addition, agreeing to drug-testing has implications about the character
of the corporation. The agreement is not only a change in Digital's
personnel relations; it has implications about retaining control in the
face of pressures from external parties. These are discussed in detail
below, but the magnitude of this change raises questions about the way
in which it was made. To what extent does agreement to the DFARS
requirement represent corporate policy? The precedent that has been set
here is suitable matter for the highest levels of the corporation. Has
policy been set on that level?
Current Action
Decisions about Digital's drug-testing program are being made now. There
are factors that need to be considered in these decisions. The actual
meaning of the DFARS clause needs to be resolved. For example, it states
that "commercial or commercial-type" products are excluded. To what
extent does this apply to Digital products? Will Digital consider
appropriate alternatives as permitted by the clause?
Digital has in the past rejected doing business where the customer
required as a condition contractual clauses which were repugnant to the
dignity of the employee as a person. The decision to accept the DFARS
clause is a change in previous policy. What made the Defense clause
different? We seek to understand the motivations that have changed
our employer.
Digital is a very special place to work, and the principal
reason for this is a corporate philosophy of respecting the integrity and
dignity of its engineers. Our concern is that these corporate values
should be consistently championed from the highest levels of Digital.
SUGGESTIONS
In general, we seek Digital's help in dealing with this intrusion on
our persons. We can express our opposition to our representatives in
Congress, but we have no representatives in the Department of Defense. This
change in our lives comes no through the normal political process of
law-making, but through a separate agency which seeks to act through our
employer. We realize this places Digital in an undeserved position, but
if Digital yields the circumvention of the normal process will have
succeeded. Thus, we request Digital oppose intrusion on the privacy and
dignity of its employees.
Rejection
We naturally would prefer that Digital not sign contracts containing
repugnant clauses, and we suggest that this be done when it is possible
to negotiate a contract without such a clause or when it is possible to
make the hard decision to reject the business. For reasons given
throughout this document, that decision can be the proper one because
of the benefits it provides. Digital could also seek to repeal or modify the
Defense Department rule requiring the offending clause. Certainly Digital
is not the only company affected by this rule. Perhaps other companies
with shared interests could jointly express the concerns of this matter to
the government. This is a desirable course of action in any event, because
this clause places obligations on Digital which will exact a cost, and the
government should not be permitted to believe that it may take action
freely. All members of this society, persons and corporations, need to
seek to regulate their government. It is necessary that neither Digital
nor its employees remain silent.
It is also important to recognize the possibility that acceptance of the
DFARS clause will lend support to others seeking to request similar
conditions of Digital. Such a trend should be controlled before it can
start. We suggest that strict policy on this matter be set as soon as possible.
Nullification Through Local Law
When Digital does make the unfortunate choice to accept undesirable
clauses, we suggest that the clause be mitigated to whatever degree
possible. For example, DFARS Subpart 223.75 is nullified when inconsistent
with state or local law. Employees would be grateful to Digital for
showing support for legislation protecting the privacy and dignity of human
beings.
Mitigation
In those places where local law does not protect the employee, Digital can
seek to make a drug-testing program as respectful as possible. To the
extent possible, testing should be voluntary and non-intrusive. Possibly
a signed agreement by the employee not to use drugs will satisfy the
DFARS clause.
The DFARS clause encourages the implementation of alternative approaches. The
stated objectives include the control of costs, delay, and risks of lessened
productivity and reliability and greater absenteeism. We submit that an
effective way to meet these objectives is to directly measure or observe
productivity, reliability, and absenteeism. When these are detected, they
should be corrected, even if drug abuse is not the cause, so this approach
is beneficial without being objectionable to many people. When there is a
problem, Digital should focus on the performance issue.
Employee Autonomy
It is desirable that a person retain control of their own body. For this
purpose, it is desirable that assignment to a job affected by drug-testing
requirements be voluntary, and that non-prejudicial reassignment to another
position be available when requested. Employees should be given information
about a drug-testing program so that they may make their own choices. A person
should be permitted to refuse to submit to actions they find offensive, and
such refusal should be possible without fear of undue repercussions.
HUMAN DIGNITY
Privacy
Privacy is an important aspect of human rights. Some amount of privacy is
even a psychological need. There is controversy about what substances
should and should not be illegal and to what extent use is abuse. But these
are not issues to be decided within Digital and certainly not by the Department
of Defense. While the DFARS clause overtly expresses opinions about drug
use, it is also a matter of privacy. The DFARS clause assaults the privacy
of all employees, whether or not they are using drugs.
It is obvious that drug tests strip away the privacy of those who test
positive because the person has taken an illegal substance. But
drug tests reveal more than use of illegal substances, so information about
the private lives of law-abiding citizens is threatened. Even if tests only
revealed use of illegal substances, the forceful examination of a even a
person who does not use illegal substances is still an intrusion into their
private life. People simply do not want strangers interfering with
them.
Respect
The DFARS clause contains a contradiction. One criterion for employees to
be tested is those in positions of trust and confidence. Then DFARS clause
requires employees who are trusted to be tested for drugs. This is a clear
lack of trust and confidence. Requiring a person to submit to a drug test
is a clear statement that they are not trusted. It is an act of disrespect.
Repugnance
The DFARS clause does not describe the physical acts it may require. What
is involved is at best an indignity and at worst humiliation. Digital would
be asking employees to provide a sample of their normally taboo body fluids
to a faceless corporation for impersonal processing. To keep control,
some drug-testing programs involve observation of the act. This more than
exceeds the latitude that an employer should have in making requests of their
employees, let alone requiring. And even supervision without observation is
repugnant.
Compensation
If a drug-testing program is implemented, this is a new addition to the
job requirements of some employees. But nothing is heard about consideration
for the employees' reduction of freedom. The drug-testing program represents
a hazard to future employment, including hazard to those who will refuse to
give up their privacy and to those who receive positive test results, whether
falsely or otherwise. If the corporation does not recognize the human values
described above, at least recognize that additional job requirements and
hazards correspond to some economic value. Just as Digital should not let the
government freely impose new contract clauses, employees should not let
Digital freely impose new conditions, both for the disdain and inconvenience
of the conditions and for the limitation of future conditions.
EMPLOYEE RIGHTS
All employees are human, and so those who accept a drug-testing program
should be accorded rights necessary to preserve justice.
Such rights include:
Any person subject to a drug test should be informed of the reasons for
the test. Probable cause is the only normal grounds for such an
invasion of privacy, if indeed there are ever grounds. In such a case,
the person should be informed of the evidence and testimony against them,
and the person should have the opportunity to explain the evidence, confront
the witnesses, and otherwise rebut the case.
Some employees may agree to scheduled or random testing. The use of
schedules or random testing requires monitoring to prevent accidental
or deliberate abuse which might unfairly target some persons or invade
privacy. The subjects of such tests should take part in such monitoring.
Testing on other grounds less than probable cause, such as mere suspicion
or a supervisor's discretion, is highly subject to abuse and should never
be condoned.
Whenever a sample of a person's body, wastes, or other personal material
is taken, including urine, blood, and hair, the person has a right to be
given portions to provide to testers of their own selection and to retain
for future resolution. Provision should be made for sealing such samples
and transmitting them in the manner necessary to preserve their status as
legal evidence. Proper regard shall be given to alternate test results when
made by respectable testers.
It should be recognized that errors can occur because of use of legal
substances, natural body variations, and other items that would cause even
different testers to falsely report a positive result. Because of this,
a tested person has the right to explain test results, to take additional
tests, to have the tests made by the most accurate methods available, and to
contest results.
All test results should be kept in the strictest secrecy. Test results should
not be available to any party other than those immediately involved, including
the subject's family, physician, or insurer; Personnel employees; and
supervisors or others in the management chain. Digital should establish
controls for handling sensitive information and make those controls known and
verifiable to employees.
When test results are found to be in error or unrelated to Digital concerns,
they should be destroyed at the employee's request. Employee's should be
informed of their right to have irrelevant, outdated, or erroneous
records destroyed.
These rights should extend to other personal information, such as reports
of suspected substance abuse, comments by supervisors, and adminstrative
actions. Whatever information is collected about a person should be held
confidential, accessible only to those who absolutely needed. For example,
a report of suspected abuse should be made available to no person other
than one charged with decided whether or not it is appropriate to administer
a test. It is not necessary to make such a report available to the
employee's supervisor. One consequence of failure to maintain such confidence
would be the prejudicing of a supervisor against an employee based on an
unsupported or malicious report.
If any action is taken against an employee, including suspension, transfer, or
denial of assignment, such penalty should be rescinded when results are
properly explained, when shown to be erroneous or unacceptable, or when the
problem indicated by the test results is corrected.
EMPLOYEE INFORMATION
About the Drug-Testing Program
Employees should be informed in advance that they are subject to a
drug-testing program. This information is needed to make decisions about
whether or not to accept the intrusion into their privacy and possible
consequences. Information should be included about who might be tested,
circumstances under which tests will be required or requested, who will
determine what employees will be tested, how that determination will
be made, and what choices the employee has before, during, and after
the testing.
Legal Rights
Persons who are subject to a drug-testing program, whether or not they
have yet been required or requested to submit to testing, should be
informed of their rights under applicable laws. In some jurisdictions,
employees will have a right to refuse to take a test. When that is the
case, the employee should be informed of that right -- no person should
be compelled to take a test with the mistaken belief that they are
required to submit. All other rights should be made known to the employee,
such as rights to contest or explain results.
The Tests
Any person to be tested should be permitted to understand the nature of
the tests they are to undergo. Each such person should therefore be
provided with a list of the tests to be made, including what method of
testing will be used, what the tests detect, how accurate the tests are,
what parties will be performing the tests or handling the samples, what
can cause inaccuracies in the test results, and what challenges to the
tests have been made in the past or exist now. This information should
be complete to the extent that the person can locate confirming
material. For example, in telling a person about the accuracy of a test,
the person should be given information sufficient for them to retrieve
copies of studies which established that accuracy.
In particular, each person who is asked to submit to a test should be
informed of what the tests can detect, even if the things that can be
detected are not the purpose of performing the test. That is, the
subject should be made aware of everything that can be revealed by the
test, including use of legal substances, pregnancy, and illness.
Results and Administration
To maintain the integrity of a system of information, it is necessary that
people have access to information about themselves. Any person who has
been tested should be informed in detail of the results. For example, if
tests measure a concentration, that information should be reported in full
and not reduced to a positive or negative report. Data necessary to
interpret such information should also be provided, such as typical
concentrations, normal variations thereof, and values that would be abnormal.
When any information is collected or created about a person, it should be
made known to that person so that it can be checked for accuracy and
relevance. This should include reports of suspicion, decisions made about
an employee, or any adminstrative action.
POLITICAL AND LEGAL CONCERNS
External Influences on Digital
Turning down a contract containing an unacceptable clause is a loss of
revenue. But it is also an investment, because it strengthens Digital's
negotiating stand, deters such clauses in the future, and protects Digital
from growing into a situation where it is overly dependent on a single
source of revenue.
The government has learned some new things. The Department of Defense has
learned it can have its way with Digital. The politicians have learned they
can implement a social agenda through means that sidestep the normal
Constitutional and other legal safeguards. These will not be
forgotten. Drugs are out of style, at least on the front pages of our
newspapers and the lead stories of our television news. But drugs are by
no means the only social issue, of today or tomorrow. Other people with goals
now have a new method to use to achieve their ends.
The Defense Department has opened the way for others. Representatives will
find it convenient to add an amendment to a bill which will add a clause
to one contract or another. Other government agencies will establish their
own rules. And Digital has already received requests from private companies
to submit Digital employees to drug-testing. There is a lot of potential
for pressure from many directions. A strong and decisive policy is needed
to control that pressure.
Checks and Balances
Our government was designed with specific protections. Different powers
of the government were given to different branches. The rights of citizens
to due process, freedom from search and seizure,
and others were recognized by the Constitution to protect citizens from
all branches of government. In other words, some powers were given to
the various branches of government but some powers were not given to the
government at all.
In the DFARS clause, the Department of Defense seeks to subject some
people to intrusive searches. There is a significant danger here of
presuming people guilty unless they can prove their innocence. Certainly
it can be argued (not necessarily correctly) that the Department of
Defense is acting within the law. But due process and freedom from search
are more than a matter of law. These rights were written into the law
because they are valuable. These rights produce desirable results, and
so we should hold on to them for the benefit of those results, rather than
a legal basis.
There are several checks and balances we are losing here. The Department
of Defense made this regulation. But Congress is our legislative
body. We need to oppose this transfer of power so that we can retain
control of our government.
Administering tests is a search of a very private kind. Privacy is
valued for reasons given elsewhere, but privacy should also be maintained
as a limit on government power. We need to say to the government that it
can control people thus far, and no farther.
There is also risk here to the principles of due process and presumption
of innocence. This sidestepping of the normal governing procedures also
sidesteps the normal reviews and controls of government, including court
review to a great extent. Proper procedures in matters of accusation and
determination of guilt are valuable because they prevent a system from
unintentional degeneration and deliberate or accidental misuse. We protect
the rights of the innocent by protecting the rights of all, and we presume
people to be innocent until proven guilty because the danger of punishing
innocent people must be balanced with the desire to punish the guilty.
A drug-testing program operated by a private company threatens these
rights. Consider also that Digital is a part of our society, and Digital
is therefore subject to government control just as much and individuals
are. The rights that are valuable to individuals are also valuable to
Digital. It is in Digital's interest to seek to limit the government's
control over our society.
Digital's Direct Concern
Newspaper and television reports about drugs have increased. But an
increase in stories is not the same as an increase in problems. Has
the use or abuse of illegal substances posed a problem to Digital? To
what extent is product quality and cost affected? These are the points
which affect Digital directly, the points that have to do with the
working of the company. They are internal, and they are a part of the
process of running the company.
The influences we are experiencing now are external. To some extent,
they are unreal -- things which could be eliminated without affecting
the company's ability to design, manufacture, and sell products. When
decisions are made about a drug-testing program, the extent to which
drugs have really presented a problem should be considered. The extent
to which drugs are in the media should be resisted.
If there are real problems with drugs, these should be made known to
people. Flashy ads on television increase cynicism. An intelligent
person knows that a picture of an egg on a frying pan does not give
them information about drugs, and that even if the picture were an
accurate analogy for some drug, it could not be accurate for all
drugs. People also know that more scientific-sounding opinions can be
bantered back and forth endlessly. What is needed is the truth. If
Digital will have a drug awareness program, then make people aware of
actual problems which have caused Digital actual damage. Show the truth
and let it speak for itself.
Law
The January/February 1989 issue of the Colorado American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) newsletter reports
a person in California was awarded $425,000 in a suit against a
company which fired her for refusing to submit to a drug test, and
there was a similar award in Massachusetts. We congratulate those states
that enact laws to protect privacy and those courts that recognize and
protect it. Digital obviously needs to consider these protections when
designing a drug-testing program.
DRUG TEST PROBLEMS
Testing a Symptom
Chemical drug tests do not measure impairment. They measure such things
as chemical concentrations. It is one problem that such chemical concentrations
can be caused by things other than use or abuse of illegal substances. But
even if chemical tests could precisely identify past use or abuse of illegal
substances, the tests do not measure impairment. The ability of a person to
do a job is dependent on their alertness, their motor skills, and punctuality.
Substances are outlawed for political reasons. These reasons are occasionally
based on science, but the process is political, and so the result is
basically political. Illegal substances are not necessarily outlawed because
they will produce impairment that will affect Digital. When substances do
produce impairment, such impairment does not necessarily continue until the
time when a person reports for work. Exposure to controlled substances may
occur under circumstances in which the exposed person is not acting illegally,
including inadvertent exposure, exposure outside of the jurisdiction of the
United States, and prescription or other lawful use. Chemical tests report
none of this.
And chemical tests do not just indicate use of illegal substances. Since
tests measure chemicals which are indirectly the result of illegal substances,
the tests reveal additional information which is not pertinent to detection
of drug use or abuse.
Many people who oppose chemical tests would be agreeable to tests that
actually measured impairment. We agree that Digital is paying for services
rendered, and so Digital has a valid interest in seeing those services
performed effectively and correctly. But when chemical tests are used,
Digital measures something other than impairment; Digital measures something
in which the company has no legitimate interest. That is an invasion of
privacy.
Misuse
Drug tests are prone to misuse. When a person gives a sample of their
bodily fluids, they lose control of personal information. This is an act
of trust, but trust is not appropriate in this situation because it has
been abused before. The Colorado ACLU newsletter also reports that the
District of Columbia police department used the urine samples to test for
pregnancy, and promotions or job offers were delayed if a person tested
positive.
A human being is well-advised to fear what will happen out of their
sight. Urine samples could also be used to look for legal drugs such
as anti-depressants or for diseases. Digital asks for an enormous amount
of faith when it asks for a sample of a person's body.
Third Parties
Many employees will extend trust that Digital will not misuse chemical
tests, particularly if there is employee review of the process. But this
trust cannot extend to strangers. Digital is likely to contract drug-testing
work to separate companies. Employees then need assurances that those
companies are trustworthy.
In addition to direct threats to privacy, there is the possibility that
personal information about people will be used for statistical
purposes. Removing individual identification from personal information and
using it in statistical or other scientific studies is often considered
objective and not an invasion of privacy. But errors in the removal of
individual identification can leave the test subjects
vulnerable. For example, a database might not given an individual name,
but it might accidentally give an inquirer the test results of a female
aged 30 to 35 in cost center 123, a description which could correspond to
exactly one person who could be identified by name. Even if individual
identification is not possible, statistical information can also be abused
by reference to groups small enough to cast aspersions on individuals, and by
misinterpretation which can adversely affect groups of people. Regardless
of what use is made of the information, information about a person gathered
from their bodily fluids should be regarded as their property and not
made available to any person for any use other than that for which it was
collected.
There is a yet more potent threat. The ACLU newsletter reports that the
United States Attorney's office subpoenaed the University of Florida for
results of drug tests given to students. The circumvention of the
normal processes of government comes to a full circle; although the government
cannot test a person without probable cause, it has found a way to cause a
person to be tested and then to take the results. This heinous disregard
for human privacy, rights, and dignity must be opposed. This eliminates the
matter of trust; even if Digital could be trusted not to misuse test results,
the company clearly has no power to make such a guarantee.
False Positives
Drug tests are not accurate. Inaccuracies exist because what is measured is
not the presence of the controlled substance itself and because the measurement
itself is prone to error.
Because of the difficulties of measuring the concentration of some substances,
chemical tests search for consequences of drug use, such as metabolites, instead
of the actual illegal substances. But some legal drugs, foods, and natural
body functions produce the same metabolites as illegal substances or metabolites
which are so similar as to be indistinguishable by the tests used. It is
impossible for any test for metabolites to eliminate this source of
error. Certainly no employee should be compelled to reveal what legal drugs
they are using; this would carry the invasion of privacy even further.
The techniques of measurement are also prone to error. Temperature, acidity,
and other elements of the test conditions must be carefully controlled. In
professionally laboratories, test results will vary from batch to batch and
from laboratory to laboratory. Mass-produced test kits are less accurate.
Tests for which the accuracy is questionnable are not appropriate evidence
on which to base determination of a person's guilt.
|
716.213 | good luck! (use .dis in .133) | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Coffee, please. Irregular. | Wed Mar 01 1989 20:00 | 32 |
|
Eric, I think you need to rethink the opening paragraph or you may lose
your readership immediately. You state that those affected by the
contract were not notified in advance. The following from the service
delivery unit manager in a previous reply would indicate otherwise:
.138
> When we received the DFAR clause on the contract it caught everyone
> off guard. It took Digital almost 3 months to reply and I was working
> toward having to decline the contract altogether. At all levels
> of Digital I was told that it was going to be very difficult for
> Digital to accept. The message I was consistently given was the
> fact that it was against 'Digital Culture'.
> All of the employees in the Unit were kept informed of the
> possibilities of the testing program. I would have done this anyway,
> but in this case I was instructed by my management to keep the
> employees informed. When the clause was accepted it was accepted
> for Warner Robins only and only for those individuals with clearances
> on this particular contract.
> What this means is that to date there is no policy except for 10
> people in GA.
Are you saying that those directly affected by the contract which has
been signed were not notified or that all those that may be affected by
such a decision downstream were not notified/consulted? If the latter,
again, I'd reword the opening.
Marge
|
716.214 | Good material but must improve the organization | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Wed Mar 01 1989 21:06 | 29 |
| Re .212
Comments from an armchair reviewer follow.
I think you have covered all the major issues but you seriously
need to rework the presentation. As it stands it is far too long
and subjects are covered numerous times.
You need a crisp 30 line summary up front detailing:
o Why drug testing is anathema to many employees
o Address the personal privacy/dignity issue
o Address negative connotations for Digital (lawsuits, loss
of employee respect for the company etc)
o Address the 'no smoke without fire issue'
o Address the. Bodily fluids can be used for other things issue.
At present your memo is over 500 lines long. I think you could reduce
it to about 200 lines. This memo needs to be punchy and to the point.
I'd also cut back on all the 'how governments should make law'
sections. They are not directly relevent to Digital and its
relationship with its employees.
There are MANY good points in the memo, let's try and get them
organized. Unfortnately my presentation skills suck. Is there anyone
with really good presentation skills that could take a stab at
organizingthe excellent material that Eric has put together.
Dave
|
716.215 | Emphasize the most important points | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Mar 01 1989 22:44 | 10 |
| Re: .213
I agree with .214. In addition, although this may seem obvious, I think
the letter needs to start out by saying that we are concerned that the DFARS
contract clause might lead to mandatory drug testing for all Digital
employees, not just employees working on defense contracts. If someone
didn't understand that hidden assumption, the rest of the letter wouldn't
make as much sense.
-- Bob
|
716.216 | You first, my dear CEO! | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Mar 02 1989 08:34 | 11 |
| One important point missing from Eric's presentation is about the
ranks of people who will be tested. He should point out that the
people who have REAL responsibility have always excused themselves
from the humiliating drug testing, while steadfastly forcing low
ranking people to submit to the drug testing. There are just too
many examples of such blatant abuse of the power at the top.
If and when digital decides that it needs to implement drug testing
program, IT HAS TO START AT THE TOP of the hierarchy.
- Vikas
|
716.217 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 02 1989 10:56 | 59 |
| Re .213:
I've rewording the first paragraphs a bit to make that clearer.
Re .215, .216:
Noted; I'm putting those in.
Re .214:
I intend to have a cover letter; that is not written yet. I have just
started to make an outline for it. Actually, it looks like I'll have
to write a cover letter and a summary. The cover letter will express
things like the fact that not every signer agrees to every part of the
letter, but the signers do hold common concerns about the drug-testing
issue. I also wish to make it clear in the cover letter that we are
expressing concerns, making suggestions, and requesting information.
We are not stipulating conditions.
The summary will briefly describe the important issues.
I am going to move the issues about government lower, along with
changing the order of the other items a bit. The order I am
considering is PROCEDURE, SUGGESTIONS, HUMAN DIGNITY, DRUG TEST
PROBLEMS, EMPLOYEE RIGHTS, EMPLOYEE INFORMATION, POLITICAL AND LEGAL
CONCERNS. I'm putting employee rights and information later because it
seems appropriate to explain the reasons that rights and information
are needed, and that is done in the earlier sections of human dignity
and drug test problems. For the same reason, the suggestions could go
later, but I feel comfortable with having them where they are. I'll
put the political and legal concerns last as a recognition that it
might be my personal bugaboo. But I think there are other people that
share those concerns, and they should be concerns to Digital as well.
Remember that Digital has a different viewpoint than people; Digital
the corporation doesn't have human rights, but it does have political
concerns. In addition, drug-testing is a threat to our society as well
as a threat to our privacy, so I think the concerns are appropriate.
I will re-read the section with a critical eye and see if I can
stream-line it. And I'll look for redundancy throughout the paper.
Some things are mentioned in various ways -- sometimes an item has two
aspects, such as employee rights under local law. First, Digital must
respect those rights. Second, the employee should be informed of those
rights. When there are areas that are different aspects, I'll try to
make the distinction sharper.
I agree that brevity is often useful, but I don't think the letter is
going to get much shorter. There are some places where I go into
several paragraphs to explain a point, but most of the letter was
generated by taking a list of the issues I and other suggested,
organizing them into categories (and sometimes sub-groups of
categories), and writing an explanation of each. And each of those
issues on the list is important in itself. Maybe I can make up for the
length in the summary.
-- edp
|
716.218 | Please use discretion and mature judgement | DR::BLINN | I'm pink, therefore I'm Spam | Thu Mar 02 1989 14:12 | 15 |
| I get the impression from .217 that you are thinking of having
many people sign this proposed letter. I personally doubt that
the number of signatures will have any impact on the people
reading it; if the ideas are sound and clearly presented, then
they will stand on their own. If they are unsound, or are poorly
presented, then the mere fact that many people have signed the
letter will be irrelevant.
In any case, please refrain from posting any notes here that
violate Policy 6.54 or any other of the Personnel Policies
and Procedures. I'm specifically concerned about soliciting
other employees to sign what might be construed as a petition
of grievances. I leave it to you to exercise discretion.
Tom
|
716.219 | Shouldn't DEC pass on the risk? | VMSNET::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Thu Mar 02 1989 14:33 | 5 |
| Should Digital make it clear to DoD how much extra this clause will
cost? For example, submit two bids, one that includes DFARS and one that
excludes DFARS. This should include all costs including worst case risks
from employee suits, legal costs, loss of productivity and anything else
that might be even remotely related.
|
716.220 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 02 1989 15:51 | 29 |
| Re .218:
On the other hand, it's been suggested to me that the number of signers
is important. Perhaps Digital is true to its word and is concerned for
employees. But perhaps Digital is a business and employee rights are
only a concern to the extent that treating employees well will earn
Digital more money. In that case, it does not matter if the ideas are
sound or how well they are presented, because nobody will be listening.
The important factor will be the number of employees.
I'll work at both goals.
I've read. As John said in .81, it is not a violation of policy to
solicit employees to make their opinions on a matter of importance
known to Digital management. I've used a conference previously to make
a petition available to those who wish it (ZKO_SUGGESTIONS, for the bar
codes at the ZK entrance); management addressed the petition, and I
heard no objection to using the conference (operated by Personnel,
which I presume knows the Personnel Policies and Procedures).
My intent is to post the cover letter, summary, and letter with a
letter to potential signers and a letter to those who wish to make
copies of the petition available in their group or site. I have
planned to solicit people who wish to do so, but to recommend that they
make the petition available to those who wish to sign but not campaign
for signatures. If necessary, I'll make and mail copies externally.
-- edp
|
716.221 | Carry on.. | DR::BLINN | I'm pink, therefore I'm Spam | Thu Mar 02 1989 17:04 | 8 |
| I have no objection to your making the letter available through
this conference. I would prefer that you not use this conference
to "solicit" signatures, and especially would prefer that no one
suggest using this conference to "vote" for the letter (sort of an
electronic petition). Again, I trust you to use discretion and
apply your judgement to do what's right.
Tom
|
716.222 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 02 1989 20:10 | 9 |
| Re .221:
Okay, that sounds good to me. I don't think soliciting would be very
productive; Soapbox has provided ample experience in the futility of
trying to sway opinion. My intent is to locate people who want to
participate.
-- edp
|
716.223 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 02 1989 20:34 | 13 |
| The two most common suggestions about the letter are to shorten it and
remove the material about the governing process.
I'd like to know how many people find the governing process an issue of
concern to them. Please feel free to respond here or send mail. If
you wish, I will count you and delete your mail immediately -- please
indicate in your mail if you desire that.
Also, the erroneous "engineer" has been changed to "employee". My
brain must have been thinking about another topic while I was typing.
-- edp
|
716.224 | Please use MAIL for simple "yes" or "no".. | DR::BLINN | An ill-cooked chicken has died in vain | Fri Mar 03 1989 14:11 | 5 |
| Substantive comments and suggestions are welcome here, but if all
you wish is to register a "yes" or "no" opinion on the "governing
process" content, please use MAIL to respond directly to edp.
Tom
|
716.225 | Comments and appreciation | HSSWS1::GREG | The Texas Chainsaw | Fri Mar 03 1989 21:06 | 34 |
| re: .223 (Eric)
First, I'd like to thank you for putting all of the information
together into one place. As I read through it, I began to see
where many sections of it would be extremely useful in a letter
I am preparing to send to my representatives in government.
Naturally, I will remove all references to Digital, and will
retain only those clauses which deal directly with the subject
at hand. If there is any interest, I will post the resulting
letter here for others to use as they see fit.
In answer to the two concerns that have been expressed about
your text, I have a few comments. On the brevity, I don't see
that as a particularly salient point. There are indeed many
real concerns about this latest attempt to invade the privacy
of the American populace, and I feel they must be explored in
some detail. If anything, I'd suggest that the document be
expanded to cover some of the points more concisely. Remember,
when reading printed matter, the length is less important than
the content. Only in Notes is 500 lines considered particularly
long. Indeed, it would hardly make a decent short story, in terms
of fiction.
As to the concerns about how we should be governed, they are
important to my letter to congress, though perhaps less significant
with regard to the letter to personnel. Digital is not, at present,
an official branch of the U.S. Government. As such, it is not
constrained by the rules that govern our legislators. I think
you have done a good job of illustrating why Digital should be
concerned about such issues, but is the intended audience in a
position to affect such policy decisions regarding the company's
political positions? I don't think so.
- Greg
|
716.226 | We *can* influence "how we work at Digital" | DR::BLINN | Mind if we call you Bruce? | Sun Mar 05 1989 13:27 | 17 |
| Actually, Digital tries very hard to avoid taking positions on
political matters. I believe this is codified in the corporate
Personnel Policies and Procedures manual, but I'd have to go look
for it to be certain.
In an earlier note, I indicated that I thought Laurie Margolies
was Corporate Employee Relations Manager, based on her number
matching that listed in the Digital Telephone Directory. I've
since learned from Laurie that that's an error in the directory
that they're trying to get fixed. The manager is Erline Belton,
and she is able to influence Digital's policies and procedures
in so far as they impact employee relations, and I think that's
what edp's trying to influence with his letter. I believe
that it is possible to influence how we work at Digital, even
if we can't influence the world at large.
Tom
|
716.227 | | LUTECE::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Mon Mar 06 1989 03:02 | 9 |
| I've been very interested in following the developments in this
note and plane to keep in touch, but there is a matter which is
of concern to me, while probably not very pressing. As an employee
of a foreign subsidiary, I'd like to know what the impact of implementing
drug testing at Digital would be for foreign employees (read employees
in foreign subsidiaries, not foreign employees in DEC US). Is there
any information on how that would affect us overseas?
Thanks for any input,
Denis (Digital Equipment France).
|
716.228 | MGMT MEMO extracts | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Coffee, please. Irregular. | Mon Mar 06 1989 10:11 | 23 |
| There is a three-page article in the current February/March 1989 issue
of MGMT MEMO which just arrived in my inbox. In the article, entitled
"DIGITAL Grapples with Drug Issue," Cyndi Bloom of U.S. Field Employee
Relations is quoted as saying, "Digital is working directly and through
industry associations to have all commercial products and services
excluded, but it now looks probable that some Digital employees, who
work on contracts that require them to have government security
clearances, may have to undergo some form of drug testing." The author
adds, "The extent of this testing will be determined by a number of
factors, including the nature of the work the employee performs under a
specific contract, and the public health, safety or national security
risk that could result from inadequate performance."
The article discusses communications with employees: "Digital is now
trying to determine what changes we must make and how to implement them
fairly and sensitively. All anticipated changes will be communicated
to employees through Personnel Perspectives, MGMT MEMO, LIVE WIRE and
local newsletters as quickly as possible. In addition, in Q4, Digital
plans to distribute a Field training package to Field Personnel and
then to Field managers. Later, a Field information package is planned
for employees who deal with customers."
|
716.229 | Here comes the 'gotcha'... | DPDMAI::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Mon Mar 06 1989 14:34 | 12 |
| re: .228
> "...specific contract, and the public health, safety or national security
> risk that could result from inadequate performance."
That's one of those "it means whatever we want it to mean" clauses.
I sure hope we get a VERY narrow definition of that clause.
Thanks for sharing that with us.
Bob
|
716.230 | Just say NO to drug testing | AUSTIN::FLATLEY | | Tue Mar 07 1989 01:17 | 11 |
| I'm on loan to the consortium Sematech. DEC along with the Department
of Defense and 13 other semiconductor manufactures are the members. In
December during a question and answer period at an all-hands meeting,
the CEO, Dr. Robert Noyce was asked if Sematech was considering implementing
a drug testing program. He's single word answer was a strong NO.
I for one applauded that answer. Curious that a CEO of a company that
gets 50% of its funding from the DoD in what is considered to be a
strategic industry would just say NO to drug testing. Why DEC would
I can't even begin to understand.
Bob
|
716.231 | The two companies may have different metrics... | YUPPIE::COLE | The TOUGH survive the bleeding edge! | Tue Mar 07 1989 10:47 | 6 |
| Is Sematech a for-profit, not-for-profit, or non-profit? If either
of the latter two choices, the CEO's answer is not that shocking. He doesn't
have stockholders to answer to.
DEC has stockholders that like to see good bottom lines! Personnel
issues are our problem.
|
716.232 | RE .231, non-profit | AUSTIN::FLATLEY | | Tue Mar 07 1989 21:34 | 1 |
|
|
716.233 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Wed Mar 08 1989 08:40 | 8 |
| > Is Sematech a for-profit, not-for-profit, or non-profit? If either
> of the latter two choices, the CEO's answer is not that shocking. He doesn't
> have stockholders to answer to.
For profit or not, any organization has masters to answer to by delivering
what was expected. SOMEBODY put up the money, and expects something back.
Kudos to Noyce or anyone who can find room to do what's right beyond
whatever his organization's bottom line is.
|
716.234 | So far, so good, Mr. Noyce... | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Wed Mar 08 1989 09:37 | 11 |
| RE: SEMATECH
>> SOMEBODY put up the money, and expects something back.
There are fourteen member companies, all for-profit types, that
put up part of the money. But the largest contributor to SEMATECH
(by far) is DoD. I applaud Noyce for his stand, but will be watching
curiously to see how long he manages to avoid drug testing.
Pat
SEMATECH Corporate Account Team
|
716.235 | A good example to follow ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:26 | 9 |
| I also applaud Bob Noyce for his stand, which has a far-reaching
impact. As the father of the integrated circuit, and the co-founder
of Intel, he's one of the leading spokesmen for high-tech industries.
Hopefully, other CEO's who realize that their greatest assets are
their employees will learn from his example, and stand up to the
government's "quick fix" tactics.
Geoff
|
716.236 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Mar 14 1989 11:22 | 150 |
| I haven't had much luck at pruning the letter -- it's tough to cut out
one's creation. And I write better when the fire strikes. I think I'm
probably going to leave the government stuff in. Digital is affected
by what happens in this society, and it shouldn't hurt to have it in
there. (16 pages isn't bad in paper form; it's just that notes are
usually shorter.)
Anyway, here are two cover pages, a note to coordinators for gathering
signatures and a note to potential signers. I'm just putting them up
for quick review. And there is the cover page of the actual letter to
Digital, which will be followed by the summary and then the body of the
letter. What should I say or not say in these pages?
In the next response, I will post two versions of a summary, which will
need more in the way of review and suggestions.
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
Note to Coordinators
My intent is to be fairly passive about collecting
signatures. I am not establishing a signature drive. I
have written this letter to Digital to express the concerns
of employees in general, and I am making it available for
distribution and signing by those who wish to make their
concerns known. My goal is not to convince people to sign
but hopefully to give those who wish to sign the
opportunity to do so.
Obviously, I cannot contact each Digital employee, so any
help others wish to provide is appreciated.
The environment varies from location to location, so use
your own judgement when making this letter available for
signing. Sometimes it might be appropriate to send a mail
message to people in your area, letting them know the
letter is available for reading by those who might be
interested. Or you could use word of mouth or a bulletin
board available for employee use.
To prevent the collected results from being a mass of
varied papers, I would like to have uniformity. Please
print the letter (the signatures page at least) on plain,
white, 8 1/2" by 11" paper with a letter-quality printer,
with the letter oriented in the normal vertical manner. If
you do not have easy access to such a printer, please
contact me; I will make copies available, at my expense if
need be.
A blank signature page can be photocopied or printed
repeatedly if necessary. On the other hand, even small
numbers of signatures are welcome.
Please send whatever you have to me by April ?.
Eric Postpischil
Alien::Postpischil
DTN 381-1172
ZKO1-3/H01
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
Note to Potential Signers
On October 31, 1988, the Department of Defense started
requiring a new clause in Defense contracts. This clause
establishes requirements for a drug-free work force and
includes provisions for a drug-testing program.
Digital has agreed to the clause.
With what I have learned of this from Digital, my own
knowledge, and information from others, I have written a
letter to express the concerns of employees. If you share
these concerns, your signature is welcome.
This letter is written to represent the combined concerns
of different people. It is not expected that you will
agree with every portion of it. This is stated in the
letter. This is a joint letter with a common cause shared
by people with varying interests, so you do not have to
agree with all of the letter to sign it.
If you should find part of the letter objectionable enough
to prevent you from signing it, please feel free to write a
statement indicating that you support the letter with the
exclusion of specified parts and to sign that statement.
Other alternatives would be to contact me to arrange to
sign an altered version of the letter or even to write your
own letter to Digital.
The date on which I plan to submit the letter to Digital is
April ?. If you wish further information about the letter
or the contract clause, please contact me.
Eric Postpischil
Alien::Postpischil
DTN 381-1172
ZKO1-3/H01
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
A Letter to Digital Equipment Corporation
It has come to our attention that Digital has agreed to the
Drug-Free Work Force clause in contracts from the
Department of Defense, and that this clause contains
requirements that Digital establish a drug-testing program.
This letter is to express our concerns as employees, make
suggestions, and request information about drug testing and
Digital. The time is premature for stronger action, but we
feel it is not inappropriate to look into what is
happening.
None of us are authorized to represent the others or to
impose conditions, although some individuals feel so
strongly about these issues that they would, albeit
reluctantly, seek other employment.
The conditions that the government is imposing on its
contracts with Digital are not compatible with Digital's
values. The relationship between Digital and the
government is a two-way street, and we hold more than a few
high cards in our hand. It is important for Digital's
upper management to tell the government that we stand
consistently behind our corporate values and integrity.
The message to Digital's employees that we trust each other
and do not intend to compromise our values will serve to
reinforce the high morale that underlines the quality of
our work.
This letter is written to represent the combined concerns
of different people. It is a joint letter with a common
cause shared by people with varying interests. So it
should be understood that each signer does not necessarily
agree with every part of the letter but does have a general
commitment to the statement made herein.
|
716.237 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Mar 14 1989 11:33 | 122 |
| Here are two versions of a summary page. For the first, I took the
suggested topics for a summary page and wrote them up. For the second,
I scanned the letter I wrote and tried to write one-liners for the
various topics, sometimes merging them.
There have been comments about the length of the letter; my goal was to
explain each topic in the letter. In compensation, I would like to
give the summary a good deal of punch, so please be free with your
suggestions. If it would be easier, you might print a copy, edit it,
and mail me the edited version. My mailstop is ZKO1-3/H01.
Which version of the summary is the better approach? Or should I mix
them? Any part of these summaries can be reworded -- if you've got a
more clear way to make a point, let me know. Some parts of the
summaries can be removed or just given an acknowledgement in a list --
which parts?
-- edp
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
SUMMARY
Opposition to drug testing comes from different motivations
in different people. Some people want to exercise their
own values. Some people just want to be let alone. And
some people find this exercise of power unreasonable.
There are two key points here. A person does not need to
be a drug user or a drug abuser to object to drug testing.
And the common abhorrence of drug testing is an indication
of the extent to which it is an intrusion.
Privacy is invaded by drug testing because it reveals
information. Dignity is assaulted because testing is
humiliating. Respect is eliminated because testing shows a
lack of trust.
The disadvantages of drug testing must be examined and made
known. Digital risks lawsuits, loss of valuable employees,
decreased morale, excessive dependence on Defense
contracts, and reduction of future negotiating power with
the government and other parties.
The normal purpose for implementing a program is to achieve
the goal of the program. In this case, that would be to
control the cost of drug abuse. However, Digital is
implementing a program not for that purpose but because of
external pressure. Digital has not previously found
sufficient cause to implement a program and has in fact
rejected earlier pressure. If the real target of a
drug-testing program does not in fact exist in Digital,
what target will this drug-testing program find?
The ramifications of drug testing must be explored.
Physical ramifications include the fact that bodily fluids
and drug tests can be misused in many ways, including false
interpretation, personal motives, and testing for more than
drugs. Political ramifications include the concern that
this initial step will lead to mandatory testing for all
employees.
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
SUMMARY
Digital's acceptance of a drug-testing program comes as a
surprise and is a drastic change in policy.
Employees are significantly affected and have a place in
decisions about this matter.
Information is sought.
A drug-testing program imposes costs upon Digital.
It is desirable to reject, nullify, or mitigate repugnant
contract clauses.
Employees should not be required to submit to intrusive
tests.
Drug tests are controversial because they do not actually
measure impairment, they are prone to several types of
error and misuse, and there are threats to privacy
including and beyond detecting drug use.
Employees are human beings deserving of autonomy, privacy,
respect, dignity, and compensation.
Digital needs to deal justly with its employees, and
justice requires the observance of proper procedures,
including probable cause, rights to information and cross
examination, control of evidence and repeatability of
tests, secrecy of personal information, and correction of
errors.
Relevant information includes details of program
implementation, legal rights, details of testing
procedures, and understanding of the admnistration of the
program and its consequences.
Digital also has to consider the consequences of yielding
to external influences, of being a part of our changing
society, of the political hazards of this matter, and of
federal, state, and local laws.
The actual threat to Digital represented by drug abuse
should guide Digital's actions more than the external,
political imposition of a repugnant contract clause.
|
716.238 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | nested disclaimers | Tue Mar 14 1989 14:28 | 3 |
| I prefer the first, Eric. Thanks for your efforts,
Marge
|
716.239 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 15 1989 08:36 | 21 |
| I'm planning a signature page which will have a brief statement and
space for a number of signatures.
For the statement, I am considering:
We are concerned about a drug-testing program and ask
Digital to consider the concerns, suggestions, and requests
expressed in this letter.
For the signatures, what is appropriate? Printed and signed name are
necessary. On a previous petition about the bar codes at the ZK
entrance, I made no indication, intending to collect only signatures.
On their own, some people wrote in their badge or cost center. I'm not
sure I see the point in that. Perhaps a site code on each page would
show geographic distribution of concern (or lack thereof).
Unless I hear otherwise, I'll just make up a form for printed name and
signature.
-- edp
|
716.240 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 16 1989 07:15 | 10 |
| I've got the letter almost ready for circulation. I am planning on
posting it here and in Soapbox. Are there any other conferences where
the topic of drug testing has been discussed or where it might be
appropriate? If so, please let me know so I can contact the
moderators.
Is four weeks sufficient time to wait for signatures?
-- edp
|
716.242 | Caution | IAMOK::DELUCO | A little moderation never hurt anyone | Thu Mar 16 1989 12:44 | 8 |
| A note of caution. My understanding is that letter writing and
signature campaigns are heavily frowned upon and may even be against
Personnel policy...but I will have to admit that I have not yet checked
the policy book. If memory serves me, several years ago a signature
campaign in PKO was squelched by Personnel and the participants were
told to use the management chain and open door method to air their
issues. I will try to track down the references. Has anyone else
had similar experience with this sort of thing?
|
716.243 | References and More Comments | IAMOK::DELUCO | A little moderation never hurt anyone | Thu Mar 16 1989 13:17 | 20 |
| I did a quick check of the VTX version of Personnel Policies and
Procedures and the only thing that I could find that applied was
two policies...6.02 Open Door Policy and 6.19 Solicitation. I won't
bother to extract and post here but if you wish to read them online,
type "VTX ORANGEBOOK" or look for Personnel Policies and Procedures_US
under Employee Benefits and Services on the Corporate VTX Library.
To do a quick reference, once you're in the infobase, hit PF1, then
keypad 7 and type the policy number in the format "S 6.02" and/or
"S 6.19".
I would also check with your Personnel department on how to deal with
this sort of issue. Personally, I see no problem with someone writing
a memo to an appopriate responsible manager regarding Digital's
philosophy or plans with regard to drug testing. I'm not sure I would
even have a problem with asking people to write their own memo to the
appropriate person to air their concerns. Circulating a memo for
signatures is quite a different approach and smacks of organizing the
massess....I won't say the "U" word. This is not the preferred way of
dealing with problems in Digital and is probably *very* risky.
|
716.244 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Mar 16 1989 15:41 | 8 |
| Well, the solicitation policy only prohibits solicitation during work time, and
by definition NOONE reads this conference during work time, so as long is this
conference, cafeterias, and break rooms are the only places that active solici-
tation is done, it certainly doesn't violate any policies.
Is it the Digital Way? Maybe not, but neither is drug testing.
/john
|
716.245 | I See The Point | IAMOK::DELUCO | A little moderation never hurt anyone | Fri Mar 17 1989 08:19 | 7 |
| Yea, I don't know that solicitation applies. That's probably
stretching it at bit far. I tend to think they meant soliciting for
personal gain or non-Digital events. I'm also not totally sure of the
application of the Open Door Policy. While it states how you should go
about dealing with issues it does not specifically say you cannot use
other methods. In my interpretation it does apply but I could see how
there could be other interpretations.
|
716.246 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:31 | 6 |
| Okay, here we go. The final version is in the next response, and I am
including a separate copy of the signature page to make printing extras
easy.
-- edp
|
716.247 | EXTRACT/NOHEADER LETTER and PRINT/QUEUE=whatever LETTER.TXT | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:32 | 1269 |
|
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
Note to Coordinators
My intent is to be fairly passive about collecting
signatures. I am not establishing a signature drive. I
have written this letter to Digital to express the concerns
of employees in general, and I am making it available for
distribution and signing by those who wish to make their
concerns known. My goal is not to convince people to sign
but hopefully to give those who wish to sign the
opportunity to do so.
Obviously, I cannot contact each Digital employee
personally, so any help others wish to provide is
appreciated.
The environment varies from location to location, so use
your own judgment when making this letter available for
signing. Sometimes it might be appropriate to send a mail
message to people in your area, letting them know the
letter is available for reading by those who might be
interested. Or you could use word of mouth or a bulletin
board available for employee use. You might gather
signatures in your site or just in your group, perhaps
letting somebody else gather signatures at another group in
your site.
To prevent the collected results from being a mass of
varied papers, I would like to have uniformity. Please
print the letter (the signatures page at least) on plain,
white, 8 1/2" by 11" paper with a letter-quality printer,
with the letter oriented in the normal vertical manner. If
you do not have easy access to such a printer, please
contact me; I will make copies available, at my expense if
need be.
A blank signature page can be photocopied or printed
repeatedly if necessary (and the numbering from 1 to 25 can
be left as is; I will add them up). On the other hand,
even small numbers of signatures are welcome.
Please send whatever signatures you have to me by April 14,
and possibly even keep me informed before then. (It may
help if we can let potential signers know how many
signatures there are so far.) If you would like to provide
a return address (preferably electronic), I will let you
know what I hear from Digital.
Eric Postpischil
Alien::Postpischil
DTN 381-1172
ZKO1-3/H01
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
Note to Potential Signers
On October 31, 1988, the Department of Defense started
requiring a new clause in Defense contracts. This clause
establishes requirements for a drug-free work force and
includes provisions for a drug-testing program.
Digital has agreed to the clause.
With what I have learned of this from Digital, my own
knowledge, and information from others, I have written a
letter to express the concerns of some employees. If you share
these concerns, your signature is welcome, alone or in a
group.
This letter is written to represent the combined concerns
of different people. It is not expected that you will
agree with every portion of it. This is stated in the
letter. This is a joint letter with a common cause shared
by people with varying interests, so you do not have to
agree with all of the letter to sign it.
If you should find part of the letter objectionable enough
to prevent you from signing it, please feel free to write a
statement indicating that you support the letter with the
exclusion of specified parts and to sign that statement.
Other alternatives would be to contact me to arrange to
sign an altered version of the letter or even to write your
own letter to Digital.
I plan on waiting for signatures until April 14, and then I
will submit the letter to Digital. The texts of a
preliminary memo on this issue and of the contract clause
are appended. If you wish further information about this
letter, the contract clause, or how signature collection is
going, please contact me.
Eric Postpischil
Alien::Postpischil
DTN 381-1172
ZKO1-3/H01
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
A Letter to Digital Equipment Corporation
It has come to our attention that Digital has agreed to the
Drug-Free Work Force clause in contracts from the
Department of Defense, and that this clause contains
requirements that Digital establish a drug-testing program.
This letter is to express our concerns as employees, make
suggestions, and request information about drug testing and
Digital. The time is premature for stronger action, but we
feel it is not inappropriate to look into and participate
in what is happening now.
None of us are authorized to represent the others or to
impose conditions, although some individuals feel so
strongly about these issues that they would, albeit
reluctantly, seek other employment.
The conditions that the government is imposing on its
contracts with Digital are not compatible with Digital's
values. The relationship between Digital and the
government is a two-way street, and we hold more than a few
high cards in our hand. It is important for Digital's
upper management to tell the government that we stand
consistently behind our corporate values and integrity.
The message to Digital's employees that we trust each other
and do not intend to compromise our values will serve to
reinforce the high morale that underlines the quality of
our work.
This letter is written to represent the combined concerns
of different people. It is a joint letter with a common
cause shared by people with varying interests. So it
should be understood that each signer does not necessarily
agree with every part of the letter but does have a general
commitment to the statements made herein.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 2
SUMMARY
Opposition to drug testing comes from different motivations
in different people. Some people want to exercise their
own values. Some people just want to be let alone. And
some people find this exercise of power unreasonable.
There are two key points here. A person does not need to
be a drug user or a drug abuser to object to drug testing.
And the common abhorrence of drug testing is an indication
of the extent to which it is an intrusion.
Privacy is invaded by drug testing because it reveals
personal information. Dignity is assaulted because testing
is humiliating. Respect is eliminated because testing
shows a lack of trust.
The disadvantages of drug testing must be examined and made
known. Digital risks lawsuits, loss of valuable employees,
decreased morale, excessive dependence on Defense
contracts, and reduction of future negotiating power with
the government and other parties. There are dangers that
bodily fluids and drug tests can be misused, including
false interpretation, personal motives, and testing for
more than drugs. The risk that this first step will lead
eventually to mandatory testing for all employees must be
evaluated.
The actual threat to Digital represented by drug abuse
should guide Digital's actions more than the external,
political imposition of a repugnant contract clause. Our
relationship with external parties should be to provide
quality products and services. Drug testing is not a good
role for Digital to have, and employee rights and dignity
should not be sold to customers.
If Digital implements a drug-testing program, we ask that
the safeguards recommended herein be considered, such as
assigning only volunteers to assignments requiring drug
testing. But we would prefer the better choice, that
Digital reject drug testing.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 3
PROCEDURE
Suddenness
The immediate reaction to news that there will be a
drug-testing program is "What's going on here?". Many
employees learned about the possibility of a drug-testing
program which concerns them only after Digital had already
entered into a contract requiring such a program. Our
current knowledge is that Digital has entered into at least
one such contract, with additional contracts on the way.
There is concern that a drug-testing program could affect
all employees, directly or indirectly. The perception is
that this has occurred suddenly, and we need information
about what is happening.
Not only were many employees not notified prior to entering
into a contract that has a potential of affecting them, but
information presented through internal memo or Digital
Video Network is that Digital is now determining what is
necessary to comply with Department of Defense Federal
Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) Subpart 223.75.
This is confusing, because it would seem proper to
determine the implications of a contract before signing it.
Employee Impact
The creation of a drug-testing program anywhere within
Digital is of interest to employees throughout the company.
Such an event represents a significant change in policy.
It gives us thought about the respect which will be given
to employees, and we are concerned about what requirements
Digital feels free to place on its employees in the future.
And of course there is the concern that a drug-testing
program will, now or in the future, be applied to all
employees.
The lack of employee involvement in the decision is
disturbing. Digital is attempting to add to the
requirements of the jobs of some employees. Surely
employment involves two parties, and both parties should
consent to a change in the relationship. Matters of
privacy and dignity are among the many discussed below;
drug testing is a serious matter. On a matter of such
importance, it is discourteous not to ask "Would you mind?"
or even to solicit opinions. Instead, we are concerned
that Digital is making decisions about its employees
without giving those employees the consideration that they
deserve as human beings and as parties to the employment
relationship.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 4
Information
Announcement of Digital's agreement to a drug-testing
requirement came as a surprise to many, and it came after
the fact. Even since that announcement, there has been
little news. We have been told that Digital is making
decisions about the implications of the DFARS requirement,
but we do not know what employee involvement or
consideration there is in this process. We would like to
know what is happening. We believe that employees have a
role here, and that they should take part in deciding what
will happen to themselves.
To this end, we seek information as quickly as possible.
One common speculation is about the scope of the program,
both immediate and in the long term. Are employees outside
individual contracting units affected? Are employees
outside the United States affected? If these employees are
not affected now, might Digital include them in the future?
Answers to these questions, Digital's interpretation of the
DFARS clause, and comments about the issues expressed
throughout this document are desired.
Corporate Impact
The DFARS drug-testing requirement places obligations upon
Digital, and, like all things in this world, these
obligations will have a cost. In addition, agreeing to
drug testing has implications about the character of the
corporation. The agreement is not only a change in
Digital's personnel relations; it has implications about
retaining control in the face of pressures from external
parties. These are discussed in detail below, but the
magnitude of this change raises questions about the way in
which it was made. To what extent does agreement to the
DFARS requirement represent corporate policy? The
precedent that has been set here is suitable matter for the
highest level of the corporation. Has policy been set on
that level?
Current Action
Decisions about Digital's drug-testing program are being
made now. There are factors that need to be considered in
these decisions. The actual meaning of the DFARS clause
needs to be resolved. For example, it states that
"commercial or commercial-type" products are excluded. To
what extent does this apply to Digital products? Will
Digital consider appropriate alternatives as permitted by
the clause? We would like to know what Digital is doing
now.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 5
Digital has in the past rejected doing business where the
customer required as a condition contractual clauses which
were repugnant to the dignity of the employee as a person.
The decision to accept the DFARS clause is a change in
previous policy. What made the Defense clause different?
We seek to understand the motivations that have changed our
employer.
Digital is a very special place to work, and the principal
reason for this is a corporate philosophy of respecting the
integrity and dignity of its employees. Our concern is
that these corporate values should be consistently
championed from the highest levels of Digital.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 6
SUGGESTIONS
In general, we seek Digital's help in dealing with this
intrusion on our persons. We can express our opposition to
our representatives in Congress, but we have no
representatives in the Department of Defense. This change
in our lives comes not through the normal political process
of law-making, but through a separate agency which seeks to
act through our employer. We realize this places Digital
in an undeserved position, but if Digital yields the
circumvention of the normal process will have succeeded.
Thus, we request Digital oppose intrusion on the privacy
and dignity of its employees.
Rejection
We naturally would prefer that Digital not sign contracts
containing repugnant clauses, and we suggest that this be
done when it is possible to negotiate a contract without
such a clause or when it is possible to make the hard
decision to reject the business. For reasons given
throughout this document, that decision can be the proper
one because of the benefits it provides. Digital could
also seek to repeal or modify the Defense Department rule
requiring the offending clause. Certainly Digital is not
the only company affected by this rule. Perhaps other
companies with shared interests could jointly express the
concerns of this matter to the government. This is a
desirable course of action in any event, because this
clause places obligations on Digital which will exact a
cost, and the government should not be permitted to believe
that it may take action freely. All members of this
society, persons and corporations, need to seek to regulate
their government. It is necessary that neither Digital nor
its employees remain silent.
Objection to the Department of Defense requirements could
also be shown by submitting two bids for each contract, one
including the cost for the Drug-Free Work Force clause and
one not. In this way, we can show the undesirability of
the clause.
It is also important to recognize the possibility that
acceptance of the DFARS clause will lend support to others
seeking to request similar conditions of Digital. Such a
trend should be controlled before it can start. We suggest
that strict policy on this matter be set as soon as
possible.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 7
Nullification Through Local Law
When Digital does make the unfortunate choice to accept an
undesirable clause, we suggest that the clause be mitigated
to whatever degree possible. For example, DFARS Subpart
223.75 is nullified when inconsistent with state or local
law. Employees would be grateful to Digital for showing
support for legislation protecting the privacy and dignity
of human beings.
Mitigation
In those places where local law does not protect the
employee, Digital can seek to make a drug-testing program
as respectful as possible. To the extent possible, testing
should be voluntary and non-intrusive. Possibly a signed
agreement by the employee not to use drugs will satisfy the
DFARS clause.
The DFARS clause encourages the implementation of
alternative approaches. The stated objectives of the
clause include the control of costs, delay, and risks of
lessened productivity and reliability and greater
absenteeism. We submit that an effective way to meet these
objectives is to directly measure or observe productivity,
reliability, and absenteeism. When problems in these areas
are detected, they should be corrected, even if drug abuse
is not the cause, so this approach is beneficial without
being objectionable to many people. When there is a
problem, Digital should focus on the performance issue, as
has been policy in the past.
Employee Autonomy
It is desirable that a person retain control of their own
body. For this purpose, it is desirable that assignment to
a job affected by drug-testing requirements be voluntary,
and that non-prejudicial reassignment to another position
be available when requested. Employees should be given
information about a drug-testing program so that they may
make their own choices. A person should be permitted to
refuse to submit to actions they find offensive, and such
refusal should be possible without fear of undue
repercussions.
Implementation
The greatest impact of a drug-testing program falls on the
employees. It is important that employees should
participate in the design and execution of any such
program. This gives employees the means to ensure a
program will not be more extensive than necessary, to
verify that it is not abused or misused, and to retain some
measure of control over their lives.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 8
The DFARS clause suggests testing of employees in positions
of trust and confidence, and the positions accorded the
most trust and confidence are those of upper management.
Applying a drug-testing program uniformly has the
advantages of showing, at least nominally, that the program
is not an exercise of power and control over employees. If
a program were to be applied discriminately, it would be a
slur to those who are tested, a statement that they are
pawns and are not worthy of respect, dignity, or trust.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 9
DRUG TEST PROBLEMS
Testing a Symptom
Chemical drug tests do not measure impairment. They
measure such things as chemical concentrations. One
failing of these tests is that such chemical concentrations
can be caused by things other than use or abuse of illegal
substances. But even if chemical tests could precisely
identify past use or abuse of illegal substances, the tests
do not measure impairment. The ability of a person to do a
job is dependent on alertness, motor skills, and
punctuality.
Substances are outlawed for political reasons. These
reasons are occasionally based on science, but the process
is political, and so the result is basically political.
Illegal substances are not necessarily outlawed because
they will produce impairment that will affect Digital.
When substances do produce impairment, such impairment does
not necessarily continue until the time when a person
reports for work. Exposure to controlled substances may
occur under circumstances in which the exposed person is
not acting illegally. These include inadvertent exposure,
exposure outside of the jurisdiction of the United States,
and prescription or other lawful use. Chemical tests
report none of this.
Many people who oppose chemical tests would be agreeable to
tests that actually measured impairment. We agree that
Digital is paying for services rendered, and so Digital has
a valid interest in seeing those services performed
effectively and correctly. But when chemical tests are
used, Digital measures something other than impairment;
Digital measures something in which the company has no
legitimate interest. That is an invasion of privacy.
Misuse
Drug tests are prone to misuse. When a person gives a
sample of their bodily fluids, they lose control of
personal information. This is an act of trust, but trust
is not appropriate in this situation because it has been
abused before. The January/February 1989 issue of the
Colorado American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) newsletter
reports that the District of Columbia police department
used the urine samples to test for pregnancy, and
promotions or job offers were delayed if a person tested
positive.
A human being is well advised to fear what will happen out
of their sight. Urine samples could also be used to look
for legal drugs such as anti-depressants or for diseases.
Digital asks for an enormous amount of faith when it asks
for a sample of a person's body.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 10
Third Parties
Many employees will extend trust that Digital will not
misuse chemical tests, particularly if there is employee
review of the process. But this trust cannot extend to
strangers. Digital is likely to contract drug-testing work
to separate companies. Employees then need assurances that
those companies are trustworthy.
In addition to direct threats to privacy, there is the
possibility that personal information about people will be
used for statistical purposes. Removing individual
identification from personal information and using it in
statistical or other scientific studies is often considered
objective and not an invasion of privacy. But errors in
the removal of individual identification can leave the test
subjects vulnerable. For example, a database might not
give an individual name, but it might accidentally give an
inquirer the test results of females aged 30 to 35 in cost
center 123, a description which could correspond to exactly
one person who could be identified by name. Even if
individual identification is not possible, statistical
information can also be abused by reference to groups small
enough to cast aspersions on individuals and by
misinterpretation which can adversely affect groups of
people. Regardless of the purpose or circumstance,
information about a person gathered from their bodily
fluids should be regarded as their property and not made
available to any person for any use other than that for
which it was collected.
There is a yet more potent threat. The ACLU newsletter
reports that the United States Attorney's office subpoenaed
the University of Florida for results of drug tests given
to students. The circumvention of the normal processes of
government comes full circle; although the government
cannot test a person without probable cause, it has found a
way to cause a person to be tested and then to take the
results. This heinous disregard for human privacy, rights,
and dignity must be opposed. This eliminates the matter of
trust; even when we trust Digital not to misuse test
results, the company clearly has no power to make such a
guarantee for third parties.
False Positives
Drug tests are not accurate. Inaccuracies exist because
what is measured is not the presence of the controlled
substance itself and because the measurement itself is
prone to error.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 11
Because of the difficulties of measuring the concentration
of some substances, chemical tests search for consequences
of drug use, such as metabolites, instead of the actual
illegal substances. But some legal drugs, foods, and
natural body functions produce metabolites which are the
same as those produced by illegal substances or which are
so similar as to be indistinguishable. It is impossible
for any test for metabolites to eliminate this source of
error. Certainly no employee should be compelled to reveal
what legal drugs they are using; this would carry the
invasion of privacy even further.
The techniques of measurement are also prone to error.
Temperature, acidity, and other elements of the test
conditions must be carefully controlled. In professional
laboratories, test results will vary from batch to batch
and from laboratory to laboratory. Mass-produced test kits
are less accurate.
Tests for which the accuracy is questionable are not
appropriate evidence on which to base determination of a
person's guilt or to make grave administrative judgements.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 12
HUMAN DIGNITY
Employees are human beings deserving of dignity, respect,
and basic human rights. Acceptance of the DFARS clause
raises the concern that Digital will sell our rights to the
government.
Privacy
Privacy is an important aspect of human rights. Some
amount of privacy is a psychological need. There is
controversy about what substances should and should not be
illegal and to what extent use is abuse. But these are not
issues to be decided within Digital and certainly not by
the Department of Defense. While the DFARS clause overtly
expresses opinions about drug use, it is also a matter of
privacy. The DFARS clause assaults the privacy of all
employees, whether or not they are using drugs.
It is obvious that drug tests strip away the privacy of
those who test positive because the person has taken an
illegal substance. But drug tests reveal more than use of
illegal substances, so information about the private lives
of law-abiding citizens is threatened. Even if tests only
revealed use of illegal substances, the forceful
examination of even a person who does not use illegal
substances is still an intrusion into their private life.
People simply do not want strangers interfering with them.
Respect
The DFARS clause contains a contradiction. The DFARS
clause requires employees in positions of trust and
confidence to be tested. But requiring a person to submit
to a drug test is a clear statement that they are not
trusted. It is an act of disrespect.
Repugnance
The DFARS clause does not describe the physical acts it may
require. What is involved is at best an indignity and at
worst humiliation. Digital would be asking employees to
provide a sample of their normally taboo body fluids to a
faceless corporation for impersonal processing. To keep
control, some drug-testing programs involve observation of
the act. This humiliation more than exceeds the latitude
that an employer should have in making requests of their
employees, let alone requiring. And even supervision
without observation is repugnant.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 13
Compensation
If a drug-testing program is implemented, this is a new
addition to the job requirements of some employees. But
nothing is heard about consideration for the employees'
reduction of freedom. The drug-testing program represents
a hazard to future employment, including hazard to those
who will refuse to give up their privacy and to those who
receive positive test results, whether falsely or
otherwise. If the corporation does not recognize the human
values described above, at least recognize that additional
job requirements and hazards correspond to some economic
value. Just as Digital should not let the government
freely impose new contract clauses, employees should not
let Digital freely impose new conditions, both for the
disdain and inconvenience of the conditions and for the
limitation of future conditions.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 14
EMPLOYEE RIGHTS
All employees are human, and so those who accept a
drug-testing program should be accorded rights necessary to
preserve justice. These include the rights described here.
Any person subject to a drug test should be informed of the
reasons for the test. Probable cause is the only normal
grounds for such an invasion of privacy, if indeed there
are ever grounds. In such a case, the person should be
informed of the evidence and testimony against them, and
the person should have the opportunity to explain the
evidence, confront the witnesses, and otherwise rebut the
case.
Some employees may agree to scheduled or random testing.
The use of schedules or random testing requires monitoring
to prevent accidental or deliberate abuse which might
unfairly target some persons or invade privacy. The
subjects of such tests should take part in the monitoring.
Testing on other grounds less than probable cause, such as
mere suspicion or a supervisor's discretion, is highly
subject to abuse and should never be condoned. Anonymous
or confidential reports should not be accepted as cause.
Whenever a sample of a person's body, wastes, or other
personal material is taken, including urine, blood, and
hair, the person has a right to be given portions to
provide to testers of their own selection and to retain for
future resolution. Provision should be made for sealing
such samples and transmitting them in the manner necessary
to preserve their status as legal evidence. Proper regard
shall be given to alternate test results when made by
competent testers.
It should be recognized that errors can occur because of
use of legal substances, natural body variations, and other
items that would cause independent tests to falsely report
a positive result. Because of this, a tested person has
the right to explain test results, to take additional
tests, to have the tests made by the most accurate methods
available, and to contest results.
All test results should be kept in the strictest secrecy.
Test results should not be available to any party other
than those immediately involved. Excluded parties include
the subject's family, physician, and insurer; Personnel
employees; and supervisors and others in the management
chain. Digital should establish controls for handling
sensitive information and make those controls known and
verifiable to employees.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 15
When test results are found to be in error or unrelated to
Digital concerns, they should be destroyed at the
employee's request. Employees should be informed of their
right to have irrelevant, outdated, or erroneous records
destroyed.
These rights should extend to other personal information,
such as reports of suspected substance abuse, comments by
supervisors, and administrative actions. Whatever
information is collected about a person should be held
confidential, accessible only to those with absolute need.
For example, a report of suspected abuse should be made
available to no persons other than the charged person and
the person with the duty to decide whether or not it is
appropriate to administer a test. It is not necessary to
make such a report available to the employee's supervisor.
One consequence of failure to maintain such confidence
would be the prejudicing of a supervisor against an
employee based on an unsupported or malicious report.
If any action is taken against an employee, including
suspension, transfer, or denial of assignment, such penalty
should be rescinded when results are properly explained,
when shown to be erroneous or unacceptable, or when the
problem indicated by the test results is corrected. These
actions and other aspects of administration of a
drug-testing program should be subject to processes of
review, appeal, and resolution of grievances.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 16
EMPLOYEE INFORMATION
Information About the Drug-Testing Program
Employees should be informed in advance that they are
subject to a drug-testing program. This information is
needed to make decisions about whether or not to accept the
intrusion into their privacy and possible consequences.
Information should be included about who might be tested,
circumstances under which tests will be required or
requested, who will determine what employees will be
tested, how that determination will be made, and what
choices the employee has before, during, and after the
testing.
Information About Legal Rights
Persons who are subject to a drug-testing program, whether
or not they have yet been required or requested to submit
to testing, should be informed of their rights under
applicable laws. In some jurisdictions, employees will
have a right to refuse to take a test. When that is the
case, the employee should be informed of that right -- no
person should be compelled to take a test with the mistaken
belief that they are required to submit. All other rights
should be made known to the employee, such as rights to
contest or explain results.
Information About the Tests
Any person to be tested should be permitted to understand
the nature of the tests they are to undergo. Each such
person should therefore be provided with a list of the
tests to be made, including what method of testing will be
used, what the tests detect, how accurate the tests are,
what parties will be performing the tests or handling the
samples, what can cause inaccuracies in the test results,
and what challenges to the tests have been made in the past
or exist now. This information should be complete to the
extent that the person can locate confirming material. For
example, in telling a person about the accuracy of a test,
the person should be given information sufficient for them
to retrieve copies of studies which established that
accuracy.
In particular, each person who is asked to submit to a test
should be informed of what the tests can detect, even if
the things that can be detected are not the purpose of
performing the test. That is, the subject should be made
aware of everything that can be revealed by the test,
including use of legal substances, pregnancy, and illness.
This information should be provided sufficiently far in
advance of testing for it to be given full consideration.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 17
Information About Results and Administration
To maintain the integrity of a system of information, it is
necessary that people have access to information about
themselves. Any person who has been tested should be
informed in detail of the results. For example, if tests
measure a concentration, that information should be
reported in full and not reduced to a positive or negative
report. Data necessary to interpret such information
should also be provided, such as typical concentrations,
normal variations thereof, and values that would be
abnormal.
When any information is collected or created about a
person, it should be made known to that person so that it
can be checked for accuracy and relevance. This should
include reports of suspicion, decisions made about an
employee, or any administrative action.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 18
POLITICAL AND LEGAL CONCERNS
External Influences on Digital
Turning down a contract containing an unacceptable clause
is a loss of revenue. But it is also an investment,
because it strengthens Digital's negotiating stand, deters
such clauses in the future, and protects Digital from
growing into a situation where it is overly dependent on a
single source of revenue.
The government has learned some new things. The Department
of Defense has learned it can have its way with Digital.
The politicians have learned they can implement a social
agenda through means that sidestep the normal
Constitutional and other legal safeguards. These will not
be forgotten. Drugs are out of style, at least on the
front pages of our newspapers and the lead stories of our
television news. But drugs are by no means the only social
issue, of today or tomorrow. People with other goals now
have a new method to use to achieve their ends.
The Defense Department has opened the way for others.
Representatives will find it convenient to add an amendment
to a bill which will add a clause to one contract or
another. Other government agencies will establish their
own rules. And Digital has already received requests from
private companies to submit Digital employees to drug
testing. There is a lot of potential for pressure from
many directions. A strong and decisive policy is needed to
control that pressure.
Checks and Balances
Our government was designed with specific protections.
Different powers of the government were given to different
branches. The rights of citizens to due process and
freedom from search and seizure and other rights were
recognized by the Constitution to protect citizens from all
branches of government. In other words, some powers were
given to the various branches of government but some powers
were not given to the government at all.
In the DFARS clause, the Department of Defense seeks to
subject some people to intrusive searches. There is a
significant danger here of presuming people guilty unless
they can prove their innocence. Certainly it can be argued
(not necessarily correctly) that the Department of Defense
is acting within the law. But due process and freedom from
search are more than a matter of law. These rights were
written into the law because they are valuable. These
rights produce desirable results, and so we should hold on
to them for the benefit of those results, rather than a
legal basis.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 19
There are several checks and balances we are losing here.
The Department of Defense made this regulation. But
Congress is our legislative body. We need to oppose this
transfer of power so that we can retain control of our
government.
Administering tests is a search of a very private kind.
Privacy is valued for reasons given elsewhere, but privacy
should also be maintained as a limit on government power.
We need to say to the government that it can control people
thus far, and no farther.
There is also risk here to the principles of due process
and presumption of innocence. This sidestepping of the
normal governing procedures also sidesteps the normal
reviews and controls of government, including court review
to a great extent. Proper procedures in matters of
accusation and determination of guilt are valuable because
they guard a system from unintentional degeneration and
deliberate or accidental misuse. We protect the rights of
the innocent by protecting the rights of all, and we
presume people to be innocent until proven guilty because
the danger of punishing innocent people must be balanced
with the desire to punish the guilty.
A drug-testing program operated by a private company
threatens these rights. Consider also that Digital is a
part of our society, and Digital is therefore subject to
government control just as much and individuals are. The
rights that are valuable to individuals are also valuable
to Digital. It is in Digital's interest to seek to limit
the government's control over our society.
Digital's Direct Concern
Newspaper and television reports about drugs have
increased. But an increase in stories is not the same as
an increase in problems. Has the use or abuse of illegal
substances posed a problem to Digital? To what extent is
product quality and cost affected? These are the points
which affect Digital directly, the points that have to do
with the working of the company. They are internal, and
they are a part of the process of running the company.
The influences we are experiencing now are external. To
some extent, they are unreal -- things which could be
eliminated without affecting the company's ability to
design, manufacture, and sell products. When decisions are
made about a drug-testing program, the extent to which
drugs have really presented a problem should be considered.
The extent to which drugs are in the media should be
resisted. The actual threat to Digital represented by drug
abuse should guide Digital's actions more than the
external, political imposition of a repugnant contract
clause.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program 20
If there are real problems with drugs, these should be made
known to people. Flashy ads on television increase
cynicism. An intelligent person knows that a picture of an
egg on a frying pan does not give them information about
drugs, and that even if the picture were an accurate
analogy for some drug, it could not be accurate for all
drugs. People also know that scientific-sounding opinions
can be bantered back and forth endlessly. What is needed
is the truth. If Digital will have a drug awareness
program, then make people aware of actual problems which
have caused Digital actual damage. Show the truth and let
it speak for itself.
Law
The ACLU newsletter also reports a person in California was
awarded $425,000 in a suit against a company which fired
her for refusing to submit to a drug test, and there was a
similar award in Massachusetts. We congratulate those
states that enact laws to protect privacy and those courts
that recognize and protect the right. Digital obviously
needs to consider these protections when designing a
drug-testing program.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program
We are concerned about a drug-testing program and ask
Digital to consider the concerns, suggestions, and requests
expressed in this letter.
Printed Name Signature
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
THIS MESSAGE IS FROM HARVEY WEISS, V.P., GOVERNMENT SYSTEMS
GROUP, AND ERLINE BELTON, CORPORATE EMPLOYEE RELATIONS MANAGER.
Managers should make further distribution as appropriate and
discuss its contents with affected employees.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The Department of Defense (DoD) is now requiring a new
clause, DFARS 252.223-7500, "Drug-Free Work Force'" be
added to contracts involving access to classified
information. This clause may also be included in
unclassified contracts where the DoD contracting officer
determines that the clause is necessary.
Digital Equipment Corporation is now accepting contracts
containing this new DoD clause. Specifically, Digital has
accepted the inclusion of the Drug-Free Work Force clause
on certain work orders on WR-ALC BOA #F09650-85-G-0001.
Employees and managers assigned to a work order from this
contract should understand that the clause may affect each
individual assigned and will affect their employer, Digital
Equipment Corporation.
The Drug-Free Work Force clause requires Digital Equipment
Corporation to institute and maintain a program for
achieving a drug-free work force. Digital has begun work
on this program which when completed is expected to
include, among other features, an employee assistance
program (EAP), supervisory training, provisions for
referral and provisions for identifying illegal drug users.
Identifying drug users is expected to require drug testing
on a controlled and carefully monitored basis. It is also
expected that Digital's work rules regarding drug use will
be modified.
Digital is several months away from a final position on the
extent to which testing will be a required part of the drug
program under the regulation. The extent of drug testing
to be conducted will be determined by a number of factors,
including the nature of the work an employee performs under
a specific contract, the resources Digital assigns to the
drug program required by the regulation and the risks to
public health, safety and national security that could
result from the failure of a Digital employee to adequately
perform on a contract covered by the clause.
Your employees are now being assigned to or are supporting
a contract that contains the new DoD Drug-Free Work Force
clause. Therefore, employees currently in these positions
will be subject to the DoD guidelines in the clause at some
point in the future. It is important that Digital make
clear to these employees some of the management
considerations on drug testing that Digital has established
as we begin the design of the drug program required under
the regulation:
o Digital will only accept the DoD drug clause when
required by the regulation.
o Before implementing testing as an integral part of a
drug program, Digital senior management will
carefully consider all appropriate issues and will
put in place a quality program consistent with
Digital's values.
o When Digital initiates drug testing as a part of its
drug program required by the DoD clause, prior to the
introduction of testing employees will be notified of
the details of the testing and the implications of
the requirement.
In closing, we wish to emphasize that the contract to which
some of your employees are being assigned does contain the
new DoD Drug-Free Work Force clause and that this clause
has the potential to subject certain positions to drug
testing. When this possibility becomes a reality, affected
employees will be notified prior to initiation of testing.
We will also keep all employees informed in personnel
bulletins as the development of the drug program required
by the DoD clause proceeds.
Should your employees have any further questions on the new
DoD Drug-Free Work Force clause we encourage them to
discuss with their respective manager or contact Fred
Beckette, FSG Human Resources Manager, DTN 297-4818.
Harvey
Drug-Free Work Force (Sep 1988)
(a) Definitions. "Illegal drugs," as used in this clause,
means controlled substances included in Schedule I and II,
as defined by section 802(6) of Title 21 of the United
States Code, the possession of which is unlawful under
Chapter 13 of that Title. The term "illegal drugs" does
not mean the use of a controlled substance pursuant to a
valid prescription or other uses authorized by law.
"Employee in a sensitive position," as used in this clause,
means an employee who has been granted access to classified
information; or employees in other positions that the
contractor determines involve national security, health or
safety, or functions other than the foregoing requiring a
high degree of trust and confidence.
(b) The Contractor agrees to institute and maintain a
program for achieving the objective of a drug-free work
force. While this clause defines criteria for such a
program, Contractors are encouraged to implement
alternative approaches comparable to the criteria in
paragraph (c) below that are designed to achieve the
objectives of this clause.
(c) Contractor programs shall include the following, or
appropriate alternatives:
(1) Employee assistance programs emphasizing high
level direction, education, counseling,
rehabilitation, and coordination with available
community resources;
(2) Supervisory training to assist in identifying and
addressing illegal drug use by Contractor employees;
(3) Provision for self-referrals as well as
supervisory referrals to treatment with maximum
respect for individual confidentiality consistent
with safety and security issues;
(4) Provision for identifying illegal drug users,
including testing on a controlled and carefully
monitored basis. Employee drug testing programs
shall be established taking account of the following:
(i) The Contractor shall establish a program
that provides for testing for the use of
illegal drugs by employees in sensitive
positions. The extent of and criteria for such
testing shall be determined by the Contractor
based on considerations that include the nature
of the work being performed under the contract,
the employee's duties, the efficient use of
Contractor resources, and the risks to public
health, safety, national security [sic] that
could result from the failure of an employee
adequately to discharge his or her position.
(ii) In addition, the Contractor may establish
a program for employee drug testing --
(A) When there is reasonable suspicion
that an employee uses illegal drugs; or
(B) When an employee has been involved in
an accident or unsafe practice;
(C) As part of or as a follow-up to
counseling or rehabilitation for illegal
drug use;
(D) As part of a voluntary employee drug
testing program.
(iii) The Contractor may establish a program to
test applicants for employment for illegal drug
use.
(iv) For the purpose of administering this
clause, testing for illegal drugs may be
limited to those substances for which testing
is prescribed by section 2.1 of Subpart B of
the "Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace
Drug Testing Programs," (53 FR 11980 (April 11,
1988)), issued by the Department of Health and
Human Services.
(d) Contractors shall adopt appropriate personnel
procedures to deal with employees who are found to be using
drugs illegally. Contracts shall not allow any employee to
remain on duty or perform in a sensitive position who is
found to use illegal drugs until such time as the
contractor, in accordance with procedures established by
the contractor, determines that the employee may perform in
such a position.
(e) The provisions of this clause pertaining to drug
testing programs shall not apply to the extent they are
inconsistent with state or local law, or with an existing
collective bargaining agreement; provided that with respect
to the latter, the Contractor agrees that those issues that
are in conflict will be a subject of negotiation at the
next collective bargaining session.
|
716.248 | EXTRACT/NOHEADER SIGN and PRINT/QUEUE=whatever SIGN.TXT | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:50 | 60 |
| Digital's Drug-Testing Program
We are concerned about a drug-testing program and ask
Digital to consider the concerns, suggestions, and requests
expressed in this letter.
Printed Name Signature
1 _________________________ _________________________
2 _________________________ _________________________
3 _________________________ _________________________
4 _________________________ _________________________
5 _________________________ _________________________
6 _________________________ _________________________
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|
716.249 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 17 1989 15:24 | 11 |
| A note of clarification: The "Note to Coordinators" isn't to
pre-arranged people; it is to anybody who is interested in having a
copy of the letter available for people to read and sign.
If you would like to take on that job, I would appreciate it.
Everything is go at this point; I've got a copy of the letter in my
office for anybody in ZK who wishes to read and sign it, and I'm just
waiting the four weeks to let signatures come in.
-- edp
|
716.250 | PK02 | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:19 | 6 |
|
I've got a copy of the letter and signature page in my office
in PK02 if anyone wishes to sign it.
Donna
PK02 Room 8
|
716.251 | The shape of things to come??? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Fri Mar 17 1989 17:31 | 13 |
| Just today Digital received from one of our defense contractor
Corporate Accounts a P.O. mandating a "drug screening" program. It is
the first time that particular account has included such a paragraph in
a purchase order. Since substance abuse is covered in the DBA between
Digital and that customer, it isn't an issue till the next DBA
negotiations come up. This time we will refuse the P.O. and return it
to the customer to be changed to simply refer to the appropriate
section in the DBA. But I fully expect the drug screening program to
become an issue in the next DBA negotiations.
I have a feeling this is just the tip of the iceberg...
Pat
|
716.252 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Mar 17 1989 18:13 | 6 |
| Yes, just the tip of the iceberg.
So far we've accepted the clause on a contract directly from DoD. Soon we'll
be asked to accept the clause on defense contracts from General Electric,
DuPont, Union Carbide, Raytheon, TRW, General Motors, Lockheed, McDonnell
Douglas, Boeing, ...
|
716.253 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Sat Mar 18 1989 19:14 | 18 |
| The purchase order I was talking about was from a company that makes a
large portion of its money on defense contracts, but the division that
issued this particular purchase order has nothing to do with defense
contracts. It's simply a manufacturing division. That's partly
why it scared me so much; it has no connection of any kind with
the DoD.
However, John, your point is well taken: every defense contractor in
the world is going to jump on the bandwagon and start putting drug
testing clauses into their contracts. Digital has been faced with this
before several years ago (from, I might add, one of our very largest
customers) and we steadfastly refused to accept the contract. The
customer backed down and we got our contract without the clause. Every
dime of it. I was involved on the periphery of that deal, and have
never been prouder of my company than I was then. I can't help
wondering if we'll do the same thing now...
Pat
|
716.254 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Mar 20 1989 15:53 | 5 |
| Current sites with the letter available for signing: ZKO, DSG, SHR,
and PKO. Are there any I don't know of yet?
-- edp
|
716.255 | Supreme Court (from NPR) | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Wed Mar 22 1989 08:16 | 102 |
|
First to the Supreme Court which today issued its first
decisions on drug testing in the workplace. In two landmark
rulings, the Court gave the Government wide laditude to test
for drug and alcohol abuse among workers who are entrusted
with law enforcement and public safety responsibilities.
NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Tottenberg
reports: Today's Supreme Court rulings involved two drug
testing programs. One program requires drug and alcohol
tests for any railroad worker involved in an accident or
safety violation. The other requires drug tests for Customs
workers recommended for promotions. In both cases workers
argued that the Constitution's ban on unreasonable searches
and seizures bars any search of their bodies unless there is
some individualized suspicion of wrong doing.
But today the Supreme Court disagreed. Until today the
only time the Supreme Court had ever upheld a bodily search
separate from an arrest without any individualized suspicion
was in the case of a prison inmate. Today that all changed
as the Court began laying down the guidelines for when drug
and alcohol testing on the job is permissible. In both
cases the Court declared that the usual Constitutional Rules
requiring some individualized suspicion before there is a
search must be balanced against the need for public safety
and the integrity of law enforcement. In the railroad
worker's case the court declared that blanket testing could
be required after accidents and safety violations because of
the need to preserve public safety and because the railroad
industry is highly regulated and that its workers thus have
a diminished expectation of privacy. The vote in the rail-
road worker's case was seven to two and the outcome was
widely expected.
But the outcome in the Custom worker's case was not
widely anticipated and the vote was five to four. The first
difference in the two cases was that while there was
evidence of considerable drug and aclcohol abuse among rail-
road workers, there was virtually none among Customs work-
ers. Government officials said that railroad accidents
linked to drug or alcohol abuse were responsible for some 42
deaths over a ten year period. In contrast the head of the
Customs Service, admitted his agency had no problem with
drug abuse. When the Customs Service tested 3600 of its em-
ployees up for promotion, only five persons tested positive.
A second difference in the two cases is that the rail-
road workers were tested after an accident or safety viola-
tion, while all Customs workers up for promotion were tested
if they were involved with drug interdition or if they wore
firearms or dealt with "sensitive information". Justice
Kenney in his majority opinion said that "in balancing Cus-
toms employee's right to privacy against the Government's
interest in fighting the war on drugs, the fight against
drugs must prevail". "The Government has a compelling in-
terest in assuring that front line interdiction personnel
are physically fit and have unimpeachable integrity and
judgement", he said. In further language that seems to give
Government broad authority to require drug testing, Justice
Kennedy also said "it is reasonable to require drug and al-
cohol tests for anyone who wears a firearm, or who has ac-
cess to classified or truly sensitive information. The
Court, however, sent the sensitive information question back
to the lower courts for further development in the Customs
worker case because those who were deemed to have access to
sensitive information included animal caretakers and accoun-
tants, for example.
Just how this issue develops could determine the out-
come of many other drug testing programs for Government em-
ployees. For example, would an employee who handles
anti-trust or trade information or secret commodity informa-
tion be deemed to have access to sensitive information and
thus be subject to mandatory urine testing? That question
awaits resolution on another day. So too does President
Reagan's order for random drug testing through out the
Government. But today's Supreme Court ruling gives the
first clear signal on drug testing and for now that signal
is a green light.
Attorney General Dick Thornberg hailed the Supreme
Court's decision as a common sense approach. He noted that
while the Court's opinion does not affect drug testing by
private employers, the ruling will send the private sector a
message, too. "Responsible employers will share our commit-
ment to providing a drug free workplace and will be hardened
in their resolution to initiate responsible drug testing
programs, by the Court's finding today".
Lawrence Segal is co-ordinator for the ACLU Task Force
on Drug Testing. "The fact that for the first time the
Supreme Court is saying that you don't need the tiniest iota
of individualized suspicion in order to conduct an invasive
body search of somebody, in the context of the workplace is
very alarming."
Scolei (spelling?), the only Reagan appointee to dis-
sent, said that since there was no evidence of a drug
problem in the Customs Service, the drug testing program
there amounted to "a kind of immolation of privacy and human
dignity in symbolic opposition to drug use".
|
716.256 | | EXIT26::STRATTON | I (heart) my wife | Wed Mar 22 1989 08:38 | 15 |
| (This is not directed at .255, but is an attempt to keep
this discussion on track.)
Please, let's remember that the purpose of this conference
is to discuss Digital and working here. If you want to
continue talking about drug testing at Digital, that's
fine. If you want to talk about drugs or drug testing
in general, there are other conferences that are more suited
for that type of discussion.
Thank you.
Jim Stratton (not acting as a moderator, but as an interested Noter
who'd simply like to see this topic stay on track)
|
716.257 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Wed Mar 22 1989 08:50 | 13 |
| Since .256 didn't speak as moderator ...
I found .255 germane, informative, and relevant ... it wasn't a discussion
of anything, just some factual information about a supreme court decision
which has bearing on Digital. Albeit the bearing is one of direction rather
than immediate effect, but it seems appropriate to the subject.
I do agree with your plea to stay on the subject; just disagree that
.255 was straying.
- greg, who hasn't commented on this topic because I am unable to
resolve a strong preference for privacy with the clear and
immediate problem of drugs.
|
716.258 | Avoid pre-emptive replies | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Mar 22 1989 09:02 | 15 |
| RE: .256
I strongly disagree with your assessment. I believe that drug testing
in general is _very closely_ tied to the drug testing at Digital. As it
has been pointed out before, the external pressure is the sole reason
behind the drug testing at Digital. Expecting participants of this
conference to ignore the reality is not acceptable.
If your reply was not directed as .255, then I see no reason for
a pre-emptive strike. If you believe that the discussion has been
or had been side-tracked, please point it out. We appreciate your
concern for keeping the discussion on the track and I am sure all
of us are doing our best not to derail it.
- Vikas
|
716.259 | oops | STAR::ROBERT | | Wed Mar 22 1989 11:02 | 4 |
| My .257 is a mistake ... I misread that .256 was directed at .255
when, in fact, the opposite was true. Regrets for the noise.
- g
|
716.260 | Your tax dollars at work | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Mar 22 1989 11:54 | 1 |
| Re: .255
|
716.261 | Relevant to Digital? As relevant as you can get!!! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Wed Mar 22 1989 15:17 | 27 |
| I too believe the Supreme Court decision has a direct bearing on
Digital. And I am upset enough that I have taken several actions
today:
I've extracted the letter and signature page, plan to print it this
evening, and will be the coordinator for the Dallas, Texas office. For
any Texas employees who want to sign, I'm in the DLO building, 8th
floor, in the Corporate Accounts area. If I'm not here the stuff will
be among the piles of junk on my desk. Feel free to dig for it. (^:}
Tonight I'm writing my senators and congressman.
And I just did something I never thought I'd do. Conservative
Republican, apolitical animal that I am, I called the ACLU to ask what
else I can do to help fight this blatant erosion of our basic
freedoms. I don't have the time, but I don't believe I can afford
*not* to get involved.
I was already worried by the DoD contract requirement, but the Supreme
Court decision yesterday has absolutely convinced me that this is
by far the worst case in my lifetime of the denial of our basic
rights as American citizens. Employers like Digital and like the
U.S. Government are being used as the vehicle for taking those basic
rights away from us. I might not win, but I *must* try
to help stop it.
Pat
|
716.262 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Bizarro Engineer | Wed Mar 22 1989 16:24 | 6 |
| This is obviously a hugely relevant topic for all affected employees.
Question: is this a big enough issue to need its own notes conference?
I can see this not going into many, many replies over time.
Andy
|
716.263 | One small step for collectivism... | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | | Wed Mar 22 1989 17:12 | 19 |
| Re: .255
I'm profoundly disappointed to see your country exchange morality
for expediency -- particularly considering the initial raison d'etre
was to escape from and guarantee against such an occurence.
I would trust that ALL elected representatives, from the President
on down (or is that 'on up') who are, as we all know, party to
sensitive information, will show up for testing tomorrow morning.
I would expect, in order to maintain independance, that the testing
be done by a private firm paid not for the number of tests performed
but rather for the number of positive results -- incentive to reveal.
As to the relevance to Digital, this 'guilty-until-proven-innocent'
trend in your society will surely modify my ambition to work in
Vermont.
My condolences.
|
716.264 | We could invite the King back... | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Mar 22 1989 23:20 | 2 |
| A lot of us probably agree with .-1, however, all but the last paragraph of
the previous reply belongs in the "Mandatory Drug Testing" topic in SOAPBOX.
|
716.265 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Mar 23 1989 08:57 | 20 |
| By the first of next week I want to see all nine Supreme Court justices
and Atty Gen. Thornberg lined up outside a Washington DC testing center with
plastic cups in their hands. They have clearly demonstrated by their
power and authority that they have sufficiently sensitive positions that we,
the people of the United States, must have clear confidence that their work
is not impaired by illegal drug involvement.
How does that relate to the Digital way of working?
If we sign a contract that requires drug testing of employees on the project,
the first person in line with his plastic cup should be the DEC VP who
signed the contract, the people from the sales staff who worked to get it,
their superioirs (to make sure that they were not working under the
direction of an impaired person), and everybody between them and the lowest
people in the chain affected. And superiors' results should be made available
to their subordinates to inspire confidence in their leadership.
- tom powers]
PS: Scalia can show up late for the tests if he wants, God bless his soul.
|
716.266 | Testing at Defense Vendor | DARTS::DIAZ | CMG/CDG/SAMG | Thu Mar 23 1989 11:18 | 8 |
| I talked about drug testing to an acquaintance that works for a
company that is mainly a Dod vendor, and he was surprised that I was
concerned about it. To them, it is considered normal business
practice and a requirement when you joint that company.
Isn't it all where you are coming from?
Octavio
|
716.267 | How frightening | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Mar 23 1989 12:23 | 16 |
| Re: .266
That's what I worried about: if drug testing is business as usual then
lie detectors will be business as usual and wire taps will be business as
usual. Might as well tear up the Constitution.
Will it affect my life at Digital if that happens here? You bet!
BTW, I'm not sure if anyone else at DSG is getting signatures for the
petition; I've checked with my personnel rep about the legalities of when
and where and how I can solicit signatures, and she says she'll get back
to me tomorrow. I should have remembered: it's easier to ask for forgiveness
than to ask for permission! (I wonder how easy it is to ask for forgiveness
after you've asked for permission and been turned down...?)
-- Bob
|
716.268 | Gosh! | RTOISB::TINIUS | I dont drink water, fish swim in it | Fri Mar 24 1989 06:56 | 8 |
| From 716.266:
> To them, it is considered normal business
> practice and a requirement when you joint that company.
^^^^^
Beautiful, that.
Stephen
|
716.269 | | CURIE::STAPLETON | | Fri Mar 24 1989 10:06 | 6 |
| Re: .254 by BEING::POSTPISCHIL
I have the letter at MRO4-3, pole J15. Well, actually the office
across the aisle from pole J15.
Stapes
|
716.270 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Mar 27 1989 09:06 | 8 |
| Current sites are:
ZKO, DSG, SHR, PKO, OGO, SPO, DLO, and MRO
Send mail if you'd like to know where the letter is in your site.
-- edp
|
716.271 | In business in DSG | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Mar 28 1989 18:15 | 6 |
| I heard back from my personnel rep, and she says the rule is that we can't
pass out petititons during work hours. If anyone in DSG would like to see
a hardcopy of the letter or endorse the letter with your signature, see me
at DSG1-2 Pole D8 between 12 and 1 p.m. or after 5 p.m.
-- Bob
|
716.272 | Articles from MGMT MEMO, Vol. 8 #2, Feb/Mar 1989 | DR::BLINN | General Eclectic | Tue Mar 28 1989 18:33 | 318 |
| With the assistance of Richard Seltzer, editor of MGMT MEMO,
I've obtained the two articles included here, which relate
to this issue. The information they contain is timely.
Tom
DIGITAL GRAPPLES WITH DRUG ISSUE
In the U.S., changes in federal laws and regulations as well as
changes in the expectations of customers and society in general
are forcing companies to rethink their policies related to
substance abuse.
Digital in the U. S., through its Employee Assistance Program
(EAP), makes various resources available to employees who may
have a drug or alcohol problem. Digital also has policies that
cover situations when employees have performance problems or
violate the company's expectations of appropriate conduct.
Managers are expected to focus on employee performance.
In addition, Digital has policies that deal with employee conduct
at Digital and customer work sites. The company expects
employees will conduct themselves in a safe and healthy way.
Employees who violate workplace rules are subject to discipline,
up to and including termination. Also, the use, possession of or
distribution of illegal substances on Digital property or on a
customer site could be cause for termination from the company.
And, in the U.S., employees are not permitted to use or possess
alcohol on company or customer permises.
In other words, in the U.S., Digital's practice and policy
regarding substance abuse has been:
o No illegal drugs are allowed on Digital property or at
customer sites (U.S. Personnel Policies and Procedures 6.24).
o If substance abuse is suspected of contributing to a
performance problem, managers should focus on the performance
issue (U.S. PP&P 6.21).
o Employees who voluntarily seek help for chemical dependency
problems are given confidential help through EAP.
o In the event that an employee appears to be incapacitated,
managers are to work with local Digital Health Services or
occupational health resources to seek a safe and confidential
solution. Upon return to work, the employee is required to
provide an explanation and medical documentation (U.S. PP&P
4.35)
These policies are intended to maintain a drug-free, productive
workplace, which is important for business.
"Our approach emphasizes self responsibility," notes Erline
Belton, manager, Corporate Employee Relations. "Digital believes
employees should be responsible for their own behavior outside of
as well as within the workplace. Individual responsibility and
trust are basic values of the company. Digital generally does
not attempt to oversee what employees do on their own time."
However, U.S. government requirements and other outside
influences are now pressuring the company to commmit to
instituting different programs to ensure a drug-free workplace.
Many such requested programs include drug testing of Digital
employees.
In the U.S., state and federal laws and regulations, and the
courts' interpretations of them, are in conflict. Legal
protections for individual rights clash with requirements
intended to protect public safety and reduce demand for and
traffic in illegal drugs.
The provisions of some state laws and state constitutions give
individuals the right of privacy to varying degrees and may give
people with substance abuse problems the same sort of protection
as people with other kinds of handicaps. But the federal
government, (and the Departments of Defense and Transportation,
in particular) insists that under certain circumstances drug
testing is necessary for the public welfare -- for instance, to
ensure that pilots and truck drivers or people with access to
classified information are not under the influence of drugs.
"At this point, it is impossible to predict how far federal
requirements will extend into the private sector," notes Paul
Henrion, staff attorney, Personnel Law Group. "We also cannot
predict whether, in the various legal challenges to these laws
and regulations, the courts will rule on the side of individual
rights, or will decide that public safety is an overriding
concern."
Right now, Digital is wrestling with these issues, trying to
develop policies and practices that remain consistent with the
company's basic values and yet meet these complex legal
requirements.
The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988, which is scheduled to become
effective on March 18, 1989, requires that federal contractors
certify to the contracting agency that they will provide a
"drug-free workplace." Some requirements of the law are:
o publish a drug policy statement notifying employees that the
unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispensation, possession
or use of a controlled substance in the workplace is
prohibited and explaining the consequences of violation;
o establish a "drug-free awareness program" to inform employees
of dangers of drug use and available treatment programs;
In addition, the Department of Defense (DoD) now requires that a
"Drug-Free Work Force" clause be added to contracts involving
access to classified information. This clause also may be
included in unclassified contracts where the DoD contracting
officer determines this is necessary. The clause requires the
contractor to institute and maintain a program that should
include: supervisory training, provisions for referral, an
employee assistance program, personnel procedures for dealing
with users of illegal drugs, and provisions for identifying
illegal drug users. It is expected that DoD will require drug
testing on a controlled and carefully monitored basis.
This clause does not apply to contracts for commercial products
unless there is access to classified information, but it does
apply to all applicable contracts for commercial services.
"Digital is working directly and through industry associations to
have all commerical products and services excluded," says Cyndi
Bloom, manager, U.S. Field Employee Relations. "But it now looks
probable that some Digital employees, who work on contracts that
require them to have government security clearances, may have to
undergo some form of drug testing." The extent of this testing
will be determined by a number of factors, including the nature
of the work the employee performs under a specific contract, and
the public health, safety or national security risk that could
result from inadequate performance.
Similar Department of Transportation regulations, which apply to
pilots and interstate truckers, are scheduled to go into effect
in December 1989.
This complex legal situation is still in flux.
In addition to U.S. government laws and regulations, Digital has
to respond to similar pressures from a variety of major
commercial customers, including several Corporate Accounts, who
are getting very selective about who they will allow on their
premises to do work for them. Some such customers have asked us
to do drug testing of Field Service and Software Service
employees to ensure that they are "drug-free." So far, we have,
through negotiation, been able to remove such stipulations from
commercial service contracts, because of our existing policies
and practices and our clear commitment to ensure that customers
get the best possible service.
Another kind of pressure comes from communities where Digital
does business. For instance, in Greenville, S.C., and Colorado
Springs, Colo., nearly all the major companies in the area now do
do drug testing. "In other words, we're not just dealing with
changes in federal law and regulat ions, but rather with a
pervasive change in public attitude," observes Cyndi.
"Drug abuse has been elevated to the position of a major public
problem, and there is a growing expectation that large companies
should help in the overall effort to deal with it," adds Erline.
"This issue will be with us for years to come.
"As a company, we are coming to grips with the fact that we are
now so large that we are a microcosm of society, with all of the
problems of society at large. Also, as one of the world's major
corporations, we are highly visible and subject to public as well
as government pressure. As we reformulate our policies to
respond to these new conditions, we have to find ways to sustain
our basic values."
In this case, the crossroads in decision-making is the point
where Digital must either change its policies or turn down
important government business. Digital is now trying to
determine what changes we must make and how to implement them
fairly and sensitively. All anticipated changes will be
communicated to employees through Personnel Perspectives, MGMT
MEMO, LIVE WIRE and local newsletters as quickly as possible. In
addition, in Q4, Digital plans to distribute a Field training
package to Field Personnel and then to Field managers. Later, a
Field information package is planned for employees who deal with
customers.
MANAGING CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY
by Bruce Davidson, manager, Corporate Employee Assistance Program
Dealing with an employee who has a performance problem that may
be complicated by personal problems is one of the most difficult
challenges a manager can face. For example, the illness of
chemical dependency -- addiction to drugs or alcohol -- can show
up at the workplace in the form of performance problems including
absenteeism and tardiness. It can lead to waste, safety hazards,
poor decision-making or disrupted employee morale.
We encourage managers and supervisors not to try to diagnose the
cause of performance problems and not to make assumptions about
people. Rather than guess at drug- or alcohol-related causes,
they need to focus on the performance, and deal with it through
normal problem-solving and corrective-action procedures. This
should be coupled with an offer of assistance.
Today, an estimated 10-15% of the U.S. population at large is
dependent on alcohol or drugs or both. A far greater number of
people are affected indirectly because of their closeness and
interactions with the substance abuser or chemically dependent
person.
When we come to work, we all bring with us attitudes and
personality styles that relate to our families of origin and our
current family situation. Sometimes people who have grown up in
chemically dependent families, for example adult children of
alcoholics, bring to their work group and to their environment
some of the same styles they experienced growing up, including
dramatic mood swings or difficulty in finishing tasks or setting
limits or overachievement.
People affected by substance abuse need help for themselves as
well as help in intervening in their situation.
Substance abuse is a worldwide problem that, because of differing
cultural norms, each geography in Digital deals with in its own
way. In the U.S. and Canada, Employee Assistance Programs (EAP)
serve as a confidential resource for Digital employees, their
families, and retirees, and provide assistance for a wide range
of problems, including legal and financial concerns, family
problems, aging parents and emotional distress, as well as
chemical dependency.
We make EAP resources available across the U.S. and Canada, but
it is up to the employee to use them. Also, managers can and do
contact their EAP consultant directly to discuss their concerns
and their approach regarding an employee before making a
referral. Managers should suggest that employees consider
contacting the EAP when a change in work pattern or a performance
issue arises. But, under current policy, the employee's use of
the program is always a matter of choice, not a requirement.
EAP's role is to to help employees evaulate whether a personal
problem or issue is contributing to a performance problem. The
employee has the opportunity to speak openly and confidentially
with experienced professional counsellors who will offer support
and understanding and give professional guidance. In cases that
are identified as chemical dependency problems, we can
successfully treat the illness, which will ultimately resolve the
performance problem.
There is a real opportunity to help people recover. From a
business point of view, we're recovering valued "human assets" --
people with training and experience, who can perform well.
Most of these people do follow through on a a program of
recovery. About 65-75% of the people who undergo treatment are
abstinent at one year after treatment. In about 70-80% of
Digital cases, the performance improvement is sustained during 18
months of followup.
Managers should keep in mind that chemical dependency is often a
progressive illness. The problem typically develops over a long
period of time. Some people are "in training" in their late 20s
and 30s and only become dependent on a chemical as they hit their
late 30s and early 40s. Others using drugs like cocaine show
signs of dependnency in their 20s and 30s. Also, emotional
crises, which are a normal part of life, may contribute to a per-
son's progression toward chemical dependency.
People often begin to abuse drugs or alcohol unknowingly, using
them to be sociable, to unwind, to reduce stress, to sleep, to
wake up, to lose weight, to be part of the crowd, or because of
peer pressure. Many people self-medicate, using alcohol and
other drugs, including over-the-counter drugs, as a way to avoid
physical pain or feelings of anxiety, worry, tenseness,
hopelessness, grief or anger.
We have been bombarded with the notion that the way to deal with
stress and pain of any type is to take a chemical. We have
become the "extra strength" generation. One or two pills used to
be enough to deal with a headache. Not anymore. It's bigger
capsules, bigger pills, and more of them. The implication is
that if you take a little bit more, you'll feel a little bit
better. If one dose reduces the pain, two doses or drinks may be
even better.
Another class of drugs -- amphetamines, "uppers," and cocaine --
poses a particularly difficult problem for managers. In the
early stages, the person using these drugs may make major
contributions at work. These drugs make people feel and act very
powerful, with an enormous amount of energy. For instance, many
cocaine users, in the early stages of use, will act as leaders,
exhibit relentless energy, and be creative and insightful.
Managers should be aware of their employees' normal behavior
patterns and notice sudden changes. Some people work 50+ hours a
week and have done that for years. It's part of their normal
life style. But when someone's performance radically changes,
when the average performer suddenly becomes a superstar, putting
enormous energy into the job, the manager should be aware of
possible disaster. It is not likely that anyone can sustain that
kind of pace forever, and on the other side of that emotional
high is a deep low. Managers love to see 130% contributions,
and, at first, may not notice the low days between the ups; in so
doing, they could fail to recognize that a crisis may be in the
making.
Managers should also be alert to instances when people who showed
signs of great potential become stagnant and blase. These
employees may never have any serious performance problems, but
they never develop into the contributors you expected they would.
In some cases, these people are chemically dependent or are
victims of chemical dependency, or have other personal
difficulties and are treading water at work while they try to
cope with problems at home.
In all such cases, the manager's role is to manage performance,
seek input from consultants, and, if appropriate, encourage the
employee to seek assistance.
|
716.273 | Sounds like a done deal to me... | DPDMAI::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Mar 29 1989 10:50 | 11 |
| re: .272
Those articles sound similar to the article that appeared in a recent
issue of U.S. Field News or whatever the thing is called.
Getting to the nitty-gritty, it seems to be saying that drug testing
will be a reality, that it is becoming the "in thing" for large
companies to do to appear to be doing their part to help fight the
drug war.
Bob
|
716.274 | happy to tune-in. | VAXWRK::HAJINLIAN | | Wed Mar 29 1989 18:29 | 12 |
| Just added this conference to my note directory. I havn't even
read one note in this conference but I endorsed the letter composed
by Eric Postpischil.
I'm new to Digital (approx 4 months) and I think this is the only place
to be if your a software tech. My opinion may change because of the
issues discussed in this topic.
I applaud Mr. Postpischil's standards, integrity, and concern for the
wellbeing of Digital's employees. I would like to get involved, and
do anything I can to help rebuke the DOD DFARS clause. My vaxmail
address is vaxwrk::hajinlian.
|
716.275 | Limited implementation at HSO | HSSWS1::GREG | The Texas Chainsaw | Wed Mar 29 1989 23:22 | 13 |
|
Here in HSO, I was not allowed to post the "petition", so
I opted for posting the letter portion only. So far as I know,
it has not yet been removed from the bulletin board in the
copy room on the ninth floor.
If nothing else, I hope to raise the consciousness of those
around me to the issues. Eric has done an excellent job of
this with his letter.
Thanks, Eric.
- Greg
|
716.276 | Scary stuff | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Mar 30 1989 01:50 | 12 |
| Re: .-1
The rules seem to be so vague that it's not surprising that they'd be
interpreted differently from site to site. For example, someone told me today
that soliciting signatures for a petition is a terminatable offense! All
I can say is: if DEC is really that repressive, do I want to be working here?
Perhaps there's a difference between the official rules and the unofficial
ones. For now, anyway, I'm going by what my personnel rep told me.
Gee, I only started on this stuff yesterday and already I'm learning things...
-- Bob
|
716.277 | Current policy on "Solicitations and Distribution of Literature" | DR::BLINN | M Power to the people | Thu Mar 30 1989 12:07 | 27 |
| The policy is not so specific that it's not open to some local
interpretation. For example, does Eric's letter constitute
"literature" for the purposes of the policy? Does posting
a copy on a bulletin board, or on the wall outside your office,
constitute "distributing" or "soliciting"? Clearly, it open
to some interpretation. If you suspect you're going to make
waves, discuss your planned action with your manager and make
sure your manager will support you.
Tom
PERSONNEL Section 6.19
Page 1 of 1
POLICIES AND PROCEDURES Effective 17-MAY-82
Solicitations and Distribution of Literature
It is Digital's policy that all employees are not to solicit other
employees for any purpose during working time. Working time does
not include break time or meal time. Digital employees are not
permitted to distribute literature of any kind and at any time in
working areas.
Persons who are not employees of the Company are prohibited from
distributing literature of any kind or soliciting employees for any
purpose at any time on Company property.
|
716.278 | We're ALL in trouble now. | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Sharing is what Digital does best. | Thu Mar 30 1989 14:05 | 18 |
| Re .277:
> PERSONNEL Section 6.19
> Page 1 of 1
> POLICIES AND PROCEDURES Effective 17-MAY-82
>
>... Digital employees are not
>permitted to distribute literature of any kind and at any time in
>working areas.
Oh my God! Do this man that I am going to be fired for distrubting
the new VMS Doc. to the people in my unit?!? We are going to have
to terminate everyone in SDC too! And what about all of those
engineers who are handing out Specs, Proposals and Phase 0 statements
all of the time? Boy, ZKO is going to be a ghost town when we get
done with them!
- Barry
|
716.279 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Mar 30 1989 14:52 | 23 |
| While neither of these quotes were directed at the subject of drug
testing, they do say something about the likeliehood of DEC trying
to convince the government that drug testing is not a great idea.
"It's a good rule of thumb, it's my rule of thumb, the
government always does the wrong thing. This is not being
cynical, the message is it's not worth getting upset,
you know the rules ahead of time."
- Ken Olsen, Worcester Gazette 17-MAR-1989
"Trying to change the government to [make it] help us
is like trying to change the speed of light: It's worth
a certain amount of effort but not an awful lot."
- Ken Olsen, Boston Globe 21-MAR-1989
Also in the news is a report that 30 White House employees have
filed suit to prevent their employer from subjecting them to random
drug testing. It's said that George is upset that they are taking
this action.
|
716.280 | | CURIE::STAPLETON | | Thu Mar 30 1989 22:58 | 8 |
| Re: back a few
I guess that I am lucky. My manager was the third person to sign.
I was first, and a fellow across the aisle was second. The biggest
problem that I have run into is the number of people unwilling to
read it because of its length. (heavy sigh)
Stapes
|
716.281 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 31 1989 09:03 | 10 |
| At one site, some people are signing a different version which is
mostly the summary page with a few introductory sentences taken from
elsewhere.
People who do not want to sign the longer statement might wish to sign
this. I am placing a copy in the next response. When you send me the
signature pages at the end, be sure to keep them identified.
-- edp
|
716.282 | EXTRACT/NOHEADER SHORT and PRINT/QUEUE=whatever SHORT.TXT | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 31 1989 09:05 | 118 |
|
DIGITAL'S DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
A Letter to Digital Equipment Corporation
On October 31, 1988, the Department of Defense started
requiring a new clause in Defense contracts. This clause
establishes requirements for a drug-free work force and
includes provisions for a drug-testing program.
Digital has agreed to the clause.
Opposition to drug testing comes from different motivations
in different people. Some people want to exercise their
own values. Some people just want to be let alone. And
some people find this exercise of power unreasonable.
There are two key points here. A person does not need to
be a drug user or a drug abuser to object to drug testing.
And the common abhorrence of drug testing is an indication
of the extent to which it is an intrusion.
Privacy is invaded by drug testing because it reveals
personal information. Dignity is assaulted because testing
is humiliating. Respect is eliminated because testing
shows a lack of trust.
The disadvantages of drug testing must be examined and made
known. Digital risks lawsuits, loss of valuable employees,
decreased morale, excessive dependence on Defense
contracts, and reduction of future negotiating power with
the government and other parties. There are dangers that
bodily fluids and drug tests can be misused, including
false interpretation, personal motives, and testing for
more than drugs. The risk that this first step will lead
eventually to mandatory testing for all employees must be
evaluated.
The actual threat to Digital represented by drug abuse
should guide Digital's actions more than the external,
political imposition of a repugnant contract clause. Our
relationship with external parties should be to provide
quality products and services. Drug testing is not a good
role for Digital to have, and employee rights and dignity
should not be sold to customers.
If Digital implements a drug-testing program, we ask that
safeguards be considered such as assigning only volunteers
to assignments requiring drug testing. But we would prefer
the better choice, that Digital reject drug testing.
Digital's Drug-Testing Program
We are concerned about a drug-testing program and ask
Digital to consider the concerns, suggestions, and requests
expressed in this letter.
Printed Name Signature
1 _________________________ _________________________
2 _________________________ _________________________
3 _________________________ _________________________
4 _________________________ _________________________
5 _________________________ _________________________
6 _________________________ _________________________
7 _________________________ _________________________
8 _________________________ _________________________
9 _________________________ _________________________
10 _________________________ _________________________
11 _________________________ _________________________
12 _________________________ _________________________
13 _________________________ _________________________
14 _________________________ _________________________
15 _________________________ _________________________
16 _________________________ _________________________
17 _________________________ _________________________
18 _________________________ _________________________
19 _________________________ _________________________
20 _________________________ _________________________
21 _________________________ _________________________
22 _________________________ _________________________
23 _________________________ _________________________
24 _________________________ _________________________
25 _________________________ _________________________
|
716.283 | "mad as hell and not going to take it anymore" | VAXWRK::HAJINLIAN | | Sat Apr 01 1989 09:40 | 18 |
| From 716.14:
>> If I was told that it was take the test or be fired
>> I would voluntarily go somewhere have a test taken and have it
>> timestamped. If I was then fired I'd make as much hay as possible
>> over the harassment of an innocent individual. Of course my test
>> would have been negative.
>>
>> I would hope that many others would have the courage to follow such
>> a course.
>> I find it absolutely unacceptable that an individual's privacy and
>> personal rights can be violated in such a way. The time to stand
>> up and be counted is now.
Great Idea! I'm planning on doing the same. And besides, before anyone
takes any of my bodily fluids they can at least talk dirty to me first.
|
716.284 | Badge number = Asset Number? | SNOC01::EVANS | There's a hole in my gumboots | Thu Apr 06 1989 03:22 | 6 |
| Could drug testing be regarded as preventative maintenance for a
resource (see note 769)?
Another indication of cultural change?
David
|
716.285 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Apr 13 1989 16:42 | 4 |
| Reminder: It is time to send me the signatures.
-- edp
|
716.286 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Apr 17 1989 12:13 | 5 |
| Four sites still have signatures on their way to me, but I have over
100 signatures already, including a few that weren't know to me before.
-- edp
|
716.287 | A description of my drug test | SYSENG::BITTLE | Nancy Bittle - Hardware Engineer, LSEE 223-7653 | Sun Apr 23 1989 23:07 | 35 |
|
I was drug tested on 5 out of 10 second interviews for engineering
positions I had before graduating from Duke in '87.
Here is how it typically went :
I had to agree to submit to drug testing before the second interview
would be arranged. If I had refused that day, I could not have
any interviews and would be flown back. (I saw this happen once)
1/4 to 1/2 the day of the interview was spent waiting for my turn.
This was usually done in the morning, and we were given lots of
coffee and hot chocolate while waiting to help nature along.
When my turn finally arrived, I was given a cup and a woman followed
me into the bathroom. The bathroom typically had only one tiolet
so there were no stalls for privacy. The woman watched *all* my
actions very closly. When I asked if she would turn around, she
replied it was necessary to see everything because I could hide
an eyedropper full of HCL and use it to wipe out drug traces in
my specimen. Giving a urine specimen while wearing a business suit,
hose, slip, etc... and having someone closely watching was never
a trivial feat.
After the specimen was given, I was required to sign the label that
sealed my specimen bottle. I then watched as the bottle was placed
in the bag to be shipped to the lab, and was required to sign the
label that sealed that bag.
Giving a urine specimen was one of the most degrading things I've
ever had to do in my life. I would think hard before doing it again.
First we are drug tested, then we are disarmed, and soon we could
have our reproductive freedom severely limited...What is America
coming to?
nancy b.
|
716.288 | Yes indeed, "what is this country coming to?" | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Apr 24 1989 06:09 | 16 |
| Re: .287
Shocking. I wouldn't even work for a company that required tests like that
for its new hires (let alone for people being *interviewed*).
My only question is: why did you submit to the tests? When they told me
that they required a drug test or I'd be flown home I'd have answered "Thank
you, I now have all the information I need to make my decision about whether to
work here. The interview process is concluded."
Of course, it's easy for me to say that now that I have 5 years experience
working for DEC. It's harder when you're first starting out. That's why
*everyone* has a moral obligation to refuse to work for a company that requires
this kind of testing.
-- Bob
|
716.289 | Where do WE stand?? | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Apr 24 1989 09:32 | 7 |
| > Shocking. I wouldn't even work for a company that required tests like that
> for its new hires (let alone for people being *interviewed*).
What EXACTLY is the policy of Digital, regarding new hires as of
today?
- Vikas
|
716.290 | | VCSESU::COOK | Chain Reaction | Mon Apr 24 1989 10:16 | 9 |
|
re .289
Well, testing all depends if you will be working directly on U.S.
Government contracts that require security clearance or not.
Whether it be new external or internal hires.
/prc
|
716.291 | Where does all this stand today? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Mon Apr 24 1989 14:25 | 12 |
| To take .289 a step further:
Exactly what is the status of drug testing in Digital today? And
what is the status of the DoD's testing requirements?
Have we tested anyone? Have we notified anyone they will be tested?
Has the DoD required us or any other corporation to test employees, or
have they just stated in the contract that they *will* require it?
Just curious,
Pat
|
716.292 | | VCSESU::COOK | Chain Reaction | Mon Apr 24 1989 14:33 | 9 |
|
re .291
See .290.
It's only required for those employees who work on government contracts
which require security clearances.
/prc
|
716.293 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Mon Apr 24 1989 17:24 | 5 |
| >> It's only required for those employees who work on government contracts
>> which require security clearances.
I realize that. But has anyone in Digital been tested, or notified by
management personally that they will be tested?
|
716.294 | Ask the unit manager (identified in an earlier note) | DR::BLINN | But wait! There's more! | Mon Apr 24 1989 17:56 | 7 |
| An earlier note in this topic was a contribution from the unit
manager for the work that brought this issue to a head. Seek
it out and ask whether anyone in his unit has yet been tested.
I'd suggest asking by MAIL, with a request that the reply go
here as well.
Tom
|
716.295 | In Memorial | REGENT::MERRILL | All we need now is a sanity check ... | Tue Apr 25 1989 18:06 | 7 |
|
I do hope that drug testing is mandatory in the Black Powder factory
that supplied powder to the USS IOWA.
Rick
Merrill
|
716.296 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck - DECnet-VAX | Tue Apr 25 1989 23:55 | 4 |
| If what I heard was accurate, the powder dates back to World War II. (Black
powder is very stable, so its age is not ordinarily an issue.)
So there's no guarantee that the factory in question is even in business...
|
716.297 | why I submitted (and why you shouldn't) | SYSENG::BITTLE | Hardware Engineer,LSEE | Wed Apr 26 1989 00:21 | 17 |
|
Bob Messenger (.288) -
Why did I submit to the drug test?
At the beginning of the recruiting season, a seminar for graduating
engineers was given. It was stated that drug urinalysis would be
the rule instead of the exception among companies involved with
government contracts. I did not think the test could be as
dehumanizing as it actually was, and was worried about limiting
my opportunities in my first position out of college.
In retrospect, I should not have "submitted".
I received 9 job offers.
I received 5 insults to my person.
nancy b.
|
716.298 | New Angle on International Relocation | MU::PORTER | gonzo engineering | Wed Apr 26 1989 00:50 | 14 |
|
Hah! After all this talk about whether one should consent to being
drug-tested or not, I find that I have to be drug-tested. Yes, Uncle
Sam does it again. As part of one's application for a Green Card
(sponsored by Digital Equipment Corp, so it *is* sort-of related to
this notes file) one has to undergo a comprehensive medical
examination, including some unspecified drug-testing and an HIV test.
As well as checking for any signs of sexual perversion (I'll let you
know exactly what THAT means after the event).
I guess they've got me over a barrel on this one. I consent to
the invasion or I don't stay.
|
716.299 | "informed consent" | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Apr 26 1989 09:58 | 6 |
| re: 716.298---Before you decide to stay, read 716.287 and think about
how you would feel under those circumstances. I salute Nancy for
relating her experience: that's never happened to me, but I'm not sure
I'd have the courage to describe it in such detail, and so widely, if
it did.
John Sauter
|
716.300 | "Clean urine" for sale | SYSENG::BITTLE | Hardware Engineer,LSEE | Wed Apr 26 1989 20:42 | 12 |
| Porter (.298) -
I remember some enterprising minds in my class began advertising
"clean urine" for sale soon after the initial recruiting seminar
at the beginning of senior year.
I am sorry you have to compromise your person in order to work at
Digital. Have you checked opportunities with other high-tech
companies that don't require drug-testing? Front page story of
4/20/89 EDN is titled "Silicon Valley in Midst of Hiring Binge".
nancy b.
|
716.301 | | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Apr 26 1989 20:48 | 5 |
| Re: .300
That wouldn't help him, since California is part of the United States...
-- Bob
|
716.302 | | MU::PORTER | gonzo engineering | Wed Apr 26 1989 22:30 | 7 |
| Yup, in case I wasn't clear -- the "tests" are required by
the US Immigration Service, or whatever their real name is, not
by DEC.
In the true spirit of capitalism, I even have to pay to be degraded!
(actually, DEC will pick up the tab as part of the relocation deal, but
Uncle Sam doesn't know that).
|
716.303 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Apologies for what Doug Mulray said... | Thu Apr 27 1989 00:30 | 7 |
| what they really need is drug testing as a requirement for
welfare...
Now that would have a noticable effect...
q
|
716.304 | Just kidding! | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Apr 27 1989 00:43 | 7 |
| Re: .303
What they really need is drug testing as a requirement for elective office.
Now that would have a noticeable effect...
-- Bob
|
716.305 | Not just kidding.. | DR::BLINN | The best mechanics are self-taught | Thu Apr 27 1989 11:39 | 7 |
| This is drifting away from the topic of "Drug testing at Digital?"
and from any relationship to "The way we work at Digital".
Perhaps we could re-focus on Digital, and not on the welfare
system or elective office.
Tom
|
716.306 | X-rated replies here? | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Christos voskrese iz mertvych! | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:38 | 9 |
| .298:
� As well as checking for any signs of sexual perversion (I'll let you
� know exactly what THAT means after the event).
Maybe I've a poor imagination, or I'm na�ve, or easily embarrassed...
... but do you think you can describe that here?
Dick
|
716.307 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:53 | 17 |
| re .306 (at the risk of heading further into the rathole)
Having been through the immigration process, my guess is that some
document wth a name like 'Optional Form 193' has the following
questions:
Have you ever been convicted of any crime involving sexual perversion?
Have you ever been involved in, but not convicted of, any activity
involving sexual perversion?
Good ol' OF-176 had the same two questions about 'use of or trafficking
in illegal drugs'.
gary
|
716.308 | | MU::PORTER | gonzo engineering | Tue May 02 1989 00:32 | 8 |
| What would I know about sexual perversion? I'm a good, clean-living
boy from England. We don't do stuff like that there, you know.
Seriously (sort of) -- all I know is I have to have a medical exam,
and there's a standard form that the doctor needs to complete, which
testifies that there are no signs of any of a big list of things
which the doctor has to check, and one of the things is sexual
deviation (I lied before, it says "deviation", not "perversion").
|
716.309 | Anoter good clean-liver speaks | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy ��� Leslie, CSSE/VMS Europe | Tue May 02 1989 08:16 | 9 |
| > What would I know about sexual perversion? I'm a good, clean-living
> boy from England. We don't do stuff like that there, you know.
Ahhhh heh heh heh heh hee.....! :-)
Thanks for the laff, Dave...
Andy
|
716.310 | classified waste | STEREO::BROWN | Who Needs a Road ? | Tue May 02 1989 13:49 | 20 |
| An earlier reply (in the .90s) said that it was necessary to P in
a bottle to get a clearance from DIS. Well, I have been cleared
to TS by DIS for the last 4 years and so far, haven't had to put
any samples in bottles yet... However, one company that I sent a
resume to recently stated that they test all new hires - P first,
then, if you pass, interview.
Next week our group is having a 3 hour meeting, in which the drug
testing topic will be discussed, along with other subjects. If there
is any new info on drug testing, I will post it here.
The only time I ever had to P in a bottle was while I was in the
Army in 1972. They also supplied oceans of beer, soda and coffee in
order to make sure that "bladder lock" wasn't a problem. Those who
failed the test were given a re-test. Those that failed round two
were sent to a two week "detox" clinic. The worst part of it was
having to fill the little bottle while the First Sergeant had his
beady little eyes fixed on my xxxx.
|
716.311 | RE: .-1 | YUPPIE::COLE | Abbie's dead. Will the '60's PLEASE do likewise! | Tue May 02 1989 15:31 | 5 |
| I was in the Air Force at about the same time, and was part of several
"random" testing samples over a few years. It seemed the same group of us were
being "randomly" selected each time, and we all knew we were clean! And we
weren't "observed", oddly enough, but that may have been because we were
officers.
|
716.312 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue May 02 1989 17:31 | 9 |
| re .310
Before anyone asks,
DIS is not Digital Information Systems,
but Defense Investigative Services.
/john
|
716.313 | The Latest Memo on Drug Testing | STEREO::BROWN | Who Needs a Road ? | Fri May 12 1989 09:22 | 212 |
| I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 10-May-1989 02:01pm EDT
From: VMSMail User KOCH
KOCH@VALUES@MRGATE
Dept:
Tel No:
TO: @DOM_STAFF
Subject: FYI - Illegal/Controlled Substance Policy
From: FACMTS::FACMTS::MRGATE::"BARTLE::A1::DOHERTY.JOHN" 5-MAY-1989 15:09
To: @Distribution_List
Subj: ILLEGAL/CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE POLICY
From: NAME: JOHN N. DOHERTY @CFO
FUNC: CORPORATE PERSONNEL
TEL: 251-1318 <DOHERTY.JOHN AT A1 at BARTLE at CFO>
To: See Below
Attached you will find a copy of the approved U.S. policy on Illegal/Controlled
Substances. There is also a memo that will probably be condensed and issued
with the policy when it goes out on LIVE WIRE in a few days.
We have a requirement to publish this policy to our employees as soon as
possible. In order to give the Personnel Organization a couple of days advanced
reading of the policy, I am sending this to you, electronically, and ask that
you distribute it to your Personnel Staffs as soon as possible.
As you will read in the policy there is very little that is new to Digital and
much of the wording in the policy is to satisfy Federal regulations. The
potential for drug testing is included in this policy and is not meant to imply
that Digital is about to implement a wide-spread drug testing program. The
intention is that we will implement such programs only when required.
Finalization of the government regulations and interpretations of those
regulations are still going on and because of that we have not got answers to a
number of the questions that people might ask. We do have several committees
put together to review issues associated with such regulations and will inform
you as to their progress and any changes we may need to make in the policy.
ATTACHMENTS (2)
U.S. POLICY
ILLEGAL/CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
PHILOSOPHY
IT IS THE GOAL OF DIGITAL TO MAINTAIN A SAFE, HEALTHY, AND PRODUCTIVE WORK
ENVIRONMENT FOR ALL EMPLOYEES. WE EXPECT EMPLOYEES TO SHARE THIS GOAL.
WE ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR PROTECTING OUR EMPLOYEES AND ASSETS OF THE
CORPORATION AND THOSE OF OUR CUSTOMERS, AND FOR OBEYING THE LAWS OF THE
COUNTRIES AND STATES IN WHICH WE DO BUSINESS. DIGITAL DOES NOT CONDONE ANY
UNLAWFUL ACTIVITY.
THE COMPANY HAS FOUND THAT EMPLOYEES WHO WORK UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF
ILLEGAL/CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES MAY PROVE TO BE HARMFUL TO THEMSELVES, OTHER
EMPLOYEES, CUSTOMERS, OR THE COMPANY. THEREFORE, THE COMPANY REQUIRES THAT
ITS EMPLOYEE WILL NOT WORK UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF, POSSESS, SELL,
DISTRIBUTE, DISPENSE, MANUFACTURE, OR USE ILLEGAL/CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES IN
THE WORKPLACE.
DIGITAL HAS POLICIES THAT COVER SITUATIONS WHEN EMPLOYEES HAVE PERFORMANCE
PROBLEMS OR WHEN EMPLOYEES POSSESS OR USE ILLEGAL/ CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES IN
THE WORKPLACE. EMPLOYEES WHO VIOLATE WORKPLACE RULES ARE SUBJECT TO
DISCIPLINE, UP TO AND INCLUDING TERMINATION.
TO HELP RESOLVE PROBLEMS WHICH MAY ARISE FROM SUBSTANCE USE, ABUSE AND
DEPENDENCY, THE COMPANY WILL PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO EMPLOYEES VOLUNTARILY
SEEKING HELP FOR THEIR PROBLEMS AS DEFINED IN ESTABLISHED COMPANY PROGRAMS.
DIGITAL TRUSTS ITS EMPLOYEES AND RESPECTS THEIR DIGNITY. HOWEVER, THERE MAY
BE TIMES WHEN LEGAL OR BUSINESS NEEDS REQUIRE THE COMPANY TO INSTITUTE DRUG
TESTING OR OTHER PROCEDURES. IN THOSE CASES, SUCH PROCEDURES WILL BE
CONDUCTED WITH APPROPRIATE SENSITIVITY TO EMPLOYEES.
POLICY
DIGITAL PROHIBITS THE UNLAWFUL MANUFACTURE, SALE, DISTRIBUTION,
DISPENSATION, POSSESSION, WORKING UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF, OR USE OF
ILLEGAL/CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES BY OUR EMPLOYEES IN THE WORKPLACE OR DURING
WORK. "WORKPLACE" IS DEFINED AS BEING DIGITAL PROPERTY, A COMPANY VEHICLE,
A CUSTOMER SITE, OR A VENDOR SITE. FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS POLICY
COMPANY-SPONSORED EMPLOYEE FUNCTIONS OR ACTIVITIES OCCUR "DURING WORK."
EMPLOYEES FOUND TO BE IN VIOLATION OF THIS POLICY ARE IN VIOLATION OF
PERSONNEL POLICY, SECTION 6.24 EMPLOYEE CONDUCT AND ARE SUBJECT TO
DISCIPLINE UP TO AND INCLUDING TERMINATION.
5/03/89
U.S. POLICY
PRACTICE
EMPLOYEES MAY SEEK OR BE REFERRED FOR VOLUNTARY ASSISTANCE IN ORDER TO
ADDRESS PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH SUBSTANCE USE, ABUSE OR DEPENDENCY.
DIGITAL PROVIDES AN EMPLOYEE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (EAP) FOR ALL EMPLOYEES
ACROSS THE UNITED STATES TO PROVIDE SUCH REFERRALS.
MANAGERS WHO SUSPECT SUBSTANCE ABUSE OUTSIDE THE WORK ENVIRONMENT SHOULD
LIMIT THE SCOPE OF THEIR DIRECT MANAGEMENT TO UNACCEPTABLE WORKPLACE
BEHAVIORS AND PERFORMANCE, IN ACCORDANCE WITH PERSONNEL POLICIES, UNLESS
OTHERWISE REQUIRED BY LAW OR LEGAL OBLIGATION. SUCH LAWS OR LEGAL
OBLIGATIONS MAY REQUIRE THAT AN EMPLOYEE BE REMOVED FROM A PARTICULAR
POSITION. MANAGERS SHOULD WORK WITH PERSONNEL AND EAP TO ADVISE THE
EMPLOYEE OF ASSISTANCE OPTIONS. ON QUESTIONS REGARDING LAW OR LEGAL
OBLIGATIONS, PERSONNEL SHOULD CONSULT WITH THE LAW DEPARTMENT.
FROM TIME TO TIME, DIGITAL MAY BE REQUIRED TO IMPLEMENT PROGRAMS FOR
IDENTIFYING ILLEGAL DRUG USE, INCLUDING DRUG TESTING. ALL PROGRAMS MUST BE
APPROVED BY THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
IN IMPLEMENTING THIS POLICY, MANAGERS MUST BE SENSITIVE TO EMPLOYEE
CONCERNS AND AWARE OF THE POTENTIAL LIABILITY OF ISSUES INVOLVING
ALLEGATIONS OF ILLEGAL CONDUCT OR DISCUSSIONS OF EMPLOYEE MEDICAL
SITUATIONS. PERSONNEL POLICY 6.18, EMPLOYEE PRIVACY, IS A KEY REFERENCE IN
THIS REGARD.
5/03/89
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
In order to comply with multiple Federal Regulations, Digital Equipment
Corporation is required to publish an Illegal/Controlled Substance policy
for our employees. This is part of a program which will also include
information on EAP, supervisory training, and in some specified cases,
procedures for identifying drug users. The laws and regulations concerning
the subject are still in the process of being developed by the Government
and are undergoing review and comment by Digital.
According to Erline Belton, Corporate Employee Relations Manager, many
aspects of the program have not been determined and therefore we do not
have all the answers. We will be staying close to developments in the
Government and in the States to understand Digital's responsibility around
such laws. Digital has always had a concern for the privacy of our
employees and values the importance of trust in our work environment.
However we also understand the issues involved with the illegal/controlled
substances and have experienced some of the problems ourselves in this
area. We will keep employees informed of developments through a variety of
communication processes within Digital as the Government goes further to
clarify their requirements which will ultimately impact Digital and our
employees.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS:
Question: Is Digital about to implement a Company-wide Drug Testing
Policy?
Answer: No, Digital has no plans to implement a Company-wide drug
testing program. Our intention is to limit drug testing if
required only to the areas required by law or legal
contract.
Question: As an employee in a group where drug testing is required,
will I have choice of whether or not I decide to take a
drug test?
Answer: The requirements for drug testing have not been developed
as of yet, so we do not know what the law might state. We
are very sensitive to the need of employee choice in issues
such these and will take that into consideration as we
develop Company policies.
Question: What kind of drug test would be performed if required?
Answer: Our medical staff is now looking into the types of test
that are now available for illegal/controlled substances.
There are many factors to look at, reliability, cost,
availability, etc.
Question: As an employee, is EAP a resource to me if I have a problem
with substance use?
Answer: Yes, EAP is available for referral to programs to help with
substance problems.
Question: If I take a required test and test is positive, what action
will the Company take?
Answer: The requirements and policies have not been determined yet.
As mentioned above, EAP will be available to employees in
the U.S. We will expect our employees to be responsible
and seek help to address their problems.
Question: How confidential are the results of the test?
Answer: All medical reports are kept confidential.
These are some of the questions we believe you might have as an employee.
There clearly may be others. We encourage you to ask questions and share
your comments with us.
If you have any other questions, please call me.
Distribution List:
|
716.314 | It turned out worse than I expected... | THEPIC::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Fri May 12 1989 11:30 | 10 |
| re: .313
> HOWEVER, THERE MAY BE TIMES WHEN LEGAL OR business needs REQUIRE THE COMPANY
> TO INSTITUTE DRUG TESTING OR OTHER PROCEDURES.
This sentence seems to leave the door wide open for drug testing of employees
for any reason. I would have expected Digital to ONLY drug test when REQUIRED
by law.
Bob
|
716.315 | | MISFIT::DEEP | Set hidden by moderator | Fri May 12 1989 11:57 | 14 |
| re: .314
Bob,
I think the "business needs" clause is there to allow Digital to enter
into contracts with Gov't Agencies that require drug testing. This
requirement is policy, not law, and therefore, Digital would not be
required "by law" to enforce drug testing, but would be required by
"business needs."
I agree, however, that this wording opens the door for abuse of
the policy.
Bob
|
716.316 | Testing is not likely to be done capriciously | DR::BLINN | Bluegrass music is where it's at | Mon May 15 1989 11:53 | 28 |
| RE: .313 -- Thanks for posting that. I expect the text of
the policy will show up in the ORANGEBOOK infobase in due time,
but the "Q&A" section won't be there, and it's illuminating.
RE: .314, .315 -- Consider the complete context for the phrase:
DIGITAL TRUSTS ITS EMPLOYEES AND RESPECTS THEIR DIGNITY. HOWEVER, THERE MAY
BE TIMES WHEN LEGAL OR BUSINESS NEEDS REQUIRE THE COMPANY TO INSTITUTE DRUG
TESTING OR OTHER PROCEDURES. IN THOSE CASES, SUCH PROCEDURES WILL BE
CONDUCTED WITH APPROPRIATE SENSITIVITY TO EMPLOYEES.
Further, consider (from PRACTICE) that:
FROM TIME TO TIME, DIGITAL MAY BE REQUIRED TO IMPLEMENT PROGRAMS FOR
IDENTIFYING ILLEGAL DRUG USE, INCLUDING DRUG TESTING. ALL PROGRAMS MUST BE
APPROVED BY THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
While there is some potential for abuse, given that any testing
program must be approved by the Executive Committee, I doubt
that a slip-shod testing program would ever be put into place,
or that it would be done capriciously.
There is a good article on "The Role of the Executive Committee
in Decision-Making at Digital" in the April-May 1989 issue
of MGMT MEMO (Vol. 8, #3). I'll ask Richard Seltzer for a
copy and post it here (probably as a separate reply).
Tom
|
716.317 | Let's find out who our IMPORTANT customers are... | THEPIC::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue May 16 1989 11:08 | 16 |
| re: .316
I guess I'm concerned about the "foot in the door" syndrome. Now that we have
given in to the demands of a large customer, what's to keep another large
customer from saying something along the lines of, "We do pre-employment drug
testing of all of our employees. We want you to test all the people that
will be working at our site. Since you do defense related work, you must
have accepted the drug testing clause in the government contracts, and we
expect that you will the same for us." (Veiled threat) "There are lots of 3rd
party maintenance companies out here that would just love to get our
maintenance contract...".
This will be one way to find out who our IMPORTANT customers are. They are
the ones we will do drug testing for.
Bob_who_hopes_he_is_just_being_paranoid
|
716.318 | It's spreading... | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Thu Jun 08 1989 13:50 | 105 |
| I have typed in the following article (without permission of course) that
appeared in this morning's Dallas Morning News. The corporation, Texas
Instruments, happens to be my account. They have a culture that is
extremely similar to ours in many ways. They are also in the same business
we are in (the semiconductor and computer divisions at least). Perhaps
this note is unrelated to drug testing at Digital, but I can't help
believing it might be useful to know what other, similar, companies are
doing and saying on the issue.
I am going to cross-post the note in SOAPBOX.
Pat
===============================================================================
New TI drugs policy includes random tests
Texas Instruments Inc. -- the Dallas area's largest employer -- announced
Wednesday a new, strengthened substance abuse policy that will include
random drug testing of employees in all its U.S. operations.
"The elimination of substance abuse in our workforce is consistent with
TI's desired culture and will enhance the safety, security, and
productivity of all TI employees," Jerry R. Junkins, chief executive
officer, said in a prepared statement.
The program -- which applies to all the company's 34,600 Dallas-area
employees -- includes rehabilitation assistance and education.
Drug testing is becoming more widespread among major U.S. corporations,
studies show. but pre-employment screening -- which TI has done since 1986
-- is the most common procedure.
Random testing is used less and is more controversial, especially outside
hazardous industries. But as the federal government has begun to mandate
drug-free workplace policies in the Defense Department, Transportation
Department, and other agencies, the testing is becoming more common in the
private sector.
"The DOD (Department of Defense) regulations do specify random testing for
anyone with access to what is referred to as sensitive information," said
Max Lasater, TI vice president and director of U.S. employee relations.
TI considered limiting testing to just those operations -- but rejected the
idea, Mr. Lasater said. "This was an issue relative to total TI," he said.
The tests will be administered at all levels -- including senior managers
-- from a random list generated by computer program, company officials
said. An employee must take the test the same day he or she is notified.
The tests won't be witnessed, protecting employee privacy, Mr. Lasater
said. If a first test is positive, a second, more exact test will be done
to confirm results.
Employees who test positive the first time will have a chance for treatment
and counseling. A second positive test will get the employee fired.
The new drug policy was a "carefully thought-out, well-researched, deeply
examined process," said corporate spokesman Stan Victor.
TI conducted opinion-gathering focus groups among employees as part of the
process, he said.
"We had several focus groups where the subject of random testing was
discussed. If it was going to be an issue, employees preferred random and
fairly pervasive (testing) as opposed to it being a small percentage of
employees," Mr. Victor said.
The company will begin testing senior managers in November and all U.S.
employees Jan. 1.
A 1988 Gallup poll found that 29 percent of large U.S. companies use drug
testing in some form, while 26 percent planned to implement programs.
According to the Conference Board, a New York-based business research
organization, most workplace testing is still largely limited to
pre-employment screening.
The U.S. Supreme Court in March upheld drug-testing policies in the
railroad industry and the U.S. Customs Service, but it has yet to hear
challenges to random-testing plans such as the one proposed by the
Transportation Department.
Private employers have far more latitude to test than the government, which
is governed by Fourth Amendment restrictions against unreasonable search.
In the past, officials representing labor groups and others have opposed
the testing.
"Our position is that it's (drug testing) an invasion of privacy,
especially without probably cause or reasonable suspicion," Richard Avena,
executive director of the Texas Civil Liberties Union, said in March.
In announcing its policy, TI said drug users are four more times as likely
to be involved in work-related accidents and file 500 percent more worker's
compensation claims than non-users.
Drug abuse "is a problem we feel is national," said Mr. Lasater.
Random testing may be controversial because it is fairly unusual in the
workplace, he said.
"We are aware of the controversy, but we feel strongly that it suits our
culture, and it's the right thing to do -- not just for TI but for society
at large," Mr. Lasater said.
|
716.319 | Senseless | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Jun 08 1989 16:47 | 22 |
| Re: .318
>If a first test is positive, a second, more exact test will be done
>to confirm results.
>
>Employees who test positive the first time will have a chance for treatment
>and counseling. A second positive test will get the employee fired.
This doesn't make sense. If the first test is positive, it could be a false
positive or the employee could be using drugs. Therefore, a second, more
exact test will be done to confirm results. So far, so good. A second
positive test will get the employee fired. Sounds logical. But if the
first test is positive and the second test is negative, doesn't that mean
that the first test was most probably a false positive? Why should employees
who test positive the first time "have a chance" for treatment and counseling?
Either they've been using drugs, in which case they should be fired according
to the policy, or else they haven't been, in which case they are in no more
need of treatment and counseling than anyone else.
Oh well, one more company I will never work for...
-- Bob
|
716.320 | | MISFIT::DEEP | Set hidden by moderator | Thu Jun 08 1989 17:02 | 9 |
| re: .319 (Bob)
I think the reporter did a lousy job with his/her "first"s and "second"s.
I'm sure the policy is that if you test positive on BOTH tests for the
FIRST time, you get rehabilitated (sic). And if you test positive on
BOTH tests for the SECOND time, you get fired.
Bob
|
716.321 | I think the reporter misunderstood | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Thu Jun 08 1989 18:32 | 6 |
| The "firsts" and "seconds" issue jumped out at me too. I suspect
the reporter got it wrong, just from knowing TI. They aren't the
sort of company (I don't think) that would implement what the reporter
described. I'll be curious to find out.
Pat
|
716.322 | | THEPIC::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Thu Jun 08 1989 18:41 | 12 |
| Pat,
I read the article this morning too. The scariest part was at the very end
where it was stated that they thought the policy was good for TI AND THE
NATION AT WHOLE.
Now, this may have been the reporter getting things screwed up again, but
I interpreted that to mean that TI felt everyone in the nation should be tested.
I can't wait for one of the TI executives to get caught in a false positive.
Bob
|
716.323 | You'll never know | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Thu Jun 08 1989 18:48 | 8 |
| > I can't wait for one of the TI executives to get caught in a false
> positive.
If it happens, you and I will never hear about it. Of that, I am
sure...
Pat
|
716.324 | It's just not right. | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Jun 09 1989 12:59 | 10 |
| Firing people for using drugs is like shooting people for being
sick. Privacy has nothing to do with whether someone actually watches
you fill the specimen jar.
If someone is addicted to a drug (and I include alcohol and nicotine
equally here) then they need help, not punishment. There is no
logic to the policy of testing and persecution. It's right-wing
reactionary discrimination.
Mandatory drug testing of any kind is an invasion of privacy.
|
716.325 | I understood it! | TILTS::WALDO | | Fri Jun 09 1989 13:26 | 16 |
| re: 318 & later
I had to go back and reread .318 to see what all the noise was about.
I thought it was clear but I guess I can see how others may have
read it differently. It is amazing how people can read things out
of context. If they would just 'step back' and look at the whole
message I think it would be clear.
I run into the same phenomenon almost daily with service people who
refuse/can't look at the whole computer system that they are trying
to fix.
Obviously I look at things differently than a lot of other people,
and thank goodness we are all different!
Irving
|
716.326 | wish someone had helped poor Charlie Manson... | CPLAN::MORGAN | Sincerity = 1/Gain | Fri Jun 09 1989 14:04 | 28 |
| re: .324
>Firing people for using drugs is like shooting people for being
>sick. Privacy has nothing to do with whether someone actually watches
>you fill the specimen jar.
>
>If someone is addicted to a drug (and I include alcohol and nicotine
>equally here) then they need help, not punishment. There is no
>logic to the policy of testing and persecution. It's right-wing
>reactionary discrimination.
>
>Mandatory drug testing of any kind is an invasion of privacy.
Wow...I'd heard that there are some people who actually believe in
determinism to the point where there is no such thing as
individual responsibilty, but I had thought they had all been
shipped off to Bezerkly, etc.
Tell me, do you believe that I am responsible for this reply or am
I just the victim of random neuron-firing patterns and need help?
BTW, I am NOT for drug testing. But the classification of
substance abuse as a mental problem by the psychobabblers and their
vast legions of believers is doing more to turn us into a
society of Orwellian eggplants than just about anything else.
Paul
|
716.327 | ...so tell me what you REALLY think... | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Jun 09 1989 14:33 | 22 |
| Substance abuse is a medical problem, whether it's narcotics, alcohol
or nicotine. Drug testing programs target the legal rather than
the medical nature of the problem. Like I said, it's emotional,
reactionary in tenor. Just like your reply.
> ... or am
> I just the victim of random neuron-firing patterns and need help?
In most cases, no. But, if you like, I'll take it under advisement.
I don't think name calling is professional or appropriate. My attitude
is not 'determinism', I simply care more about solving the medical
problem than supporting the witch hunt of drug testing.
I don't smoke, but I used to. Smokers should be given help to quit,
not fired. Same with alcoholics and other drug addicts. This idea
is not that complicated or subversive -- you're welcome to disagree
but see if you can come up with a rebuttal based on logic instead
of hormones.
tim
|
716.328 | I would also WANT to know if I've been exposed to AIDS | CSC32::J_OPPELT | You don't notice absence of pain | Fri Jun 09 1989 14:47 | 18 |
|
Having traces of an abusable substance in my blood does not mean
that I am addicted to it. Someone addicted to a substance DOES
need help (and testing positively may be the first step in helping
them determine if they are addicted), but an ABUSER (as opposed
to an ADDICT) will also be found through testing.
Testing positively under either circumstance will benefit the
person. The addict can get help. The abuser will be warned.
A second positive test before firing seems fair.
Living one's life under the (even occasional) influence of certain
substances risks the well being of not only oneself, but those
around him. I would support random testing at DEC. I have
nothing to hide. Just my opinion. Now, if they made me pay
for the cost of the test they want me to take...
Joe Oppelt
|
716.329 | So, quit smoking or find a job? | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Jun 09 1989 15:21 | 23 |
| I still have trouble seeing how firing a person who tests positive
for a drug has helped them. It's only the abuse of illegal drugs
that gets them fired, so even though they may abuse a much more
dangerous drug than cocaine, i.e. nicotine, they won't stand to
lose their livelihood for it. So where is the turning point between
the 'abuser' and the 'addict', and why should we draw that distinction
for drug testing purposes?
Nicotine is a drug, and more people die annually by it than by cocaine.
Should smokers be fired if they don't quit? Why not? The long
term costs to the company of smoking are much higher than those
of narcotics -- I expect narcotics addicts just don't live long
enough to be as much of a burden. But popular emotion is on the
other side of that argument -- it's not consistent.
BTW, there was an article in the paper here locally the other day
showing annual fatalities for nicotine, alcohol and narcotics.
If I recall, Nicotine deaths outnumbered narcotics by nearly 100 to 1.
It seems to me that the argument for drug testing is based solely
on emotion, because when you look at it outside the veil of popular
emotion, it just doesn't make sense.
|
716.330 | | VCSESU::COOK | SASE VAXcluster Engineering | Fri Jun 09 1989 15:38 | 6 |
|
re .329
Your arguement makes alot of sense. I agree.
/prc
|
716.331 | Nicotine/cocaine comparison not valid this context | SMOOT::ROTH | Green Acres is the place to be... | Fri Jun 09 1989 15:42 | 7 |
| Re: .329
Companies are concerned about substance-abusers and what effects/mistakes/
accidents they may cause while on the job, not whether they will die on the
job or not.
Lee
|
716.332 | That's no basis for random testing | CHIRPA::SWONGER | Carpe Diem | Fri Jun 09 1989 15:59 | 13 |
| >Companies are concerned about substance-abusers and what effects/mistakes/
>accidents they may cause while on the job, not whether they will die on the
>job or not.
If that's the case then random testing makes no sense.
Testing those who exhibit degradation in their on-the-job
performance might perhaps be justifiable, but random drug
testing on that basis makes no more sense than random
analysis of an employee's personal relationships. After all,
it's not uncommon for an employee's work to suffer when he
or she goes through a problem in a personal relationship.
Roy
|
716.333 | Don't say it's for their own good! | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Jun 09 1989 16:13 | 29 |
| There is no doubt that drugs do impair judgement, and increase the
instances of accidents. Companies should be concerned about that.
But companies are typically more concerned about controlling costs,
and the costs of the impact of substance abuse (including alcohol
and nicotine) are much more than the costs of accidents.
I mean, realistically, the majority of us won't hurt anybody else
by an accident at work, but our health will definitely be effected
if we abuse nicotine/alcohol/cocaine, or whatever.
I'm in favor of controlling substance abuse, of all kinds. I think
it's important to reduce the impact on healthcare costs and to reduce
the accident rates as well. I'm opposed to forcing people to take
a test for only the unpopular drugs, under penalty of dismissal,
and then, if they are already unfortunate enough to have a problem
with one of the unpopular drugs, fire them, have them arrested,
brand them as social outcasts and denegrate their moral character,
as if we are any better. And we haven't even breached the subject
of probable cause.
It isn't fair. Just because it's popular to think so, doesn't make
it right. People become intimidated into silence, even when they
disagree, afraid of becoming branded a social leper by the
'I have nothing to hide' attitude of the self-righteous defenders
of popular fad. Nonsense. Even Joe McCarthy had something to hide.
I think the whole idea stinks, especially when it is portrayed as being
in the best interest of the victim.
|
716.334 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Jun 09 1989 16:45 | 28 |
| RE: < Note 716.328 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "You don't notice absence of pain" >
-< I would also WANT to know if I've been exposed to AIDS >-
> A second positive test before firing seems fair.
What if both tests are false positives? Is getting fired still
fair?
> I would support random testing at DEC. I have nothing to hide.
Well, you may not but I do. No, I don't use illegal drugs. I don't
even drink alcohol very much. But it is none of Digital's business
what prescription drugs I take, or whether I might be pregnant at
any given time. Those are things I'd definitely like to hide from
Digital, and random testing does away with my ability to hide them.
> Now, if they made me pay for the cost of the test they want me to
> take...
I'd gladly pay for the cost of the test. I'd gladly go to my private
physician, have a blood test, and ask him to report back to Digital.
The report would consist of one word: either yes or no. After all,
that's really enough isn't it? Am I or am I not taking illegal drugs?
Yes or no? Anything beyond that is (IMHO) clearly none of my
employer's business and is a terrible, totally unwarranted invasion of
my privacy.
Pat
|
716.335 | Let's stop whining for the sake of whining... | CSC32::J_OPPELT | You don't notice absence of pain | Fri Jun 09 1989 17:52 | 15 |
| re .334
> > A second positive test before firing seems fair.
>
> What if both tests are false positives? Is getting fired still
> fair?
This is so unlikely to happen that it is not even worth considering.
A false positive can be disproved, and I am sure that any company
as honorable as DEC would give the employee every opportunity to
exonerate himself. Besides, getting fired for a false positive,
once it is proven to be false, can set you up for a lawsuit that
will ultimately provide you with a tidy early retirement! :^)
Joe Oppelt
|
716.336 | | CSSE32::RHINE | Jack Rhine - DTN: 381-2439 | Fri Jun 09 1989 18:10 | 24 |
| I haven't read all of the previous replies, but ..............
1. It is not my business what the people who work for me inhale, drink, smoke,
shoot unless:
a. They violate corporate policy or criminal laws by posessing, using,
selling at work, or conducting themselves in a manner injurious to
the health and well being of others or company property.
b. Their performance becomes unacceptable for reasons directly or
indirectly related to substance abuse.
In the first case, the employee should be dealt with according to law or policy.
In the second case, the corrective action process should be used to make the
employee responsible for his/her behavior. The manager should do what ever they
can to explain the options that the employee has in seeking help for the
problem. Systematic testing has no place at DEC or anywhere else unless the
safety or security of others is directly threatened.
2. I like poppy seed bagels and use poppy seeds in other cooking. I recently
read about a career military person with a unblemished record who suffered
all kinds of personal and career trauma because he was accused of being a
heroin user because of eating poppy seeds and then flunking a drug test.
|
716.337 | I can't tell you what I really think... | CPLAN::MORGAN | Sincerity = 1/Gain | Fri Jun 09 1989 18:31 | 44 |
| re: .3270
>Substance abuse is a medical problem, whether it's narcotics, alcohol
>or nicotine.
You are confusing symptoms with causes...else child abuse and assault would
be medical problems.
> Drug testing programs target the legal rather than
> the medical nature of the problem.
> Like I said, it's emotional,
> reactionary in tenor. Just like your reply.
The accuracy of the latter statement aside, drug testing programs are concerned
with employee PERFORMANCE, not legalities nor medical issues.
> My attitude
> is not 'determinism', I simply care more about solving the medical
> problem than supporting the witch hunt of drug testing.
You may wish to consult with local liscencing boards before practicing medicine.
Fortunately (for you at least :) ), you are free to pursue your intrusive, er..
represive, er.. condescending, er.. authoritarian, er.. philanthropic (whew!)
social programs. Oh, and you may wish to consider all the fun implications
of your attitude concerning individual responsibility (or the lack thereof).
>I don't smoke, but I used to. Smokers should be given help to quit,
> not fired. Same with alcoholics and other drug addicts.
Fine...go ahead and help them. Just restrict the set of people you
are including in your "should" to yourself.
> This idea
> is not that complicated or subversive -- you're welcome to disagree
> but see if you can come up with a rebuttal based on logic instead
> of hormones.
Oh Most Holy Moderator, I appologize for my unprofessional, emotional reply.
Alas, my hormones are responsible and therefore I am unaccountable for my
noting behavior.
Paul (off to the NAP {Noting Assistance Program} for some help)
|
716.338 | different issues | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Fri Jun 09 1989 18:51 | 27 |
| There is a small distinction between drugs, alcohol and nicotine.
If you are going to talk about the number of deaths - let's clear
up some facts:
substance effect on self effect on others
drugs death death - driving,
results of poor work,
violence to buy
alcohol death death - driving,
results of poor work
smoking death same amount of 'residual'
effect as car exhaust,
industrial smoke, etc.
Now - How many are mugged or robbed to buy cigarettes?
How many car accidents are caused by too many cigarettes?
Yes, I agree that nicotine is an addictive substance - BUT it does
not have the effect on society, in general, that alcohol abuse and
the drug problem do.
-Barry_who_still_smokes-
|
716.339 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Jun 09 1989 18:52 | 24 |
| RE: < Note 716.335 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "You don't notice absence of pain" >
-< Let's stop whining for the sake of whining... >-
> re .334
Joe,
Before you accuse me of whining, I'd be curious to see your response
to the other two items I posted instead of just the first (and easiest
one).
Item 2 (testing for things other than drugs) has already happened, in a
documented case where women's urine samples were tested for pregnancy
as well as drugs. The way drug testing is being implemented, there are
absolutely *no* safeguards against that, and other tests, being done
without the knowledge or permission of the employee and the results
being used to affect that employee's career.
And IF the company's only concern is illegal substances, then why on
earth wouldn't my item 3 (having a private doctor provide the company
with a yes/no report) be perfectly acceptable to them?
Pat
|
716.340 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | You don't notice absence of pain | Fri Jun 09 1989 19:58 | 14 |
| re .339
Calm down.
You know as well as I that for any argument there is always
"a case where" xyz refutes or distorts the intended outcome.
I don't really care to hear about "a documented case" or "it
could happen". Nothing would ever get done for anything if
we held back because of one extreme example.
Let's stop whining for the sake of whining.
Joe Oppelt
|
716.341 | How about an original idea for a change? | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Fri Jun 09 1989 22:48 | 47 |
| Hmm. Things are indeed getting stirred up again.
Barry, I respect your opinion, and I certainly cannot dispute the
impact that drugs and alcohol have on innocent bystanders. It is
a terrible waste of life, especially since the young seem most effected
by it. Nevertheless, more people die from nicotine than all the
victims, innocent or otherwise, of drugs and alcohol. Yet the
treatment of each of the three categories is, IMHO, too inconsistent.
Yes, possession of controlled substances should be illegal, of course.
But nobody has the right to come up to me, without rhyme or reason,
and tell me to fill a specimen bottle (or roll up my sleeve).
Paul, I think you're taking this a little personally. At least
the tone of your sarcasm, and your rebuttal's lack of substance
would seem so. Perhaps we can debate this issue when you come up
with one good reason why anyone should be allowed to waive all probable
cause and invade my very body just to check up on me. I think that's
a pretty 'condescending', to use your word.
I'm opposed to what happens, or at least what can happen to someone
when the system DOESN't work the way it's supposed to. When someone
gets two false positives, or if they only get one false, but the
word gets around about that, and only that 'positive' test. Or perhaps
it's a true positive, and they're fired. Just precisely what constructive
net good has that done? Tell me how that individual's drug problem
has been helped. What miniscule statistic shall we use to measure
this improvement for the greater good of society, or the workplace?
How naive! It's pretty cavalier to discard individual rights to
the greater good of God, country and employer. I can't accept those
kind of values.
It must be working. These tactics are not new. This treatment
by punishment with only a token effort at rehabilitation of the
real problem has been in place for many years, and how rewarding
the improvement in the metrics has been. It's a failure. The problem
is real and growing, and the time for this kind of myopic, shallow,
self-righteous medieval inquisition has long since past. I think
we can be a little more creative in finding a workable solution.
To me, the good of the one outweighs that of the many. When
the good of the many outweigh that of the individual, it is then
that Paul's Orwellian eggplants are bound to sprout. Funny Orwell
should come up in this conversation, really, especially on the side
IN FAVOR of monitoring the public's bodily fluids. Strikes me as
ironic, indeed.
tim
|
716.342 | A different comparison | LEVERS::PLOUFF | Glorious Blossoms -- Ah-ah-ah-choo! | Sat Jun 10 1989 00:00 | 15 |
| re: .338 and others
I will happily grant that nicotine abuse has a far smaller effect
on non-abusers than does drug or alcohol abuse. But in the context
of employment at Digital, i.e. where the buyer is reasonably well
paid and not likely to resort to violence to support his habit,
why doesn't alcohol receive the same tough treatment as illegal
drugs? The scope of alcoholism and consequences to individuals
and society has been objectively documented for at least half a
century.
The answers to this question appear to have little to do with medical
reasons or the safety and well-being of the general public.
Wes Plouff
|
716.343 | Whoops - PEAR::SOAPBOX, press KP7 to add to your notebook | LESLIE::LESLIE | Snip'n'Sew | Sat Jun 10 1989 05:28 | 8 |
| This note appears to be getting off drug-testing at Digital (Jack
RHines was the last relevant reply(?)) - there is a general topic on
Drug Testing in PERA::SOAPBOX where some genuinely interesting
discussions are taking place.
I reccomend we all pursue drug testing per se in that conference.
Andy (Digital Co-Mod and 'Boxer)
|
716.344 | Cool down please, we all work for the same company | CVG::THOMPSON | Protect the guilty, punish the innocent | Sat Jun 10 1989 11:09 | 6 |
| Andy meant PEAR::SOAPBOX. (KP7 etc.)
General society effects of drug use and the like belong elsewhere.
Please keep replies here directly related to Digital.
Alfred co-moderator
|
716.345 | Thank you for your moderation. | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Sun Jun 11 1989 17:16 | 38 |
| I was wondering when we would be moderated. During the weekend
I was considering entering a 'thank you' for the lack of censorship
excercised to date -- moderators, you have been very fair. I mean
that quite sincerely.
We cannot discuss our reasons for supporting or disputing the fairness
of drug testing without discussing the subject itself. I respectfully
decline to cross reference my comments in another conference. I
feel the current popular wave of denial of the individual's rights
is quite germaine to our discussion of drug testing in Digital.
I'll see if I can keep using the word 'Digital' regularly, so we
can keep in context. (just kidding...:-)
I've been with Digital for over ten years. I feel strongly enough
about the issue of drug testing as an invasion of my personal privacy,
that I will decline if I am told I must submit to testing, especially
on the whim of a manager, and without due process of law.
My only point in this discussion is that I feel drug testing of
any kind is an invasion of privacy. Testing without probable cause
is unfair, and I won't submit to it. 'Innocent until proven guilty'
is a serious statement, and I expect my employer to treat it as
such. The McCarthyism of 'I have nothing to hide, have you?' is
intolerable and as un-American as the guys in the white sheets and
flaming crosses. And just as two-faced. It has no place in Digital.
I apologize if this all seems to be too emotional for the more
'moderate' (pun intended). My words express my feelings on a subject
that runs deep into the concepts of personal privacy and freedom
of expression. Neither our employer nor our government has the
right to invade our bodies, nor to stifle our expression of objections
to their presumptuous intent!
The moderators have done well by this topic. It is a more insidious
censorship that implies those of us who object must have something
to hide, so dare not speak lest you be labelled a 'user'. Personal
freedom is too important to be left in the hands of those simpletons.
|
716.346 | Digital - a model of competence and efficiency! | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Mon Jun 12 1989 09:16 | 32 |
| re .345:
Well said! I agree strongly.
re: second tests
The "quick" test normally given as the first test has an extremely
debatable level of accuracy. If the sample is given under ideal cond-
itions, handled properly, tested by an extremely diligent lab, the
whole paper trail properly filled out, and the subject is taking none
of the dozens of common KNOWN substances (and probably quite a few yet
to be discovered) that cause false positives, I can believe that the
test is 97% accurate (seen a number of different "authoritative"
statements of just how accurate the test is). Of course, the National
Institutes of Health have found that IN PRACTICE, accuracy even for
commonly done blood tests has been found to be less than 50% in some
studies. Given Digital's known high levels of organizational
competence and efficiency (burst of wild laughter), I wouldn't bet my
career on the results - yours maybe.
If a positive result is gotten from the first test, a much more
expensive and supposedly more accurate set of tests is normally done.
If THAT set also shows positive, then you have failed your FIRST test.
Of course, this more accurate set of tests is subject to the same
caveats as the first level. If the reason for the problem is that your
clean sample got mixed up with somebody elses (a not infrequent cause
of errors according to the NIH studies), YOU will fail. Digital will
presumably carry out the second test with the same industry leading
care and efficiency that was used in the first set. ('Nother burst
of extremely wild laughter.)
/Dave
|
716.347 | clarification... | CPLAN::MORGAN | Sincerity = 1/Gain | Mon Jun 12 1989 10:15 | 17 |
| re: .341
>To me, the good of the one outweighs that of the many. When
>the good of the many outweigh that of the individual, it is then
>that Paul's Orwellian eggplants are bound to sprout. Funny Orwell
>should come up in this conversation, really, especially on the side
>IN FAVOR of monitoring the public's bodily fluids. Strikes me as
>ironic, indeed.
You're very confused...if you can find a note of mine that supports drug testing
of any kind, I will mail you $100 dollars. My comments may appear to lack
substance to you because they are concerned with demonstrating the weakness
(and dangers) of your train of thought.
As for the esteemed moderators of this conference, I can only say in solidarity
with the survivors of the Chinese massacre, "Thank you for not shooting me."
Paul
|
716.348 | My last 2 cents | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Mon Jun 12 1989 12:59 | 46 |
| RE: < Note 716.340 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "You don't notice absence of pain" >
> re .339
> Calm down.
> You know as well as I that for any argument there is always
> "a case where" xyz refutes or distorts the intended outcome.
Joe, if I've ever heard a cop-out, that's it.
> I don't really care to hear about "a documented case" or "it
> could happen". Nothing would ever get done for anything if
> we held back because of one extreme example.
That one extreme example involved many, many people. It was NOT
a case of one person being affected. Not that it would make any
difference if it had only been one person, but for the record we're
talking about one (extreme, really?) example that affected the careers
of a large group of minority Americans. And it's not a what-if,
a speculation of what MIGHT happen if our rights are undermined
with mandatory drug testing. No, it's a living example of what
already HAS happened. And no one has given me any reason at all
to believe it won't happen again. And again. And again.
> Let's stop whining for the sake of whining.
I am presenting logical arguments, to which you refuse to reply.
RE: the moderators
I've been with Digital for over 11 years. I see my career in jeopardy
here. I have seen nothing in the past 11 years MORE germane to working
at Digital than the issues being discussed here. Our very culture, the
values on which our company was founded and has been run since its
inception, are at stake.
In deference to the authority of the moderators, I will not enter any
more replies to this note, though I strongly disagree that the tone of
the topic is not relevant to this conference.
Pat
|
716.349 | 2 questions | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | You seem to be a bit steamed | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:18 | 10 |
| : talking about one (extreme, really?) example that affected the careers
: of a large group of minority Americans.
:
1. What minority might that be? (I assume we're still talking
about the unknown testing for pregnancy, no?)
2. What does _minority_ have to do with it?
-Monty-
|
716.350 | | 34427::GRADY_T | tim grady | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:19 | 14 |
| My apologies if I implied to the contrary. I did, however, get
the distinct impression that you disagreed with me, at least on
the issues of personal freedoms and responsibility.
I take for granted the fact that individual rights include
individual responsibilities. Everyone should be held accountable
for what they've done. I just don't think everyone (or a convenient
random subset thereof) should be held accountable for what they
probably HAVEN'T done. Perhaps you've read a little more into my
comments than I intended.
Then again, sometimes my words outrun my headlights. Sorry.
|
716.351 | | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:22 | 5 |
| Sorry, I failed to reference my last reply. It was re:.347, Paul
Morgan's comments.
|
716.352 | Who's helping who? | DLOACT::RESENDE | Familiarity breeds content{ment} | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:23 | 9 |
| Re: .329
> I still have trouble seeing how firing a person who tests positive
> for a drug has helped them. It's only the abuse of illegal drugs
I think the point is that it's not done to help the employee - it's being done
to help protect teh company and the stockholders. But not to help the
employee.
Steve
|
716.353 | There but for the grace of God... | CSC32::J_OPPELT | You don't notice absence of pain | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:46 | 5 |
| Firing the drug offender does not really help him/her (except maybe
as a kick in the pants...), but it does serve as an example and a
deterrent for other employees.
Joe Oppelt
|
716.354 | Brain fault | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Mon Jun 12 1989 13:51 | 19 |
| RE: < Note 716.349 by WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY "You seem to be a bit steamed" >
-< 2 questions >-
> 1. What minority might that be? (I assume we're still talking
> about the unknown testing for pregnancy, no?)
> 2. What does _minority_ have to do with it?
> -Monty-
My brain had already gone to lunch when I wrote that; my fingers
were merely *thinking* about lunch but hadn't left yet. (^;
Sorry, don't know what I was thinking. The group discriminated
against was women, not a minority.
Pat
|
716.355 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | nested disclaimers | Mon Jun 12 1989 15:12 | 5 |
| ...and of course you can't get them on discrimination charges if they
also test the men's samples for pregnant condition, correct??!
;^)
Marge
|
716.356 | What price, deterrence? | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Mon Jun 12 1989 15:40 | 22 |
| Re: .353
> Firing the drug offender does not really help him/her (except maybe
> as a kick in the pants...), but it does serve as an example and a
> deterrent for other employees.
I'm sorry, but I'm not willing to sacrifice my personal freedom
to the simplistic and dubious cause of setting an example. I think
we'd have much more success if the cure wasn't worse than the disease.
I think we have much more to lose by selling our privacy for the
miniscule returns that deterrence can promise.
I feel like too many people are more interested in a scapegoat than
in actually solving the problem. I think this is the wrong kind
of example to be setting -- treat all substance abuse with a consistent
policy of recovery and rehabilitation, not deterrence via random
or blanket surveilance. Nicotine, alcohol, and other drugs, probably
in that order, should be treated with the goal of rehabilitation
and the assurance of privacy. Let the government deal with law
enforcement, and let Digital find better ways, more creative ways
to serve the good of its employees. Now that would be impressive.
|
716.357 | that's not what "we" are after | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Mon Jun 12 1989 18:44 | 24 |
| re Note 716.331 by SMOOT::ROTH:
> Companies are concerned about substance-abusers and what effects/mistakes/
> accidents they may cause while on the job, not whether they will die on the
> job or not.
I don't believe that the effects on the abuser's job
performance are the REAL motivation behind drug testing.
I believe that the real reason is that there is a serious,
drug-related crime wave in this country. All traditional
attacks on this problem seem to be nearly ineffectual. Thus
our society is looking for new ways to beat the drug problem.
If you can make the drug consumer fearful of losing her or
his job, then perhaps you will cut down on the demand for
drugs.
Thus arguments that alcohol or nicotine causes more deaths or
cost more in terms of poor job performance fall on deaf ears.
There is no alcohol- or nicotine-related crime wave in our
cities and in our schools. That's really what the majority
is after, in my humble opinion.
Bob
|
716.358 | Hypocrisy | SALSA::MOELLER | This space intentionally Left Bank | Mon Jun 12 1989 20:46 | 22 |
| I've stayed out of this so far. There seems to be a real double
standard regarding substance abuse in the country, extending to
Digital.
If a person is an alcohol abuser, it seems that government and the
private sector consider that person 'sick' and do everything
possible to facilitate his or her recovery.
If a person chooses another substance to abuse (including
legal/prescribed drugs) besides alcohol, then the person is an
'addict' and is to be shunned, fired and if possible placed behind
bars, because 'addicts steal'. viz:
< Note 716.357 by XANADU::FLEISCHER "without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63)" >
I believe that the real reason is that there is a serious,
drug-related crime wave in this country.
Why would an alcoholic be less inclined to be a criminal than any
other kind of substance abuser ? .. And don't say 'beer costs less'!
karl
|
716.359 | MADD as hell! | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Mon Jun 12 1989 21:15 | 5 |
| Your local chapter of MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) will
be happy to debate the damage caused by alcohol related 'crimes'.
-Barry-
|
716.360 | What about customers testing Digits? | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Infinitely deep bag of tricks | Mon Jun 12 1989 23:49 | 33 |
|
re .358 and hipocrisy
There's no hipocrisy here. If you're abusing a legal substance, you
get help. If you're abusing an illegal substance, it TI's case you
get help the "first" time, "fired" the second time. If you're abusing
legal drugs, Valium, for example, you're not treated as a criminal.
Discussions of the hipocrisy of non-correlation of toxicity and
illegality are more suited to SOAPBOX.
Personally, I'm rather proud of Digital that we've adhered to
a culture that values individuals and their rights by not implementing
drug tests. That's not "right" as in "right to abuse substances" --
it's "right" as in no one has the right to invade your body for their
own purposes, however innocuous or well-intentioned.
As a rule, Digital also does not permit customers to drug-test people
who we send out on consulting assignments, although I've heard that it's
not been possible to do this in at least one case where the cutomer had a
blanket test of all new staff, permanent and temporary (and we could not
afford to lose the business of a major account), in which case our
employee was given the option to decline the assignment, no questions
asked.
It's been a while since I've check the orange book -- does anyone know
what our official policy is in regards to drug testing of Digital
employees by customers?
/Peters
|
716.361 | Substance Abuse and the "Enabler" | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | You seem to be a bit steamed | Tue Jun 13 1989 09:24 | 38 |
| : < Note 716.353 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "You don't notice absence of pain" >
:
: Firing the drug offender does not really help him/her (except maybe
: as a kick in the pants...), but it does serve as an example and a
: deterrent for other employees.
:
: Joe Oppelt
Actually, firing the drug offender DOES help him/her.
NOT firing a substance abuser (assuming that the abuse has an adverse
effect on job performance) merely makes DEC into another "enabler".
Those of us who have studied and learned about substance abuse and
substance abusers are very familiar with the detrimental effect
that "enablers" have on the person who needs help. In the home,
the enabler might be the husband who calls in sick for his alcoholic
wife when she can't get out of bed. It might be the son or daughter
who makes excuses for why Daddy can't come to the phone. In the
workplace, the enabler might be the addict's workmates, covering
for him when he's unable to work. It might even be a Personnel
representative telling a manager to lighten up the load on someone
with a substance problem because he/she "just needs time to deal
with some stress".
Research has shown all too much how the enablers keep the abuser
from admitting the problem (the first step toward getting better)
by making the situation comfortable.
In DEC's case, I agree that firing may be a little harsh, but I
submit that an unpaid suspension for a person whose performance
has been shown to be subpar _due_to_substance_abuse_ would be very
reasonable. This allows the abuser to have the time and opportunity
to get help, while showing that the company will not tolerate the
existing situation. Subsequent abuse, or complete lack of effort
to get help, should then result in termination.
-Monty-
|
716.362 | concentrate on performance and drugs become irrelevant... | CPLAN::MORGAN | Sincerity = 1/Gain | Tue Jun 13 1989 10:28 | 40 |
| re: .361
> In DEC's case, I agree that firing may be a little harsh, but I
> submit that an unpaid suspension for a person whose performance
> has been shown to be subpar _due_to_substance_abuse_ would be very
> reasonable. This allows the abuser to have the time and opportunity
> to get help, while showing that the company will not tolerate the
> existing situation. Subsequent abuse, or complete lack of effort
> to get help, should then result in termination.
Note the elegance of this solution:
1) no new arbitrary regulations and testing are necessary
2) performance is a recognized metric that is relatively objective
to measure
3) no moral judgements are being made
4) removes the spectre of "absolute performance"
(a drug testing program would result in the firing of a brain-dead
Gordon Bell and the continued employment of a clean incompetent
even though the Gordon Bell-type may still be an order of magnitude
more productive.)
5) there is no intrusion into employee's private lives
6) there is no lollipopping_of_the_masses going on as the individual
employee is still fully responsible for their lack of performance
as well as the necessary corrective action.
7) It highlights the employee performance issue which damn well needs
emphasis. "Pay for performance" has become a sad joke.
8) It is very cost effective. No need for expensive headshrinkers,
drug treatment programs, etc.
Paul
|
716.363 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Jun 13 1989 12:06 | 21 |
| Re .333:
> There is no doubt that drugs do impair judgement, and increase the
> instances of accidents.
I have doubt.
Re .357:
> I believe that the real reason is that there is a serious,
> drug-related crime wave in this country.
There is no "wave"; what is in the news is increased reporting of
anti-drug mania.
The crime that exists is more anti-drug-law related crime than drug
related crime.
-- edp
|
716.364 | perception | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Jun 13 1989 12:20 | 21 |
| re Note 716.363 by ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL:
> Re .357:
>
> > I believe that the real reason is that there is a serious,
> > drug-related crime wave in this country.
>
> There is no "wave"; what is in the news is increased reporting of
> anti-drug mania.
Excuse me, I meant "there is a PERCEPTION of a serious,
drug-related crime wave in this country." Likewise, the
PERCEPTION of alcohol abuse is that it's just not as
threatening.
TI and other companies are being enlisted to help in a
national campaign against illegal drugs. The incentive to
the companies is that performance problems may decrease if
harsh action is taken on users.
Bob
|
716.365 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Change is the only constant. | Tue Jun 13 1989 12:52 | 48 |
| re .356
> we'd have much more success if the cure wasn't worse than the disease.
Drug abuse is not a disease. It is a criminal act. Drug ADDICTION
may be a disease. You consistently fail to address the distinction.
> treat all substance abuse with a consistent
> policy of recovery and rehabilitation,
Recovery and rehabilitation from a criminal act? If you come to
work with traces of drugs in your system, you are under the
influence of those drugs. If those drugs are illegal, you are
violating the law while on company time and property, and are
subject to firing. I think it would be magnanimous on the part
of a company to allow the employee to declare "addiction" and
get "treatment". Subsequent violations deserve firing. We are
subject to search when we leave plant property. If we are found
stealing DEC property, we are subject to firing. Is there a
difference here? Both are criminal acts. Can we turn around
and ask DEC to rehabilitate us if we are caught stealing?
> Nicotine, alcohol, and other drugs, probably
> in that order, should be treated with the goal of rehabilitation
Why put the illegal substance last? Nicotine use is perfectly
legal. Alcohol use is equally legal, although it is illegal
to perform certain functions under its influence. Getting
drunk IS abuse, although it is not illegal per se, and getting
drunk does NOT necessarily imply addiction. Abuse of illegal
drugs is always illegal. Period. Addiction to those illegal
drugs comes about through a series of illegal acts. Coming to
work with traces of illegal substances in your system is an
illegal act. DEC does not tolerate illegal activity on its
premises. It would be nice for DEC to encourage rehabilitation
for employees dependent on various substances. DEC should
have no responsibility for those who simply want to ABUSE such
substances.
> Let the government deal with law enforcement,
DEC is not interested in enforcing the law. DEC is saying "Such
and such is against the law. You cannot do that here. If you
insist on doing that here, we ask you to leave. We do not care
if you do it elsewhere after you leave." (DEC does not notify
the authorities of a drug abuser who was fired.)
Joe Oppelt
|
716.366 | | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Tue Jun 13 1989 13:43 | 16 |
| >>> DEC is not interested in enforcing the law. DEC is saying "Such
>>> and such is against the law. You cannot do that here. If you
>>> insist on doing that here, we ask you to leave. We do not care
>>> if you do it elsewhere after you leave." (DEC does not notify
>>> the authorities of a drug abuser who was fired.)
That is NOT what DEC is saying. They're saying "if you use drugs
at ANY time, even on vacation or weekends, and even if it has NO
effect on your job performance, we're going to fire you."
I refuse to let DEC distate to me what I can or cannot do on my
own time.
Steve
|
716.367 | | SALSA::MOELLER | These ECLARS taste terrible ! | Tue Jun 13 1989 14:20 | 25 |
| re .359 re my .358
< Note 716.359 by NYEM1::MILBERG "Barry Milberg" >
> Your local chapter of MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) will
> be happy to debate the damage caused by alcohol related 'crimes'.
I asked why an alcohol abuser is LESS likely to commit a crime than
other substance abusers. Your reply is tangenital at best. Besides,
I don't need reminding about MADD. My wife is a member, as my stepson,
aged 18, was killed in Sept. '87 by a drunk driver who was a repeat
offender. The repercussions from THAT are still felt in MY home.
No, my point in .358, apparently too subtle, is that alcohol abuse
by anyone, including Digital employees, though legal (money talks-
big deal) is MORE likely to 'impair performance' on the job or even
kill than some discreet snorting or dope-smoking at home !
Stating that we must crack down on drug use inside the corporation
because there is a media-fed perception of a drug-related crime
explosion is muddled thinking. But noooo.. in order to ignore the
very real problems facing this country, huge deficit, inflation,
loss of prestige and U.S. corporations' market share around the
world, we must focus at all costs on the WAR ON DRUGS.
karl
|
716.368 | What's more important, life or law? | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Tue Jun 13 1989 15:16 | 41 |
| < Note 716.365 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "Change is the only constant." >
> Drug abuse is not a disease. It is a criminal act. Drug ADDICTION
I beg to differ. Drug addiction is a disease, abuse is a symptom,
and diagnosis of the distinction is apparently of no interest to
those who care more about the legal costs than the human costs.
I'm trying to emphasize the need to focus on diagnosing and curing
the disease, and let the laws be changed to fit the need.
> Recovery and rehabilitation from a criminal act? If you come to
> work with traces of drugs in your system, you are under the
> influence of those drugs.
First of all, there's nothing new about the idea of rehabilitation
in criminal justice. Secondly, traces of drugs can remain in your
system long past the point where you are no longer under the influence,
quite litterally months afterward.
> Why put the illegal substance last? Nicotine use is perfectly
> legal.
The focus is on the substances that cost the most in human lives,
not the ones that are least popular, as reflected in current legal
statutes.
Where I really disagree is that it is more than just 'nice' for
an employer to 'encourage' rehabilitation, it's in everyone's best
interest to pursue it whole-heartedly. I really don't believe that
mere legistation and overly zealous enforcement will solve this
problem. I think the problem is too pervasive and profound. On
the other hand, I think that the more attractive that rehabilitation
can be made, the more approachable the cure will be.
It's just too callous, too self-righteous to depend on traditional
law enforcement to fix the problem as if it were just an intractible
minority of disposable sub-humans involved. It's pretty naive too.
Maybe I'm just not so impressed by the sentiment, 'Gee, you can't
do that, that's ILLEGAL!'. Laws can be changed, if people's attitudes
change first.
|
716.369 | Did I miss something? | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | You seem to be a bit steamed | Tue Jun 13 1989 22:20 | 21 |
| {: That is NOT what DEC is saying. They're saying "if you use drugs
: at ANY time, even on vacation or weekends, and even if it has NO
: effect on your job performance, we're going to fire you."
:
I don't recall seeing _any_ "corrective action" mandated,
recommended, or even hinted at in any of the official communications
regarding drug testing or drug-free workplaces.
As far as I can tell , DEC's position is that DEC will _try_ to
adhere to vendor policies from our customers (read: Uncle Sam) by
striving for a drug-free workplace (which may or may not include
testing of employees). Even if testing were to take place, I can't
remember seeing _anything_ spelling out the consequences of failing
a test. There's been one heck of a lot of speculation and innuendo
in this topic (Are y'all the same people that thought rock'n'roll
was the degradation of the human soul in the '60's?), but it seems
rather unfounded to me.
-DM-
|
716.370 | Oppelt's straw man in .365 confused Susswein in .366 | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 14 1989 01:42 | 7 |
| re .369
Ya know, I tried to tell him this by mail, so that maybe he would delete his
silly message. But I received a reply that he was sticking to his guns.
I think he was confused about what TI is doing and somehow thought DEC was
doing it, too.
|
716.371 | Would DEC follow the path lead by IBM, TI? Eventually, YES | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Jun 14 1989 10:01 | 10 |
| RE: .370
> I think he was confused about what TI is doing and somehow thought DEC was
> doing it, too.
However, it NOT unreasonable, given the similarities between the
`culture' of TI and DEC, that our management might take the similar
measures.
- Vikas
|
716.372 | Where are Digital's values? | ATLV5::GRADY_T | tim grady | Wed Jun 14 1989 11:18 | 10 |
| Re:< Note 716.371 by SERPNT::SONTAKKE "Vikas Sontakke" >
-< Would DEC follow the path lead by IBM, TI? Eventually, YES >-
Exactly. And that's why I feel so strongly about voicing opposition
to such authoritarian tactics. I think we need to encourage management
to demonstrate they still have a backbone. It is a real test of
values, and the lack of commitment to date is discouraging, to me.
It's no small issue of semantics. It's important.
|
716.373 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy =^= Leslie | Wed Jun 14 1989 12:21 | 10 |
| Re:< Note 716.371 by SERPNT::SONTAKKE "Vikas Sontakke" >
-< Would DEC follow the path lead by IBM, TI? Eventually, YES >-
Please support this by some allusion to fact.
Thanks.
Andy
|
716.374 | MORE DIFFERENT THAN SIMILAR | COMET::BARRIANO | choke me in the shallow water... | Wed Jun 14 1989 13:20 | 15 |
| re.371
> However, it (is) NOT unreasonable, given the similarities between
the 'culture' of TI and DEC, that management might take the
similar......
Vikas,
Having worked at TI for nearly three years in the early 80's,
my personal experience is that (thankfully) there are more differences
than similarities in the "culture" at TI and DEC.
DEC is a great place to work, after you've experienced the "here's
two weeks pay, we don't need you any more" lay off policy that TI
and others have.
IMOH
Barry
|
716.375 | My Experience | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | Leave it better than you found it... | Wed Jun 14 1989 17:03 | 56 |
| Earlier messages have mentioned a concern about 'false positives'
in testing programs. I have some first-hand experiences in this
matter.
When I was in the Army, I had 5 men who tested positive on random
samplings. All claimed loudly that they were innocent. All tested
positive on a second test and were entered into a rehab program.
These were NOT all at the same time. They were spread over about
a year.) There were several who tested positive and admitted use,
but I am talking about those who claimed 'false positives' were
denying them their 'rights' etc etc.
So what happened?
1 man was busted pushing dope.
1 man was busted for possession and use
1 admitted to me just prior to his discharge that he used dope
and didn't care. He lied just to try to get away with it.
1 successfully completed rehab, still claiming 'false positives'
on his 2 tests. He never had any more positives on followups.
1 Was set up. He was an unpopular NCO because he was a strict
disciplinarian. No one really believed he was a user, but he
kept getting positives. I discovered someone was 'spiking' the
coffee in his shop with amphetamines when I got a cup and literally
'got high!' (so did the battalion commander!) I took the coffee
to the MP station, and it tested positive for amphetamines. We
never found out about who did it, and the NCO was completely
exonerated.
So 4 of the 5 were not 'false positives.' The 5th is unknown. Three
of the five were liars. Yes, its a small sample, but, since the tests are
even more accurate now than then, I expect the true incidence of
false positives to be remote when given a second test.
A few noters have suggested the drug-related crime problem is hyped
out of proportion by the media or some self-serving special interest
groups. I believe this to be propaganda spread by a far more dangerous
special interest group interested in the spread instead of the
eradication of drug abuse.
The fact remains that the sale of illegal drugs, and prescription
medications without a prescription is a crime. The taking of an
illegal drug is a conscious act. The user knows the drug is illegal,
but takes it in defiance of authority and the law. (Exceptions would
be those children born addicted, and those few forced to
take it by bullying toughs.)
It is the responsibility of citizenship to support (not break) the
law.
Just my 2� !
John B.
|
716.376 | Not all laws are just | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 14 1989 17:48 | 4 |
| > It is the responsibility of citizenship to support (not break) the
> law.
You'd make a good soldier in Deng's army.
|
716.377 | Your previous experience is a *negative* example! | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed Jun 14 1989 18:13 | 45 |
| re: .-1 and "false positives"
> So 4 of the 5 were not 'false positives.' The 5th is unknown. Three
> of the five were liars. Yes, its a small sample, but, since the tests
So, what's 20 (perhaps 40) percent of 70,000+ U.S. employees? I
hope you're not implying this is an acceptable error rate! Anyway,
all it takes is *ONE* of these errors successfully presented in
court to cost the company *millions* of dollars, try multiplying
that by 20 percent.
> 1 Was set up. He was an unpopular NCO because he was a strict
> disciplinarian. No one really believed he was a user, but he
This presents some interesting possibilities ... considering that
it can come from *both* directions, above or below ...
> A few noters have suggested the drug-related crime problem is hyped
> out of proportion by the media or some self-serving special interest
> groups. I believe this to be propaganda spread by a far more dangerous
> special interest group interested in the spread instead of the
> eradication of drug abuse.
When I first read this, I thought that you were implying that all
'noters who suggested that the media was biased were themselves
drug users or pushers. You might want to clarify this. As far
as the "self-serving special interest groups" are concerned, have
you ever encountered a governmental agency that was interested in
*lessening* its span of control?
IF drug abuse and crime are a national crisis, then the problem
should be addressed on a national basis, by a government that is
restrained from abuse by statutes and the Constitution. I don't
see any reason to allow the government to circumvent these laws
by pressuring private employers into doing the dirty work. IF
Digital Equipment Corporation is suffering financially from any
employees who are failing to perform responsibly (for whatever
reason) then Digital already has policies and procedures to deal
with this. The Company has a right to expect that employees will
live up to their employee agreement and do a good job for our wages.
But I don't think the Company has an absolute right to control the
employee under any and all circumstances. We are not slaves, but
employees, and our private lives should remain our own.
Geoff
|
716.378 | Drugs are the Tyranny from which we must be free | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | Leave it better than you found it... | Wed Jun 14 1989 18:21 | 14 |
| re.376
Not so! I do not support tyranny, slaughter, or repression of
innocents, whether it be by governments or organized criminals.
As a matter of fact, I view with equal disgust the actions of
Deng's version of 'Krystal Nacht' and the actions of the drug
'culture' in this hemisphere. They both deal in death and the
subversion of truth to the personal gain of an elite who consider
themselves above the law. They are in the same league as Hitler,
Stalin, and Idi Amin, whose abuse of the welfare of their society
brought only destruction to their people.
John B.
|
716.379 | Just a QUICK clarification... | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | Leave it better than you found it... | Wed Jun 14 1989 18:31 | 19 |
| re: .377
I just read your reply quickly, and MUST quickly point out
that I in no NO WAY intend to equate any contributor to this
discussion with any drug use or abuse. No, I intend to point
out that many honest people believe propaganda in spite of the
evidence to the contrary.
I fully know that I, alone, cannot change the opinions of anyone
who believes as strongly in their point of view as I believe in
mine. ...but that is one of the benefits to the freedoms we have
and the utility of conferences such as these. We can express our
points of view honestly and still work to the improvement of
our societal culture AND our work 'culture.'
...more later!
John B.
|
716.380 | And maybe, just maybe, some of the drug laws should not be | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 14 1989 19:03 | 9 |
| > Not so! I do not support tyranny, slaughter, or repression of
> innocents, whether it be by governments or organized criminals.
But under the laws in the country where they reside, they are not innocent.
Nor am I innocent for selling my symphony tickets to friends, since I was
going to be out of town. (A crime in the People's Republic of Massachusetts.)
/john
|
716.381 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Wed Jun 14 1989 19:48 | 21 |
| re .375 et al
> A few noters have suggested the drug-related crime problem is hyped
> out of proportion by the media or some self-serving special interest
There is a degree of historical precedence for the 'hyping' of drug
related issues in the US, both by the press and politicians to serve
their own interests. Enough to make one view ANY drug related news item
as potential hype.
If you are interested in learning more about this aspect of the 'War on
Drugs', I can strongly recommend the Consumers Union publication 'Licit
and Illicit Drugs'. It is a little out of date (1980 I think) so it's
medical and pharmacological information may not represent more recent
research, although it has some interesting points to make about this
research. It is certainly useful as a reference for historical
information on drug use in the US and the politics thereof.
If anyone is interested, I can provide details on publisher, ISBN, etc.
gary
|
716.382 | Cost vs. benefit of the hard line? | LEVERS::PLOUFF | Glorious Blossoms -- Ah-ah-ah-choo! | Thu Jun 15 1989 01:06 | 25 |
| re: all the hard line replies past about .300
It's difficult to read all the recent replies without making a heated
response. Regretfully, dear Moderators, I succumbed to that temptation
in the .340's.
Back closer to the original topic, the use of random drug tests implied
in .9, and their effect on the Digital culture. Note that these tests
detect drug use, not abuse. I think it's important to keep in mind
that we're talking about all illegal drug users, not just the chronic
abusers.
My personal opinion is that law enforcement should follow the rules
laid out by the Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth amendments -- but if
Digital couples mandatory rehabilitation/punishment to random testing,
that's irrelevant.
To those out there who advocate a tough stand on illegal drug use by
employees: Digital's corporate culture emphasizes individual initiative
and individual responsibility, as well as a high degree of trust
between people. How do you think that random testing and hard-line
policies will affect these ideals? Is the benefit worth the social and
bottom-line cost?
Wes Plouff
|
716.383 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:25 | 16 |
| Re .375:
According to your own report, 20 or 40% of the punished people were
innocent. Would it be acceptable for our jails to be filled with 20 or
40% innocent people? If Digital starts firing people because of
positive tests and 20 or 40% of those people are innocent, do you think
that's okay?
> I believe this to be propaganda spread by a far more dangerous
> special interest group interested in the spread instead of the
> eradication of drug abuse.
This is absolute nonsense entirely without evidence of any sort.
-- edp
|
716.384 | Closer to the Topic, perhaps... | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | Leave it better than you found it... | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:27 | 26 |
| re:.382
In my opinion, if Digital incorporates Drug testing (either random,
or as a part of a cutomer requirement) the following would be
reasonable options:
1. Even if a Digital employee tested positive (multiple tests)
I do not think he would be summarily fired. If the customer
had a drug-free requirement, then he probably would be relieved
from that assignment, given another, and given the opportunity
for rehab programs. Relief from a job assignment would not
be necessary if there were no customer requirement or his problem
posed no safety considerations (such as operating heavy equipment).
2. Termination (firing) would only occur when the drug habit affected
job performance, indicated intoxication on-the-job, and the
employee did not respond to rehabilitation programs. Of course,
conviction and imprisonment for felony crimes (such as drug
dealing) would result in termination. A personnel/mamagement
descision would be needed for those cases where conviction of
a felony did NOT result in a prison sentence. I think they should
be handled on a case-by-case basis.
Just my opinion...
John B.
|
716.385 | A Response to Many Previous Replies... | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | Leave it better than you found it... | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:47 | 30 |
| Re: Those commenting on the 20-40% indication of my experience related
in reply .375...
No, I certainly do NOT believe a 20% false positive rate is acceptable!
As I said in my reply (.375), this sample is small. Obviously, it
cannot be used to predict a failure rate or a success rate. The
indication was that, in this case, most of the results were NOT
really false positives, and the truth of one is known ONLY to the
individual concerned. Neither do I believe that an employee should
be fired for just testing positive. If testing is required at a
customer's location, and an employee cannot meet the drug-free
requirement, he should be offered rehabilitation and a job at
a location where the drug testing requirement is not a condition
of employment.
Digital is not a law enforcement agency, nor an agent of social
change. It has accepted a responsibility to assist employees with
problems of several sorts through several programs and through an
extremely positive 'valuing differences' philosophy. Digital will
meet customer requirements, I believe, and may well institute drug
testing programs where required.
If the problem exists, it will not improve by ignoring it or
encouraging resistance to identification and assistance programs.
I, for one, am glad I work for a company that would rather help
than just fire someone. There are companies out there that are not
so concerned.
John B.
|
716.386 | Drug Testing is Abuse of the Power and the Authority | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Jun 15 1989 10:03 | 18 |
| If Digital is willing to start the drug testing program from the TOP,
then only I will believe that it is really serious about stopping the
drug abuse.
If what hypothetical_I do is so important and so critical that Digital
wants hypothetical_me to submit to drug testing, shouldn't
hypothetical_my boss be the one standing in the line in front of
me? Isn't it obvious that what hypothetical_my boss does is ten
times more important and more critical than what hypothetical_I do?
Unfortunately, in real life people at the top (e.g. elected officials,
appointed bureaucrats) use drug testing on OTHERS to show who is
the boss.
If you think that we need drug free train drivers but don't care if the
President is high, you have been brain-washed by the propaganda.
- Vikas
|
716.387 | Non-drug-testing digression... | WAYLAY::GORDON | Sometimes, I wonder... | Thu Jun 15 1989 19:46 | 10 |
| Re: .380 COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert"
� Nor am I innocent for selling my symphony tickets to friends, since I was
� going to be out of town. (A crime in the People's Republic of Massachusetts.)
Only if you sold them for more than face value. (or face value plus a
service charge if you were an authorized ticket agent)
--Doug
|
716.388 | Can't sell tickets w/o a license, even to a friend | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jun 15 1989 21:07 | 14 |
| >� Nor am I innocent for selling my symphony tickets to friends, since I was
>� going to be out of town. (A crime in the People's Republic of Massachusetts.)
>
> Only if you sold them for more than face value. (or face value plus a
>service charge if you were an authorized ticket agent)
Wrong. It's a crime even if you sell them for less than face value. I just
talked to the Mass. Attorney General's office while trying to figure out why
CLASSIFIED_ADS no longer allows us to post entertainment tickets for sale.
They agreed that it sounds crazy, but it's the law. A copy of the statute is
in the mail to me.
/john
|
716.389 | interpetation of .375? | VINO::WEINER | Sam | Fri Jun 16 1989 00:01 | 8 |
| re .385 and responses to .375
As I read .375, 20-40% of the positives were false, not 20-40% of
all tests. I think some of the replies assumed the latter
interpetation. I think a false positive rate of even 1% would be too
high, especially if it caused drastic actions such as firing. One
percent of Digits is 1,000 people.
|
716.390 | don't agree with me? you must be ON DRUGS! | SALSA::MOELLER | 114�F, but it's a DRY heat..(thud!) | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:25 | 25 |
| < Note 716.375 by CLOSUS::J_BUTLER "Leave it better than you found it..." >
-< My Experience >-
> A few noters have suggested the drug-related crime problem is hyped
> out of proportion by the media or some self-serving special interest
> groups.
I am one of the few noters that think that the 'drug-related crime
problem' is just a government-encouraged media barrage to distract
citizens from REAL issues, like the environment, running out of
oil (with no viable alternative energy research being funded),
acid rain, inflation, the deficit, the out-of-control arms race,
falling dollar, overpopulation, and loss of U.S. prestige abroad....
> I believe this to be propaganda spread by a far more dangerous
> special interest group interested in the spread instead of the
> eradication of drug abuse.
I resent this last intensely.. especially in light of the above
REAL issues. J Butler assumes that if one's priorities are different
from his/hers, then one must necessarily be part of a secret (and
well-paid, I assume) DRUG CABAL. Well, I'm NOT ! I happen to believe
that these other issues are FAR more important than testing employees'
piss for drug traces !
karl moeller, obviously a person with something to hide
|
716.391 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:49 | 18 |
| > I believe this to be propaganda spread by a far more dangerous
> special interest group interested in the spread instead of the
> eradication of drug abuse.
While I don't know whether Karl Moeller's analysis of the above is correct, I
find it most interesting that one of the socialist groups operating in the U.S.
is stating just that.
Sunday I attended the memorial service for victims of the Beijing Massacre held
at the site of the 1770 Boston Massacre. Several different socialist groups
were there handing out their rags (Socialist Worker, Workers Advocate, ...)
and someone was following one of the paper-hawkers saying, "Communist Newspaper,
brought to you by the people who brought you the massacre." But I digress.
One of these rags claimed that all of the drug arrests of black people is a
evil plan by Bush and the Bosses to destroy the black community.
/john
|
716.392 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie, csse | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:56 | 10 |
| Once again I would ask that replies in this topic are related to
DIGITAL.
Given continuous incentives to close this topic like -1, you may yet
see your patient Moderators get hard-nosed and set note/nowrite.
Give us all a break, huh?
- Andy ��� Leslie
Co-Moderator, DIGITAL
|
716.393 | Facts don't lie - presumptions do! | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | You can't kill a man born to hang! | Mon Jun 19 1989 22:30 | 126 |
| Re: Karl < Note 716.390 by SALSA::MOELLER "114�F, but it's a DRY heat..(thud!)" >
�I am one of the few noters that think that the 'drug-related crime
�problem' is just a government-encouraged media barrage to distract
�citizens from REAL issues, "..."
Someone give Karl a cookie! He (IMHO) hit the nail squarely on the
head. Although one study does not a conclusion make, if other studies
prove this premise to be true - then we'll know that there is no
drug crisis in the workplace, but it just a ruse for further
governmental control of our lives (corporate and private).
Extracted w/o permission from Friday, June 16, 1989 edition of the
Orange County Register (a conservative SoCal newspaper).
STUDY LINKS POSITIVE DRUG TEST WITH ABSENCES AND FIRINGS
By Frank Greve / Knight-Ridder Newspapers
Trenton, NJ -- Why, Carmen Harrison wonders, did she have to take
a drug test to land her job as a postal clerk?
The answer is that Harrison and 4,374 other Postal Service workers
were guinea pigs in a two-year landmark experiment comparing the
relationship between drug use and job performance.
The results show that workers whose pre-employment drug tests were
positive were substantially more likely to be absent or fired in
the months that followed.
The Postal Service says that finding justifies its plan to exclude
job applicants who test positive for drugs in the world's fourth
largest workforce beginning in December.
But the study, while showing a powerful connection between cocaine
use and job performance, showed only a slight relationship for
marijuana. And, when the results are compared with other surveys,
drugs appear less releated to job performance than alcohol abuse,
smoking, or even the age and sex of workers.
Thus critics, even within the Postal Service, say the study fails
to make a valid case for for requiring workers to submit to urinalysis.
"Personally, my own feeling is that we're legislating morality and
using this rationale - or irrationale - to justify it," said Pat
Natoli, 43, the personnel director for 1,400 workers in the Trenton
region of the Postal Service.
"At least when it comes to marijuana, our norm is a recreational
user, and by and large you'll never know it," he said.
The battle over the PS study - the most sophisticated research effort
to date to relate drug use and job performance - is important because
the vast majority of the nation's Fortune 500 companies intend to
introduce pre-employment urinalysis by year's end.
About one million employees and four million job applicants under
went urinalysis for drugs in 1988, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
The mounting wave of job-related drug testing grows from a widely
held presumption among employers that drug users made bad workers.
They consider a drug-free workplace their contribution to the national
war against substance abuse.
The prospect of massive indiscriminate urinalysis alarms organized
labor and civil libertarians who regard it as an unreasonable form
of search. They and others also worry that shutting doors to employable
drug users, while making drug use less attractive, will make their
rehabilitation more difficult.
Others question the relative importance of drug use among workers.
Absentee rates for alcohol abusers, for example, are 16 times higher
than for non-abusers, estimated Richard Bickerton, spokesman for
the Washington-based Association of Employee Assistance Professionals.
Natoli and Joel S. Trosch, assistant postmaster general for employee
relations, agree that alcohol abuse has been a bigger PS problem
than drug abuse.
John Banzhaf, executive director of Action on Smoking and Health,
a group opposing tobacco, stated that absenteeism among smokers
is about double that of non-smokers of the same age and sex.
- Featured to the left of the article was a pie and bar chart breaking
down the results of the study-:
Postal Service drug study
The PS tracked 4,375 newly hired people, first testing them for
drug use, then examining their records of absenteeism and firings.
Here are results from the two-year study
Results of the workers' drug-use tests
Total: 4,375
[picture a large pie]
4,021 (92%) Drug use not detected.
354 ( 8%) Drug use detected.
[picture another pie - the drug use subset]
Types of drugs found
Total: 354
232 Marijuana [ 5.3% of test population / 65.53% of positives ]
88 Cocaine (or cocaine and marijuana) [ 2.01% / 24.86% ]
34 Other or multiple drugs [ 0.78% / 9.60% ]
Percent of workers fired Absence rate
9.5% Passed drug test 3.00% Passed drug test
13.3% Failed drug test 4.35% Failed drug test
So, where's the evidence that America has a "massive"
drug-use/job-performance problem?? Why does digital feel it must
comply with a DoD directive when this is the first major study of
the "problem"? How can _any_ policy be based on an assumption??!
I just don't see the problem when it's put in proper context.
Jp
|
716.394 | damn I'm grateful for our moderators..should be mentioned in our benefits package... | CPLAN::MORGAN | Sincerity = 1/Gain | Tue Jun 20 1989 10:19 | 22 |
| > Once again I would ask that replies in this topic are related to
> DIGITAL.
>
> Given continuous incentives to close this topic like -1, you may yet
> see your patient Moderators get hard-nosed and set note/nowrite.
>
> Give us all a break, huh?
>
> - Andy ��� Leslie
> Co-Moderator, DIGITAL
Ain't nothing like self-imposed martyrdom, Andy...
If you cannot understand that the way people view drug use is extremely relevant
to the way corporations (such as DEC) make policy then at least have the class
to restrict your censorship to yourself.
BTW, did anyone happen to catch the article on drug addiction as disease (or
more accurately, drug addiction as non-disease) in THE SCIENCES this month?
Paul
|
716.395 | This note from LESLIE::LESLIE, node database on HUMAN:: is old | NIGE::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie, csse | Tue Jun 20 1989 11:34 | 9 |
| re: .394
I hope YOU have the class to have regard for the fact that
this is NOT a general discussion forum.
I am as cognisant as anyone of the issues here, but let's discuss the
issues HERE.
- Andy ��� Leslie
|
716.396 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Jun 20 1989 11:43 | 35 |
| With unemployment at a low, with American high schools having an
extremely high drop out rate, with the quality of American education
suffering,... I wonder how American industry can decide that they
do not need the (apparently) thousands and thousands of skilled
and experienced pot smokers.
The assumption seems to be that they do not contribute, I wonder
if that is true. Perhaps certain drug users have personality traits
that other people don't have. They are apparently more prone to
risk taking... often a useful trait in the business world.
They may be more creative as well.
I will be interested in seeing how well American business actually
does without them. Government is full of clean, straight people
and we all know how intelligent and efficent government is.
Once forced out of mainstream jobs, how will these people live?
Well, I assume they will turn their talents and intelligence to
other ways of making money.
I also assume that they will have totally 'lost faith' in the
government and in society (as it is obvious that neither cares diddle
about them) so they will feel free to be as creative and to take as
many risks as they deem necessary with all of that experience and all
of those acquired skills. They will have been forced out of the
mainstream of society but they will not merely dry up and go away.
They are at the present time (for the most part) contributing members
of society. They will become (for the most part), an unknown,
uncontrolled, unproductive (in the traditional sense of the word)
and dangerous element.
Why dangerous? Because the unknown element adds a level of chaos
that can totally disrupt the 'status quo'. This may be the dumbest
thing the government has ever done.
Should prove to be interesting times._:-)
|
716.397 | There seems to be agreement | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Tue Jun 20 1989 22:10 | 12 |
| Re:
> I am as cognisant as anyone of the issues here, but let's discuss the
> issues HERE.
>
> - Andy ��� Leslie
Isn't that what people are asking to do? There seems to be violent
agreement here so let's get on with the discussion.
Dave
|
716.398 | I agree with Andy... | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | DTN 225-4959 | Wed Jun 21 1989 10:38 | 5 |
| > Isn't that what people are asking to do?
Not in my opinion.
Mike
|
716.399 | So, what's next? | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | You can't kill a man born to hang! | Wed Jun 21 1989 16:26 | 0 |
716.400 | who's special interest | FURRY::MCCUTCHEN | | Fri Jun 23 1989 16:23 | 8 |
| re: .375 and .378...
The interesting question is how much of the "special interest groups"
and "drug culture...hitler" are composed of the illegal drug industry
and how much is composed of the enforcement agencies (e.g. DEA,
Customs ...). Were *I* a "drug lord", I would support massive increases
in enforcement (not treatment) because the effect of that would
simply be to increase my proffit margin.
|
716.401 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie, csse | Fri Jun 23 1989 16:44 | 12 |
| Set Moderator/Hat=ON
I fail to see how .400 is related to "Drug Testing in DIGITAL". This is
NOT a general discussion forum, about Drug Testing or anything else.
I sincerely suggest you do not continue this topic unless the reply can
be demonstrated to be directly relevant to Digital and its employees.
I believe I speak for all the Moderators of this conference in making
this request and ask that participants take note of my request.
- ���
|
716.402 | Forward...into the past. | VAXWRK::HAJINLIAN | | Tue Jul 11 1989 02:50 | 4 |
| We've come a long way. Witches, communists and now drug users.
I like to think Digital won't waist effort and $ on drug testing. We
are in the computer business not drug enforcement.
|
716.403 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie | Tue Jul 11 1989 04:26 | 6 |
|
Personally I believe that DEC will do the absolute minimum in this area
to prevent our losing business. That is the prudent and sensible course
of action and hopefully will be far less than is feared by some here.
- ���
|
716.404 | Just say NO | LAGUNA::SEIDMAN | Fear Consultant | Thu Jul 13 1989 20:05 | 43 |
| This is why I have a problem with drug testing at Digital;
What is the goal of testing at work? To determine which employees
are on drugs while on the job for improved job performance and the
safety of others (assumption). And this is where I think the testing
fails. Drug testing by Digital will not only point out who is on
drugs at work but also those employees who use drugs outside the
work place. At work, I agree, employees should not be high on drugs
for all kinds of reasons but, what people care to do to themselves
in the privacy of their homes is their business. I don't care,
unless it effects job performance and then it becomes a performance
issue. If performance is suffering and can be attributed to some
form of drug abuse then offer that person help and a chance to get
better.
I understand many drugs can show on sophisticated testing long after
ingested. Until a test can differentiate between who is at work
on drugs and someone who used some drugs last weekend, I am against
it at Digital. By testing, Digital would be doing more than supplying
a drug free work environment. Digital would be saying anyone who
uses drugs anytime, at work or whenever, should not be employeed
here. I don't think we work for that kind of company.
It's really a tough issue but, I don't feel the current testing
procedures are adequate for the goal of a drug free work place.
And, firing employees who simple test positive, no performance
problems, no signs of use at work is wrong for us. It's not like
we're airline pilots, bus drivers etc. Plus, I think we would loose
many valuable corporate citizens who do drugs on their own time.
Hypothetically; A few years from today, all major corporations
policy is to fire any employeee who tests positive.
That person can:
1. Clean up their act and find a new job.
2. Find a meanial job with no testing.
3. Deal in illeagle drugs.
I don't think testing is going to accomplish much for Digital except
to make us another "me too" company when dealing with goverment
accounts.
|
716.406 | | SHALOT::NICODEM | Delays? We don't need no stinkin' delays! | Fri Jul 14 1989 09:45 | 23 |
| RE: .404
� Drug testing by Digital will not only point out who is on
� drugs at work but also those employees who use drugs outside the
� work place. At work, I agree, employees should not be high on drugs
� for all kinds of reasons but, what people care to do to themselves
� in the privacy of their homes is their business.
I could be wrong, but couldn't one build a case that said "If
someone has sufficient drugs in their system to TEST positive in
the workplace, then that will affect their work REGARLDESS of whether
the drugs were actually ingested "in the privacy of their homes"?
It would seem that one cannot draw as sharp a distinction with
drugs (which have a "carry-over" effect) as with, say, hobbies. If
I want to collect wierd animals and perform bizarre experiments on them
in my basement, then that shouldn't have any effect on my efficiency
later when I'm in the workplace. But if I've just loaded myself with
drugs "in the privacy of my home", and come to work an hour later
totally stoned, there would seem to be a decided reason to relate
the two.
Frank
|
716.407 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jul 14 1989 10:00 | 24 |
| > < Note 716.406 by SHALOT::NICODEM "Delays? We don't need no stinkin' delays!" >
>
> I could be wrong, but couldn't one build a case that said "If
> someone has sufficient drugs in their system to TEST positive in
> the workplace, then that will affect their work REGARLDESS of whether
> the drugs were actually ingested "in the privacy of their homes"?
Some (perhaps most) drug tests do not test for the presence of the drug,
but for the presence of metabolized drug residue ("metabolites").
In some cases, the metabolites can be retained in the system for days
or weeks after ingestion. In many cases, the metabolites can be generated
from substances other than the drug being sought (hence the poppy seed
bun leading to positive indications of opiates).
Yes, you are right, one COULD build a case for continued impairment,
and that's a fundamental approach being used to legitimize drug testing.
But this approach is not universally applicable.
- tom]
PS: Testing for alcohol is an exception. The test for blood alcohol levels
is a test for the presence of alcohol, and the level of alcohol can be
directly related to impairment. This is not a good precedent for testing for
other drugs, for many reasons.
|
716.408 | Notes collision | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jul 14 1989 10:03 | 10 |
| > I could be wrong, but couldn't one build a case that said "If
> someone has sufficient drugs in their system to TEST positive in
> the workplace, then that will affect their work REGARLDESS of whether
> the drugs were actually ingested "in the privacy of their homes"?
You are wrong. An employee can test positive weeks or months after using a
drug, or as a result of eating a poppy seed bun that morning. This has already
been discussed in detail; read the existing replies.
/john
|
716.409 | Management abrogates responsibility - you abrogate rights | CGOA01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Fri Jul 14 1989 13:52 | 23 |
| The technical details of testing, the potential carry-over of
impairment, the moral issues surrounding drugs themselves are
smoke-screens around a base issues.
On the one hand we have "management", be it Digital's or the
government's, abrogating their responsibility to manage people and
their performance. I don't really care what you're on or not on
as long as it doesn't adversely affect your performance. Personally,
I have come to work under the influence of 24-hour cold remedies
and performed quite ineffectively.
On the other hand we have the rest of us trying to maintain our
perceived level of 'basic rights' from a position of financial weakness
(i.e. we'd like to stay employed). We are, as usual, asked to give
up something so that "management" or "the powers that be" or whoever
they are can get away with incompetence.
In the case of drugs, the "war" is being taken to the work-place
because the government has been absolutely useless in thge streets.
It's kindergarten again, folks, we all have to stay in because the
teacher's too stupid to figure out who wrote the four-letter word
on the board.
|
716.410 | government policies arrive and common sense flys out the window\ | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Jul 14 1989 14:07 | 15 |
| I hate to see government get involved in the workplace because they
can't seem to do anything right. They have made a mess of government,
there are scandals galore, the state and federal economy has been
consistently mishandled.
Government involvement in the workplace only means that they bring the
same level of incompetence and corruption here that they have
displayed in their own field. Who in their right mind would want
DEC run like the government is run? Who in their right mind would
consider William Bennett style of management as productive and
efficient?
What this country needs is less government interference, not more.
Mary
|
716.411 | isn't always nonsense | VLNVAX::TSTARLING | | Fri Jul 14 1989 14:53 | 8 |
| The basic point that a lot of folks seem to be missing is that the
prime reason for DOD asking for people to be drug free is an attempt
to lessen the possibility of a person doing something (e.g., selling
information) as a result of their drug use. Face it, people with a
monkey on their back will do anything necessary to feed it. I've
seen people have their clearance pulled for things with a lot less
potential for placing them in a compromising position than would a
drug habit.
|
716.412 | It **IS** always nonsense!! | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Fri Jul 14 1989 17:19 | 26 |
| re: .411
Now the reasoning is more autocratic. It's bad enough to attack
people for their mind-expanding or -collapsing weekend activities
because they might wander in to work a little less robust-of-mind
than when they were hired and screw things up (like a SDI box
which decides LA is strategically objectionable) but to suggest
they are not reliable because they have more reason to sell-out.
Give me a break! I'd sell out for a deep-metallic blue '67 Cobra
or a Kirstie Alley clone long before I'd go for broke on any chemical.
I guess DoD should stop doing business with:
- people who smoke (dope or tobacco) as the price keeps rising;
- people who drink as the taxes keep rising;
- people who gamble;
- people who like any kind of expensive or quality 'things';
- people who like people (if you get my drift); and
- people who eat.
By the time they get their weapons and systems from the 'perfect
source' there'll be nothing left to defend and no-one in their Forces.
Besides, if the 'enemy' wants to know our secrets, they don't have
to prey on our weaknesses - they just need to interrogate Charlie
Matco.
|
716.413 | Just sigh here...(to give up your rights!). | VAXWRK::HAJINLIAN | | Fri Jul 14 1989 19:41 | 47 |
| More fuel for the fire.
A person I know applied for employment recently. The following document was
attached to the back of the application for employment. This company is a
MAJOR communications corporation. Also, this corporation has a LARGE family
of companies.
START OF DOCUMENT.
Dear Applicant:
The xxx Company has a commitment to the public it serves and to its employees
to provide quality service and a safe workplace. In the furtherance of the
Company's safety programs and to avoid drug-related work performance problems,
the Company is striving for a drug-free environment. As a result, if an offer
of employment is made to you, you will be asked to complete the medical process
which includes drug testing for a range of chemical substances, which may
include some drugs which are available by prescription and over-the-counter, as
well as illegal substances. Any offer of employment is contingent upon
satisfactory completion of the medical process, including the drug screening
tests.
PAGE TWO.
I understand and acknowledge that any offer of employment made to me by xxx
Company is contingent upon the satisfactory completion of the medical process,
including but not limited to testing for use of certain drugs.
I hereby consent to drug testing as defined and administered by the Company,
and I release the Company from any and all liability for such testing of drugs,
including but not limited to illegal drugs such a marijuana, cocaine, and
heroin; certain prescription drugs, such as valium; and certain
over-the-counter drugs. The purpose of the test will be to determine whether I
am using or have recently used any such drugs.
I also consent to the release by the Medical Department of the xxx Company of
the results of the drug screening to certain representatives of the Company who
have the need to know, including but not limited to appropriate members of the
Employment and Legal Departments, and I release the Company from any and all
liability for such disclosure.
In the event a positive test result is obtained, I will be advised of the
results.
END OF DOCUMENT.
I would like to think Digital would pull this kind of garbage.
|
716.414 | | MU::PORTER | Rightward Ho! | Sat Jul 15 1989 00:07 | 7 |
| >What this country needs is less government interference, not more.
Hmm, I obviously haven't quite grasped Amur'can politics correctly.
The Republicans claim to stand for less gum'mint, but they seem to
keep passing more and more laws against the people...
|
716.415 | Abstain to pass a test | SMOOT::ROTH | Contains no pacheyderms or doorknobs. | Mon Jul 17 1989 00:29 | 4 |
| If someone were going to be tested for drugs could they simply just suspend
their drug use for a month or two...?
Lee
|
716.416 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Mon Jul 17 1989 14:22 | 28 |
| re .415
Yes, abstaining for an appropriate amount of time would allow you to
pass the test. Of course, by doing so you are implicitly voicing your
approval of this form of testing.
Note also that they reserve the right to test for anything they please.
This allows them to discriminate against, say, allergy sufferers,
people who eat chocolate or many, many other factors.
re .411
The DoD have been doing various forms of screening for high security
jobs for many, many years. It doesn't seem to have made much
difference.
re .412
If the DoD can't find anyone to buy new toys from, they won't be able
to spend as much money. You may be on to something there :-)
re .414
You are making the mistake of thinking that The War on Drugs (tm) is
something more than a political diversion to keep the press and public
amused.
gary
|
716.417 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Jul 18 1989 15:11 | 29 |
| Note 716.414
MU::PORTER
> Hmm, I obviously haven't quite grasped Amur'can politics correctly.
> The Republicans claim to stand for less gum'mint, but they seem to
> keep passing more and more laws against the people...
Talk is cheap (and politicians love to talk). To coin a biblical phrase,
"By their works shall you know them".
Note 716.415
SMOOT::ROTH
>If someone were going to be tested for drugs could they simply just suspend
>their drug use for a month or two...?
Lee, they don't test for the actual drug itself and the whole point of
random testing is that the subject is given no warning. Some traces show up
in a test months afterwards, others will leave no trace in the system in a
matter of hours. Interestingly, the more innocuous drugs are those
that show up months after use. Other substances such as poppy seed
dinner rolls and common cold medication may cause a false positive test
result.
It is also possible that these tests could also be used for other
screening purposes, such as pregnancy screening, AIDS screening, and the
presence of other health problems that could possibly cause future employment
problem or expensive employee benefits.
|
716.418 | | SA1794::SEABURYM | | Thu Jul 20 1989 09:37 | 10 |
| Re .411
FWIW: The KBG has a policy of not recuiting drug users because
they consider them unreliable.
Also, I don't know if you have noticed or not but almost
all those arrested for espionage in the US in recent years
have been career military types with years of exemplary
service.
Mike
|
716.419 | ""DON'T WASTE MY MIND"" | FOOZLE::SHELDON | LOCK&LOAD GO ROCK&ROLL | Thu Jul 20 1989 09:56 | 15 |
| Reading this note set I have noticed that there is much do-about not
wanting to be tested. Is the underlieing truth the fact that we as a
socity are a group of users and don't want anyone to know about it.
Face up to the facts - if you use you use and you know what your
liminitations are when you are using or recovering from the effects of
using. Having only worked at DEC for only a couple of years I know I
shouldn't cast stones, cast I will. I have seen the effects of work
done by or attempted to by done by someone who was under the influence
or recovering from the influence of substance abuse or use. At one time
I was forced to work with an individual in this condition. NO THANK
YOU!!! Burn your brain out on your own time and recover on your own
time, but don't waste my mind and time with your foolishness.
Jan
|
716.420 | Waste your own mind, we aren't interested in it. | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Jul 20 1989 12:10 | 56 |
| Note 716.419
FOOZLE::SHELDON
> Reading this note set I have noticed that there is much do-about not
> wanting to be tested. Is the underlieing truth the fact that we as a
> socity are a group of users and don't want anyone to know about it.
The truth may be that we, as Americans, find drug testing to be humiliating,
intrusive, and unnecessary. It may also be true that we don't like being
intimidated or threatened by government policy. We may also find intrusive
policy to be unconstitutional.
> Face up to the facts - if you use you use and you know what your
> liminitations are when you are using or recovering from the effects of
> using. Having only worked at DEC for only a couple of years I know I
> shouldn't cast stones, cast I will.
People are reviewed on a regular basis. That review identifies any problems
that may exist and places a focus on their correction. If it is productivity
that is the concern, then that is addressed already in the review process.
> I have seen the effects of work
> done by or attempted to by done by someone who was under the influence
> or recovering from the influence of substance abuse or use.
How do you know that? How do you know that a particular piece of work was
done by someone who was under the influence or not? What proof do you have
of such a serious accusation?
> At one time
> I was forced to work with an individual in this condition. NO THANK
> YOU!!! Burn your brain out on your own time and recover on your own
> time, but don't waste my mind and time with your foolishness.
Since we do not conduct drug testing here, I have to assume that you are
either mistaken in your estimation or confused as to your facts Jan.
I find it very difficult to believe that a manager would test someone, find
out that the person tested positive, and then assign the person to work
with you.
Perhaps you disliked the particular individual, or had a job related problem
yourself that you blamed on the other individual. Regardless, your experience
obviously happened under extreme and unusual circumstances and is irrelevant
to the daily working conditions here.
It is unwise to accuse people with whom you disagree of committing a crime
in a public notesfile, as is shown in your statement "Burn your brain out
on your own time and recover on your own time, but don't waste my mind and
time with your foolishness", and probably illegal as well. It could possibly
be interpreted as libel, slander, and/or defamation of character by previous
contributors.
It also indicates that an individual can be substance free and still lack
spelling and grammar skills, logical thinking, and courtesy.
Mary Stanley
|
716.422 | What price for civil rights? | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Thu Jul 20 1989 14:58 | 37 |
| Re: 716.419
There is little doubt that drugs, including alcohol, have little
redeeming social value, but that isn't the point to objecting to drug
testing at Digital (or anywhere else).
First of all, currently the primary goal of drug testing is to identify
and punish (or, to use the popular euphemism, 'deter') the user.
Rehabilitation is almost an afterthought, and left solely in the hands
of the person least capable of ensuring success: the user themselves.
'Clean up your act, or get fired/prosecuted/whatever' is a naive, and
socially irresponsible philosophy. Serious addicts couldn't care less
about such threats, so it's only likely success will be among the
casual users
Secondly, and more importantly, mandatory indescriminant testing is
illegal, for the same reason that the police must show probable cause
to pull you over on the highway and test your sobriety, or search your
person. If we allow this violation of our unalienable right to due
process, then what stands in the way of mandatory pregnancy tests, AIDS
tests, diabetes tests, VD tests, genetic tests, or worse? And what
guarantees of privacy does the victim of these tests have? Given the
opportunity, any well-intentioned violation of individual rights can
and will be perverted toward an insidious end.
How about this: suppose it became legal to test voters for drugs at the
polls? Seems like a drug user's judgement should be too impaired to
make a sound decision. Sounds reasonable. Even sounds familiar.
While your at it, give 'em literacy tests too. Welcome to Mississippi,
circa 1950.
Sure drugs are a problem. Civil rights are a bigger problem, and
effect EVERYBODY, eventually. Don't sell them so cheaply, rather then
spend the time, effort and money on the real solution.
|
716.423 | shades of grey ? what's that? | SALSA::MOELLER | 118�F,but it's a DRY heat.(THUD!) | Thu Jul 20 1989 15:57 | 13 |
| re 716.419...
Spare me. Another "Anyone who opposes mandatory drug testing OBVIOUSLY
has something to hide and is probably a criminal" noter.
Civil liberty is such an ephemeral concept I guess it's difficult for
some minds to understand. Not to mention the even less clear issues
of the government trying to force private industry to implement
screamingly unconstitutional invasions of privacy on its employees.
So when in doubt, shout and point...
karl moeller SWS Consultant
|
716.424 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jul 21 1989 09:17 | 24 |
| Re .419:
> Is the underlieing truth the fact that we as a socity are a group of
> users and don't want anyone to know about it.
No. What is there that makes you accuse people so?
I put a good deal of effort into explaining why drug tests are bad for
everybody. You will find those explanations in .247.
I only use drugs a little. I don't smoke -- no nicotine. I don't like
coffee or tea, so the only caffeine I get is from sodas that are not
available without caffeine. The only alcohol I've had in the last nine
months or so is from a sip of champagne during a wedding toast. I even
probably make less use than other people of medications like pain
killers or cold remedies. I have a prescription I've used twice in the
past year. I take no other drugs.
I am probably cleaner than William Bennett, our drug czar, but the
reasons given in .247 still apply to me. The freedom of myself and
others is more important than a political crusade.
-- edp
|
716.425 | Drug use here? Take that back! | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Sat Jul 22 1989 00:04 | 15 |
| Re: [.420]: The reaction against possible drug testing has reached
hysterical proportions. Now it is a crime even to accuse a coworker of
being under the influence of drugs. Gee, I've known people who have
voluntarily brought up the fact that they were hung over at work, or
drank on the job, or were, in one memorable phrase, born with a silver
spoon up their nose; but I'd better not say that, or I might be guilty of
"libel, slander, and/or defamation of character." No, not one of the
112,000 employees of Digital Equipment Corporation has ever used drugs
on the job, or reported for work under the influence. No sir. Don't
even think about it.
I think the conclusion of .420 was beyond the bounds of etiquette for
this Notes file.
|
716.426 | How many drug users in the State Dept, Senator? | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Mon Jul 24 1989 08:37 | 10 |
| re .425:
Accusing a co-worker of being under the influence of drugs *without
proof* or any mention of what was done to correct the situation (like
dsiscuss the worker *performance* with management) is not a crime, but
is certainly extremely poor judgement. Sufficiently poor as to justify
at least some questions about the accusers qualifications and state of
mind.
/Dave
|
716.429 | No performance hit = none of DEC's business | MARVIN::HARNEY | Stay Cool, But Care | Tue Jul 25 1989 06:13 | 27 |
| Absolutely agree with Don's conclusions (-.1).
If someone's `abusing' substances and it doesn't effect their
peformance, what has it got to do with DEC? If a person's performance
is effected, then DEC has every right to find out why: but it's the
performance issue that has to be the trigger for any `investigation'
(to be followed-up by help rather than punishment, I would trust).
By `performance' I include all of the usual metrics against which
people are judged (for example, including ability to work with
people).
This principle should be enough to cover all of the scenarios so far
described, even some of the clearly bizarre ones.
What bothers me is that some people are clearly in favour of drugs
testing, not to prevent DEC suffering low performance because of drug
abuse, but because of an intolerance of some people's lifestyles (for
example, where they're big drinkers).
Reaching for a legislative - and destructive - weapon is to simply
shrug off the personal responsibilities involved in being tolerant
and valuing differences. Those last must be our principles because
they add value to all our lives, whereas the alternative impoverishes
our lives. Sticking to that isn't easy, but then good things are
rarely easy.
Mick
|
716.430 | No way! | SMOOT::ROTH | Contains no pacheyderms or doorknobs. | Tue Jul 25 1989 09:32 | 26 |
| .429> Reaching for a legislative - and destructive - weapon is to simply
.429> shrug off the personal responsibilities involved in being tolerant
.429> and valuing differences. Those last must be our principles because
.429> they add value to all our lives, whereas the alternative impoverishes
.429> our lives. Sticking to that isn't easy, but then good things are
.429> rarely easy.
Whoa. "Being tolerant and valuing differences"?? Sorry, but
substance abuse hardly belongs in that catagory. What is the
added value to DEC or me if I 'tolerate' or 'value the
difference' of a substance abuser?
Maybe your last raise was an impressive one, but mine wasn't. As
a DEC employee my employer expects me to be looking out for the
companies best interests. If I uncover a case of employee theft
or a security problem the company would expect me to report it.
Performance impaired by substance abuse costs DEC money. And the
less profitable DEC is, the smaller my raise (probably).
In the case of substance abuse I don't advocate reporting other
employees because I feel that if their performance is affected
then it will become known and some help for them can be sought.
Please though, don't ask me to tolerate it or value the
difference of it.
Lee Roth
|
716.431 | | HPSRAD::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Tue Jul 25 1989 09:58 | 6 |
| re -.1
Too bad... better report all those smokers using your smoking rooms.
Statistically, they have a higher likelihood of taking sick days than
non-smokers, & the more sick days they take the less work they'll do,
so the smaller your raise (probably) becomes.
|
716.432 | | HOCUS::RICCIARDI | Mark Ricciardi New York Financial | Tue Jul 25 1989 10:23 | 32 |
| "OK, HOW CAN YOU TAKE PHILIPS MODEL 3004 FILES AND TRANSFER THEM
TO YOUR SYSTEM? THIS MUST BE DONE BY THE VENDOR CHOSEN FOR OUR
$1.6M WP SYSTEM."
"{Phhhhhhhhhhh...phhhh....phhhhhhhhhhhh} (GULP)..(gulp)
(whoshhhhhhhh..........)
:) :) :0 :) :) (chough)
Hey man, no prob! We'll just suck it in and pump it out! Heh
Heh. WOW. :) :)
Hey did you see that bird, man don't you wish you could fly man?!
Wow.
Sign here man!"
*****************************************>
I'm always striving to do better. I feel its my obligation to DEC
and my self to constantly get better. If my performance is good
enough stoned, but could be even better straight, then I feel I'm
cheating myself and DEC by being stoned.
With this attitude I find life and work too demanding for drug use.
Like getting stoned while walking a tightrope, its just not helpful
:)
To each his/her own
Markos
|
716.433 | an experience | ATLACT::GIBSON_D | | Tue Jul 25 1989 11:55 | 41 |
| I don't think there has yet been a note from anyone who has directly
been affected by substance abuse. I'll post one. This is not an
arguement for or against drug testing -- only an observation about what
you do on your own time is your business and whether it does or does
not affect your work. And as .432 points out, if you're not at your best,
then you're cheating someone.
I had a substance abuser work for me. There was a slow deteriation in
his job performance. No one came and complained to me, in fact, there
were people who still were happy with his work. After discussion with
personnel, I talked with the employee about his job performance. He
denied that he had any problems and said it was my problem. To shorten
a long story, after verbal and written warnings and on the verge of
being fired, the employee went to rehab. He asked me to be part of his
rehab program which I agreed to. After about a month out of rehab, the
employee delibertly set out to break his rehab agreements and lied to
me about it. Finally, one fellow employee came to me and said, this guy
is bragging about how he has tricked you. Shortly thereafter, while
impaired, he committed a fireable offense and was terminated by
personnel.
Now, I tell this story for the following points: a) the employee never
felt his job performance suffered, b) no fellow employee ever reported
him except when he bragged about it, c) the cost in time and $ to do
what was right was high. (This was not at DEC and this company had no
drug testing program.)
Some questions come to my mind: would drug testing have gotten him into
a rehab program quicker, would it have kept him on the rehab program,
would an early rehab have been of benefit to the employee and the
company, etc? There were other employees who showed minor work problems
and who were felt to have similar abuse problems, nothing was ever done
with them. Does that mean marginal and/or reduced performance has to be
tolerated because there is no "evidence"? One of the things stressed
to me about abuse during the rehab program is that tolerance is one of
the worst things you can do.
Because of my experience (walk a mile in my shoes), I would be in favor
of drug testing and would expect DEC to do the right thing if positive
results were obtained. Before my experience, I'd probably be one of
the ones who felt my "rights" were being violated.
|
716.434 | No opinion, but things can be different elsewhere | CASEE::LACROIX | Object oriented dog food? No, sorry | Tue Jul 25 1989 12:27 | 14 |
| Fascinating discussions! In the spirit of 'valueing differences', I'll
give you what I think would happen in France, and probably elsewhere in
Europe:
Company X decides to institute a drug testing program. Employee Y
immediately sues company X, and wins right away. Company X gets bad
mouthed all over the place, and makes the news for weeks on all TV and
Radio channels. CEO is shown the way out.
And I'm not taking in account countries where some substances are
perfectly legal (their consumption, that is); like Spain and others.
Regards,
Denis.
|
716.435 | Some Devil's advocacy of testing | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Tue Jul 25 1989 13:13 | 25 |
| I think limiting drug testing to employees whose performance is
deteriorating sounds like a good arrangement in the Digital culture.
There's probable cause to look, and the emphasis is on performance, not
lifestyle.
I wonder, though: Is it reasonable to wait until the problem manifests
itself? If I'm on drugs and I come in to work at odd hours, or stagger
down the hall, or write notes all on one line so no one can read them,
that doesn't do irreparable harm to the company or my fellow employees.
But what if my first slip-up is crashing a truck into an overpass and
killing a number of people? What if my first slip-up is a bug in some
piece of mission-critical software ("Roger, go at throttle-up" <BOOM>)?
What if my first slip-up speeds a commuter train over an embankment?
What if my first slip-up sends a supertanker into a reef? (If
Joseph Hazelwood gets the blame for the Exxon Valdez disaster, which I
think would be unfair, it will be written that one man did a billion
dollars' damage through substance abuse.) You get the idea.
Drug testing, it can be argued, is the proactive approach. It has the
potential to head off problems before they manifest themselves,
problems which may potentially be destructive and hugely expensive.
It's a tough call. I think of my doctor, my childrens' bus driver, the
guy coming at me on the road, and I wonder sometimes if they're OK or
not. Sometimes I think my attitude toward drug testing
is, "I want all of YOU tested, but keep your hands off my body!"
|
716.436 | citizen "rights" - threat or menace? | SALSA::MOELLER | 118�F,but it's a DRY heat.(THUD!) | Tue Jul 25 1989 14:04 | 13 |
| re .432 - thanks, Mark Ricciardi, for the NOTES equivalent of a
Geraldo Rivera 'drug experience'.. really hot stuff.
re .433< Note 716.433 by ATLACT::GIBSON_D >
> .....Before my experience, I'd probably be one of
>the ones who felt my "rights" were being violated.
I don't put RIGHTS in quotes, as if they're not real, or a figment
of overheated imaginations. I suppose you "voted" in the last
"election", too ? I did, but without the quote marks.
karl moeller
|
716.437 | Drug testing unlikely to improve safety. | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Tue Jul 25 1989 14:13 | 35 |
| re .435:
> Drug testing, it can be argued, is the proactive approach. It has the
> potential to head off problems before they manifest themselves,
> problems which may potentially be destructive and hugely expensive.
> It's a tough call. I think of my doctor, my childrens' bus driver, the
> guy coming at me on the road, and I wonder sometimes if they're OK or
> not. ...
So far, I have read lots of rather hysterical articles about the costs
of drug abuse to business, but I have yet to see any reasonably well
documented figures as to the prevalence and costs of illegal drug
abuse.
Almost every article I have seen starts by discussing SUBSTANCE ABUSE
and how costly and widespread it is, and then by some strange sleight
of word winds up talking about drug testing without ever really
defining how much of substance abuse is illegal drug abuse and how much
is legal drug (alcohol mainly) abuse. Funny. You'd almost think the
writers were trying to avoid giving out much data on how much illegal drug
abuse there really is. Maybe because it wouldn't be sufficient to back
up all the hysteria if illegal drug abuse was only a small fraction of
the cost of substance abuse? Do any of the passionate arguers for
testing have some reasonably well backed figures? (NIH, CDC, Surgeon
Generals Reports will happily be accepted - DEA has a track record of
fudging and I would consider figures from them somewhat suspect.)
So far, the only figures I have seen are for various causes of death,
in which illegal drugs are somewhere around 1% as large as the combined
affects of alcohol and tobacco. If the secondary affects (health,
accidents, etc.) are proportional to the direct mortality affects, then
testing for illegal drugs will have no noticeable affect on safety
either in the workplace or on the road.
/Dave
|
716.438 | | SALSA::MOELLER | 118�F,but it's a DRY heat.(THUD!) | Tue Jul 25 1989 14:35 | 8 |
| I notice that the latest issue of DEC's U.S. Field News is chock
full of 'dangers of drugs in the workplace' articles.
Kind of an interesting tactic.. stymied by the Bill of Rights, the
government tries, by selectively withholding contracts, to force
private industry to implement drug testing.
karl
|
716.439 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Jul 25 1989 16:55 | 23 |
| Re .430:
> Whoa. "Being tolerant and valuing differences"?? Sorry, but substance
> abuse hardly belongs in that catagory. What is the added value to DEC
> or me if I 'tolerate' or 'value the difference' of a substance abuser?
It was suggested that you value differences in general, not that you
value the differences of a substance abuser.
There is value in tolerating and valuing the difference of a substance
user. Use is not necessarily abuse. Some drugs are relatively mild,
some drugs have only short-term effects.
Value to be gained in toleration is reciprocation -- if you tolerate
others, they are more likely to tolerate you. Don't think you have
anything to tolerate? Toleration is how we get along in this country
with widely opposed views on abortion, sexual activities, social
agendas, political ideas, and so on. Toleration gives you free speech,
privacy, and due process. Take it away from others and it will
ultimately be taken away from you.
-- edp
|
716.440 | What's "bad"??? | CGOA01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Tue Jul 25 1989 16:56 | 19 |
| To those of you who believe the government is out to protect you,
I offer the following, relatively famous piece. I'm sure someone
will be able to correct it and name the source...
When they came and took away the communists, I was not a
communist so I did nothing. Then they came and took away
the Jews and I was not a Jew so I did nothing. They took
away the Catholics and the intellectuals, and I was neither
so I did nothing. When they came to take me away there was
no-one left to complain.
It refers to the Nazis, and while it may be a poor paraphrase, the
point is: If you allow any of 'them' to test you physically for
things 'they' don't like, please don't come crying to me when you
disagree with 'their' definitions of 'bad', 'dangerous' or 'harmful'.
Don
|
716.441 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:28 | 64 |
| RE: .420
> It is unwise to accuse people with whom you disagree of committing a crime
> in a public notesfile, as is shown in your statement "Burn your brain out
> on your own time and recover on your own time, but don't waste my mind and
> time with your foolishness", and probably illegal as well. It could possibly
> be interpreted as libel, slander, and/or defamation of character by previous
> contributors.
Some people seem to have a problem with the fact that being accused of
substance abuse offended Mary. Well, I also am offended by such an
accusation, and to be more specific I was highly offended by the note
saying that anyone opposed to drug testing is a drug abuser. That
person was saying that I'm a drug abuser.
I don't use illegal drugs. I am vehemently opposed to random drug
testing.
I have never had an abortion. I am strongly pro-choice.
It is not necessary for something to personally affect me in order for
me to have strong feelings about it. Why is such a simple concept so
hard for some people to understand?
RE: .425
> Re: [.420]: The reaction against possible drug testing has reached
> hysterical proportions. Now it is a crime even to accuse a coworker of
> being under the influence of drugs.
Did Mary say the accusation is a crime? I missed that somehow.
> No, not one of the
> 112,000 employees of Digital Equipment Corporation has ever used drugs
> on the job, or reported for work under the influence. No sir. Don't
> even think about it.
Mary didn't say that every Digital employee is completely clean. She
DID say that everyone opposed to drug testing isn't automatically a
user. Do you dispute that?
> I think the conclusion of .420 was beyond the bounds of etiquette for
> this Notes file.
You're entitled to your opinion. I personally think .419 (was that the
number of the note?) was beyond the bounds of etiquette for this Notes
file. I'm also entitled to my opinion.
RE: .434
> Fascinating discussions! In the spirit of 'valueing differences', I'll
> give you what I think would happen in France, and probably elsewhere in
> Europe:
> Company X decides to institute a drug testing program. Employee Y
> immediately sues company X, and wins right away. Company X gets bad
> mouthed all over the place, and makes the news for weeks on all TV and
> Radio channels. CEO is shown the way out.
Don't be too sure. If someone had asked me a year ago, I'd have told
them the exact same thing would happen in the U.S. It hasn't.
Pat
|
716.442 | "Just Say No" to drug testing | FRAGLE::WIEGLEB | Score: Flag 1 - America 0 | Tue Jul 25 1989 21:54 | 35 |
| To those who favor drug-testing:
I view random drug testing as an invasion of privacy and unreasonable
search and seizure. The previous paraphase on the situation with the
Nazis was pretty apt. One should not let one's civil rights be easily
taken away - even if the methods don't "apply" to you right now.
Maybe you don't mind peeing in a bottle, because it helps us battle
"drugs in the workplace". Maybe you won't mind random strip-searches
either, with all bodily orifices being carefully probed, to make sure
that you aren't hiding illegal drugs. After all, we have a "war on
drugs" going on, and people who use illegal drugs should be rooted out
by any means necessary.
Keep an eye on your civil rights now folks before they slip away little
by little.
The stated party line at Digital at this point is fairly reasonable -
address performance problems as performance problems; take action on
(possibly terminating) any employee found with alcohol or controlled
substances on Digital property or customer property; and refer employee
with emotional or substance-abuse problems to the Employee Assistance
Program where they can get help. However, Digital is receiving a lot
of pressure from the government and customers who are succumbing to the
general hysteria.
I was not comforted by the fact that the long-awaited "US Field News"
issue on the subject dwelt entirely on substance-abuse problems in the
workplace with nearly nothing on Digital's position on testing. It
gives me the sinking feeling that Digital may be weakening in its
current stance due to increased outside pressures.
Remember - "Just Say No" to drug testing.
- Dave
|
716.443 | | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Jul 26 1989 09:33 | 13 |
| -< Some Devil's advocacy of testing >-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> It's a tough call. I think of my doctor, my childrens' bus driver, the
> guy coming at me on the road, and I wonder sometimes if they're OK or
> not. Sometimes I think my attitude toward drug testing
> is, "I want all of YOU tested, but keep your hands off MY body!"
----------------------------------------------------------
You can afford to be brutally honest since you are playing Devil's
advocate. However, if one were to actually sum up the attitude of many
people, your summary would be quite close.
- Vikas
|
716.444 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Wed Jul 26 1989 09:57 | 53 |
| > < Note 716.435 by LEAF::JONG "Steve Jong/NaC Pubs" >
> -< Some Devil's advocacy of testing >-
>
> I think limiting drug testing to employees whose performance is
> deteriorating sounds like a good arrangement in the Digital culture.
> There's probable cause to look, and the emphasis is on performance, not
> lifestyle.
"Deteriorating performance" is probable cause? Deteriorating performance
followed by consultation with the "offender" and the presence of corroborating
evidence perhaps, but this level of blanket authorization is no protection
at all!
> But what if my first slip-up is crashing a truck into an overpass and
> killing a number of people? What if my first slip-up is a bug in some
> piece of mission-critical software ("Roger, go at throttle-up" <BOOM>)?
> What if my first slip-up speeds a commuter train over an embankment?
> What if my first slip-up sends a supertanker into a reef?
By this argumentation we'd all be under house arrest all the time.
Maybe everybody should be tested for allergies, so only people not likely
to go into sneezing fits that would cause them to swerve their cars into
crowds of children waiting for school buses would be allowed to drive?
> Drug testing, it can be argued, is the proactive approach.
It's also invasive, patronizing, demeaning, shows a lack of trust.
> It has the potential to head off problems before they manifest themselves
So does house arrest.
> It's a tough call.
Not to me it isn't..... As things stand, I'll take my chances with personal
liberty. I want to keep mine, so I'll let them keep theirs.
> I think of my doctor, my childrens' bus driver, the
> guy coming at me on the road, and I wonder sometimes if they're OK or
> Sometimes I think my attitude toward drug testing
> is, "I want all of YOU tested, but keep your hands off my body!"
Alas, too many people feel this way, and I commend you for stating it.
(Whether you mean it or not, or whether you said it for dramatic effect or not,
it's a statement that needed to be brought to people's attention.)
"Hey, *>I<* don't have a problem! Why would you want to test me?"
The anecdotes seem to indicate that substance abusers have a record of
not admitting to a problem. That is not sufficient justification for
dragging all of us through the evidence gathering process to try to flush
them out.
- tom]
|
716.445 | Repeated, with ID | VAXUUM::T_PARMENTER | Not a swinehound | Wed Jul 26 1989 10:35 | 16 |
|
> When they came and took away the communists, I was not a
> communist so I did nothing. Then they came and took away
> the Jews and I was not a Jew so I did nothing. They took
> away the Catholics and the intellectuals, and I was neither
> so I did nothing. When they came to take me away there was
> no-one left to complain.
Father Martin Niemoller, German Protestant pastor, who was
sent to the concentration camps when he kicked back against
mistreatment of Protestants. Crude summary.
By the way, the largest protests against Nazi euthanasia came
when the Nazis started rounding up the mentally and physically
disabled.
|
716.446 | There is no threat greater than the threat to freedom. | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Jul 26 1989 11:23 | 76 |
| Note 716.425
LEAF::JONG
> Re: [.420]: The reaction against possible drug testing has reached
> hysterical proportions. Now it is a crime even to accuse a coworker of
> being under the influence of drugs.
The reaction against possible drug use has reached hysterical proportions as
well. Such an unproven accusation can cost a man his job, his reputation, and
his future. To accuse anyone of a crime in such a manner is by definition
against the law.
Libel: A written, printed, or pictorial statement that unjustly damages a
person's reputation.
Slander: The utterance of defamatory statements injurious to the reputation
or well-being of a person.
Defamation: To attack the good name of another by slander or libel.
It is one thing to express one's opinion and quite another to suggest or
imply that those who have a different opinion have it because they are
guilty of a crime, especially when done in public and in writing. If you
don't believe me, then ask your lawyer. Business Week has an interesting
article regarding the tremendous rise in employee/employer lawsuits that are
proliferating today and that are directly related to drug testing and related
accusations.
We all know that at different times there have been people who have stolen
from the company. Does that justify conducting random searches of our homes?
Are we silly or hysterical to resent suggestions of such policy?
We all know that at different times during an employee's life, he or she
may suffer from depression due to family problems, divorce or whatever.
Depression certainly affects one's work. Does that justify conducting random
and obligatory psychiatric testing of all of us? Would we be hysterical and
childish to resent such policy?
Personality conflicts, stress, and other symptoms of the modern human
condition can cause problems at work. That is part of being human.
Men and women are not disposable pieces of plastic that exist to serve the
machine of society and business. Management and government cannot
legislate away the human condition, threaten away the human condition or
program away the human condition. If business and government cannot deal
with the nature of humanity then it is they who must change, who must adapt.
The dignity and self-respect of the whole is more important than the policing
of the few. I submit that physical testing of our bodily fluids is intrusive,
unnecessary to our safety and happiness, and an indication of the despotism
at work in our country today. Therefore we, as Americans, have a sacred duty
to resist such attempts, even if we place our own personal self interest at
risk in so doing. We owe it to our children and to the future to preserve
our precious freedom and privacy and to protect the dignity and well-being
of the individual. There is no greater threat than the threat to freedom.
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that
they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among
these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these
rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish
it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles
and organizing its powers in such form as to them shall seem most likely to
effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that
Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient
causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more
disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by
abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of
abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to
reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to
throw off such Government and to provide new Guards for their future security.-
And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the Protection
of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives our Fortunes
and our sacred Honor.
Mary Stanley
|
716.447 | | LEAF::GOLDBERG | | Wed Jul 26 1989 12:13 | 2 |
| Magnificent words! But they were not written to protect the Colombian
drug cartels.
|
716.448 | Don't give away your right! | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | Now for something more completely different... | Wed Jul 26 1989 12:46 | 27 |
| Re: < Note 716.447 by LEAF::GOLDBERG >
�Magnificent words! But they were not written to protect the Colombian
�drug cartels.
Yes, you are correct. They were written to protect Americans from
themselves.
First of all, we as a country never had a "problem" with drugs until
Congress decided we had one. And now, they've set about to control
the drug flow (they can't stop it) by terrorizing it's citizenry,
because it couldn't get foreign leaders to stop production on their
lands.
Rights are too precious to be given away to anyone! How many of
you watched the Iran-Contra hearings and heard about what the Fed.
Emergency Mgmt. Agency (FEMA) had in it's plans for you??! I'll
refresh your memory: In a time of "National Crisis" [term was never
defined] the military would be given permission to round up protestors,
who were thought "dangerous" to the Gov., and it's policies, and
imprisoned in "internment camp" [just like the Japanese in WWII].
Also, discussed was that constitutional rights *could* be SUSPENED!
Giving the gov. the clearence to suspend a right, for the good of
the people, is just plain wrong.
-Jp
|
716.449 | I'm not a moderator, but... | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Jul 26 1989 13:22 | 12 |
| Many of the recent polemics in this topic have absolutely nothing
to do with drug testing and Digital.
Digital is bound to abide by the law, whether ill-conceived or not.
How Digital exercises whatever discretion it has when responding to
government policies is a valid topic for conversation here.
Discussions addressing the broader topic of whether or not such
policies are of value to society belong elsewhere.
Al
|
716.450 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Jul 26 1989 17:18 | 63 |
| Note 716.435
LEAF::JONG
> But what if my first slip-up is crashing a truck into an overpass and
> killing a number of people? What if my first slip-up is a bug in some
> piece of mission-critical software ("Roger, go at throttle-up" <BOOM>)?
> What if my first slip-up speeds a commuter train over an embankment?
> What if my first slip-up sends a supertanker into a reef? (If
> Joseph Hazelwood gets the blame for the Exxon Valdez disaster, which I
> think would be unfair, it will be written that one man did a billion
> dollars' damage through substance abuse.) You get the idea.
What if Joe Hazelwood and substance abuse is a convenient excuse for Exxon
to blame? Exxon could have designed it's ships with double hulls but that
would have cost money. What if Exxon fudged on the design to increase it's
profit margin and then conveniently blamed the captain and substance abuse
when the inevitable happened? Exxon dismantled the division trained to deal
with oil spills, thats how much concern they had for a possible spill.
Substance abuse and the individual can be blamed regardless of what other
factors may have been at cause.
What if a first slip-up is caused by incompetence or stupidity? What if it
is the result of mental illness? What if it is caused by human error?
There are no guarantees in this life. We depend on each other to do the
right thing. That is a judgment call that each of us may interpret
differently. Life carries certain risks. From the time we draw that first
breath we are at risk, that is the nature of life. The safe approach to life
is not always the right approach. There is no protection from the uncertainty
of life.
> I think limiting drug testing to employees whose performance is
> deteriorating sounds like a good arrangement in the Digital culture.
Performance is a judgment call that is largely determined by the personality
and opinion of the judge. Poor performance can indicate; a personality clash,
personal problems at home, a health problem, a lack of training, an emotional
problem, a mismatch between individual and position, and many, many more.
The treatment we allow for the least of us (the most vulnerable) sets the
standard for all of us. And who among us hasn't had a problem at one time
or another?
> Drug testing, it can be argued, is the proactive approach. It has the
> potential to head off problems before they manifest themselves,
> problems which may potentially be destructive and hugely expensive.
Problems that are unmanifested are not problems at all. Further, some things
are more important than money; freedom and human dignity are among them.
Drug testing is also a way for institutions to blame individuals when
problems arise, to hold individuals responsible for destruction that may
occur regardless of it's actual cause and contributing factors.
It is a dangerous precedent and not one that the American people can accept.
re: .449
> Digital is bound to abide by the law, whether ill_conceived or
> not.
There is no law requiring drug testing. It is a requirement to
bid for certain government contracts, nothing more. If a new law
has been passed that I don't know about, please post it here.
Mary
|
716.451 | Drug users as scapegoats? | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Wed Jul 26 1989 18:15 | 34 |
| Re: [450]:
>> What if Joe Hazelwood and substance abuse is a convenient excuse for
>> Exxon to blame? ... Substance abuse and the individual can be blamed
>> regardless of what other factors may have been at cause.
Mary, I agree with you completely. What do you think Digital is trying
to cover up by drug testing?
>> We depend on each other to do the
>> right thing. That is a judgment call that each of us may interpret
>> differently.
Unfortunately, some small fraction of the population, through illness,
arrogance, or bad judgement, does the wrong thing. What can we do
about it? Nothing?
>> Drug testing is also a way for institutions to blame individuals
>> when problems arise, to hold individuals responsible for destruction that
>> may occur regardless of it's actual cause and contributing factors.
Drug users as scapegoats? If you substituted the word "Breathalyzer"
for "drug," do you think anyone would agree with you? Would you agree
youself?
* * * * *
I wanted to make a brief comment on a different reply in this topic
(not authored by Mary), which said, "There was no drug problem in this
country until Congress declared there was." I think that is the
most preposterous thing I've heard all year. Any black leader will
tell you drugs are the TOP problem facing blacks in this country
today--even over poverty and racism. Are you suggesting that the most
serious problem facing blacks is not, on the whole, a problem at all?
|
716.452 | | ESD19::MOSER | Have �VAX, Will Travel | Wed Jul 26 1989 19:00 | 7 |
| re: .450
The fact that life is full of inherent risks does not mean we should ignore
factors that increase that risk. Just because anybody could swerve into my
lane and cause a head-on does not mean we should tolerate drunk drivers...
/mike
|
716.453 | | MU::PORTER | Rightward Ho! | Wed Jul 26 1989 19:29 | 13 |
|
> Drug users as scapegoats? If you substituted the word "Breathalyzer"
> for "drug," do you think anyone would agree with you? Would you agree
> youself?
In an heroic attempt to force the topic back to "drug testing at DEC",
I'll answer that one a little bit out of context.
YES.
If someone was proposing that I get breathalyzed at work, I'd be every
bit as pissed off as I am now pissed off over the idea of mandatory
drug testing.
|
716.454 | Sheesh! | MLTVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Jul 26 1989 20:41 | 35 |
| re: .several by Mary HKFINN::Stanley
Nice words, Mary. You sum up my views on the subject quite concisely.
I've been following this discussion for as long as it's been going
on and I've been _amazed_ at the tangents and ratholes that have been
pursued. People! Stop for just one moment! Think about the issue here!
FORGET about how you feel about substance abuse, the effects on
our business, and congress' ability to succeed or fail in a war
against drugs! Those things ARE NOT the issue here! The issue is
whether or not drug testing is reasonable at DEC. It would appear
to me that many well stated cases have been made to support the
opinion that it is NOT reasonable, that it is counter-culture, and
that it has absolutely nothing to do with dealing with issues
which are manifest by performance problems (which IS what we need
to be concerned about from a business standpoint.) The other thing
we need to be concerned about from a business standpoint, obviously,
is how we think our profit picture will be affected by our stance
on this issue (i.e. will we lose big on govt. contracts if we say
NO to drug testing?).
Personally, I'm strongly opposed to drug testing for all of the
reasons that have been stated herein. From a business standpoint,
I would prefer that DEC and other companies offer the govt. some
alternative plans to satisfying their "requirement" of a drug-free
workplace, rather than agreeing to mandatory (even limited) testing.
Now, does anyone have any creative suggestions as to how that could
be proposed to Uncle Sam? To be perfectly honest, I don't think he
wants to kiss all his VAXen goodbye, anyway!
-Jack
|
716.455 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Jul 26 1989 21:00 | 36 |
| re: .450
I did not say anything about a law requiring drug testing; that
much is obvious from even a cursory inspection of my reply.
What I did say is that Digital must abide by the law. That may
include drug testing under limited circumstances, though it appears
that Digital has some latitude in complying with the order.
Nevertheless, discussions regarding Digitals response to this change
in requirements or Digitals substance related policies are quite
relevant to the topic.
On the other hand, the merits of mandatory drug testing, the effects
on society, the existence of a real or perceived problem, individual
rights, whether the law is misguided and the Exxon Valdez are topics
better left to other forums. At least that's my opinion, though the
moderators of this conference may have other ideas.
* * *
To start a slightly different twist to the discussion, let me pose
a hypothetical scenario:
Digital is awarded a service contract which requires substance
screening of the individual responsible for servicing the account.
Suppose that I'm Mr. Field Service Manager (actually, Customer
Service now...) and I have a small unit with only one person qualified
to perform the required work. Presume also that training someone else
or transferring somebody is not an option. The person I have
designated to do the job refuses to submit to the testing process.
The question: Is the employee a performance problem, and if not,
why?
Al
|
716.456 | How about 'Just say no, thank you.' | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Thu Jul 27 1989 00:30 | 19 |
| Re: 716.454: suggestions on what Digital might do...
Nice idea. How about this one: Compliance with this government
regulation implies testing employees who might be directly involved
with delivering government contracts (presumably, mostly DoD work).
I, for one, do not ever wish to work with the U.S. government, and
especially the DoD - never have, never will. Digital should allow
employees to specify with impunity that they do not ever wish to be
involved with delivery of a U.S. government project, and therefore are
exempt from drug testing. I'll be at the head of that line.
Frankly, when it comes to working with DoD, I already 'Just say no'.
P.S. Mary, thank you for the Declaration of Independence. I can't
think of a better place for it than here. I hope our pro-testing (no
pun intended) colleagues out there were paying attention when that went
by.
|
716.457 | Staffing _is_ your job, no? | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Infinitely deep bag of tricks | Thu Jul 27 1989 02:35 | 21 |
|
> Digital is awarded a service contract which requires substance
> screening of the individual responsible for servicing the account.
> Suppose that I'm Mr. Field Service Manager (actually, Customer
> Service now...) and I have a small unit with only one person qualified
> to perform the required work. Presume also that training someone else
> or transferring somebody is not an option. The person I have
> designated to do the job refuses to submit to the testing process.
>
> The question: Is the employee a performance problem, and if not,
> why?
As a manager, you cannot _compel_ a subordinate to take a drug test.
You can ask the employee to take a test, but that test is between
them and their prospective (temporary) employer. Your employee can
"just say no." Between a rock and a hard place? That's why you're
Mr. (whatever) Manager -- it's _your_ problem to solve.
/Petes
|
716.458 | not black and white | ESD19::MOSER | Have �VAX, Will Travel | Thu Jul 27 1989 08:34 | 12 |
| re: -.2
> Frankly, when it comes to working with DoD, I already 'Just say no'.
Hmmm... I wonder why... I would assume that we sell a substantial number of
computers and services if not directly to the government (which I would guess
we do) then certainly to businesses involved in defense work. (please correct
me if this is inaccurate)
If you have a problem with dealing with the bureaucracy and BS issues like drug
testing then you are justified, but if you are operating from the belief that
we have nothing to do with the defense industry, I would reexamine that belief.
|
716.459 | problem caused by Sales | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jul 27 1989 08:51 | 33 |
| re: .455
In general, I agree with Petes in .457. The scenario is unreasonable,
because of the assumption that bringing in someone else is not
permitted. Suppose your only qualified employee dies? Is bringing in
someone else still not permitted?
If I were a manager who inherited a situation in which only a single
employee was qualified to deliver a service to a customer, the first
thing I would do is find a backup delivery person. (Actually, the
_first_ thing I would do is inform the customer about the situation,
so if the employee gets sick the customer will have been prepared for
the temporary interruption of service. _Then_ I'd look for a backup.)
If I were a manager who encountered the situation described in .455,
I would tell the customer that I am sorry, but Digital is unable to
deliver the service. This might require that Digital pay penalties,
and would certainly involve loss of face. Then I would go have a talk
with the salesperson who sold the service without first determining
that we had the resources necessary to deliver it. Depending on the
situation I would probably also have a talk with his manager. The
purpose of these talks would be to insure that the problem did not
happen again.
I am not very familiar with field procedures, so the previous paragraph
may not correspond to the way things are actually done in the real
world. My intent is to say that the service should not have been sold
without first making sure that we had someone who was willing and able
to deliver the service, including submitting to drug testing if that
is part of the requirements. To sell a service which we cannot deliver
(for any reason) is an error on the part of the salesperson.
John Sauter
|
716.460 | Give me a dew | MDVAX3::DONOVAN | Patti Donovan | Thu Jul 27 1989 10:15 | 4 |
| On a lighter note, .... according to this week's Newsweek, drug tests
can't differentiate between Diet Mountain Dew and urine. They have the
same pH and density. FWIW, you probably should let it go flat and warm
it under your arm as well.
|
716.461 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jul 27 1989 10:37 | 26 |
| There is no such thing as a service which we are unable to deliver.
If it's in the price book, it can be sold. It is the delivery
organizations responsibility to find a way to satisfy the need.
Sales people don't negotiate terms and conditions; the delivery
organizations do. That is not the issue at hand, however.
If any employee can refuse to submit to testing, then it is entirely
possible that we will be placed into intolerable business situations.
The corporation has not yet said that it will refuse to enter into
government contracts which contain the objectionable clause, so
I must assume that Digitals intent is to deliver such services.
This is clearly at odds with the choice of any single employee.
It's a cop out to simply say "that's the managers problem" and handcuff
him at the same time. Managers are expected to use the resources
allocated to them to acheive the business goals established for
them. If the corporation is really willing give individual employees
the authority to decide whether or not to accept work assignments
(and that is really the underlying question here), than it must adopt
a formal method of forgiving business goals which go unmet as a result.
I don't believe that Digital has made any such commitment at this
time.
Al
|
716.462 | We've always tolerated objections to assignments! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Thu Jul 27 1989 12:18 | 67 |
| RE: <<< Note 716.461 by HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
> There is no such thing as a service which we are unable to deliver.
> If it's in the price book, it can be sold. It is the delivery
> organizations responsibility to find a way to satisfy the need.
> Sales people don't negotiate terms and conditions; the delivery
> organizations do. That is not the issue at hand, however.
Right. It is (and never has been, at least in my 11+ year experience)
the Sales organization's responsibility to inventory our people and
their skill sets before selling a service. It is the delivery
manager's job to ensure that we have adequate resources and people
available to provide the customer with what was sold. That's what
delivery managers get paid for.
As far as employees refusing drug testing, how is that different from
an employee who states that s/he will not work, for example, on a
computer system that will {operate/guide/monitor} an offensive weapon
that could/will kill people? Our employees are allowed to do that, and
are not required to work on such a system if they object. We have also
asked many employees to apply for government clearances. The employee
has the right to refuse to apply for such a clearance, and in such
cases, is simply assigned to work that does not require a clearance.
Regarding the scenario where there was only one qualified individual
available to do a job requiring drug testing, and that employee refused
to be tested: I believe it should be his/her right to refuse. The
manager should treat the situation exactly as s/he would treat it if
s/he had *zero* people qualified to do the job. As a SWS manager, I
found myself with the latter problem many, many times. A manager who
can't handle such a situation, even in the midst of a hiring freeze,
won't last very long at Digital, at least not in management. You (a)
train someone, (b) find someone at another office to do the job, or (c)
hire someone.
> If any employee can refuse to submit to testing, then it is entirely
> possible that we will be placed into intolerable business situations.
If, as I would like to see, almost *every* employee refuses to be
tested, then you are correct. As far as I am concerned, that would be
the most expedient and desirable solution for this entire mess.
> It's a cop out to simply say "that's the managers problem" and handcuff
> him at the same time. Managers are expected to use the resources
> allocated to them to acheive the business goals established for
> them.
Managers are also expected to value differences and respect the
individual, whether that individual objects to building offensive
weapons, applying for a government clearance, or being subjected to an
unconstitutional search. We expect that of our managers today, and we
expected it of them ten years ago. It hasn't changed.
> If the corporation is really willing give individual employees
> the authority to decide whether or not to accept work assignments
> (and that is really the underlying question here), than it must adopt
> a formal method of forgiving business goals which go unmet as a result.
The word "if" in the above paragraph is extraneous; we already
willingly give individual employees the authority to decide whether or
not to accept work assignments in situations like I have cited above.
It is management's responsibility to meet business goals, *without*
sacrificing Digital's policies of valuing differences and respecting
our employees' beliefs and value systems. That's why they pay managers
the big bucks! (^;
Pat
|
716.463 | No cop-out here -- this _is_ management | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Infinitely deep bag of tricks | Thu Jul 27 1989 12:29 | 64 |
| re .461
> There is no such thing as a service which we are unable to deliver.
> If it's in the price book, it can be sold. It is the delivery
> organizations responsibility to find a way to satisfy the need.
> Sales people don't negotiate terms and conditions; the delivery
> organizations do. That is not the issue at hand, however.
Agreed, mostly. This, of course, is the first rathole of services delivery. A
competent salesperson will have been in contact with the delivery manager, if
only to find out the best way to position and sell the service. The delivery
organization's being responsible for delivery does not release sales from their
obligation to be responsible preofessionals.
> If any employee can refuse to submit to testing, then it is entirely
> possible that we will be placed into intolerable business situations.
> The corporation has not yet said that it will refuse to enter into
> government contracts which contain the objectionable clause, so
> I must assume that Digitals intent is to deliver such services.
> This is clearly at odds with the choice of any single employee.
> It's a cop out to simply say "that's the managers problem" and handcuff
> him at the same time. Managers are expected to use the resources
> allocated to them to acheive the business goals established for
> them. If the corporation is really willing give individual employees
> the authority to decide whether or not to accept work assignments
> (and that is really the underlying question here), than it must adopt
> a formal method of forgiving business goals which go unmet as a result.
Either drug testing is mandatory at Digital, or it isn't. Right now, it isn't.
We, Digital, can enter into a contract, but, guess what? It's a manager who
signs the contract and obligates Digital to deliver. (That's, in fact, why
non-managers cannot sign contracts.)
If a manager knows a drug test is going to be required of one of our employees,
then he or she better prepare for it. Frankly, in most cases, employees will be
"reasonable" and submit to the test, even if they don't like the idea.
If a manager does business in accounts with which Digital has signed a contract
agreeing to drug testing then it's up to them to work with their employees to
find them alternate assignments or a transfer opportunity, and to set the
expectation of any potential member of the unit that they will have to take drug
tests at the customer.
Note, however, that a customer _normally_ requiring drug tests and signing a
contract _not_ requiring drug tests are _not_ mutually exclusive.
I was a PSS (Software Services Delivery) manager for 2 years. What I was talking
about wasn't a cop-out. "I was there." If you had business goals to achieve
without any handcuffs, and "forgiveness" when things went wrong, it wouldn't be
much of a management position.
You know, as a manager I was rather _proud_ of Digital, that
- I could ask someone, nicely, to submit to a drug test, but
couldn't _force_ them to.
or
- I could look a customer straight in the eye and say "No, Digital
does not perform drug testing of its employees"
/Peters
|
716.464 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jul 27 1989 14:35 | 41 |
| First of all, I want to reiterate (assuming that I 'iterated' once
before...) that I'm no fan of drug testing. What I am especially
interested in (and what I believe is appropriate to the topic) are
the effects on how we do business. With that in mind...
re: .462
My understanding of employee refusal to accept certain assignments
or submit to DoD or DoE clearance procedures is that tolerance,
if any, is at the discretion of the manager. I'm certainly not
aware of any formal policy which deals with this - are you? I'd
be very interested in knowing. I think that this is a key concept
in dealing with the issue.
re: .463
Managers should prepare and employees will probably be reasonable;
I'd certainly agree with you there. What I'm really interested
in, however, is exploring the limits of the manager's and employee's
obligations to the corporation and to each other.
I think there is an interesting parallel between drug testing and
security clearances. Let me put up a straw man. I've not had to face
the drug testing clause and hopefully never will. I do have to face
the security clearance issue because of our customer base. It's not
been a problem yet, but I've wondered what I would do if faced with an
employee who refused to submit to the background check. The realities
are that it could cause a significant business problem. I would feel
obligated to attribute that to the employee and his/her PA would
be affected, to a degree at least commensurate with the problems
caused.
On the other hand, I would be far less willing to attribute the
problem directly to the employee if they submitted to the background
check but were denied a clearance.
At any rate, that's about as far as the evolution in my own thought
process has progressed. I'd be interested in hearing other ideas.
Al
|
716.465 | A "business" problem, yes. | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Infinitely deep bag of tricks | Thu Jul 27 1989 15:12 | 56 |
| re .464
> My understanding of employee refusal to accept certain assignments
> or submit to DoD or DoE clearance procedures is that tolerance,
> if any, is at the discretion of the manager. I'm certainly not
> aware of any formal policy which deals with this - are you? I'd
> be very interested in knowing. I think that this is a key concept
> in dealing with the issue.
Worded a different way, there is no official policy which requires
employees to submit to drug testing or security clearance checking.
> Managers should prepare and employees will probably be reasonable;
> I'd certainly agree with you there. What I'm really interested
> in, however, is exploring the limits of the manager's and employee's
> obligations to the corporation and to each other.
At the limits, things break down. I think the issue here is "temperance"
on the parts of employer, employee, and customer. Again, strictly
speaking, the employee has the final say where drug testing is concerened.
security clearance checks
> I think there is an interesting parallel between drug testing and
> security clearances. Let me put up a straw man. I've not had to face
> the drug testing clause and hopefully never will. I do have to face
> the security clearance issue because of our customer base. It's not
> been a problem yet, but I've wondered what I would do if faced with an
> employee who refused to submit to the background check. The realities
> are that it could cause a significant business problem. I would feel
> obligated to attribute that to the employee and his/her PA would
> be affected, to a degree at least commensurate with the problems
> caused.
Someone who worked for me went through a sercurity clearance check (not
for Digital). I'm not sure I would want to go through the same
experience. Basically, they get your entire life's story from birth
(like, they go back and interview teachers you had in school when you
were "growing up.") There is no respect for privacy, understandably.
As to the "business problem" caused by refusal to submit, you have hit
the nail on the head. It is a _BUSINESS_ problem, not an _EMPLOYEE_
problem. It you can't keep the two separated, then you will have great
difficulties being an effective manager.
> On the other hand, I would be far less willing to attribute the
> problem directly to the employee if they submitted to the background
> check but were denied a clearance.
This is, of course, personal judgement on priorities. I would add that
in some cases, if people fail clearance or security checks, we are
informed of what the issue is. If a check turns up, for example, that
our employee sold Digital confidential information to a competitor, they
would be dismissed from Digital. (So submitting is worse than not
submitting.)
/Peters
|
716.466 | You can't do what's right if you don't know what's wrong... | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jul 27 1989 17:15 | 32 |
| < Note 716.465 by SVBEV::VECRUMBA "Infinitely deep bag of tricks" >
> Again, strictly
> speaking, the employee has the final say where drug testing is concerened.
> security clearance checks
I don't deny that - no one may be physically compelled to submit
to any of these processes. The security policy in particular states
that signing the authorization to conduct a background check is
voluntary. What isn't addressed by policy (or even by guideline
as near as I can determine) is whether the right to refuse includes
an explicit or implicit guarantee that it can be done with impunity.
> As to the "business problem" caused by refusal to submit, you have hit
> the nail on the head. It is a _BUSINESS_ problem, not an _EMPLOYEE_
> problem. It you can't keep the two separated, then you will have great
> difficulties being an effective manager.
I have to disagree with you here. The business problem is caused
in this instance by the employee, not the manager, not Digital,
not the customer. What is the extent of the employees obligation
to Digital and vice versa?
Managers don't have tolerance on their goalsheets, and Digital hasn't
given employees veto power over assignments. This means that each
situation that arises will likely be handled differently; my worry
is that identical situations will not be handled the same by different
managers.
Al
|
716.467 | | HPSRAD::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Thu Jul 27 1989 17:40 | 19 |
| Al, the problem is not an employee problem - it is a problem with a number
of causes, only one if which is the employee's refusal to submit to a drug
test. If we agree that the employee has the right to refuse a drug test,
then the problem is not an employee problem (and corporate policy should state
that the employee has the right to refuse a drug test with no punitive
action to be taken). In this case, the problem is a business problem because
no employee should be required to give up his rights in order to further
Digital's business goals.
If, on the other hand, we decide that drug testing may not be refused by
employees, then this too should be stated explicitly and the employee's
refusal to submit is an employee problem. However, mandatory drug testing
will result in some employees leaving and may result in a suit. And, IMHO,
it would deserve to lose.
Drug testing the way the government has been pushing it sounds to me too
much like the loyalty oaths required in the 50's (if you wouldn't sign, you
had to be a commie, because no one but a commie would have anything to
hide).
|
716.468 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Jul 27 1989 18:36 | 26 |
| < Note 716.467 by HPSRAD::KIRK "Matt Kirk -- 297-6370" >
>Al, the problem is not an employee problem - it is a problem with a number
>of causes, only one if which is the employee's refusal to submit to a drug
>test. If we agree that the employee has the right to refuse a drug test,
>then the problem is not an employee problem (and corporate policy should state
>that the employee has the right to refuse a drug test with no punitive
>action to be taken). In this case, the problem is a business problem because
>no employee should be required to give up his rights in order to further
>Digital's business goals.
I think that's what I said, only with respect to background checks.
What the employee has a right to refuse is somewhat a specious
statement, since an employee can refuse to do anything he or she
wants to. That refusal, however, may or may not have a cost associated
with it. Without clear guidelines regarding the consequences of
such refusal, the area between insubordination and acceptable behavior
will be indistinct at best.
Stated another way, it is clear what the civil rights of an employee
are. It is unclear to what extent Digital must accommodate the
exercise of those rights.
Al
|
716.469 | ... looping ... | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Jul 27 1989 21:37 | 3 |
| Has anything much new been said in this note since, say, .100?
- g
|
716.470 | We agree, and yes, there's not much more to add. | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Infinitely deep bag of tricks | Thu Jul 27 1989 23:57 | 29 |
|
re .466, .467...
I think we all agree that:
There is no explicit policy covering those cases where Digital
enters into contract with a customer, agrees to have its employees
submit to security checks or drug tests, and the "scheduled"
employee declines. That is, there is no explicit impunity.
I think we all also agree that:
Whether declining to submit is a "business" or "employee" problem
depends on the "rules." I personally believe that the current rules
(or lack thereof) make it a business problem lock stock and barrel.
And finally,
[In the absence of clear rules, given the increased likelihood of
entering into contract requiring drug tests, clearance, checks,
> etc.,] This means that each situation that arises will likely be
> handled differently; my worry is that identical situations will not
> be handled the same by different managers.
There really isn;t much more to say about this until some more formal
policies, or at least guidelines, are stated.
/Peters
|
716.471 | Has anybody actually been drug tested yet? | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Jul 28 1989 00:42 | 20 |
| Re:
> Has anything much new been said in this note since, say, .100?
OK I'll ask something new. Has any Digital employee been asked to take
a drug test yet? If you've been asked to take a drug test perhaps
you'll share with us what you did, did you refuse? If so what happened?
Also does anybody know of any Digital employee that has been asked by
Digital to take a drug test?
Let's get down to the real issues.
I remember the memo that came round saying that all Frequent Flier
miles should be given back to Digital. From what I understand Digital
didn't want its FF miles back, and no doubt didn't have the admin
necessary to handle it anyway, apparently the memo was strictly
something to satisfy some tax regulation. Maybe this drug policy
is just another empty memo. The only way we'll know is to know whether
anybody is actually being asked to be drug tested.
Dave
|
716.472 | | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Fri Jul 28 1989 01:16 | 20 |
|
<<< Note 716.458 by ESD19::MOSER "Have �VAX, Will Travel" >>>
-< not black and white >-
>If you have a problem with dealing with the bureaucracy and BS issues like drug
>testing then you are justified, but if you are operating from the belief that
>we have nothing to do with the defense industry, I would reexamine that belief.
The bureaucracy and such doesn't bother me as much as what the DoD and
the DoE actually DO. I am well aware of the nature of our business
with them, I simply decline to personally contribute to it. Working
for Digital doesn't imply I agree with everything Digital does. I
don't.
Perhaps some would confuse insubordination with conscientious
objection. I'll be happy to respectfully decline the drug test and the
background check in a single breath. I don't think I should be
discriminated against for defending these beliefs. Isn't that the idea
behind 'valuing differences', or is this just too different for the
Morton Downey Jr. generation?
|
716.473 | Let the top executives set an example for us to follow | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Fri Jul 28 1989 09:51 | 9 |
| Talking about managers and drug testing, did anyone notice that when it
comes to the testing part of it, managers themselves probably would
NEVER be tested?
Frankly, Al, if you are not personally willing to fill the bottle as
the manager of an employee, your insistence that your subordinate
should submit to the humiliation is extremely offensive.
- Vikas
|
716.475 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 28 1989 09:55 | 15 |
| < Note 716.472 by SCAM::GRADY "tim grady" >
>Isn't that the idea behind 'valuing differences',
No, it's not. Valuing differences refers to race, color, sex,
religion, age, national origin, citizenship or veteran status, sexual
orientation, or handicap.
Although respecting political beliefs (or any beliefs, for that
matter) is in keeping with this philosophy, it in no way obligates
Digital to act as a facilitator for anyone's political or religious
agenda.
Al
|
716.476 | DEC memo on drug free environment is not an empty threat. | CSSE32::RHINE | Jack Rhine - DTN: 381-2439 | Fri Jul 28 1989 10:02 | 16 |
| re: .471
I don't think the memo on Digital providing a drug free environment is an empty
one. Basically it stated that employees found with drugs on the premises will
be dealt with through the standard disciplinary process. People who have
performance problems (that may be drug related) will be dealt with through the
corrective action process. Go offer some drugs to your local security people
and you will find out how empty that memo is!
As far as frequent flier miles, I agree that DEC can't administrate them. But,
before frequent flier miles were around, when United ( and probably others) were
handing out coupons for a discount on a subsequent flight, I was asked by the
group secretary to turn in a coupon when I returned from a business trip. I
didn't think DEC would bother. No, I don't think that the secretary was
collecting the coupons for personal use.
|
716.477 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Just a Coupl'a days.... | Fri Jul 28 1989 10:26 | 25 |
| re
<<< Note 716.475 by HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
> >Isn't that the idea behind 'valuing differences',
>
> No, it's not. Valuing differences refers to race, color, sex,
> religion, age, national origin, citizenship or veteran status, sexual
> orientation, or handicap.
Personally, I would classify significant drug use as a handicap...
And, I must agree with the recent comment, that people will demand
that their babysitters, and childrens teachers etc be drug tested
etc, but refuse it themselves. If it would do anything to stop
drug abuse in the community (digital or otherwise), I would submit
to testing without any qualms. Although, I do feel that doing it
as a Government requirement is a bit much. IF Digital wan'ts to
eradicate drug abuse in its workforce, then it should be because
the Company cares for our well being rather than to plases a
customer.
q
|
716.478 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 28 1989 10:41 | 11 |
| re .473
Drug testing would be an extraordinary change in the working
environment. I'd be first in line, even though I probably needn't
submit.
BTW, I find the use of the word 'subordinate' to denote individual
contributor somewhat inappropriate.
Al
|
716.479 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Jul 28 1989 11:27 | 9 |
| > I'd be first in line, even though I probably needn't submit.
First a question: why would you "probably needn't submit"?
Second, a comment: as long as I'm not expected to be in line behind
you, I have no problem whatsoever with your willingness to submit to
drug testing or anything else.
Pat
|
716.480 | | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Jul 28 1989 14:41 | 30 |
| re: Note 716.475 by HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ
> >Isn't that the idea behind 'valuing differences',
>
> No, it's not. Valuing differences refers to race, color, sex,
> religion, age, national origin, citizenship or veteran status, sexual
> orientation, or handicap.
. . . or socio-economic background, or geographic origin within a given
country, or educational experience, or . . . C'mon Al, it doesn't
stop at just the things you mentioned. Valuing differences includes
_ALL_ of the areas in which we differ - even down to weight! At least
that's the gist of what I learned in DEC workshops on Valuing Differences
that I've attended.
re: Note 716.476 by CSSE32::RHINE
> Basically it stated that employees found with drugs on the premises will
> be dealt with through the standard disciplinary process. People who have
> performance problems (that may be drug related) will be dealt with through the
> corrective action process.
But when you come right down to it, Jack, none of this was really new.
Both of these points seemed perfectly reasonable to me based on the
employee agreement I signed, and the company philosophy I read when I
joined DEC over 11 years ago. The testing aspect was in no way, shape,
or form ever alluded to. It may be that portion which lacks teeth.
-Jack
|
716.481 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 28 1989 15:44 | 27 |
|
It sounds to me like people aren't listening, or at least they are
only hearing what they want to.
re: .479
Whether or not I would pee in a bottle has nothing to do with my
own beliefs on the merits of drug testing. Someone accused me
(undeservedly) of hypocrisy, and I pointed out that I would provide
the necessary leadership in such a situation.
As far as my not being required to submit to testing, isn't that
obvious? What has been proposed is that employees who must perform
certain on-site service may have to submit to testing. My current job
description (SWS manager) would not seem to fall into this category,
though it's entirely possible that people who work for me would.
re: .480
You are being quite silly. I could say that valuing differences
includes respect for the stupid, lazy, ignorant and bigoted as well.
That is certainly not the case. Read the rest of my statement;
valuing differences does not obligate Digital to advance or facilitate
any particular political or religious agenda.
Al
|
716.482 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Jul 28 1989 16:20 | 14 |
| RE: .-1
Al,
Valuing differences including respect for the stupid, lazy, ignorant
and bigoted is silly.
Valuing differences with regard to race, color, sex, religion, age,
national origin, citizenship or veteran status, sexual orientation, or
handicap, socio-economic background, or geographic origin within a given
country, educational experience, weight, and the many other things that
make each of us a unique but valuable Digital employee...
That is not silly.
|
716.483 | Either I've got marbles in my mouth or someone is not listening | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 28 1989 16:29 | 6 |
| re: .482
Isn't that what I said????!??!??!?!??!?!??!?
Al
|
716.484 | Drug Free Environment vs. Drug TEsting | CSSE32::RHINE | Jack Rhine - DTN: 381-2439 | Fri Jul 28 1989 16:45 | 23 |
| RE: .480
We are in agreement. I tried to find a copy of the memo on maintaining a drug
free environment and couldn't find it. The drug free policy hasn't made it in
to the latest orange book yet either.
But, as I remember the memo, it seemed like the major impetus was that the
government requires corporations above a certain size to have a policy around
maintaining a drug free environment.
My recollection is that Digital's "plan" to accomplish this is through the
normal policies and procedures and not through drug testing.
The real issue becomes, as stated earlier in this topic, how does Digital
comply wiht our customers' requirements for doing business with them. But,
that is very different from the purpose of the memo on providing a drug free
environment in Digital.
I do not use drugs (if I did, I wouldn't say it here!) but I do eat poppy seeds
and I would refuse testing because I know the tests are not reliable. I'm glad
that my job and others I see myself doing in the future would not put in the
position where I would have to make that decision. If I had people working for
me who had to make this decision, I would support them.
|
716.485 | It may have been what you said, but it wasn't what I read | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Jul 28 1989 17:45 | 17 |
| You said
> You are being quite silly.
to someone who had replied:
> [Valuing differences refers to]. . . socio-economic background, or
> geographic origin within a given country, or educational experience, or
> . . . C'mon Al, it doesn't stop at just the things you mentioned.
> Valuing differences includes _ALL_ of the areas in which we differ -
> even down to weight! At least that's the gist of what I learned in DEC
> workshops on Valuing Differences that I've attended.
I disagree with your premise that the author was being quite silly. I
think he was being quite accurate.
Pat
|
716.486 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 28 1989 18:47 | 19 |
| < Note 716.485 by DLOACT::RESENDEP "Live each day as if it were Friday" >
The key sentence was:
> Valuing differences includes _ALL_ of the areas in which we differ -
> even down to weight! At least that's the gist of what I learned in DEC
> workshops on Valuing Differences that I've attended.
Stupidity, ignorance, laziness and bigotry most certainly fall into
the category of 'areas in which we differ', do they not? The author
of the above statement even made a point of emphasizing _ALL_. Yet we
do not value the differences I just repeated above. The spirit
of valuing differences extends beyond just those aspects outlined
in PP&P 2.03a; I don't deny that. But it IS silly to say that it
encompasses _ALL_ employee differences, because that is patently
false.
Al
|
716.487 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jul 28 1989 20:05 | 10 |
| >the government requires companies above a certain size to have a drug testing
>policy
Let's kill that rumour really fast. A law like that would never stand up in
court.
The requirement is for companies working on certain contracts to have a drug
testing policy.
/john
|
716.488 | | CSSE32::RHINE | Jack Rhine - DTN: 381-2439 | Fri Jul 28 1989 22:44 | 4 |
| RE: .-1
Oooooops, I didn't mean to say testing policy, I meant to say stated drug free
environmental policy.
|
716.489 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jul 28 1989 23:42 | 3 |
| re .488
Same thing. Required based on contracts, not based on size of company.
|
716.490 | '...don't call me stupid...' | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Sat Jul 29 1989 00:28 | 18 |
| Al,
For one thing, conscientious objection is a profound, if unpopular,
belief. I don't expect my employer to 'facilitate' it, whatever that
means, but I expect some reasonable respect for what has been a
lifelong personal belief. If you want to call it religious, fine,
if it makes you happy. It's not political at all.
Also, I see no reason not to value the difference that a person of less
intelligence (.i.e. 'stupid') might have to offer. Why not?
After all, I may disagree with you, but I respect your opinion.
:-). Sorry, I couldn't resist.
Seriously, discrimination based on percieved level of intelligence may
be legal so far, but it's pretty rude. Recursive, in a way.
|
716.491 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jul 29 1989 12:19 | 36 |
| re: .490
This is getting a little off the subject at hand. I think it all
comes down to a question of what is 'reasonable'. I would certainly
not consider a persons political or religious beliefs material when
it comes to hiring or promotions, for example. In a very real sense,
Digital values these differences by ignoring them.
Where things start to get sticky is when (or, more specifically,
if) we allow concientious objectors (to use your example) to turn
down work assignments. To accomodate such a situation, there is
a good probability that there is a cost associated with it; we might
have to retrain someone else, transfer people, underutilize staff,
hire additional staff, lose business. This is no longer a passive
valuing of differences, since we can't ignore it; Digital becomes
a facilitator.
I can probably think of several other reasons why people might wish
to turn down work assignments - some of them silly, others quite
plausible. Do we honor them all? I suspect not; therefore it places
Digital in the position valuing certain forms of moral objection
over others. Is this correct? Do we really want to do this? How and
where do we draw the line? It places Digital in the position of
evaluating which are valid forms of moral objection and which are
not.
Digital is a business, an economic activity. I think it complicates
things needlessly if we start to get too deep into social causes;
it pits one employee against another. To me, valuing differences
means ignoring everything extraneous about an employee and looking
solely at ability. From the employee, I would expect a willingness
to tackle any assignment that doesn't run contrary to our corporate
philosphy.
Al
|
716.492 | Being tested or drugs isn't an assignment I'm willing to tackle | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sat Jul 29 1989 16:32 | 21 |
| Re: .491
> From the employee, I would expect a willingness
> to tackle any assignment that doesn't run contrary to our corporate
> philosphy.
The DIGITAL Philopophy
...
We encourage all employees to take responsibility in community,
social, and government activities.
The DIGITAL Culture
...
DIGITAL is a people-oriented company. The employee receives courteous,
fair, and equitable treatment.
-- Bob
|
716.493 | Where are our priorities? | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Sat Jul 29 1989 19:08 | 31 |
| <<< Note 716.491 by HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
> To me, valuing differences
> means ignoring everything extraneous about an employee and looking
> solely at ability. From the employee, I would expect a willingness
> to tackle any assignment that doesn't run contrary to our corporate
> philosphy.
Personally, I think your priorities are unrealistic. The corporation
cannot afford to expect it's employees to routinely subjugate their own
personal beliefs for the greater good of the company or the community
as a whole. Personal freedom, the individual rights of 'life, liberty
and the pursuit of happines' come first. Privacy (i.e. drug testing),
and conscientious objection as a manifestation of that pursuit are
unalienable rights.
I expect the company, and my management, to value me as an employee for
what I can contribute to the business goals of the company. If I have
a substance problem, I expect the company to realize the obvious
benefits of helping me overcome that problem, but not to act as big
brother to police my personal habits. Offer help, perhaps even mandate
therapy, but don't hurl cheap threats at my livihood. If I have a
conscience about working with the nuke-heads, I would expect the same
kind of pragmatic approach to direct my efforts where the company and
I will mutually benefit. In short, I don't think people should be
approached as disposable work-units applied to the corporate bottom line.
I think the current trend in government policy is treat people just so.
People, ALL people, have value. Find it, and use it to the mutual
benefit of both company and employee.
|
716.494 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jul 29 1989 21:18 | 22 |
| < Note 716.492 by HANNAH::MESSENGER "Bob Messenger" >
I knew when I made that statement it would be provocative.
> We encourage all employees to take responsibility in community,
> social, and government activities.
The operative words here are 'encourage', 'employee' and
'responsibility'. This does not mean that we authorize employees
to obligate or otherwise encumber the corporation in order to lend
support to their causes or beliefs.
> DIGITAL is a people-oriented company. The employee receives courteous,
> fair, and equitable treatment.
Does the fact that there are limits to the corporations tolerance
(there _are_ limits you know, even if we don't agree what they are)
somehow contradict this?
Al
|
716.495 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jul 29 1989 22:23 | 37 |
| < Note 716.493 by SCAM::GRADY "tim grady" >
> Personally, I think your priorities are unrealistic. The corporation
> cannot afford to expect it's employees to routinely subjugate their own
> personal beliefs for the greater good of the company or the community
> as a whole.
The company cannot afford to honor every belief of every employee.
I have suggested that there are limits to our tolerance although
I don't expect everyone to agree exactly what they are. I'm not
sorry to admit that the amount of latitude we are likely to allow
an employee is probably proportional to the degree which we value
his or her abilities. Frankly, you've not admitted to any limits
yet. If that's truly your position, I'm afraid that it's you who is
unrealistic.
> People, ALL people, have value. Find it, and use it to the mutual
> benefit of both company and employee.
Technically, this is not true. Not all people have value to the
corporation (or shall we say sufficient value), else there would
be no need for a termination policy.
* * * * * *
I think that we're about as close to a convergence of viewpoints
as we're going to get, which isn't very close. I don't want to
beat a dead horse. Suffice it to say, I believe in doing 'what's
right'. The way I hear that term overused in this conference I
sometimes think people believe it's an absolute, or that it's always
obvious what's right.
'Doing the right thing' in a Digital - employee conflict may not
always mean 'the right thing as defined by the employee'.
Al
|
716.496 | Join the cause! | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sun Jul 30 1989 16:26 | 40 |
| Re: .494, .495
>> DIGITAL is a people-oriented company. The employee receives courteous,
>> fair, and equitable treatment.
>
> Does the fact that there are limits to the corporations tolerance
> (there _are_ limits you know, even if we don't agree what they are)
> somehow contradict this?
You're right, there are "limits to the corporation's tolerance", and as a
manager you have to find the right balance between treating your "individual
contributors" fairly and maximizing the corporation's (short term) profit.
This is summed up by the wonderfully vague commandment "do what is right in
each situation". I'm sure we'll each have our own ideas about what is right
in any given situation, but in general the goal seems to be to be true to
long term principles, and not look *only* at short term advantage.
By quoting from The DIGITAL Philosophy and The DIGITAL Culture, I was trying
to show you that there is a basis, rooted in the corporate philosophy and
culture, for you as a manager to stick up for an employee who refuses to
take a drug test on philosophical grounds. You've made a good point, though,
that if the corporation doesn't clearly state that employees can refuse to
take drug tests without being penalized for any adverse consequences of that
refusal, that there will be a lot of pressure on managers to give bad
reviews to people who cost us business opportunities. For that reason, those
of us who oppose mandatory drug testing shouldn't celebrate just because it
now seems likely that there will be no across the board, mandatory testing.
There could still be more subtle pressure to submit to testing, through
the performance appraisal process. Unless the corporation makes a clear
statement about this, we may start to hear about drug-testing-related
grievances being escalated through the open door policy.
Ultimately, though, the bottom line is that I consider a bad review to be
a small price to pay for the privilege of standing up for my beliefs -- after
all, I've previously said that I'd choose to be fired rather than submit to
a drug test that I felt violated my rights. If you're really opposed to
mandatory drug testing, as you've stated before, I hope you'll do your part
by backing up people in your group who also take this stand.
-- Bob
|
716.497 | "...and you see, here we are..." | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Sun Jul 30 1989 21:04 | 30 |
| <<< Note 716.495 by HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
> I have suggested that there are limits to our tolerance although
> I don't expect everyone to agree exactly what they are. I'm not
> sorry to admit that the amount of latitude we are likely to allow
> an employee is probably proportional to the degree which we value
> his or her abilities.
Actually, I think we agree on that point. I agree that the company has
the right to make decisions on the disposition of employees based on
their contribution and performance. I just don't believe that it
should violate their rights in the process, nor uniformly direct those
employees' careers toward termination or prosecution. I think Digital
should look for help in determining when an investment in
rehabilitation is a good business decision. I don't think most
managers are currently capable of that, let alone goaled toward it.
> Not all people have value to the
> corporation (or shall we say sufficient value), else there would
> be no need for a termination policy.
Again, I agree. I think the difference here is more semantics. I do
believe that all people have some inherent value. It just may not be
useful to Digital.
So you see, we did come to some convergence after all...our
perspectives of the issue are different.
tim
|
716.498 | Opinions? | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | Know what I mean, wink-wink-nudge-nudge?? | Sun Jul 30 1989 23:54 | 32 |
| So, to take up the argument of the viability of refusing an
assignment...
Let us suppose that we have an employee who's religious beliefs
would not allow him to work at a customer site that dealt with
Nuc's. And this employee was allowed to refuse the assignment
(i'm speaking PSS here..). How would that differ from an employee
who's political beliefs prevented him to do the same assignment?
Would we say that because specialist "A"'s beliefs were based upon
a religious belief (and we respect that view by our differing values)
that he was justified in his request - but not spec "B", because
his view was political vs. religious [what would be the difference]??
Now then. Let's say I don't want to support the gov's postion that
employers must test employees for drug use (presumed guilty and
make the employee produce evidence to support the prosecution).
If I feel that this is a rights violation - do I not have a
responsibility to my fellow americans to stand up for our right
of privacy, and refuse to be tested?
Do I as a stockholder in DEC have the authority to dictate to
management that the business is more important than it's employees?
My bottom line belief (if you haven't figured it out by now ;')
is that testing for drug abuse should not be a function of our
business. If were are required to stipulate that our employees
are "drug free", then a written agreement to that fact should be
entered into - with that fact, and let it go at that (leave it as
a performance issue!).
-Jp
|
716.499 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Jul 31 1989 12:41 | 48 |
|
Note 716.495
HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ
>> Personally, I think your priorities are unrealistic. The corporation
>> cannot afford to expect it's employees to routinely subjugate their own
>> personal beliefs for the greater good of the company or the community
>> as a whole.
>
>> The company cannot afford to honor every belief of every employee.
An employee's beliefs can be respected and tolerated without being "honored".
Respect and tolerance are all most employees ask in return for their
contributions.
> I have suggested that there are limits to our tolerance although
> I don't expect everyone to agree exactly what they are. I'm not
> sorry to admit that the amount of latitude we are likely to allow
> an employee is probably proportional to the degree which we value
> his or her abilities.
Our best and our brightest may expect that the least of us are entitled to
the same treatment as the best of us.
> Technically, this is not true. Not all people have value to the
> corporation (or shall we say sufficient value), else there would
> be no need for a termination policy.
Most people have skills and talents that contribute to the corporation
in different but meaningfull ways.
> 'Doing the right thing' in a Digital - employee conflict may not
> always mean 'the right thing as defined by the employee'.
We have always been a team here Al. The corporation and the employees
have always pulled together to share our success and our problems. We
have hung in there through wage freezes and through cost containment
and we continued to respect each other and to pull together... like a
family.
What is "the right thing" for the employee, is also the "right
thing" for the corporation. Digital is more than a company to us. We
are proud of our association with it, and we are proud to be a part of
this team. We will continue to be in the future, I am sure. Digital
reflect the values of each and every one of us. It won't let us down.
Mary
|
716.500 | pointer... | REGENT::LEVINE | | Thu Aug 03 1989 18:45 | 4 |
| Please take a look at note 883. It is somewhat related to this
discussion.
|
716.501 | Time out!! | HAZEL::LEFEBVRE | Hopelessly Obscure | Wed Aug 09 1989 13:26 | 40 |
|
I didn't want to clutter the survey being conducted in 883 with
editorial comments, but I just couldn't let this reply stand without
comment.
<<< HUMAN::DISK$HUMAN_WRKD:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;2 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 883.77 What will YOU do? 77 of 80
NITTY::COHEN "What a wonderful peice of work is man" 10 lines 9-AUG-1989 09:10
-< Tough Times - Tough Actions >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a> Happily Submit
b> Happily Submit
c> Submit
> I believe we are in the middle of a war and that extreem measures MUST
> be taken. I also agree with the reply that states only people who are
> drug users need be concerned by the testing.
What kind of comment is this?? You feel that if someone (myself
included) is concerned about drug testing then that person is a
drug user?
If so, you owe several dozen fellow employees who voiced their
collective and individual concern over the invasion of their privacy,
and the potential violation of their constitutional rights, a *huge*
apology.
If not, you should carefully reword your position to be less
inflammatory.
The inference of your response is frightening, and to be perfectly
blunt, I'm offended.
Mark.
tac
|
716.503 | food for thought | TILTS::WALDO | | Wed Aug 09 1989 16:12 | 14 |
| Because of "DEC culture" drug testing will only become necessary
if DEC wishes to continue doing business with those customers that
require their vendors have a "drug free" environment. So the real
question becomes "Should DEC do business with those who require
drug testing?". That is a lot of our business!
Those people who would leave DEC because of this issue will have
to face the issue elsewhere. I doubt very seriously if there would
be any legal remedies available.
An invasion of privacy? Sure, probably. What do you think happens
every time you give blood at the loacl blood bank?
Irv Waldo
|
716.504 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Wanna work in Wagga Wagga N.S.W. | Wed Aug 09 1989 16:37 | 7 |
| < Note 716.503 by TILTS::WALDO >
> Those people who would leave DEC because of this issue will have
> to face the issue elsewhere.
Not necessarily. I disagree with your conclusion..
karl
|
716.505 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Aug 09 1989 17:23 | 24 |
| Re 883.77
> I believe we are in the middle of a war and that extreem measures MUST
> be taken. I also agree with the reply that states only people who are
> drug users need be concerned by the testing.
You speak from a point of "extreem" [sic] ignorance. Listen to what's been
going on here! We're talking about a basic right to privacy, and the
action of rescinding that right to wage a poorly defined "war". I speak
out against arbitrary drug testing. I never take anything stronger than
an aspirin, about 4 wine coolers a year, and don't smoke - my only
addiction is to junk food. I will not submit to a drug test on
someones whim, because I feel strongly that it is a gross violation of
my basic rights. Wake up! Or next thing you know, they'll be pinning
your eyes open and forcing you to watch John Wayne movies.
Re .503:
> An invasion of privacy? Sure, probably. What do you think happens
> every time you give blood at the loacl blood bank?
When was the last time you were forced to give blood in order to retain
your employment?
|
716.506 | A few thoughts | DELNI::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Wed Aug 09 1989 19:56 | 51 |
| In the National Football League, where they have (1) drug testing and
(2) a number of drug users, some players have admitted to going to
unscrupulous doctors to be catheterized and filled with clean urine so
they can pass the test. William Nance Gardner once commented that the
Vice-Presidency wasn't "worth a bucket of warm p*ss" (no, it was not
"spit"). Well, the value of a bucket of warm p*ss may be going up.
Now that I have your attention 8^):
I think one legal issue here is that Digital is not the United States
Government, and as such is not necessarily bound by the same
Constitutional provisions that apply to the government.
Nobody forced you to work here, and no one is forcing you to remain.
Our employment agreement is a voluntary contract entered into by both
sides, and it may be terminated by either side.
Unfortunately, there is some lattitude in what a private company can
require of its employees, which if requested by the government would be
an infringement of rights. For example, I may not discuss with my
friends from IBM the details of the project I'm working on. Isn't that
violating my freedom of expression? If I am inspired to write, on my
own time, some absolutely revolutionary operating system, I can't keep
it. Is that Constitutional? If I violate my employment agreement,
I'll be fired. Being fired is not unconstitutional. If I flunk my
drug tests enough, I'll be fired. (Now, if my employer turns me in for
prosecution, I think that would be another matter.)
It's entirely possible the courts will decide that corporate
drug testing, as a condition of employment, falls into the same
category. The Supreme Court has already ruled that drug testing of
Federal transportation workers *IS* Constitutional.
This is not so different from the "infringement of rights" exercised by
other institutions. Do prisoners get to travel? Can they bear arms?
If they do certain things you or I can do with impunity, they may be
shot. Can schoolchildren publish obscene newspapers? Can THEY bear
arms? (Well, some do, but it's generally considered a bad thing.) I
may be wrong, but if schoolchildren do certain things you or I can do
with impunity, they may be physically punished.
I suppose this is taking things to extremes, and it would be fair to
point out that I'm grouping Digital employees with prisoners and
children. But I suggest that drug testing of employees is somewhere on
the same spectrum of infringement of rights by private organizations.
By the way, Karl (.504): I think Digital is one of the few companies
large enough, nervy enough, employee-conscious enough, and independent
enough of Federal dollars to successfully resist the call for drug
testing. If Digital knuckles under, I fear it may be one of the last
to go. Therefore, I agree with the conclusion in .503: If drug
testing comes to Digital, and an employee quits, he'll have nowhere
else to go.
|
716.507 | If the worst comes to the worst... | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Aug 09 1989 20:38 | 34 |
| Re: .506
> I think one legal issue here is that Digital is not the United States
> Government, and as such is not necessarily bound by the same
> Constitutional provisions that apply to the government.
That may be true, but I question the constitutionality of a *government* policy
requiring that private employers conduct searches that would be illegal if
conducted by the government itself.
> Our employment agreement is a voluntary contract entered into by both
> sides, and it may be terminated by either side.
Exactly. If Digital abuses what I consider to be my rights, I will terminate
our agreement.
> It's entirely possible the courts will decide that corporate
> drug testing, as a condition of employment, falls into the same
> category.
I'm afraid you may be right, but that wouldn't change the fact that freedom
from unreasonable searches is a right that I am willing to *fight* for.
> If Digital knuckles under, I fear it may be one of the last
> to go. Therefore, I agree with the conclusion in .503: If drug
> testing comes to Digital, and an employee quits, he'll have nowhere
> else to go.
I suspect that there will always be small companies around willing to hire
the "black listed" talent. DEC does *not* own me, even if there's "nowhere
else to go".
-- Bob
|
716.508 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Wed Aug 09 1989 21:49 | 10 |
| re: .503
> An invasion of privacy? Sure, probably. What do you think happens
> every time you give blood at the loacl blood bank?
Come on now Irv, how can you equate giving blood at the blood bank with
drug testing? The former is quite a voluntary act while the later may not
be. In this context it would not be voluntary.
- George
|
716.509 | | MU::PORTER | still life with prawn cocktail | Wed Aug 09 1989 23:49 | 17 |
| Since I come from somewhere that doesn't have a written
constitootion, I'll refrain from joining in the "rights"
discussion on the grounds that I don't have any anyway.
However, that doesn't make me willing to submit to drug-testing
as a condition of employment.
My take on all this is that it's pretty similar to me getting
a letter from The Company which says "Dear Employee: you are
Hereby Notified that We Do Not Trust You At All." The legality
of this doesn't worry me; what does worry me is that the place
that I used to think was a nice, friendly, open sort of
place to work will have suddenly changed its nature, and
therefore the reasons that have kept me here probably
won't apply any more.
|
716.510 | | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Aug 10 1989 09:06 | 24 |
| re: several discussing the "nowhere else to go" syndrome.
There are plenty of small (and even not-so-small) companies that simply
DON'T DO business with the government or any of its agencies. Period.
Categorically. Actually, I find that to be an endearing trait!
I seriously doubt that this nation would ever get so hypersensitized
on the "War against drugs" that it would ever extend an embargo to
the limits of requiring a drug-free work force down to the vendors'
vendors' vendors' vendors, for example. Can you imagine DEC asking
for a drug-free work force guarantee from the company they buy paper
products for the rest rooms from? Or from the people who manufacture
the sheet metal we use in our cabinets? How 'bout the manufacturers
of the tape we seal boxes with at the SDC (oops - SSB!)?
I'd still be very interested to know what would happen if DEC went
back to the Federal government and said something like:
"Yes - we have procedures already in place to ensure a drug-free
work force on this contract project. No - I'm afraid the details
and records are not available for your inspection. They are con-
fidential and proprietary."
-Jack
|
716.511 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Aug 10 1989 09:43 | 21 |
| > < Note 716.510 by WHYVAX::DELBALSO "I (spade) my (dog face)" >
> I'd still be very interested to know what would happen if DEC went
> back to the Federal government and said something like:
>
> "Yes - we have procedures already in place to ensure a drug-free
> work force on this contract project. No - I'm afraid the details
> and records are not available for your inspection. They are con-
> fidential and proprietary."
Various entities in the Federal Government have subpeona power.
(The good news there might still be a need for probable cause to issue
the subpeona.)
Some contracts will also have clauses allowing for auditing of project
progress, which could be interpreted as the right to access such records.
Look way back in this topic, probably before .200 or so, about how the Feds
have used schools to administer what would otherwise be illegal tests
and then appropriate the results.
- tom]
|
716.512 | Welcome to reality... | ATLV5::MCDONALD_J | Surly to bed, surly to rise... | Thu Aug 10 1989 12:23 | 36 |
| This is an issue that's close to hitting home with me. I'm currently
contracted to an Air Force Base, and my contract expires at the end of this
year. Since the Government has said that all new and renewed contracts will
include a clause mandating drug testing for all contractors exposed to
classified materials, I expect to be asked to take a drug test.
The whole drug-test issue bothers me. On the one hand, I've never used drugs
(although I have been known to drink Scotch, which some say is worse :-), so I
resent the invasion of privacy. On the other hand, I can remember working in a
manufacturing plant where it was a semi-regular occurrance for employees to
come to work high/stoned/plastered and drive a forklift over someones foot or
something. (Seriously, several incidents a year.) My gut reaction is that
these jokers who come in stoned and operate heavy equipment should be disarmed
BEFORE they seriously maim someone. But you can't fire or demote them just
because you SUSPECT them of using drugs. (That'd be worse than drug testing!)
So, as with any issue, there are pros and cons to drug testing. I think it's
WRONG to just arbitrarily say everyone should be tested. I think it's wrong
to allow someone to come to work stoned and injure others. I think it's wrong
to give a supervisor/manager power to fire or demote a person just because he
suspects this person is a user. I think, for persons who work in a capacity
such that they could do serious harm by comeing to work stoned, the employer
should be allowed to request drug testing for that person IF THERE IS REASON TO
SUSPECT HE/SHE COMES TO WORK STONED. (To be perfectly fair, this should extend
to alcohol as well... even prescription drugs if they affect your ability to
perform your job safely.)
In short, I can't really see a clear answer to this one. I don't want anyone
violating my rights, but I DO want them to be able to prevent an irresponsible
co-worker from maiming or killing me. (It just doesn't wash to wait 'til he's
already hurt someone before firing him.)
Tough question. And I haven't seen ANYONE yet who's got a real answer.
John
|
716.514 | reposted by moderator in a more appropriate place | REGENT::LEVINE | | Thu Aug 10 1989 14:10 | 31 |
| Ive reposted this part of this note here, to avoid cluttering 883
with the reactions to this note. The rest of this note (the answers
to 883.0's questions) are posted as reply to 883
Rick LeVine
MODERAtOR, HUMAN::DIGITAL
<<< HUMAN::DISK$HUMAN_WRKD:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;2 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 883.86 What will YOU do? 86 of 86
CRAIG::YANKES 22 lines 10-AUG-1989 11:57
-< I won't join in the unemployment line over this one. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a comment on the poll itself and not the issue -- In this age when
many people consider DEC as having too many employees, or at least too many with
the wrong skillset, I'm amazed that so many of the negative respondants in here,
a group perhaps generalized as being afraid of what The Company might do with
information in the wrong hands, is publicly telling the whole company what would
make them leave. Somewhat of a contradiction, I'd say.
-craig
p.s. I did have to have a urine test done this past spring for a Life Insurance
application. No big deal -- all it did was prove exactly what I put down on
the application and kept me in the lowest-premium category.
|
716.515 | | HAZEL::LEFEBVRE | Hopelessly Obscure | Thu Aug 10 1989 14:34 | 66 |
| < Note 716.513 by NITTY::COHEN "What a wonderful peice of work is man..." >
> Re: 716.501
>
>--> The inference of your response is frightening, and to be perfectly
>--> blunt, I'm offended.
>
> There was no offense meant by my reply. I was just stating my opinion.
> That I do not believe that this is a Right to Privacy Issue. I respect
> your opinion and would "Fight for your right to have it and communicate
> it" but I do not have to agree with it. AND DON'T.
How can it NOT be a Right to Privacy issue? If someone wants to
determine what I'm doing during my free time, it IS an invasion
of my privacy.
But it goes beyond that. Not only does the scenario in 883 invade
my privacy, it presumes I'm guilty and it tells me that the company
doesn't trust me when I say that I don't take drugs.
>--> If so, you owe several dozen fellow employees who voiced their
>--> collective and individual concern over the invasion of their privacy,
>--> and the potential violation of their constitutional rights, a *huge*
>--> apology.
>
> If you were to follow the line of reasoning that says drug testing
> is not an invasion of your privacy then the only people who need be
> concerned by the testing are the active drug users. This is the way I look
> at it. I do not feel that testing something I am going to freely discard
> and no longer wish any claim to is an invasion.
I don't follow your line of reasoning, therefore I believe your
argument to be irrelevant. If the results of this testing can be
used to incriminate you and to jeopardize your career growth potential,
it shouldn't matter whether or not they're testing something that
you "would freely discard".
> Part of the problem is that we have a very serious problem in the US,
> Drugs, and we need to find some way of determining the sellers and users
> of drugs so that we can help them. Lets not be naive; society does
> things all the time to protect itself and help its citizens even if they
> do not ask for, or wish for help.
That does not make it right.
Society does not need police state tactics to verify that law-abiding,
people (in this case, Digital employees) are telling the truth when
they say they are not using drugs.
> Now I will agree that this may not work perfectly because of the
> fallibility of the test, but I believe that this sends a message out
> that we as a society (and as Digital) find drug using abhorrent and
> will not tolerate it. I also believe that we as a country should be
> doing more proactive measures to stop drugs, such as education, more
> law enforcement to stop the trafficers and more clinics/aid to help
> people who are addicted.
I believe it sends the message that "we, as society, do not trust
you, and that we will test you against your will to make sure you
are telling the truth."
|
716.516 | Now we must conduct random searches of your home, you might be a thief. | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Aug 10 1989 16:04 | 57 |
|
> If you were to follow the line of reasoning that says drug testing
> is not an invasion of your privacy then the only people who need be
> concerned by the testing are the active drug users. This is the way I look
> at it. I do not feel that testing something I am going to freely discard
> and no longer wish any claim to is an invasion.
According to this line of reasoning, if you are not a thief and have not been
stealing DEC property then you should have no objection to DEC and or the
government conducting random searches of your home. Certainly your body is
more inviolate than your home. Enough is enough.. this is where we
draw the line.
> Part of the problem is that we have a very serious problem in the US,
> Drugs, and we need to find some way of determining the sellers and users
> of drugs so that we can help them. Lets not be naive; society does
> things all the time to protect itself and help its citizens even if they
> do not ask for, or wish for help.
I'm not convinced that drugs really are a serious problem in society. Most
of the violence comes from drug laws not drugs. If drugs were not illegal
than there would be no profit and no violence. Its possible that drugs are
being used an an excuse to strip away the very rights we are discussing here
now. Some people will self destruct with drugs but those people will
always find a way to self destruct if thats what they want to do.
The entire country should not trade its freedom to protect those few
people who choose to self destruct.
> I also believe that we as a country should be
> doing more proactive measures to stop drugs, such as education, more
> law enforcement to stop the trafficers and more clinics/aid to help
> people who are addicted.
With all of the money and attention focused on the drug war today, with
the borders sealed, I cannot believe that drugs are continuing to come into
the country without the knowledge and/or assistance of government. If cocaine
was brought into the country in government planes (as was disclosed in the
Iran/Contra hearings) and then sold to provide money for the Contra's war
then the government has a history of drug dealing for its own purposes.
The entire drug situation could conceivably have been developed for just
the purpose of stripping us of the rights granted us by the Bill of Rights
and Declaration of Independence.
Some of us will never submit to any intrusive invasion of privacy. If it
means that we cannot work then we will not be the only ones to suffer.
It is our tax money that supports the governments drug war and Savings
and Loan bailout and HUD handouts. Perhaps the system can survive
without us and perhaps it can't.... but the government has at least as
much to lose as we do in this.
Don't think that we will be starved into submission (which is what this
is all about really). We will find our own ways to survive. Of course,
the resentment will never go away. Bush may find his thousand points of
light burning brightly underneath him.
Mary
|
716.517 | I'll stand up for yours - if you'll stand up for mine | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | Beer isn't just for breakfast anymore! | Thu Aug 10 1989 16:08 | 61 |
| Okay, let's examine some issues here...
Re .515
�But it goes beyond that. Not only does the scenario in 883 invade
�my privacy, it presumes I'm guilty and it tells me that the company
�doesn't trust me when I say that I don't take drugs.
First. A drug testing policy implies that there is a suspicion that
the testee is a user of drugs (illegal variety), and that to prove
this suspicion the person in question must submit to a testing of
their bodily fluids.
This is indeed a presumption of guilt, with or without provocation,
and the testee must consent to use the results of a test (with the
unsurity of the qualifications of the testing facilatator) as evidence
to prove their innocence. [In my book this is a violation of trust]
Re .513
�Part of the problem is that we have a very serious problem in the US,
�Drugs, and we need to find some way of determining the sellers and users
�of drugs so that we can help them. Lets not be naive; society does
�things all the time to protect itself and help its citizens even if they
�do not ask for, or wish for help.
The law enforcement agencies are not interested in "helping" sellers
and users - their only concern is to throw them in jail (and throw away
the key), to get them off the streets. It's public relations and
continued funding for police power expansion.
re .515 (again)
�Society does not need police state tactics to verify that law-abiding,
�people (in this case, Digital employees) are telling the truth when
�they say they are not using drugs.
What separates the US of A, from say the communist countries, when
cooperation can only be achieved through police power and conformed
compliance??
To force a person to prove their innocence - without having been
charged with a crime - is dead wrong.
If I may take literary licence here... Many of us are concerned that
our government is taking action that is in violation of Bill of Rights.
History repeats itself once again: Wasn't it Sen. Joeseph McCarthy who
went on a witchunt for communists, in the 1950's, only to find very
little evidence of them - and destroying many people in his path??
How many people remember from the Irangate hearings a plan by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) that sought the authority to
"suspend" all constitution rights "in a time of a 'national emergency'"??
Are we doomed to repeat history again and again until we finally
learn from it?? Or will we finally wake up and "do the right thing"
to solve this problem once, and for all.
I wonder what Andrew Jackson would say if he were alive today...
Jim_who_is_disillusioned_with_this_mess
|
716.518 | | NITTY::COHEN | What a wonderful peice of work is man... | Thu Aug 10 1989 16:28 | 13 |
| Re: 716.501
I am NOT accusing anyone of being a drug user. And I appologize for the
misunderstanding. Quite possibly the wording of my reply was too harsh.
There was no offense meant by my reply. I was just stating my opinion.
That I do not believe that this is a Right to Privacy Issue or if it is
it is a very minor one compared to the problem. I respect your opinion and
would "Fight for your right to have it and communicate it" but I do not
have to agree with it. AND DON'T.
Thanks
tac
|
716.519 | personal experience of a drug test | CRONIC::PETERSON | | Thu Aug 10 1989 17:42 | 23 |
| I have hit a frustration level reading back and forth why and why not
drug testing. I will speak from experience. 1976 U.S. Navy, I
had been in the Navy for five years and I was in a 20 wk comm school
in San Diego. At that time Drug testing was happening randomly
throughout the military. Our class was called out on afternoon to
go to the admin building where we were met by an officer and corpmen
for drug testing/urine samples. I had recently burnt my foot and was
taking codine for pain. I told the corpmen I had been taking medication
for my foot he said no problem he would mark it down on the list.
About a week later I got called out of class (publicly (sp) ) to go
see the shrink my drug test came back positive. Feeling like the world
had just caved in, I went for the visit as I arrived I was told they
don't see drug addicts until later in the day. Finally got to see the
shrink and had one hassle trying to explain the situation. I finally
got it resolved. Fortunately it was only a temporary duty station for
me and I could move on.
My question, could this happen in the private sector ? I think so.
Could one recover a reputation as quick as it was destroyed ? Doubtful
Mike
|
716.520 | Lawyers, Drugs, and Money! | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | Beer isn't just for breakfast anymore! | Thu Aug 10 1989 18:43 | 22 |
| �My question, could this happen in the private sector ? I think so.
�Could one recover a reputation as quick as it was destroyed ? Doubtful
I think that in this litigious society, that a situation were a
false positive caused harm to a persons reputation, that a lawyer
would be involved very quickly. And it would cost a company dearly
in megabucks.
This brings to light a interesting legal and economic issue: If
false positives became prevalent, and lawsuits cost <mumble> mucho
bucks - would <mumble> then be inclined to drop business that required
proof of a drugfree workplace??
And what of the Government...if companies couldn't afford the liability
and dropped out of that business - would the gov. admit defeat and
quietly drop/change their policy??
-Jp
<mumble> = "company of your choice"
|
716.521 | United We Stand | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Thu Aug 10 1989 19:06 | 14 |
| The drug testing survey note asked people what effect their leaving
would have on the group, and most responses have been of the "they'd
survive without me" type. While this is probably true for any single
individual, if 50% (to pick a random number) of the engineering force
were to leave because of drug testing, it would have a severe (and
possibly fatal) effect on the company. In a way, this is very similar
to civil disobedience: any 1 or 100, or 1000 people can be thrown
in jail, but what do you do when all the jails are full?
If enough of us refuse to accept this infringement on our civil
liberties, we CAN force DEC out of this course of action.
Steve
|
716.522 | who'll cross the line first? | WORDS::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Thu Aug 10 1989 22:05 | 6 |
| re .521 What effect? Talk is cheap. When the rubber meets
the road, how many of those who said they'd leave would accually
hit the road? No don't take another survey. Lip [or in this case
finger] service is cheap and hard to measure without it happening.
#ed
|
716.523 | Drug Testing=McCarthyism?! | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Aug 10 1989 22:35 | 53 |
| Re: [.516 (Mary Stanley)]:
>>With all of the money and attention focused on the drug war today, with
>>the borders sealed, I cannot believe that drugs are continuing to come
>>into the country without the knowledge and/or assistance of government. If
>>cocaine was brought into the country in government planes (as was
>>disclosed in the Iran/Contra hearings) and then sold to provide money
>>for the Contra's war then the government has a history of drug dealing
>>for its own purposes. The entire drug situation could conceivably have
>>been developed for just the purpose of stripping us of the rights
>>granted us by the Bill of Rights and Declaration of Independence.
Wow.
I was tempted to label this as paranoid claptrap, but there are true
statements and historical precedents here. It's very heard to "seal"
the thousands of miles of borders of the United States, which include
oceans, deserts, and mountains. Remember, we have no armed or defended
borders. Russia comes much closer to having a "sealed" border, and
commercial airliners have flown directly into Soviet airspace and gone
for literally hours undetected. Small boats approaching the shore, and
small aircraft low to the ground, are apparently almost impossible to
detect on radar. While I know for a fact that the government KNOWS
drugs are coming in to this country, I find it hard to believe the
government is ASSISTING the drug traffickers. I say this despite
Iran-Contra, and despite what the British did to the Chinese.
Re: later replies:
I suppose, as a nation, we have demonstrated that we cannot be trusted.
But still I don't react the same way some do to the notion that drug
testing says we're not trustworthy. Is that how you reacted when you
interviewed here, and the hiring manager asked you about your
education: "Yes, I went to State U.! Don't you trust me?" Is that how
you reacted when the Registry of Motor Vehicles started your eye test:
"I said I could see! Don't you trust me?" I could go on, but you get
the point. Hey, our coffee club at work is losing a lot of money.
I was at a party once where the host ran out of food and passed a hat;
someone stole the hat! (I'm serious.) Most people are trustworthy;
some are not. The ones who aren't screw it up for the rest of us.
Re: a reply about the impact of engineers leaving]:
Yes, if 50% (to use your "random" number) of the engineers left, it
would have a serious impact on the company. But if a plausible,
realistic, meaningful, common-sense, non-hyperbolic, unexaggerated
number ACTUALLY left--like, say, one half of one percent, which I
estimate at 300 engineers--no, why fool around?--if one-half of one
percent of the WORKFORCE summarily left the company, which would be
about 625 people--then I think Digital would survive.
(If 625 people left, I, for one, would be astounded. Just my opinion.)
|
716.524 | People leaving isn't the real damage | MARVIN::HARNEY | Stay Cool, But Care | Fri Aug 11 1989 06:08 | 25 |
| More fiendish advocacy Steve? :-)
Anyway, it seems to me to miss a lot of the point if the argument
comes down to "Well, not that many people will REALLY leave, so it's
not going to damage the company SO much..." as a few folk have
suggested in the last couple of replies.
So far as I can tell from the replies to the would you/wouldn't you
note, a large majority are prepared to say they wouldn't take drug
tests and would leave if it came to the crunch. It would seem to me
the worst damage you could do to the company would be to have a policy
that forced a lot of people to do something they clearly feel strongly
they shouldn't have to do.
These folks might still be in the company at the end of the day, but
what kind of morale have they got left? What would be their attitude
towards a company that forced that on them? What would be left of the
trust between the people and the company? What left of the feeling
that there are common goals we're all pulling towards?
It's not exactly a recipe for success or any kind of preparation to
face the "challenge of the 90's".
Mick
|
716.525 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Aug 11 1989 09:10 | 13 |
| Re .522:
> When the rubber meets the road, how many of those who said they'd
> leave would accually hit the road?
I've been in contact with a person at Texas Instruments. Since TI
announced they would have drug testing for all employees, people have
left, including some senior engineers who had been with the company for
15 years, etc. I'm sure when the tests actually start, even more
people will leave.
-- edp
|
716.526 | pay to the order of *ME*... | REGENT::LEVINE | | Fri Aug 11 1989 09:28 | 28 |
| (speaking as a noter and not a moderator at this moment)
I dont think that ANY number of people leaving would put DIGITAL
out of business or even seriously slow down over-all productivity.
And, while I cant speak for anyone else, if I left, it would be
in order to remain true to my beliefs about what being an *American
really means, NOT to spite or damage Digital. Digital has provided
me with a tremendous amount of training and experience, for which
Im very grateful.
My basenote in 883 was NOT intended to coerce the "policy makers"
into backing down. I'm quite sure that they fully realized that
some people would submit gladly,some would leave, others would
be angry and stay, and that employee perception of "DEC-culture"
would necessarily change.
(I attended a lecture last year at the mill in which a high ranking
personnel-consultant told us that "DEC-culture" would have to
change if Digital were going to survive in the '90s. Maybe this
is PART 1.)
This has little to do with morality, politics, or a "war" on
anything. It has to do with a three million dollar contract
NOW and others like it thereafter. I have to admit that if the
government was going to make the $3M check out to ME, I'd
probably feel better about filling the cup for them.
|
716.527 | trust: a bilateral condition | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Aug 11 1989 09:34 | 38 |
| I have found Digital a wonderful place to work: a good environment
with intelligent co-workers, challenging assignments, supportive
management and fantastic toys. The pay isn't bad either, but it's not
the most important thing: I wouldn't leave for a poorer environment
for a 50% raise.
However, mandatory drug testing, which I see as a violation of trust as
much as an invasion of privacy, changes that. George Schultz, former
U.S. Secretary of State, was once asked on national television what he
would do if he were asked to take a lie detector test. He tried to
avoid answering, but the reporters pressured him, so he responded that
he would take the test, and immediately resign. He didn't say why, but
it's easy to guess: lack of trust.
George Schultz wouldn't have any trouble getting another job, so his
position was credible. I wouldn't have any trouble getting another job
either, since I've been in the computer business since 1964, and have
experience on a variety of IBM and DEC systems, plus a few others.
Indeed, I suspect that most DEC software engineers wouldn't have any
trouble getting a job with a DEC customer, probably at a significant
increase in pay. It used to be said that if you walked down a street
in Silicon Valley holding up a sign saying "VAX experience", people
would come rushing out of the buildings to offer you a job. That may
no longer be true, but I'm sure that DEC software engineers are highly
respected among DEC customers.
I can't speak for other areas than Software Engineering, because I've
never worked in any other capacity for DEC.
I feel sure that management is aware that DEC software engineers (at
least) stay because of the good environment that I referred to at the
top of this response. I feel confident that they will do all in their
power to maintain that good environment. If that means providing an
alternative short of resignation for those who refuse to take drug
tests, they'll provide it. In essence, I have confidence that
management will find a way to avoid my having to choose between taking
a drug test and resignation.
John Sauter
|
716.528 | Top Executives are exempt | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Fri Aug 11 1989 09:39 | 9 |
| RE: .526
> I have to admit that if the government was going to make the $3M check out
> to ME, I'd probably feel better about filling the cup for them.
However, the way drug tests are conducted the person receiving the check
and the person signing for it are NEVER subjected to one.
- Vikas
|
716.529 | Do we have leaders or power merchants? | MANFAC::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Fri Aug 11 1989 10:05 | 9 |
| As we have all heard, the US Armed Forces have been doing testing for some
time. My question is have the President, Cabinet Officers, Joint Chiefs,
Congress, and Congressional staffs been tested?? My feeling is that if
this is a "war", then all should participate. One of the things that I
like about Mayor Young of Detroit is that he was the first one tested when
he made the police department do testing. While I disagree with his
decision to do testing, at least he was a leader.
Lee G.
|
716.530 | Rose colored glasses | DLOACT::RESENDE | We never criticize the competition directly. | Fri Aug 11 1989 13:45 | 16 |
| Re: .514
>p.s. I did have to have a urine test done this past spring for a Life Insurance
>application. No big deal -- all it did was prove exactly what I put down on
>the application and kept me in the lowest-premium category.
No big deal indeed!
Did you have to produce your sample under the watchful eyes of an enforcer?
Were you subject to loss of employment due to a false positive or could you try
another insurance company?
This is NOT a similar situation in my book!
Steve
|
716.531 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Wanna work in Wagga Wagga N.S.W. | Fri Aug 11 1989 13:50 | 12 |
| > < Note 716.522 by WORDS::BADGER "One Happy camper ;-)" >
> -< who'll cross the line first? >-
> Talk is cheap. When the rubber meets the road, how many of those
> who said they'd leave would accually hit the road?
Let's see.. I have a problem with lack of trust on DEC's part re
drug testing. Then YOU don't believe I'm telling the truth about
my intent to leave if/when widespread drug testing is instituted.
Hard to believe ! ;-)
karl
|
716.532 | Since you asked, let me finish the story... | CRAIG::YANKES | | Fri Aug 11 1989 14:07 | 33 |
|
Re: .530
>Did you have to produce your sample under the watchful eyes of the enforcer?
Well, not really since the insurance agent was in our diningroom and I
was in the bathroom. So?
>Were you subject to loss of employment due to a false positive or could you try
>another insurance company?
No to the first, but a "not really" to the second. Insurance companies
do swap medical information, so going to another company does not mean it will
be hidden. However, the insurance company has reasonable policies governing
second (or third or fourth...) tests to negate *anything* their tests come up
with. My wife's test, for example, revealed elevated liver enzymes that could
point to some real nasty problems. A "false positive"? No!!! It was quite
real and we were *thankful* (to say the least) to have it identified. We went
to our doctor for more tests (which confirmed the insurance company's tests)
and determined that the cause was not a problem. A letter from our doctor
describing a clean bill of health was sent and the insurance coverage was
approved. (And, incidently, the insurance company doesn't report any test
results that have been explained.)
So let me change my "no big deal" statement -- it *was* a big deal
since it identified a possible life-threatening problem with my wife's liver.
Of course, I could have always stuck to my perceived "freedoms" and,
besides not getting the insurance coverage that my family needs, risked my
wife's life if it really was something. I suspect we differ on priorities.
-craig
|
716.533 | | MU::PORTER | still life with prawn cocktail | Fri Aug 11 1989 14:18 | 4 |
| Hey, if all this drug-testing is part of a "war on drugs", I guess
I'm exempt from the call-up -- I'm not a citizen!
Good news for me, I guess.
|
716.534 | How important is "innocence"? | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Aug 11 1989 21:57 | 4 |
|
"A lot of people don't realize how important innocence is to innocent
people."
|
716.535 | | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Sat Aug 12 1989 11:44 | 6 |
| > "A lot of people don't realize how important innocence is to innocent
> people."
So what's that supposed to mean?
Pat
|
716.536 | | THEPIC::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Sat Aug 12 1989 14:02 | 12 |
| > "A lot of people don't realize how important innocence is to innocent
> people."
>> So what's that supposed to mean?
Pat,
I think that is in reference to several of the earlier replies that say
basically, "Only people with something to hide oppose drug testing".
Bob
|
716.537 | background... | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Dictated, but not read. | Sun Aug 13 1989 09:02 | 5 |
| That's a quote from the movie Cry in the Dark which depicts the story
of a family whose baby was carried off and killed by a dingo in
Australia. It took years for them to clear the mother of wrongdoing.
Marge
|
716.538 | | DLOACT::RESENDE | We never criticize the competition directly. | Sun Aug 13 1989 12:05 | 52 |
| RE: .732
>>Did you have to produce your sample under the watchful eyes of the enforcer?
>
> Well, not really since the insurance agent was in our diningroom and I
>was in the bathroom. So?
So? Well, as I understand it, drug testing as being considered means you will
have an audience present for the sample production.
Why? Because you are NOT TRUSTED. Simple. Period.
There is little similarity between the two scenarios.
> Of course, I could have always stuck to my perceived "freedoms" and,
>besides not getting the insurance coverage that my family needs, risked my
>wife's life if it really was something. I suspect we differ on priorities.
Don't get me wrong. I'm *very happy* that you were able to early diagnose and
address a medical problem and that your family's health was improved as a
result. If I put myself in your shoes, I believe I can see how you feel since
this has had a direct benefit on a loved one.
However, I can't follow the line of reasoning that this example "justifies"
mandatory drug testing. Following that logic (that saving lives justifies it),
we would not have fought in wars (admittedly a STUPID activity anyway!) since we
could have preserved thousands of lives by not doing so (here come the flames, I
can see it now).
Just yesterday morning on NPR, Morning Edition carried a story about companies
that are now beginning to perform genetic predisposition tests prior to
employment to identify those with high-potential for expensive medical benefits
coverage, thus barring them as candidates for jobs, regardless of
qualifications, because they MIGHT someday require expensive medical care.
That's a related issue.
I think there is a bigger issue at hand, that of addressing proper and improper
invasions of privacy. It's sad that there is no constitutional right to
privacy, perhaps an oversight of the founding fathers who never could have
anticipated this problem -- they likely had much more privacy than we still
have managed to retain, computers notwithstanding.
I think our priorities are not all that different. We all have families. And
we're citizens of one or another country. And we're employees. And sometimes
our priorities are in conflict. Mandatory drug testing brings personal rights,
employer interests, and national policy all into conflict. Thus, the active
discussion here. With no easy answers, I'm afraid. I respect your right to
disagree. I wish the world were a simpler place with easy answers ... but I
guess that would be boring! :-{
Steve
|
716.539 | Relevent precedent? | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Sun Aug 13 1989 19:49 | 54 |
| I don't know if you would consider this a relevent precedent, but since
it reflects the decision of a Federal judge, and on a semi-related
topic, I thought the audience might find it interesting:
Copied without permission from the St. Petersburg Times, August 11,
1989:
TAMPA -- A federal judge has ordered the city of Tampa to rehire
and give back pay to three water department workers fired in 1987 as a
result of unconstitutional drug tests.
Wendell Pelley, William E. Hensel and William C. Taylor should be
reinstated, according to an order signed Thursday by U.S. District
Judge William Castagna.
Castagna also gave the workers 20 days to submit records of back
pay, minus wages they may have earned at other jobs in the interim.
Castagna then will rule on the amount of back pay due each man.
Another employee, Robert F. Klein, also was subject to the February
1987 drug tests that later were found unconstitutional. He was not
fired but was required to use up 40 hours of sick leave to attend a
drug rehabilitation program. Castagna's order requires the city to
restore the sick leave and repay Klein the $237 he paid to attend the
program.
"To the extent they got reinstated, we're happy about that," said
James A. Sheehan, attorney for the four men. "That issue was really
at the heart of our case. Otherwise, if they had a constitutional
right violated, and the city could still fire them, what kind of right
is it?"
Thomas Gonzalez, a private attorney who defended the city in the
lawsuit, said, "We still feel like we did the right thing. We don't
want drugs in the workplace."
The four men were among eight Tampa Water Department employees who
sued the city in March, 1987, the first suit to challenge Tampa's drug
testing policy. Four of the men who had not been fired dropped out of
the suit after the city paid their attorneys' fees.
Tampa does not permit random testing but requires certain workers
to submit to urinalysis if there is a "reasonable suspicion" that they
abused drugs or alcohol.
On Feb. 16, 1987, however, all 23 employees at the Morris Street
Bridge Plant were met by city officials who required the workers to
sign forms consenting to urinalysis. Armed police then took the
workers to St. Joseph's Hospital for testing.
Several who tested positive were required to enter the city's
rehabilitation program and submit to further, random testing.
Taylor failed a second test and was fired. Hensel was fired in
April 1987 after he refused to take a second test. His lawyer argued
that it was unfair to require the second test when the legality of the
first test was still undetermined.
Pelley, because he had tested positive in the fall of 1986, was
fired after the positive results of the Feb. 16, 1987, test.
Because of those second test results, the city opposed reinstating
the men. But Castagna ruled that Taylor and Hensel would not have
been in the rehabilitation program -- and subject to a second test --
except for the unconstitutional test on Feb 16.
|
716.540 | The price of dealing with the U.S.A. | ATLV5::TUCKER_D | That's a hell of a note! | Mon Aug 14 1989 14:47 | 17 |
| It hasn't been touched on very heavily here what might also come to pass after
the drug testing has been accepted. A friend works for Lockheed which makes
most of it's money from government contracts. He's upset because of the latest
controls that the U.S. are imposing on Lockheed. The government now monitors
the amount that Lockheed spends on employee insurance so that it is not above
the industry norms thereby costing taxpayers more. He says, starting this fall,
company payments for insurance will be approximately nill. Not only that,
*but*, the government also monitors Lockheed employee *salaries* for the same
reason. Raises are meager and few.
At least this way, companies accepting government contracts don't have to
be officially nationalized. This is the price paid for government contracts.
Regards,
David Tucker @ato
|
716.541 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Aug 14 1989 15:35 | 5 |
| This happens when you take on "cost plus" contracts.
I hope Digital never agrees to a "cost plus" contract.
/john
|
716.542 | How Many? | SCAFST::RITZ | The Power of Notes | Mon Aug 14 1989 19:16 | 6 |
| Re. earlier note questioning how many people would actually leave
and how many are just paying lip service? I've a better question:
How many would not only leave but be willing to stand up and fight
to protect the freedoms that many a good man died for in the past?
Ted
|
716.543 | The road is long, and this is but the first step. | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Aug 14 1989 22:54 | 19 |
| re: .542 How many brave souls ...
I think that there aren't really that many who would walk away from a
good job on the first wave of drug testing. But some will finally get
the message when a friend or co-worker gets zapped, especially if it's
under suspicious circumstances (zappee happens to be on the manager's
sh*t list, political reasons, etc). And the message will come through
loud and clear when things like health insurance surcharges for those
employees whose urine samples happen to reveal other problems, like
incipient diabetes, or prostate problems, or whatever. Even now
certain firms are talking about genetic screening of new employees to
eliminate those with possibilities of genetically-linked diseases like
sickle-cell anemia.
So much for "created equal" and "inalienable rights" ...
Geoff
|
716.544 | | MU::PORTER | still life with prawn cocktail | Wed Aug 16 1989 01:13 | 3 |
| Is .542 advocating physical resistance against the drug-testers?
:-)
|
716.545 | Don't have to Push & Shove | SCAFST::RITZ | The Power of Notes | Thu Aug 17 1989 11:14 | 6 |
| Not advocating physical resistance or violence, Most "battles" for
rights and defense of The Constitution, Bill of Rights, etc. happen
in the courtroom today. However, the second admendment does give
me right to bear arms to protect these rights from overaggresive,
out of control zealots sp?
Ted
|
716.546 | | WMOIS::FARHADI | | Sat Aug 19 1989 11:48 | 101 |
| NAME: Paul Henrion
FUNC: LAW
TEL: 223-5950
Subject: Federal Highway Admin. - Drug Testing
***********************************************
THIS MEMO IS FROM JOHN GUNTHER AND PAUL HENRION
***********************************************
This is to alert you to the requirements of a new Department of
Transportation, Federal Highway Administration regulation requiring drug
testing and education for certain of Digital's vehicle drivers, and to
request that you assign individuals in your organization the
responsibility for establishing a compliance program and obtaining
Executive Committee approval for it.
The regulation by its terms requires Digital, effective December 21,
1989, to implement:
A drug testing program for covered drivers (see below) consisting of
random, reasonable cause, pre-employment, biennial and post-accident
testing;
2. An EAP program consisting primarily of driver and supervisory
training;
3. An after-care program, including follow-up testing for drivers who
return-to-work after a positive test;
4. A record keeping system; and
5. A process for taking appropriate employment action for positive test
results.
Affected personnel are employee drivers or certain contract drivers of
vehicles in U.S. interstate commerce: weighing in excess of 26,000 lbs;
or carrying over 15 passengers including the driver; or carrying
hazardous materials requiring placarding. Interstate commerce is broadly
defined in the regulation. While we are still reviewing the intended
it is reasonably clear that at least Canada and Mexico will be
affected, and probably all U.S. Territories and Possessions, eg. Puerto
Rico.
Manufacturing will need to establish a compliance program, which will
work with the existing Corporate design groups (see attached) and obtain
Executive Committee approval per the new Personnel Policy. Milagros
Tomei, Corporate Distribution Personnel Manager, and Jim Williams, U.S.
DOT Compliance Manager have already begun meeting with the Corporate
groups to begin driving DOT implementation.
As indicated above, the effective date for the program per the regulation
is December 21, 1989. We have heard some rumors that DOT may delay this,
but a DOT official indicated today that there are no plans to do so.
There is also the question of the constitutionality of random and
post-accident testing, which is being reviewed in the courts. We
recommend at this time, however, that the compliance effort proceed
assuming the current regulation sets forth the requirements.
Please let us know what individuals you have assigned the responsibility
establishing the compliance program and obtaining Executive Committee
approval. We look forward to supporting the compliance effort.
Regards,
BACKGROUND
ON
DIGITAL'S MANAGEMENT OF
DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE REQUIREMENTS
The Company has been working on an overall drug program for many years,
and specifically reviewing the issue of drug testing for the last two
years, primarily in response to customer requests. Last fall the
Drug-Free Workplace Act and Department of Defense Drug-Free Workforce
Regulation became law. Certain programmatic activities are required of
U.S. government contractors including limited drug testing on classified
contracts.
Executive Committee chartered Corporate Employee Relations and the
Government Systems Group to design and implement a compliance plan to
avoid the loss of U.S. government business. The design work is being
carried on by several task forces established by Erline Belton, Corporate
Employee Relations Manager, and Dave Burke, Government Policy Manager.
The Policy task force managed by John Doherty, Personnel Policy Manager,
after receiving Executive Committee approval published a new U.S. policy
in May, 1989, which indicates that any Digital drug testing program must
be approved by the Executive Committee. Additionally, there is a drug
testing task force managed by Dr. Ross Myerson of Health Services, which
is in the process of contracting with external vendors for drug testing
services. The EAP task force is managed by Bruce Davidson, Corporate EAP
Manager, and is in the process of creating an Employee Awareness Program
including supervisor and employee training. Finally, the GSG
Implementation Task Force is chaired jointly by Cyndi Bloom, U.S. Field
ER Manager and Dave Burke, and will implement the GSG processes across
the company.
|
716.547 | The wedge gets thicker | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Sun Aug 20 1989 00:20 | 28 |
| Re .-1
Wow. This is scary. The wedge gets thicker. Before it was the
government saying:
'You have to do drug testing if you want to do business with us'
Now it is:
'You have to do drug testing because if you don't you'll be breaking
some DOT regulation, ie you WILL BE BREAKING THE LAW'
What I ask is HOW THE HELL CAN THIS BE CONSTITUTIONAL. Isn't the US
Bill of Rights worth the paper it is written on? Maybe my own countries
constitution (the British one) is better after all, even though it is
unwritten.
I really feel for our drivers who will now be subject to random
searches of their bodily fluids. Where will it end? I personally
don't like people who are not too accurate when they piss in the
bog. But I wouldn't dream of supporting a law that mandated the
installation of close circuit television cameras in every loo.
Would you? This is no different than dug testing, they are both
unwarranted invasions of privacy.
Dave
|
716.550 | You have no rights in this farcical drug-war | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Mon Aug 21 1989 13:07 | 9 |
| To see how far hysteria has gone and common-sense and freedom have been lost;
A law was just passed giving federal drug agents the "right" to
shoot-down any aircraft *SUSPECTED* of being involved in drug-trade.
The death penalty for suspicion of commiting a crime.
Somebody asked if a noter was suggesting violence against the testors
Self-defence against a government run amok is more like it.
|
716.551 | Neither drugs nor government are the problem | STAR::ROBERT | | Mon Aug 21 1989 13:17 | 23 |
| > The death penalty for suspicion of commiting a crime.
So, what's new? The police have always had limited rights to shoot
at fleeing suspects. Debating whether it's appropriate for aircraft
that refuse to comply with "landing" orders (I'm sure that applies)
and where probable cause exists is interesting, but the underlying
theory isn't anything new. The penalty is not for suspicion, but
rather for aggravated disobedience of a law officer's legal orders
under circumstances adjudged to be of serious potential consequence
to the public welfare.
That might be a bad judgement, but it's not a new theory of law.
I agree that society's response to the symptom of "drug abuse" is
hysterical (alcohol and nicotine remain the overwhelmingly more
directly damaging drugs), but the illness behind the symptom is
quite serious.
Government, like any management structure, inexhorably responds
to public perceptions and bottom lines. Sometimes well, sometimes
not, rarely optimally.
- greg
|
716.552 | back to the subject as it relates to Digital please | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred . | Mon Aug 21 1989 13:36 | 4 |
| RE: last two. Let's keep to the subject as it relates to how
Digital does business shall we? Thanks.
Alfred
|
716.553 | ask not for whom the bell tolls... | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Aug 21 1989 16:31 | 16 |
| I don't drive a truck for Digital, but if I did I would be extremely
annoyed at this situation. The courts are reviewing whether or not
tests under certain circumstances are constitutional, but that isn't
important---Digital is going to conform nonetheless. That seems like
what is arguably a constitutional right is being violated.
The memo didn't say what would happen to truck drivers who refused
to submit. I hope that an effort will be made to find some other
place for them in Digital. I hope the "head-count freeze" rules
will be relaxed for employees who must leave their current department
because they refuse to take a drug test.
For all of you who are not Digital truck drivers, remember that if DOT
can do it to truck drivers, other departments can do it to other
occupations. Whatever you do for Digital, you may be next.
John Sauter
|
716.554 | Get real, truck drivers don't have access to DIGITAL file | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Aug 21 1989 18:12 | 6 |
| RE: .553
To all digital employees:- If you are a truck driver for digital and
reading this conference, please raise your hand.
- Vikas
|
716.555 | ... the relevance | STAR::ROBERT | | Tue Aug 22 1989 02:14 | 64 |
| re: .52
My apologies. I thought the relevance was more obvious. On re-reading
I saw it was not.
The constitutuion has never provided us with absolute privacy; only
with a promise of balancing the right of privacy against other needs.
Hence, I do not find the arguments that drug testing is automatically
anathema to the constitution compelling. If drug use is perceived as
a clear and present danger to society then congress will pass laws to
contain that risk, law enforcement will enforce them, and the courts
absent better alternatives will almost certainly permit them.
That's about the situation today vis-a-vis drug testing and Digital.
It's safe to assume Digital will comply with the law until and unless
it is overturned. Digital might lobby for a change, but is unlikely
to indulge in civil disobedience.
[These are predictions --- not comments on what might be right or wrong.]
So, the relevance to Digital is this:
Could drug and alcohol use within Digital constitute
a serious threat to society? While I lean toward a
"no" answer, it is getting harder to be really sure
about this, especially as our products play a greater
and greater role in the maintenance and protection of
our society (whether we like it or not).
If the answer is "yes", then how shall we address it?
"Just say no" is a cute answer --- but it isn't really
an answer at all is it?
Relying upon degraded performance to occur in time for
preemptive action (that is, before serious damage occurs)
is worrisome; our society provides ample training in
drug-detection avoidance even before high-school. Our
taboos and stigmas hide it futher. And our national
tolerance for mind-altering substances, conditioned by
the fabled "failure" of prohibition, only make it worse.
There are several other ways in which we are abdicating
our power through irresponsibility and denial.
The problem isn't going to go away by itself. What we are seeing
is only the smallest tip of the iceberg in terms of a governmental
and societal response.
Constantly falling back on tired constitutional arguments is
dangerously naive. This is not to say that the guarantees of
the constituition should be capriciously laid aside; but it is
equally irresponsible to believe they are inviolate dogma.
I can't remember the quote --- something like:
The price of freedom is constant vigilance
It probably referred to watching the perimeter originally, but it
can apply within as well. Taken to an extreme it leads to totalitarianism,
but totally ignored it lead to the fall of the Roman Empire. Forgive
the melodrama, but drugs are not a joke.
- greg
|
716.556 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Aug 22 1989 08:21 | 10 |
| re: .554
Don't be too sure that no Digital truck drivers read this conference.
Anyhow, my main point was that Digital truck drivers are no more
deserving of unreasonable searchs than Digital computer programmers.
re: .555---"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance" brings to mind
another quotation: "The tree of liberty must be watered by the blood
of patriots". I think "just say no" is a fine answer.
John Sauter
|
716.557 | How 'bout letting the AFL-CIO worry about it? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Aug 22 1989 09:24 | 30 |
| Somewhat (although not directly) along the lines of John Sauter's
comments in .553, I wonder what would happen in the following
circumstances? If any of you can help with facts on the background
figures relative to this it might be useful.
Approximately how many drivers do you suppose DEC has who are in
volved in interstate trucking, transport of loads in excess of
26,000 pounds, transport of more than 15 poassengers, and/or
transport of hazardous materials? I know there is some number of
DEC employees involved in these activities, but I don't know
the magnitude of that number. Anyway, what if all of them were
able to be assigned to other driving (or perhaps non-driving)
duties and DEC were to make arrangements, before the DOT regulations
go into effect in December, to ensure that all trucking under
the categories above (I believe they were the ones specified by
the DOT), were to be handled NOT be DEC employee drivers, but
rather by outside common carrier transportation contractors?
In that way, DEC would be able to avoid buckling to pressure on
this onslaught without needing to subject any of its employees
to making a choice as to whether or not they would submit to drug
testing and set a precedent for violation of privacy and constitutional
rights within DEC. Granted, the contracting drivers would be subject
to the DOT reg's with their own employers, but that becomes a non-DEC
issue, even if it is still a human rights issue.
Any guesses as to whether this could work?
-Jack
|
716.558 | While we're quoting... | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | Irie | Tue Aug 22 1989 09:38 | 4 |
| "Those who would sacrifice liberty for safety will ultimately have
neither."
-Ben Franklin
|
716.559 | what is a quote worth? | WORDS::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Tue Aug 22 1989 12:57 | 11 |
| re .558, I *think* uncle Ben was over ruled by the Supreme Court
when they ruled that it was not 5th ammendment right to yell 'fire'
in a theater. Some liberty is sacrificed for safety.
So much for quotes. There are some things in our modern times that
even the founders could not have foreseen. Thats why *they* provided
for changes.
#ed
|
716.560 | Who's next? | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Aug 22 1989 13:37 | 17 |
| RE: .553 "show of hands"
> To all digital employees:- If you are a truck driver for digital and
> reading this conference, please raise your hand.
I'm not driving a truck, but I do drive a Digital Commuter Van between
Massachusetts and New Hampshire every work day. If the DOT requirement
of "more than 15 passengers, including the driver" were revised
downward by 1, it is conceivable that DEC vanpool drivers could
be required to submit to random drug tests.
What if they decide that all people in carpools should be tested,
or people that drive vehicles capable of speeds greater than 75 mph?
55 mph? 40 mph? With more than 4 wheels? 2 wheels? People with
freckles? Blue eyes? People who write code? People who profess
to understanding it?
|
716.561 | | BOLT::MINOW | Pere Ubu is coming soon, are you ready? | Tue Aug 22 1989 13:41 | 16 |
| > <<< Note 716.559 by WORDS::BADGER "One Happy camper ;-)" >>>
> -< what is a quote worth? >-
>
> re .558, I *think* uncle Ben was over ruled by the Supreme Court
>
> when they ruled that it was not 5th ammendment right to yell 'fire'
> in a theater. Some liberty is sacrificed for safety.
Nope: the quote (from Justice Holmes) was that the 1st Amendement did
not give one the right to "falsely shout fire in a crowded theatre
and thereby cause a panic."
re. .554: change "15 passengers" to "14 passengers" and the Dec vanpool
drivers are included.
Martin.
|
716.562 | | RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Tue Aug 22 1989 14:58 | 16 |
| Re: the "None of us are truck drivers, so we don't have to worry"
replies:
The problem with this sort of mandate is that it tends to get
generalized very quickly. If there's no objection to the initial
orders, how far is that from "Anyone driving a vehicle on the public
roads for commercial purposes on behalf of Digital"?
Doesn't that describe all plan-A cars?
Lots more people involved now, eh?
Besides, since when does the number involved have a bearing on
whether it is the right thing to do? If its only being done to
you and to nobody else in the company, does that automatically make
it right?
Kevin
|
716.563 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Aug 22 1989 15:40 | 14 |
| re:<<< Note 716.562 by RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE "Insufficient Virtual...um...er..." >>>
> Re: the "None of us are truck drivers, so we don't have to worry"
> replies:
I'm sorry, Kevin, I don't recall having seen a response that said that.
Can you cite a reply number?
The closest I could recall was my .557 which was basically saying "What
_if_ DEC excused themselves from this requirement by not having any truck
drivers fitting the criteria?". Different issue, I think.
Thanks,
-Jack
|
716.564 | Plans A, B, and C all are on official business | WKRP::CHATTERJEE | Your MIND: The ultimate interface | Tue Aug 22 1989 16:11 | 12 |
| >>> How far is that from "Anyone driving a vehicle on the public
>>> roads for commercial purposes on behalf of Digital"?
>>> Doesn't that describe all plan-A cars?
Actually, I would guess that would include all Plan B and C cars
too, since any expense that shows up on your expense report proves
that you were in the car on behalf of Digital. For ex, if I got killed
while driving to/from a customer site, I assume it would be taken as dying
with my boots on for Digital (so to speak).
....... Suchindran
|
716.565 | I humbly apologise, I was COMPLETELY wrong :-( | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Aug 23 1989 12:14 | 9 |
| I was trying to find my earliest note on this topic but the response
time is just too slow. Suffices to say, that I had predicted that the
drug testing will come to digital and will be started with employees
who are not able to afford to be vocal and possibly can not really
fight against. I had thought that Digital will start with janitors but
I was proved to be wrong. Digital started its drug testing program
with truck drivers.
- Vikas
|
716.566 | | RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Wed Aug 23 1989 18:35 | 16 |
| Re .563,
> I'm sorry, Kevin, I don't recall having seen a response that said that.
> Can you cite a reply number?
actually, My reply was in reference to .554, which said basically,
"Get real, truck drivers don't read this conference.
Any of you out there who are truck drivers, please reply to this
note"
I will admit to using a bit of hyperbole in my response, and if
I've gotten the sense of Vikas's reply wrong then I apologise, but
that is how it came across to me.
Kevin
|
716.567 | Government=Love of money=Root of all evil | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Wed Aug 23 1989 20:16 | 31 |
| Buried in the unspoken reasons for the truth of .565, lies the major
cause of the 'problem' in the first place.
As to the clear and present danger to the public: What if (to borrow
a competitor's sentence starter) failure of our products was considered
a public danger? What if that's why those building the stuff (be
it hard, firm or soft) are selected for testing? What if it was
found that errors are more likely to creep into code generated by
IQs lower than 130? What if 'they' found out that product engineers,
like the DC9 pilots in Detroit, made more and more serious errors
after a night of carousal? What if it was shown that the designer
with less sleep left things out?
Would, for example, Mr. Robert, submit to:
- Monitoring so he does not watch Letterman?
- IQ test (now, not at hiring)?
- Verification of celibacy?
For those of you on the 'anyone who won't submit must be a user'
kick, the reality is that excessive government CAUSES social problems.
Governemtn intervention, therefore, can NOT solve them.
As to the Digital environment & relevance, I was a simple servant
before I came here. If I wanted to stay one, I wouldn't have moved.
Besides, it's hard enough to get my actual work done without having
to worry about whether or not I'll pass the next
drug/attitude/aptitude/intelligence/awareness/sanity/happiness/stress
test.
Don
|
716.568 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 24 1989 01:31 | 50 |
| re: .567
Don, if you read my note you'll see that I never said:
We should test employees for drugs
I would submit to such a test
Refusal to submit is an indicator of guilt
What I said, put tersely was, "let's not play ostrich".
As it happens, I personally think that operators of nucleur installations
and weapons, mass transit, and other major hazardous systems such as
chemical plants should be required to give up any necessary rights and
submit to testing as a condition of employment. I don't find it very
different from requiring that they submit to physical fitness examinations
which have long been standard (I had to do so to drive a school bus in
1968 ... made sense then, makes sense now).
In fact, it's not different at all; drug use _is_ a physical disability.
I do not wish to hound, persecute, stigmatize, or deprive such people
(everyone is disabled in some dimension) ... I think we as a society
and as humans should do everything possible to make their lives as
rich and contributory as possible. But I don't want the pilot of my
plane to be high --- and I've no reluctance to require that pilot to
prove they do not use drugs. I don't feel obligated to accept their
word for it, and I do not want airlines to react only "after the fact".
I don't know how I feel about truck drivers and software engineers, and
I don't know how grandfather situations (new rules _after_ you've established
your means of livelhood) should be handled. But I certainly don't believe
that "no drug testing for any job" is a constitutional right in any way
whatsoever.
By the way, I don't know of any job that requires a minimum IQ, but I
have to suspect it would be pretty damn hard to get a pilot's license
with an IQ of 70. Of course, that's not *really* IQ testing is it?
My point is that Digital has certain jobs that are near the line.
How near? I don't know. I'll bet if I had a wife and kids that
I'd start moving that line, for example, to include truck drivers.
There are many jobs open to people. It is *reasonable* to make
fitness, including being drug free, a pre-requisite for certain
jobs. It is not reasonable, at this time, to make it a pre-requiste
for all jobs.
- greg
|
716.569 | I feel that KO has more direct effect on my family than a truck driver | PAXVAX::SONTAKKE | | Thu Aug 24 1989 09:52 | 12 |
| RE: .566 <Kevin>
> if I've gotten the sense of Vikas's reply wrong then I apologise, but
> that is how it came across to me.
I am sorry that my intention did not come clear but my prior and
subsequent replies to this topic should make it perfectly clear how I
feel about this issue. I feel that you got the sense of my reply
completely wrong. However that is my fault for not making the sarcasm
more explicit.
- Vikas
|
716.570 | Government does not CAUSE social problems | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Aug 24 1989 16:39 | 21 |
| Re: [.567 (Don Thompson)]: I couldn't let this pass without comment:
>> For those of you on the 'anyone who won't submit must be a user'
>> kick, the reality is that excessive government CAUSES social problems.
>> Governemtn intervention, therefore, can NOT solve them.
If excessive government causes social problems, it follows that the
problems didn't exist before government became excessive. Are you
willing to suggest that there was no drug problem before government
attention turned to it? Or that there was no poverty before welfare?
Baloney!
Now, if you just say, "government intervention cannot solve social
problems," you'll get no argument from this terminal. Despite the
billions of dollars spent on the War on Poverty, the War on Crime, the
War on Cancer, and the War on Drugs, we still have more than enough of
each. (Hey, at least we tried.)
And whether there was a drug problem at Digital before the company
began to consider drug testing is another good question.
|
716.571 | | PEKING::HASTONM | Emm | Fri Aug 25 1989 09:17 | 20 |
| There seems to be strain of thought that people in life-threatining
jobs should be drug free, that's good - but a bit hard to define
I think.(The jobs that is).
At DEC we don't have any people in those sort of jobs - and I would
exclude our truckers if they're not going interstate (i.e. long
haul). Our s/w types (including me) have their work tested (but
not for drugs 8^) before it gets let loose so I don't see a problem
there. I would think that the same goes for out h/w stuff too.
Therefore, no chance of drugged workers harming anyone but themselves.
The U.S. govt instituting these regulations on firms like DEC is
just another example of treating the symptoms and not the cause.
The effect on working for DEC wouldn't really be that the firm doesn't
trust you - in no other terms at least it would be another level
of (unpaid) bureauocracy - but that your govt doesn't. Nothing new
there.
(RE: America being the richest..capitalist etc...I think that should
be past tense)
M
|
716.572 | Intervention in causes is potentially _more_ invasive | STAR::ROBERT | | Fri Aug 25 1989 14:05 | 19 |
| There's a good reason that government treats symptoms and not causes.
The symptoms are what injure society. The causes injure individuals.
While the causes _lead_ to societal injury they are usualy not viewed
as a "clear and present danger".
Hence the rights of privacy and liberty win out over governement
intervention in causes, but the public safety threat of symptoms
can trump individual rights when the consequenses are sufficiently
grave.
The liberal 60's and 70's gave us a taste of possible downsides
to governmental action on causes: the war on poverty being one.
The theory of government and society might not seem germane to
the topic, except that the topic is about Digital's interaction
with those bodies, so I think the context must be considered.
- greg
|
716.573 | From devils advocate to innocent? | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Sat Aug 26 1989 21:31 | 21 |
| re .570
>If excessive government causes social problems, it follows that the
>problems didn't exist before government became excessive. Are you
>willing to suggest that there was no drug problem before government
>attention turned to it? Or that there was no poverty before welfare?
>Baloney!
A rather strangely naive response, Steve. There is no bad situation
that a government or (attempt to keep this DEC specific) a large
bureauracracy cannot make much worse! As can be seen by many other
topics and replies in this file.
The rest of the resonse I agree with. So far, despite my question
a few replies back, I STILL have not seen any information that would
lead me to believe that general or random drug testing at Digital or
any other company would solve or even significantly mitigate the
current (U.S.) societal problem with drug abuse.
/Dave
|
716.574 | Prescriptions and Drug Testing? | ALBANY::MULLER | Fred Muller | Mon Aug 28 1989 08:42 | 43 |
| What percentage of the population takes prescription drugs, either
temporarily or permanently? Everyone? Anyone concerned about this
angle on the testing problem? As the population ages and as medicine
progresses, this eventually will become a concern to almost everyone.
Some of the other notes and replys indicate that many ordinary things
indicate extraordinary things: How about legal prescriptions which
MIGHT show up during testing and be misinterpreted?
Professional confidences of lawyers and physicians are points of law,
not to be compromised. Isn't mandatory drug testing by Dr #1 (not
yours) which turns up "bad things" prescribed by Dr #2 (yours), but
thought to be good by your physician a VERY sticky wicket? Maybe even
your physician (and you) recognize the POSSIBILITY of some side
effects!
What if Dr #1 works for your employer and thinks a drug which he found
will adversely affect your job (all shades of meaning here if you look
at any pharmacopedia), but your doctor (and you) do not think so. Dr
#1 MAY be obligated to report it to your mutual employer; and, of
course, that eventually means your boss (doesn't it?). Now, say you are
over a deadline on a project (or anything with negative connotations
businesswise) - the reasons may be entirely irrelevant to the drug test
results and interpretation.
I do not care what avenues of communication are established to
ameliorate inaccurate or misinterpreted drug testing results, I do not
think the outcome of such a situation has a happy ending for ANYONE
concerned, but guess who gets hurt the most? Maybe that has to be
inevitable, as usual. Pointing fingers tend to be sticky.
I am sure we can all dream up lots of other scenerios. Am I being
pessimistically paranoid?
Fred
PS: Ok, I will put it on the line with a specific example. The medical
profession claims something like 20-40% of the population should be
treated for hypertension (high blood pressure) in one way or other
including prescription drugs. That's a lot of people. Are you one? I
am. And I started after my current job. U'h oh, I shouldn't have said
that! :-) ~~~ )-: ?
|
716.575 | Some questions | JULIET::APODACA_KI | The Outback Eggplant | Mon Aug 28 1989 14:02 | 36 |
| Forgive me since I don't wanna read all 500+ replies, but perhaps
someone can explain some things to me that might make me understand
the hugely negative reaction to drug testing.
One, is the implied policies to test everyone for anything? (Yes,
I am aware that the Federal Government wants people connected with
itself tested--therefore I would imagine any groups within digital
with a Govt tie would be amongst those being tested).
Other than the Goverment issue, are the tests presumed to be random,
or completly mandatory--OR are they aimed at employees who show
considerable job performance deterioration where drug abuse is more
than marginally suspected of being the reason? Who are the tests
supposed to be performed by? Is someone really going to stand there
and watch you pee? (why not a blood test them? I would think
performance anxiety might just affect the quanity of a urine sample...)
I understand that many of us take prescription drugs. Are the tests
able to determine between a prescription drug (which should NOT
be affecting job performance to the degree where people have reasonable
cause to think you are stoned out of your mind), and illegal drugs?
If the tests can distinguish, at least to some degree, then you
certainly should be able to provide a prescription and doctors note
(so to speak) to prove yourself "clean".
I am NOT asking for a monologe on how awful or wonderful drug testing
is. I have my own beliefs on drug testing which I have put in the
poll. What I am trying to find out is just what "drug testing"
means, at least in context of Digital. I do not wish to get into
the age hold debate of invasion of privacy vs. company rights to
protect itself or what have you....thanks. All that has been said
before already. :)
Thanks,
kim
|
716.576 | I COUlLD produce a prescription, but choose not to! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Mon Aug 28 1989 14:11 | 9 |
| > If the tests can distinguish, at least to some degree, then you
> certainly should be able to provide a prescription and doctors note
> (so to speak) to prove yourself "clean".
Assuming my job performance is acceptable, what business is it of
Digital's whether or not I am taking prescription drugs, and if so,
which ones?
Pat
|
716.577 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Aug 28 1989 15:18 | 58 |
| Note 716.568
STAR::ROBERT
>drug use _is_ a physical disability.
No, drug use is not a physical disability. Every person alive has taken
some kind of drug at some time. The housewife who takes an asprin for a
headache does not have a physical disability. Drug use and drug abuse are
not the same thing and the refusal to recognize that fact is the basis of
the failure of the governments war on drugs.
Note 716.570
LEAF::JONG
> If excessive government causes social problems, it follows that the
> problems didn't exist before government became excessive. Are you
> willing to suggest that there was no drug problem before government
> attention turned to it? Or that there was no poverty before welfare?
The violence and profit associated with the drug trade today increased
exponentially with governments attempts to contain it.
I am willing to suggest that drugs were not nearly as much of a problem
in the past as they are today, not because they were not as widely used
but because drug laws have caused more problems than drug use. Certainly
the profit made by drug cartels (and hence the violence generated) stems
from drug laws and not from drug use.
In the same vein, we have several generations of welfare recipients
who know no other way of life and who grew up expecting to live on welfare
as their parent did before them. Government solutions have made certain
social problems a permanent and accepted way of life and a permanent part
of society.
> And whether there was a drug problem at Digital before the company
> began to consider drug testing is another good question.
Ask personnel what percentage of people have been fired for drug abuse and
you'll have the answer.
Note 716.572
STAR::ROBERT
>The symptoms are what injure society. The causes injure individuals.
>While the causes _lead_ to societal injury they are usualy not viewed
>as a "clear and present danger".
Society is made up of individuals. A society is only as healthy, as educated,
and as intelligent as the individuals that comprise it. To fight the symptom
and ignore the cause is an exercise in futility. Its a waste of time and
money and allows problems to grow beyond containment. Our communist friends
are finding out that repression only allows problems to grow beyond the scope
of the very best efforts to resolve them.
Mary
|
716.578 | I lost my job for eating a Hamantasche... | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Aug 28 1989 17:07 | 73 |
| > Forgive me since I don't wanna read all 500+ replies
You're forgiven, especially since it provides an opportunity to restate some
things that have already been said.
> One, is the implied policies to test everyone for anything?
The only program currently approved by the Executive Committee applies to
people working on certain government contracts. So far it appears to be
only people working directly on the project, but is this just the nose of
the camel in the tent?
I fear it is.
The next step seems to be to require testing for truck drivers.
Who's next?
> Other than the Goverment issue, are the tests presumed to be random,
> or completly mandatory--OR are they aimed at employees who show
> considerable job performance deterioration where drug abuse is more
> than marginally suspected of being the reason?
To meet the government requirements, it appears that everyone must be tested.
Selection is done at random, so you can't prepare yourself.
>Is someone really going to stand there and watch you pee?
Yes.
> I understand that many of us take prescription drugs. Are the tests
> able to determine between a prescription drug (which should NOT
> be affecting job performance to the degree where people have reasonable
> cause to think you are stoned out of your mind), and illegal drugs?
There are ways to test positive that have nothing to do with prescription drugs,
ways that cannot be explained. Over-the-counter drugs, foods, being in the
wrong place at the wrong time.
Poppy seed buns cause you to test positive for heroin.
Sitting near someone smoking pot at a rock concert may cause you to test
positive for marijuana.
Someone who prefers to remain anonymous mailed this to me:
ACCURACY OF DRUG TESTING
In the process of drug testing, the following
medication may test positive for the following drugs:
Medication Appears To Be
1) Ibuprofen, Advil, Motrin, Rufen marijuana
2) Fenoprofen, Nalfon, marijuana, amphetamine,
barbiturates, benzodiazepines,
methaqualone
3) Naproxen, Anaprox, Apo-Naproxen, Naprosyn, marijuana
Novonaprox
4) Ephedrine, Acet-AM, Amesec, Bronkaid, amphetamine
Bronkotabs, Ectasule Minus, Ephadrol,
Marax, NyQuil, Quadrinal, Quelidrine,
Quibron Plus, Tedral
5) Phenylopropanolamine, Alka Seltzer Plus, amphetamine
Allerest, Caldecon, 4-Way Nasal Spray,
Naldecom, Sinarest, Sine-Off, Sinubid,
Triaminicin, Triaminicol, Tussagesic
The above is condensed from an article in the January,
1987 issue of Playboy on Page 35.
|
716.579 | Are DEC employees anachronistic in their beliefs? | ULTRA::GONDA | DECelite: Pursuit of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Happiness. | Tue Aug 29 1989 10:43 | 14 |
| I was wondering if anybody noted down the results of the
National Poll conducted on the drug testing issue that
channel 7 (Boston, MS, USA, Earth) showed yesterday? If
I remember the main questions and the highest numbers then
the question on,
Whether an employee should be tested for drug?
75% answer Yes.
And the question,
Can an employee be fired for refusing to take a test?
55% answered Fair.
The Poll conducting company's representative on TV also
mentioned that the numbers for MA state are higher because
of it being a relatively liberal state.
|
716.580 | Just say no. | RKBA::TUCKER | Notes> Set Conference /separate=(wheat from chaff) | Tue Aug 29 1989 13:31 | 18 |
|
540> ...The government now monitors
540>the amount that Lockheed spends on employee insurance
540>[and] ... *salaries* ...
541>This happens when you take on "cost plus" contracts.
I asked my friend about that this weekend. He said that their contracts
(Lockheed Georgia) are seldom cost plus. In fact, the largest contract
they've had, for the C5 Galaxy, was fixed priced. Of course, there are more
Lockheed divisions around the country doing other things. This is not to
belabor the point, only to give an example of the lengths a contract junkie
will go to get his fix.
Regards,
David Tucker @ato
|
716.581 | | JULIET::APODACA_KI | The Outback Eggplant | Wed Aug 30 1989 13:52 | 18 |
| Re. 576
Perhaps I did not make it clear, but I was speaking of drug testing
on the basis that your job performance is NOT near par. Not simply
because Digital or any other company wants to simply see what
prescription drugs you are taking.
re. 578
Thanks for your replies--should I then infer that there IS no way
for a drug test to differentiate between your basic "household"
drugs and poppy seeds and illegal drugs? I mean, if poppy seeds
show up as marijuana....and does this apply to all drug tests? (ie,
are there different kinds of testing?)
Thanks again,
kim
|
716.582 | Not so... | PEKING::HASTONM | Emm | Wed Aug 30 1989 15:41 | 14 |
| < Note 716.579 by ULTRA::GONDA "DECelite: Pursuit of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Happiness." >
> I was wondering if anybody noted down the results of the
> National Poll conducted on the drug testing issue that
> channel 7 (Boston, MS, USA, Earth) showed yesterday?
Kinda hard to answer your question if you aren't too sure of the
polls results. What were the samples?
Taking what your saying, I'd say that the DEC employees (the ones
that participate in this topic at any rate) stance is something
other than anachonistic.
M
|
716.583 | | HANNAH::LEICHTERJ | Jerry Leichter | Wed Aug 30 1989 23:31 | 21 |
| re: .581
People tend to see what they want to see. Drug tests used today - especially
the more elaborate secondary tests used to confirm a positive on the prelimi-
nary tests, are IN PRINCIPLE essentially immune to interference by drugs
other than what they are supposed to be testing for. Playboy is (a) hardly a
standard of scientific reference; (b) proclaims support for legalization of
marihuana, so there is a question of bias; (c) out of date - the article cited
is over 2 years old, and this technology has advanced rapidly.
All that having been said, there is also a long way from "in principle" accuracy
attainable in a research lab and "in practice" accuracy attained by testing
organizations making money by doing tests as fast and as cheaply as possible.
For one thing, even a 100% accurate test will give bad results if the samples
tested get mixed up - which has been known to happen.
Finally, even if the tests were 100% accurate, I for one see little difference
in their moral acceptability. A search is as much an invasion of privacy if
done by an experienced, accurate searcher as when done by an incompetent.
-- Jerry
|
716.584 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 31 1989 10:30 | 3 |
| re: .577
Ok, make it drug abuse. You knew what I meant, right?
|
716.585 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Aug 31 1989 11:50 | 10 |
| Re .584:
> Ok, make it drug abuse. You knew what I meant, right?
How could somebody know? Too many people don't know the difference;
how was somebody else to know if you did or not? That ignorance is a
major cause of the current destruction of human rights.
-- edp
|
716.586 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 31 1989 20:47 | 3 |
| re: .585
It was obvious from context. Let's get back to the subject.
|
716.587 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Sep 01 1989 10:55 | 38 |
| No, it wasn't obvious from context and it is the subject.
The refusal to differentiate between drug use and drug abuse is what
drug testing is all about.
The drug abuser is obvious, his abuse causes problems that effect his
ability to function in all or most areas of his life.
The drug user is subtle, his use does not cause him any problems (or
few that he can't control) and that is why the government has to
resort to testing his blood and/or urine. Because unless his bodily
fluids are tested, there is no way to tell that he uses drugs.
Is controlling the personal behavior of the user worth all of the
money, violence, elimination of individual rights, and the neglect
of genuine social issues to concentrate on this single issue?
Many Americans do not think so. There is no consensus on this question
and therefore there is no support for drug testing.
Drug testing doesn't spot the abuser... it doesn't have to... the
abuser is easy to spot... he is sleeping in doorways and collecting
welfare. He cannot function in society.
Drug testing is aimed at the user. The user is paying taxes,
supporting his family, working and minding his own business. He
functions fine, he just doesn't alter his behavior to suit current
political social engineering.
It may all be a moot point of course if the Colombian drug cartels
start taking the war on drugs to Washington and begin assassinating
American politicians instead of Colombian politicians. Then it
will be too late, even legalization may not stop it.
Combine that with anarchy, violence and chaos (such as the race
wars happening in New York City right now) rising fast due to the
neglect of genuine social problems for the past ten years and to
the increase of poverty and we have a truly dangerous situation
and not just political rhetoric.
|
716.588 | | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Fri Sep 01 1989 12:12 | 23 |
| Re: .587
> Drug testing doesn't spot the abuser... it doesn't have to... the
> abuser is easy to spot... he is sleeping in doorways and collecting
> welfare. He cannot function in society.
Most of the drug abusers in this country don't fall into this
category. They aren't homeless and they hold jobs, but they are
dependent on drugs and their drug use affects their entire life.
Drug abusers who haven't dropped out of society are a
significant cause of, among other things, industrial accidents.
In many cases they are easy to spot at work, to someone trained
to look for the symptoms. Drug testing isn't necessary to find
(and help) most abusers, testing is just an easy way for a
government/business to address the problem. A much better
solution is to offer help to those who show signs of drug abuse.
And in any case, most drug abusers are using alcohol as their
drug of choice--but testing for alcohol isn't done because it
would catch too many `respectable' people.
B.J.
|
716.589 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Sep 01 1989 15:53 | 79 |
|
Note 716.588
ULTRA::HERBISON
> Most of the drug abusers in this country don't fall into this
> category. They aren't homeless and they hold jobs, but they are
> dependent on drugs and their drug use affects their entire life.
A true abuser cannot function normally within society. He cannot
hold a job and maintain an apartment or home. His family falls
apart and his career falls apart. Today everyone is classified
as an abuser or something... even computers are said to be addictive
and a man has been sentenced to rehabilitation for computer addiction.
There is no sense of balance or priority anymore. No sense of personal
responsibility.
There are advantages in blurring the lines between use and abuse
today... there is a lot of money to be made in this field... more
money is being spent on various aspects of the war on drugs (including
new prisons, the training of additional police, DEA, correction
officers, money spent fighting the WOD in foreign countries) than
on any other social issue.
There are many institutions making a lot of money these days by
rehabilitating substance abusers. Middle class High School kids
who get caught smoking a joint are now involuntarily committed to
treatment centers ..... until the insurance money runs out that
is. Treatment Centers end up getting twenty thousand or so, the kid
ends up with a disrupted education and life and the idea that he isn't
normal and can't function, while the insurance industry ends up
raising rates for legitimate health problems.
Certainly there are legitimate cases for treatment centers but today
just about anyone (who has insurance or parents who have insurance)
qualifies. No wonder the health system is such a mess.
> Drug abusers who haven't dropped out of society are a
> significant cause of, among other things, industrial accidents.
Got some source for this statement? CNN had a program on industrial safety
recently. Seems as though workers don't have much protection these
days and the safety laws that do exist are not enforced. Drugs
are the easy target... whether an industry is at fault or not,
substance abuse by workers can be blamed. Wasn't that what Exxon
did to the captain of the Valdez? The retraction came out months
later. Certainly there is some truth to this but not as much as
we have been led to believe.
> In many cases they are easy to spot at work, to someone trained
> to look for the symptoms.
Tell me, what are the symptoms of someone who has used LSD within
the last month? What are the symptoms of someone who has smoked
pot within the last two weeks? What are the symptoms of someone who
has used ecstasy or mushrooms within the last week? Do you know?
Does anyone? That statement simply isn't true.
>Drug testing isn't necessary to find (and help) most abusers, testing
>is just an easy way for a government/business to address the
>problem. A much better solution is to offer help to those who show
>signs of drug abuse.
Testing is the only way to identify users of certain substances
(whether the government is interested in 'helping' them or not is a matter
of opinion of course).
> And in any case, most drug abusers are using alcohol as their
> drug of choice--but testing for alcohol isn't done because it
> would catch too many `respectable' people.
To tell you the truth, I have grave misgivings as to what is actually
being tested for. Blood and urine tests can spot pregnancies in
women, some cancers, heart problems, AIDS and numerous other health problems
that could be expensive to the company providing benefits.
Blood and urine tests could be used to screen potential employees for
future health problems by health care providers as well... good
way to increase the profit margin and keep costs down.
|
716.590 | Pardon my ignorance, but... | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Fri Sep 01 1989 16:13 | 4 |
| > What are the symptoms of someone who has used ecstasy or mushrooms
> within the last week?
What is ecstasy and mushrooms?
|
716.591 | Get serious | STAR::BECK | The question is - 2B or D4? | Fri Sep 01 1989 17:18 | 20 |
| re .589
> A true abuser cannot function normally within society. He cannot
> hold a job and maintain an apartment or home. His family falls
> apart and his career falls apart. Today everyone is classified
> as an abuser or something... even computers are said to be addictive
> and a man has been sentenced to rehabilitation for computer addiction.
Oh, come on. The nice thing about language is that you can use (or
abuse) it to your "benefit".
If you choose to define "abuser" as one who "cannot function normally
within society", then you are correct. By your definition, an
alcoholic who still has a job and (watch out) a driver's license is not
an abuser of alcohol. This is patently absurd. It's like saying we're
not abusing the ozone layer because there still are some people who
haven't died of skin cancer. It's the kind of definition that defers
any treatment or correction action until it's far too late. You can
drive sixty miles an hour directly at a cliff, but until your tires
leave the pavement, there's no problem, right?
|
716.592 | | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Fri Sep 01 1989 18:17 | 53 |
| Re: .589 (Re: my .588)
I'm not sure why your response is so strong. We seem to agree
on many things, but you seem to be responding to claims that are
much stronger than the statements I made.
> A true abuser cannot function normally within society. He cannot
> hold a job and maintain an apartment or home. His family falls
This is a new and different definition of `abuser' with which
I was not previously aware.
> Certainly there are legitimate cases for treatment centers but today
You go on for quite a while about treatment centers, but I
didn't mention them. I said help them and I agree with
you--sending someone off to a treatment center is usually not
the best way to help someone with a drug abuse problem.
> > Drug abusers who haven't dropped out of society are a
> > significant cause of, among other things, industrial accidents.
>
> Got some source for this statement? CNN had a program on industrial safety
>...
> later. Certainly there is some truth to this but not as much as
> we have been led to believe.
I have no citations handy (I don't keep reports like that in my
library). Again, I agree with you--workers are blamed by
industry more than they should be. But the fact that drug abuse
is frequently falsely claimed doesn't mean that the proportion
of industrial accidents cause by drug abuse is insignificant.
> > In many cases they are easy to spot at work, to someone trained
> > to look for the symptoms.
>
> Tell me, what are the symptoms of someone who has used LSD within
> the last month? What are the symptoms of someone who has smoked
> pot within the last two weeks? What are the symptoms of someone who
> has used ecstasy or mushrooms within the last week? Do you know?
> Does anyone? That statement simply isn't true.
There is a big difference between `being able to spot many
cases of substance abuse' and `being able to identify cases
of substance abuse and determine the substance involved'.
You seemed to believe I said the latter, but I actually said
the former.
It is possible to look for general characteristics of substance
abuse in people by observing their behavior--especially if we
take your definition of substance abuse.
B.J.
|
716.593 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Fri Sep 01 1989 18:42 | 17 |
| re .590
'Ecstasy' is the street name for methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA),
one of a vast group of compounds somtimes called psychedelic
amphetamines. They are somewhat related to both mescaline and the
amphetamines.
FWIW, the increasing popularity of MDMA and it's cousins lead to the
'Analog Drug Act' that basically makes it illegal for anyone to
synthesise similar drugs that may act upon the nervous system, thus
closing off a valuable line of legitmate research. Of course it hasn't
stopped the bathtub chemists.
'Mushrooms' (or magic mushrooms) refers to various mushrooms that
contain psilocybin, an indole based psychedelic.
gary
|
716.594 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Sep 05 1989 09:13 | 22 |
| Re .591:
It works the other way, too: Define "drug abuser" as anybody who uses
illegal drugs, and one can automatically find them at fault without
having used any connection to fact.
Re .592:
> I have no citations handy (I don't keep reports like that in my
> library). Again, I agree with you--workers are blamed by
> industry more than they should be. But the fact that drug abuse
> is frequently falsely claimed doesn't mean that the proportion
> of industrial accidents cause by drug abuse is insignificant.
Oh, that's rich! "You haven't proven it's false, so that doesn't mean
it's not true." You've got nothing to support your statement, you
admit the reports are exaggerated, yet you expect your statement to
stand.
-- edp
|
716.595 | Accurate = 100% participation in testing | CIMNET::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith 291-7689 MET-2/E2 | Tue Sep 05 1989 12:26 | 21 |
| RE: .591,.592,.594 -- accurate info on relation between drug use/abuse
and industrial accident incidence...
Wait a minute, am I missing something? To have an accurate study
either confirming or refuting a relationship between drug use and/or
abuse and various accident statistics, you would need to test a
statistically significant sample, both accident and non-accident
employees ( need a control group, too ).
Given the amount of traffic this note has generated, how could anyone
anywhere get the necessary information? You can't ask for voluntary
participation, since the people who opted out might share similar
characteristics. They might all be drug users, or they might all be
"clean," ultra-careful employees who are just more aware of their
constitutional rights. Either way, anything less than random mandatory
participation in a study would lead to one or both camps complaining
that the test was skewed.
Hmmm... Maybe that's why people in this country are starting to view
mandatory testing with less loathing. It's certainly an invasion of
privacy, but how else can we even find out the real impact?
|
716.596 | RE: .571 | JACKAL::CARROLL | | Tue Sep 05 1989 15:09 | 16 |
|
Why should only DEC interstate truck drivers be excluded, a
stoned intrastate drivers could be responsible for someones death.
As for the Hardware being tested before shipment that is beside
the point don't the DEC employees who test the equipment qualify
as people who could be killed improperly assembled hardware. What
about those employees whose job entails the use of dangerous chemicals,
remember the plant evacuation at Hudson, Ma. not that long ago?
To think that DEC does not have jobs that present a potential hazard
to others besides the immediate operator shows a lack of the big
picture of what it takes to produce a product here at DEC. Take
a look at something outside of the software world, go visit a
manufacturing plant. We have fork truck drivers, welders, machine
operators, etc. all of which could cause injury or death to others.
Bob
|
716.597 | | CRAIG::YANKES | | Tue Sep 05 1989 15:54 | 10 |
|
Re: .596
The commerce clause of the Constitution only grants the federal
government the ability to regulate interstate commerce. Intrastate commerce
is solely the responsibility of the individual state to regulate. Therefore,
while you are correct that a stoned intrastate driver could be dangerous, it
is harder for the Feds to directly regulate that driver.
-craig
|
716.598 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 05 1989 18:12 | 145 |
|
Note 716.591
STAR::BECK
> If you choose to define "abuser" as one who "cannot function normally
> within society", then you are correct. By your definition, an
> alcoholic who still has a job and (watch out) a driver's license is not
> an abuser of alcohol.
An alcoholic who still holds a driver's license obviously is an alcoholic
who doesn't drive and therefore is not a problem on the roads. Society has
enough genuine problems, we don't need to create more.
> It's like saying we're
> not abusing the ozone layer because there still are some people who
> haven't died of skin cancer.
Its nothing like that at all. Our abuse of our environment does not justify
our political social engineering.
> It's the kind of definition that defers
> any treatment or correction action until it's far too late. You can
> drive sixty miles an hour directly at a cliff, but until your tires
> leave the pavement, there's no problem, right?
If an individual decides to commit suicide it is not your problem, it is
his problem.
Please provide your own definition and then I can see where you are coming
from. You seem to be suggesting that a problem need not exist for a
solution to be determined. If an individual functions, then what needs
correcting?
Are you saying that you must save us from ourselves? That you only (and those
who agree with you) are able to determine the way for all of us to live,
to act, to behave?
Are you saying that a person can function, work, support a family, pay taxes,
and still be subject to "corrective treatment or action"? Why? To what
purpose? I sometimes get the impression that this is not so much a war on
drugs as it is an attempt to enforce conformity and another way to get rich at
the expense of the individual.
Note 716.592
ULTRA::HERBISON
> I'm not sure why your response is so strong. We seem to agree
> on many things, but you seem to be responding to claims that are
> much stronger than the statements I made.
My writing style is often mistaken as being "strong". Its really the
result of being a tech writer for so long. We are trained to eliminate
extraneous information and present the facts. That comes across as
somewhat impersonal I think.
>> A true abuser cannot function normally within society. He cannot
>> hold a job and maintain an apartment or home. His family falls
>
> This is a new and different definition of `abuser' with which
> I was not previously aware.
Have you a definition of 'abuser'? I'd be interested in seeing it.
> You go on for quite a while about treatment centers, but I
> didn't mention them. I said help them and I agree with
> you--sending someone off to a treatment center is usually not
> the best way to help someone with a drug abuse problem.
I have living with me a boy whose life was almost ruined by the current
drug hysteria. Since he came to us, he has completed high school and has
started college and shows no signs of serious problems. He came so close
to getting lost over this stupidity. So many good kids are being sacrificed
on the political alter of drugs.
> There is a big difference between `being able to spot many
> cases of substance abuse' and `being able to identify cases
> of substance abuse and determine the substance involved'.
> You seemed to believe I said the latter, but I actually said
> the former.
This is what you said, "in many cases they are easy to spot at work, to
someone trained to look for the symptoms".
What I am trying to tell you is that there are no symptoms of casual drug
use. The drug abuser (who comes to work under the influence) can
be spotted, but the individual who used a drug over the weekend will not
show symptoms during the week.
> It is possible to look for general characteristics of substance
> abuse in people by observing their behavior--especially if we
> take your definition of substance abuse.
But it is not possible to look for general characteristics of substance
USE in people by observing their behavior..... and that is where drug
testing comes to play. It is aimed at the user, not at the abuser.
It is aimed at the individual who does not exhibit symptoms of a problem,
not at the individual who does.
Note 716.595
CIMNET::PSMITH
"More workers are killed on the job in the United States than in most other
major industrialized countries. Workers in this country are 36 times more
likely to be killed than a Swede, and 9 times more likely to be killed
than a Briton, the National Safe Workplace Institute found in its annual Labor
Day report.
In addition, a U.S. worker is more likely to be seriously injured on the job
than a 2 pack a day cigarette smoker is to contract cancer, according to the
report."
Its much cheaper and more convenient to blame industrial accidents on employee
drugs use than to enforce worker safety laws.
> Hmmm... Maybe that's why people in this country are starting to view
> mandatory testing with less loathing. It's certainly an invasion of
> privacy, but how else can we even find out the real impact?
Who says people in this country are starting to view mandatory testing with
less loathing? Nothing I've ever read indicates that.
And obviously, testing of bodily fluids doesn't reveal "impact".
Impact should be obvious. If there is no obvious impact than why is testing
necessary in the first place?
Want to talk about impact upon society?
In Worcester County, there is a private, profit-making, process-serving
business that is trying to form an independent, self-financed police agency,
not subject to any legislative bodies for funding or accountability.
The money to run the operation would come from the fees collected for serving
court papers and revenues from private properties seized during drug raids.
What do you call a private business, not accountable to any legislative body,
not associated with the police or the DEA, who conducts drug raids and seizes
private property? How about the Mafia.
This is where all of this hysteria is taking us these days. Its a dangerous
trend.
Mary
|
716.599 | It's not all black or white | STAR::BECK | The question is - 2B or D4? | Tue Sep 05 1989 19:10 | 76 |
|
>> An alcoholic who still holds a driver's license obviously is an alcoholic
>> who doesn't drive and therefore is not a problem on the roads. Society has
>> enough genuine problems, we don't need to create more.
WHAT??? This statement is so illogical I must assume you meant something
else. Why do you say an alcoholic who STILL HOLDS a driver's license is one
who DOESN'T DRIVE? I'd assume s/he DOES drive, and is a menace. Tests we've
all seen on television (the last bastion of absolute truth) can demonstrate
that someone who's consumed moderate quantities of alcohol - too little to
really affect their outward personality, and therefore not obvious drunks -
are still significantly impaired when driving. These people should not
drive. But the roads are full of them. Alcohol is the most serious drug in
use in this country.
>> If an individual decides to commit suicide it is not your problem, it is
>> his problem.
I believe you missed the analogy, whether by intent or not. Perhaps I
should spell it out more clearly. Your definition of "abuse", by inference,
refers to people who are so seriously impaired as to be almost totally
dynfunctional in society. Doing nothing to help people until they fall this
far is like deciding your car doesn't need brakes until you're over the
cliff. If, on the way down, these proto-abusers (they haven't hit bottom
yet, so they can't be abusers, right?) are totally benign, then the
attitude "let'em rot, it's their fault" might have some merit.
Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way. The proto-abuser can be impaired
in numerous ways, which can range from poor job performance (which, if
endemic, can result in significant economic decline, affecting all of us)
to directly endangering others (drivers, air traffic controllers, etc.).
You can't just make the assumption that the "casual abuser" is benign; this
is the Pollyanna view. There's a big gap between the Woodstock view of
drugs and "Reefer Madness". The truth is somewhere in between.
>> Please provide your own definition and then I can see where you are coming
>> from. You seem to be suggesting that a problem need not exist for a
>> solution to be determined. If an individual functions, then what needs
>> correcting?
Actually, I didn't propose any particular solution, nor have I taken a
stand one way or the other on drug testing in the workplace. I merely
reacted to a definition of "drug abuse" which has little connection to
reality.
My definition of substance abuse - use of a substance with the result that
you are impaired to a non-trivial degree in your physical reactions, work,
or personal interactions. The definition of "non-trivial" is obviously
problematic. Then again, in the paragraph I quoted above, the definition of
"an individual functions" is also open to question. Functions how? At his
or her normal capacity? Half capacity? Just enough to preclude
institutionalization?
If an individual functions normally, including having normal reaction times
while driving, normal concentration and reasoning power (for the
individual) in work or social situations, I would not view the individual
as impaired, and hence not an abuser. If the individual is impaired, as the
result of substance use, then I would view the individual as an abuser.
The expense of drugs results in another, VERY MAJOR impact on society:
crime. Some people will commit crime regardless, just because they're pond
slime. Others will commit crime based on circumstances (need cash for
drugs). This latter group are clearly abusers, even though they may
"function" (are capable of wielding a weapon, for example).
The other tricky question is under what circumstances "corrective action"
is appropriate. There are obvious extremes, and a vast middle ground. If
you commit crimes, or drive while impaired, corrective action is
appropriate. If you endanger people on the job, ditto.
Does all this warrant global drug testing? Not in my view, but I don't see
anything wrong with specifying that people whose jobs put them in positions
where any drug-related impairment can result in danger to lives or property
be able to demonstrate they're not impaired.
Enough rambling.
|
716.600 | The Digital mindset on drug testing--unique? | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Tue Sep 05 1989 19:39 | 80 |
| The debate over drug testing at Digital is a microcosm of the national
debate over the war on drugs. The outcry against testing is intense,
and court decisions have gone both ways. (The first Supreme Court
decision, in a narrow situation, is pro-testing.) But some of the
positions taken here are quite unlike those voiced in the real world.
On the national scene, no one has taken the position that (1) there
is no drug problem, (2) the drug problem was invented to steal our
liberties, or (3) the drug problem and drug testing was created to
profit government. The dichotomy is striking.
Re: [.573 (Dave Butchart)] (Alright, so I've been on vacation!):
I think I forget the context, but I think we all agree that a
bureaucracy (the Federal government, the state government, the company,
etc.) can always start a program to "control" a problem and end up
making it worse. But I still don't accept the premise that there was
no drug problem in either this country or this company before
drug testing appeared on the scene; in the case of the United States, I
think that is historically wrong.
Re: [.592 and .598 (Mary Stanley)]:
>> To tell you the truth, I have grave misgivings as to what is
>> actually being tested for. Blood and urine tests can spot pregnancies
>> in women, some cancers, heart problems, AIDS and numerous other health
>> problems that could be expensive to the company providing benefits.
>> Blood and urine tests could be used to screen potential employees for
>> future health problems by health care providers as well... good way to
>> increase the profit margin and keep costs down.
I infer from your response, Mary, that you're a long-time employee,
because you've forgotten your pre-employment physical. Remember the
form you filled out? It asked you if you had heart problems, cancer,
and numerous other health problems; whether or not you were pregnant;
and these days it asks if you have AIDS. Perhaps you haven't applied
for insurance lately, either; you have to fill out the same kind of
form. The doctor is right behind, listening to your heart, checking
your lungs. I seem to recall blood and urine testing as well, for
just the sort of things you mention. It's been a condition of
employment for this company and many others for years.
What you're objecting to, I think, is secret testing, right? Well, my
wife, the medical technologist, hit the roof recently when I mentioned
some of the things written in this topic (not the replies I cite here).
I gather the idea that labs do testing without the doctor's permission
is a professional affront, not to mention a huge waste of time and
money. To test for drugs, then for pregnancy, diabetes, and AIDS, say,
is at least four times the effort, four times the time, and four times
the expense, all on four different machines. To test for more than
what's stated is a breach of ethics and a pain in the rear. And
where's the profit? For a company to deny employment on the basis of
many of the things you've suggested--pregnancy, cancer, AIDS--is a
Federal crime.
>> Who says people in this country are starting to view mandatory
>> testing with less loathing? Nothing I've ever read indicates that.
Listen to President Bush tonight. "The drug problem" is, and has been
for some time, the number-one problem in the minds of three-quarters of
the U.S. population. Some politicians are even suggesting that
Americans are willing to pay (shh) new taxes to fight drugs. This is
somewhat across the point, I realize, but I'd say people put drug
testing into the category of "weapons in the fight on drugs," perhaps
with my "everyone else but me" disclaimer implicit.
>> Are you saying that a person can function, work, support a family, pay
>> taxes, and still be subject to "corrective treatment or action"? Why?
>> To what purpose? I sometimes get the impression that this is not so
>> much a war on drugs as it is an attempt to enforce conformity and
>> another way to get rich at the expense of the individual.
I think an individual can do all these things and still be the Green
River Killer, a fugitive Nazi, a child molester, or a substance abuser.
In fact, they can't succeed unless they meet all of your conditions!
I agree with one clause of the last sentence I extracted: this is
clearly an attempt to enforce conformity on the individual, for the
perceived good of society and the individual both. But where do you
get this "rich" business? The only people I see getting rich in the
drug business are in Columbia (figuratively speaking).
|
716.601 | moderator warning | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred . | Tue Sep 05 1989 19:40 | 4 |
| This topic has gotten way to far off the subject of Digital. Please
get back in track or we'll start returning notes.
Alfred
|
716.602 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Tue Sep 05 1989 20:09 | 17 |
| re .600
The difference is somewhat a result of the different media involved.
The subset of Digital employees that access this conference are free to voice
their opinions and ideas here. And even present facts.
The same cannot be said of the general media, i.e. TV news, newspapers etc.
They are interested in selling and anti-drug hype sells papers and ad time.
Similarly, very few politicians are going to get up in public and say something
that disagrees with the anti-drug lobby. And if they did, would it get reported?
Which of these is closer to the true public opinion (if it even has one), I
don't know. But somehow, I don't think it is truly reflected in any amount
of USA Today multicolor graphs or CNN 900 number polls.
gary
|
716.603 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Sep 06 1989 08:41 | 12 |
| Re .599:
> The expense of drugs results in another, VERY MAJOR impact on
> society: crime.
Drugs cause few crimes. Using marijuana doesn't give you some mystical
urge to rob. Anti-drug laws cause crimes. To solve that problem, we
need to stop the law abusers (those whose need or use of laws causes
non-trivial impairment in society).
-- edp
|
716.604 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Sep 06 1989 08:49 | 29 |
| Re .600:
> Well, my wife, the medical technologist, hit the roof recently when I
> mentioned some of the things written in this topic (not the replies I
> cite here). I gather the idea that labs do testing without the doctor's
> permission is a professional affront, not to mention a huge waste of
> time and money. . . .
You go on and give reasons why secret testing won't happen. First, I
think you have the scenario wrong -- you seem to be discussing the lab
doing tests of its own, for some unspecified purpose. That isn't the
problem. The problem is the employer asking the lab to do tests.
Any reasons you can give why that won't happen are insufficient. Any
argument you give would be false. We can say that with certainty
because SECRET TESTS HAVE OCCURRED. See, for example, the citation of
the District of Columbia police department earlier in this topic.
> "The drug problem" is, and has been for some time, the number-one
> problem in the minds of three-quarters of the U.S. population.
I see no reason to fight problems in people's minds. Let them spend
money in their minds to do it.
Bush's big message: Drug use down 37 percent; spending must increase.
Yeah, that makes sense.
-- edp
|
716.605 | Oh, my tummy always looks this BIG :-) | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Sep 06 1989 09:30 | 10 |
| If it is a federal crime to deny employment based on pregnancy, AIDS,
cancer etc; how come Digital can ask those questions to a prospective
employee? This is not idle curiosity.
Can the prospective employee REFUSE to answer those questions and
DEMAND that the practice be stopped? It is assumed that the particular
applicant's chances of receiving an employment offer would be nil but
at least the future applicants will benefit.
- Vikas
|
716.606 | | PEKING::HASTONM | Emm | Wed Sep 06 1989 10:14 | 19 |
| RE: < Note 716.596 by JACKAL::CARROLL >
My reasoning on the DEC truck drivers is that I believe truck drivers
tend to use ampethamines to keep awake on long hauls. Intrastate
truckers don't do long hauls.
Your claim that I have a lack of the big picture is presumptive.
I worked in offshore oil (at the sharp end) for many years and am quite
familiar with the dangers of a high risk environment with or without drug
users.
At the base (and absurd) level we are all risks to each other, I
could walk in front of a fork-lift (or truck or...) driver and cause
an accident that way. I can do that in DEC or on the street. Do
I have a test in my kitchen before coming to work?
What about the testers? Who tests the testers? (or the people that
_make_ the testing equipment) The whole thing is silly. Fortunately
we have no such plans, to the best of my knowledge, for such activities
in DEC UK.
M
|
716.608 | | E::EVANS | | Wed Sep 06 1989 10:43 | 9 |
|
Having been throught the hiring process less than a year ago, yes they do ask
you all of those questions. However, they asked me those questions after I had
been offered employment with the intent of making sure that they would be
assigning me to a job that was a good match for my physical condition. I
understood that the implication was that if there was some problem that they
would find another job for me and not that they would withdraw the offer of
employment (something that would be a clear violation of the law).
|
716.609 | From personal experience... | EDUHCI::WENTZELL | Does anybody remember laughter? | Wed Sep 06 1989 13:57 | 8 |
| I too am recently hired and the those questions (in the form of
a pre-employment physical) came after the offer and acceptance of
the job. The reason I was given was because of insurance reasons.
Medical benefits cover you while you are employed so if someone has
problems that developed previous to employment, Digital wants to know
it. I don't know the how or why (so nobody leap down my throat :-) )
but coverage gets tricky for old/previous problems.
|
716.610 | Digital has no pre-existing condition clause | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Wed Sep 06 1989 15:12 | 18 |
| > Medical benefits cover you while you are employed so if someone has
> problems that developed previous to employment, Digital wants to know
> it. I don't know the how or why (so nobody leap down my throat :-) )
> but coverage gets tricky for old/previous problems.
Not true. Digital has no pre-existing condition clause for either
newly hired employees or their dependents. Period. I hired someone
once whose wife was 8 months pregnant, and Digital paid for her
maternity care from the day he began work, no questions asked. The
same employee also had another child with some very severe birth
defects, and Digital also picked up coverage on that child immediately,
no questions asked.
I don't know what the reason is for asking the questions being
discussed here, but it isn't to determine whether you're eligible for
medical benefits.
Pat
|
716.611 | I only know what I'm told | EDUHCI::WENTZELL | Does anybody remember laughter? | Wed Sep 06 1989 15:43 | 4 |
| RE .610
Well then, I guess some misinformed person is misinforming people
like me. Thanks for the correction.
|
716.612 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Sep 06 1989 16:36 | 5 |
| re: .610---I can't be sure what the policy is today, but when I was
hired in 1975 there was no coverage for "pre-existing" conditions.
My wife was pregnant when I changed jobs, so our expenses were not
covered.
John Sauter
|
716.613 | None of which has anything to do with drug testing... | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Sep 06 1989 16:44 | 8 |
| And for those who need to know, the magic three questions referred
to here are on the "Evidence of Insurability" form which is required
to be filed whenever certain additions or changes are made to your
benefits coverage. If it means anything, Digital is nowhere mentioned
on it - it's a standard John Hancock form.
Al
|
716.614 | one last tangent | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Wed Sep 06 1989 17:45 | 23 |
| > And for those who need to know, the magic three questions referred
> to here are on the "Evidence of Insurability" form which is required
> to be filed whenever certain additions or changes are made to your
> benefits coverage. If it means anything, Digital is nowhere mentioned
> on it - it's a standard John Hancock form.
Al, I might be mistaken, but I don't believe Evidence of Insurability
is required for new-hires, so it must be some other form these folks
are talking about.
RE the pre-existing condition: the reason I'm so sure of myself is
that the employee I hired made insurance coverage a condition of his
accepting the job. I went to Personnel and checked and double-checked
and ended up getting them to put it in writing. They assured me and
the employee that Digital would cover literally *any* pre-existing
condition he or his dependents might have. The candidate was
understandably reluctant to quit his old job till he was absolutely sure
both his wife and his son would be covered by Digital. Both were.
This happened within the last 5 years.
OK, I'll shut up now and y'all can return to the drug testing subject.
Pat
|
716.615 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Sep 07 1989 09:26 | 14 |
| re: .614
Pat,
You didn't say explicitly whether personell claimed this was general
policy, or under certain circumstances, or as an exception. I know at
least one hire for whom an explitic exception was made (10+ years ago).
Could you clairify?
Actually, since this is such important information, could someone from
personel clairify?
tkx, greg
|
716.616 | Digital started with truck drivers, then it will be new hires | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Sep 07 1989 09:26 | 8 |
| RE: How this is related with drug testing?
My brother just started his job with a F-500 company. His offer letter
specifically mentioned that the offer was contigent upon him passing
pre-employment medical (physical??) AND drug testing. Once I get the
chance, I will reproduce the offer letter.
- Vikas
|
716.617 | RE: .606 | JACKAL::CARROLL | | Thu Sep 07 1989 11:08 | 21 |
|
RE: .606
>At DEC we don't have any people in those sort of jobs - and I would
>exclude our truckers if they're not going interstate (i.e. long
>haul). Our s/w types (including me) have their work tested (but
>not for drugs 8^) before it gets let loose so I don't see a problem
>there. I would think that the same goes for out h/w stuff too.
>Therefore, no chance of drugged workers harming anyone but themselves.
I do not believe that my statement was at all presumptive. Your
statement in .571 is what precipitated my response. The big picture
applied only to DEC not anywhere else. You may have worked on an
oil rig but that does not necessarily translate to a knowledge of
how DEC produces product or how life-threatening some postions are.
Distance may not be the only reason a driver might use to justify
taking drugs, working overtime while driving intrastate could be
as good a reason as any, possibly working two jobs is another.
Bob
|
716.618 | BTW a drug test was not required on the form | EDUHCI::WENTZELL | Does anybody remember laughter? | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:18 | 14 |
| RE: back a few
I have not seen the "Evidence of Insurabiltiy" form probobly since
I opted to go with a HMO and not John Hancock. There is a *DIGITAL*
Pre-employment Physical form that must be filled out by a doctor
or registered nurse before you may start at DEC. In fact, two of
the people who started with me forgot their forms and were told to
go home and get it (one of the people lived over an hour away).
Now, if anyone wants to continue this discussion, I suggest we start
a new topic. Back to our regularly scheduled program...
Scott
|
716.620 | So why IS Digital asking all those questions??? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:56 | 30 |
| RE: .615
> You didn't say explicitly whether personell claimed this was general
> policy, or under certain circumstances, or as an exception. I know at
> least one hire for whom an explitic exception was made (10+ years ago).
> Could you clairify?
Greg, I called Personnel while the employee was sitting in my office,
and explained the details of the situation: applicant's wife is very
pregnant, and applicant has a child with a birth defect that requires
constant and expensive medical care. The PSA *immediately*, without
hesitation, said "Oh, there's no problem. Digital has no pre-existing
condition clause on medical insurance as long as the new employee
enrolls within 31 days of starting work." I told the applicant that
and concluded the interview. Later, when I made him the offer, he
again expressed concern about it. I went back to Personnel to verify
what I had been told and received the same answer. I asked for it in
writing and got it.
Just to be sure of myself (this happened about four years ago), I
checked my "Rainbow" Benefits Book last night. Sure enough, all a new
employee has to do to get coverage both for the employee and his/her
dependents is to submit a Group Insurance Authorization form within 31
days of starting work. Evidence of Insurability is required ONLY IF
THE EMPLOYEE APPLIES FOR COVERAGE AFTER THE 31-DAY PERIOD.
Perhaps someone from Personnel will jump in and confirm it for us.
Pat
|
716.621 | throw another log on the fire... | WAYLAY::GORDON | bliss will be the death of me yet... | Sat Sep 09 1989 00:32 | 9 |
| I was hired in July of 1986, into DEC US, in a software job, and
I never had to take a physical or submit a form. It's possible I fell
through the cracks...
I know of at least one current DEC employee who turned down a job
from another company because they wanted a drug test as a condition of
employment.
--Doug
|
716.622 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Sun Sep 10 1989 18:12 | 1 |
| re: .620 ... thanks, that sounds pretty solid to me also.
|
716.623 | Drug testing is becoming a requirment | COMET::HULTENGREN | | Wed Sep 13 1989 12:30 | 18 |
| I have two sisters who have looked for jobs in the petrolem/geological
engineering fields in the last three years and both have been required
to submit to drug testing befor the final interview appointment would
be made. Both are graduates of Colorado School of Mines in Golden.
The older of the two graduated three years ago and has had two other
positions other that the one she currently has in San Francisco.For all
positions she was required to submit to testing befor they would give
the offer.
THe younger just graduated this last june and finally accepted a
position with a firm in Alaska(She did not want to work nuclier(sp)
waste issues with the City of Denver and continue the part-time
position she had during the school year and summer vacation while
attending Mines. They did offer her a position and she declined).
She submitted to drug testing for each position she interviewed for.
janet
|
716.624 | one companies opinion | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Thu Sep 14 1989 00:54 | 9 |
| A rather large (8' x 6') sign in front of Home Depot:
ALL APPLICANTS ARE TESTED FOR DRUGS
If you use drugs, don't apply to work here!
-Barry-
|
716.625 | | COOKIE::WITHERS | If you play it, say it | Thu Sep 14 1989 20:21 | 5 |
| When someone makes their opinions known like that, then you can decide
whether to shop there (or not). When someone posts an opinion like that, I
then feel free to tell them what I think of their opinion.
BobW
|
716.626 | clarification | PCOJCT::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Fri Sep 15 1989 11:32 | 16 |
| clarification needed for 716.624
The sign AT HOME DEPOT read:
-------------------------------------------------
| |
| ALL APPLICANTS ARE TESTED FOR DRUGS |
| |
| If you use drugs, don't apply to work here! |
| |
-------------------------------------------------
I am sorry if the second line was taken as my personal opinion.
-Barry-
|
716.627 | | COOKIE::WITHERS | If you play it, say it | Fri Sep 15 1989 19:11 | 11 |
| Barry, I read it as the store's policy...if my note wasn't clear, it would
affect my decision to shop at that store.
AS I said somewhere else in a note boauty dress codes, stores in the colorado
springs area often post signs that say
" No Shirt
No Shoes
No Service"
and I suggest that you be careful what you ask for...
|
716.629 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Dec 14 1989 10:26 | 30 |
|
SURVEY FINDS WORKERS BACK DRUG TESTING
(Copied without permission from the Boston Globe,
14-Dec-1989 -- Associated Press)
WASHINGTON - Sixty percent of American workers favor on-the-job drug
testing, according to a Gallup poll released yesterday by a corporate
group that said the results give "a green light" to increased employer
testing.
The survey, done for the newly formed Institute for a Drug-Free
Workplace, an organization of 14 large corporations concerned about
employers' rights, said workers tend to support some programs over
others.
"Most significantly, the survey reaffirms the policy of increasing
numbers of employers who are drug testing, and gives a clear and
unmistakable green light to further testing of employees and job
applicants," said Mark A. de Bernardo, executive director of the
institute.
For example, 51 percent of the 1,007 employees polled indicated that
the companies should have the right to test any employee randomly for
drug use. Support rose to 70 percent for testing employees "suspected
of drug usage."
On the broadest question, 60 percent of the sample said they favored
their company adopting some sort of drug-testing policy.
|
716.630 | Poll based on less than 1% of DECies | CEDSWS::RELYEA | Ed | Thu Dec 14 1989 12:09 | 9 |
|
1007 people is hardly what I would call a majority. That is not
even 1% of the DECies out there. What would have happened
if all 1007 said yes to drug testing.
Title would read "100 percent of American..."?
��
|
716.631 | | GOFER::HARLEY | Confidentially... I AM A WABBIT!! | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:26 | 10 |
| re .629
I'm sure that a survey done for a group called the
Institute for a Drug Free Workplace
(an organization of 14 large corporations concerned about employers' rights)
will be totally unbiased as to it's findings...
/Harley
|
716.632 | Unbiased Survey: No Such Thing! | NITTY::COHEN | What fools these mortals be... | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:24 | 9 |
| --> I'm sure that a survey done for a group called the
--> Institute for a Drug Free Workplace
--> (an organization of 14 large corporations concerned about employers' rights)
--> will be totally unbiased as to it's findings...
I am not sure there is such a creature as an "unbiased survey"!
Seems like a contradiction (sp?) in terms.
tac
|
716.633 | Test your drugs here! | CGOO01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:30 | 6 |
| Before I jump up and down, I would like to know what drugs Digital
wants to test on me? Today I'm very open for any kind of cold or
flu remedy.
:^)
|
716.634 | | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:52 | 4 |
| I just added a few more dollars to the check I'm sending the ACLU ...
:^(
|
716.635 | Other unbiased sources of information | CALL::SWEENEY | International House of Workstations | Thu Dec 14 1989 21:18 | 4 |
| And while you're at it, why not NORML and "High Times"...
What do they have to say about drug testing in the workplace, and at
Digital (this is the Digital conference, after all)...
|
716.636 | Just so we can all get a little more paranoid . . . | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Dec 15 1989 08:54 | 19 |
| Heard on WBZ radio (Boston) on the 8AM news today - A recent study published
in the New England Journal of Medicine reveals that testing human hairs is
a far more reliable method of drug testing than urine or blood tests. The
tests are much less susceptible to false positives, and additionally have
"historical" merit, since cocaine use will leave a permanent "mark" on the
hair as it grows from the follicle during a period of drug use. This "mark"
stays with the hair as it grows, thus recording the drug use for months
after the fact.
So what d'ya think about them apples? Just think, now technology will allow
"them" to not even have to ask you to pee in a bottle! All they have to do
is walk into your office (probably when you're not there) and grab a few
hairs off the collar of your coat as it hangs there innocently. Oh well,
at least I don't think they've yet figured out how to test a hair for
pregnancy or various diseases. But you will have to wonder if you see
more and more people coming to work looking like skinheads, I guess.
-Jack
|
716.637 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Dec 15 1989 09:30 | 3 |
| As I recall, the hair test was also some ten times more expensive than
a standard urinalysis; this was forecast to have an adverse effect on
acceptance by employers.
|
716.638 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Dec 15 1989 09:54 | 23 |
|
I recently received a much-forwarded and very interesting memo on drug
testing at Digital. While I seek the original author's permission
to post it here, I believe a unattributed summary is both legal and
useful.
In summary, this memo says the following:
1) A temporary task force has been established to handle the sporadic
but growing number of requests for drug tesing of on-site Digital
employees. The purpose of this task force is to provide a consistent
response to such requests, to explore alternatives to drug testing
and to review existing drug testing programs [in other companies?].
All requests for drug testing are to be forwarded to the task force.
2) There is indication that a change in Digital's policy toward drug
testing will be announced very shortly [by the new year?]. An
effective mechanism to support these new policies will be put in
place, including a drug testing mechanism provided by the medical
department which will protect the privacy of the employee.
3) It is expected that the task force will be disbanded by the end of
Q4 [replaced by new policies and/or field experience?].
|
716.639 | Pro-civil liberties does not mean pro-drugs! | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Sat Dec 16 1989 03:12 | 36 |
| re: 716.635 by CALL::SWEENEY "International House of Workstations"
> And while you're at it, why not NORML and "High Times"...
I wouldn't contribute money to organizations like these, because I'm
not "pro-drugs". I am very "pro-civil rights" however, and it seems
to me that ACLU and its affiliates deserve my support for their efforts
to protect my civil rights.
I for one feel that our company is being pressured by the government
to do their dirty work for them, namely drug testing. I believe that
it runs counter to DEC's culture to engage in this sort of blanket
"checking-up" on employees with no prior cause. I also believe that
any such program would quickly lend itself to abuse, both from within
and from outside of the company. What is to prohibit the government
from passing a law next year that requires the company to turn over
the results of such tests for anything from "statistical purposes"
to individual investigation and criminal prosecution? As long as
these steps are taken gradually, and we can be bullied by the
beaurocrats with spectres of our kids becoming junky-prostitute-
homosexual-psycho killers, we seem to acquiesce to ever thinking
of the long-term consequences.
Yesterday the Texas Supreme Court let stand a ruling allowing totally
random drug-testing at a local (Austin) high-tech company that had
been challenged in court by an employee. Representatives from other
local employers like Texas Instruments, Motorola, IBM, and 3M have
followed the case closely, and have generally expressed support for
the decision. I expect they and others (like DEC) will take this
as a green light to implement testing programs in this state.
It truly amazes me that even as we are applauding our Eastern neighbors
for escaping the reins of oppressive government control, we are busily
thinking of new ways to give our own government these very same powers.
Geoff
|
716.640 | Why Not ? | NEWVAX::TURRO | Watch the skies | Mon Dec 18 1989 02:15 | 17 |
| I have read most of the replies in this topic and find it most
interesting. While Im addicted to Nicotine(Cigs) and my rights have
been infringed upon. I find it troublesome that some people have the
the thought that Drug Testing for an illegal and dangerous drug
are an infringement on there rights. The only problem I have is
that since most tests are not fool-proof then there should be a
way for a retest if a false "positive" result should occur.
Im for drug testing while I don't know of anyone that is on drugs ie
cocaine or some chemical(s) I do know of alot who are on cigs,alcohol.
Why not test if you have nothing to hide ? By testing it would weed out
those that are "using" and get them help even though they probably
don't think they need help. And believe me they do now or will soon....
My .04
Mike
|
716.641 | Why would anyone approve? | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Mon Dec 18 1989 09:03 | 20 |
| RE: .640 In many of the previous replies are a number of reasons
why people who don't use drugs would object to these tests. I personally
don't use drugs (including tabaco or alcahol). Yet I strongly oppose
this testing. A few reasons.
It assumes one is guilty until they prove themselves innocent. That
strikes me as ver un American.
The potential for abuse is widespread. Everything from testing for
other things not allowed to using the results for blackmail
to criminal prococution that bypasses due process.
It violates the concept of privecy that has been supported by the
Supreme Court.
False positives are very very common. Even re-tests can show false
results. Show me a test that is 100% and I'll still object
on the grouds above though.
Alfred
|
716.642 | You have nothing to hide, do you? | THEPIC::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Mon Dec 18 1989 09:03 | 13 |
| re: .640
> Why not test if you have nothing to hide ?
How about warrantless, uannounced, random searches of your house? How about
random, no-probable cause traffic stops with strip searches? How about police
video cameras in your bedroom? In some states, certain sexual acts are still
illegal. You don't have anything to hide, do you?
Fortunately, we still have a Constitution, despite the best efforts of certain
government officials.
Bob
|
716.643 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Mon Dec 18 1989 09:11 | 13 |
| > Why not test if you have nothing to hide ? By testing it would weed out
> those that are "using" and get them help even though they probably
> don't think they need help. And believe me they do now or will soon....
> Mike
Why Not, Mike? Well just to draw out a point lets take this to an extreme.
Why not let the government put a camera in your bedroom, mind you its there
just to make sure you aren't doing something illegal and if you arent, then
you have nothing to worry about, right?
So, when would you like for the installer to show up?
- George
|
716.644 | I want a Digital drug-test policy--a no test policy | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Mon Dec 18 1989 09:45 | 25 |
| Re: .629
> On the broadest question, 60 percent of the sample said they favored
> their company adopting some sort of drug-testing policy.
I wonder if that's the actual question the survey used. I would
answer `Yes, I want Digital to have some sort of drug-testing
policy, the sort of policy that says testing will never happen'.
Re: .641
You missed a few reasons against testing:
o The tests don't test for illegal use of drugs, because
the tests don't determine where the drugs were taken
and drug laws vary from country to country.
o Companies shouldn't care about use of drugs, they should
care about on-the-job imparement, and most drug tests in
use don't say anything about that subject.
o If a company wants to improve productivity, a drug
testing program that ignores alcohol is silly.
B.J.
|
716.645 | Abuse is not a theory, it's a fact ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Mon Dec 18 1989 16:13 | 35 |
| re: .644
> o If a company wants to improve productivity, a drug
> testing program that ignores alcohol is silly.
To take that point a step further, if a company wants to improve
both the productivity of its workers *and* cut insurance costs, it
would have to account for both alcohol and nicotine. While there
is no law that prohibits the use of these two particular drugs (at
the moment), they would both be easily testable using the very same
sample of blood.
There is already a splendid example of how such testing by employers
can be abused: lie detector tests. When the Labor Department and the
Congress were in the progress of drafting legislation for restriction
of lie detector tests by private employers, the studies turned up two
shocking points. In the first place, they found that many employers
were asking questions far beyond the ostensible "Have you stolen from
the company?", things like sexual and political orientations. And in
the second place, they found that a significant number of the operators
of the detectors were poorly trained and often interpreted results
based on their own personal opinions and from pre-conceptions. But
the employers often treated this information as gospel, and took
disciplinary actions without further justification. That is why the
Congress passed a bill restricting the use of lie detector tests by
private employers.
Why should drug testing be any different? The validity of the tests
still rely in great measure upon human lab personnel and upon the good
faith of the Company personnel who receive the results from the lab,
all of whom you would never get a chance to hold accountable should
your job be threatened by a questionable drug test.
Geoff
|
716.646 | "Nothing to hide"--but don't look, please | WORDY::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Mon Dec 18 1989 16:35 | 26 |
| Re: [.645 (UNLAND)]: Laboratory drug tests, while certainly not 100%
accurate, are far more accurate than lie-detector tests. To mention
the two in the same argument is silly.
Re: [.640 (Mike Turro)]: In this country we are caught on the horns of
a terrible dilemma. While it's not called out in the Constitution,
there is a generally recognized "right of privacy." Random drug
testing is seen as a profound threat to the "right of privacy." Many
of us are disturbed about chipping away at that right, for any reason,
both on its own merits and as a precedent for further assaults on
rights.
Yet the problem of drugs is so serious that many of us are willing to
see drug testing on a massive scale in an effort to root it out. The
specter of drug-impaired transportation workers, health-care givers,
military personnel, law-enforcement agents, and--yes!--legislators is
frightening.
To put the dilemma bluntly, Mike, I don't care what you do on your
spare time (and presumably you don't care what I do on mine). But when
we pass on the highway, I hope to God your head is clear. In this
topic, I have expressed that point of view as "I'm in favoring of drug
testing everyone but me."
I don't know who said it, but it sounds appropriate: "He who gives up
liberty for security shall have neither."
|
716.647 | | BUCKY::FRIEDMANN | moderate extremism | Mon Dec 18 1989 16:59 | 12 |
| Drug tests may be more accurate than lie detector test, but that is not the
issue. The lack of 100% accuracy in the tests themselves, the inability of
the tests to identify the source of the positive reading (eg: poppy seeds),
and the inability of any system to insure total confidentiality are but
a few of the multitude of reasons to oppose drug testing. But then that's
all been discussed at length in early notes.
Interestingly enough, traditional conservative versus liberal lines hold
little sway in this discussion. Rather, it appears that the discussion
centers around whether your fear of societal decay, which IMHO drug problems
are merely a symptom of, prompts you to sacrifice the personal freedoms our
ancestors fought for, and which, sadly, we must continue to fight for.
|
716.648 | winners write the history books | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Dec 19 1989 08:02 | 10 |
| re: .646
I think it was Benjamin Franklin who said ``He who is willing to give
up a little liberty to improve his security is bound to lose both.''
(Or something like that.)
Ben Franklin, in addition to being a world-class scientist, was also
a flaming radical revolutionary. He encouraged the American colonies
to revolt against their King.
John Sauter
|
716.649 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | King Cynic | Tue Dec 19 1989 10:01 | 24 |
| RE: .630
Obviously, you've never heard anything about sampling theory! A sample
size of 1007 is a pretty good sample for something like this.
The number of samples required for an accurate survey is based on the
standard deviation of the population (estimated by the st. dev of the
sample divided by the Sqrt(sample size)) and the accuracy necessary.
(say an error of .01, or 1%)
Given this, it's rather easy to compute the sample size necessary. Thus
they take 1000 or so samples, figure the standard deviation of the
sample, compute the number of samples necessary to get an accurate
confidence estimate, and it it's smaller than the 1000, the sample is
valid. (with of course, a +/- error, which is usually given also)
-bill
Who is taking his statistics final tonight
|
716.650 | I hope it's Stat 101 | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Tue Dec 19 1989 10:08 | 11 |
| Ah, com'on.
People's opinions about drug testing and a bottle filled with blue and
yellow marbles are not the same.
Good surveys are very hard to design, if you want to find out the
"truth".
The way the questions are worded has a large effect.
The sample population has a large effect (consider the same survey
administered to a random sample of software engineers and to a random
sample of MBAs for instance).
/s/ Jim Williams
|
716.651 | Lets see how much stress the economy can take. | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Dec 19 1989 15:55 | 27 |
|
Well, Transportation dropped almost 30 points the day before random
drug testing was announced in the paper. The traders probably got
wind of it and knew what it ment... disruption in service and/or
productivity due to employee dismissals and severe employee resentment
which could manifest in slowdowns or sabotage.
A pilot study conducted by the Post Office (I believe) showed almost
no correlation between employees who tested positive in pre-employment
drug screening and those who were subsequently fired for poor performance.
The Soviet Union showed us how an economy fares when those people
who actually do the hands on work resent their employers (in their
case the government). Hostility never makes for high profit. Poor
morale doesn't contribute to a productive economic climate.
Lets see where the Transportation industry is in a year or so...
Lets see how the economy holds up under the weight of constant
employee disruptions and uncertainty. Lets see what happens the
first time someone wants to watch you urinate (the collective Decie
"you" of course_:-) As for myself... its not a pretty sight_:-)
By the way... when is the next election year?_:-) No wonder our
government is so friendly towards the Chinese government... they
probably like their style._;-)
Mary
|
716.652 | | BCSE::YANKES | | Tue Dec 19 1989 17:18 | 12 |
|
Re: .651
There are many, many variables that effect how the economy will
perform in general and industry sectors in particular. I don't believe
that making a judgement on how drug testing will effect an industry based
on their stock values a year from now is a valid approach. What will
you claim if the entire economy is in a recession next year and the
transportation stocks are down -- that is is all caused by drug testing?
The economy is far more complex than that.
-craig
|
716.653 | | SUBSYS::NEUMYER | | Wed Dec 20 1989 11:27 | 9 |
|
So what is the real impact to DEC? How will the testing be done? How
much will this program cost........
BTW. One class of people being tested is commercial airline pilots. How
many commercial airline accidents have been attributed to drug abuse?
|
716.654 | Nothing left to do but smile, smile, smile. | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Dec 20 1989 12:29 | 73 |
|
Note 716.652
BCSE::YANKES
> There are many, many variables that effect how the economy will
>perform in general and industry sectors in particular.
Of course there are and drug testing is one of them.. an unprecedented
variable with no positive historical example to extrapolate upon.
>I don't believe that making a judgement on how drug testing will
>effect an industry based on their stock values a year from now is a
>valid approach.
I believe it is a valid approach. A government policy that is forced
upon American industry should certainly be held accountable for
any adverse economic effects it may generate in a free market economy.
>What will you claim if the entire economy is in a recession next year
>and the transportation stocks are down -- that is is all caused by
>drug testing? The economy is far more complex than that.
I will say "I told you so_:-)". The entire economy *will* (in my
opinion) be in a recession next year -craig, and the primary reason
will be short-sighted policy that lacks common sense like this one.
Milton Freidman, one of America's most respected economists, publicly
stated sound economic reasons why drugs should be decriminalized
in his open letter to William Bennett published in the Wall Street
Journal.
It is easy to blame economic problems on vague and uncertain
complexities because then you needn't supply solutions and you can
avoid blame, but the economic problems that face us today and tomorrow
are the direct result of specific government policy and attitudes
like this very one. Unfortunately, the economic damage may be out
of control before we wake up and stop the Republican social engineering
and waste of money and resources. They can't even keep drugs out
of jails. Throwing money at a problem doesn't solve it, neither
does repressive government policy.
America suffers now from a lack of trust, of faith and of vision.
We don't believe in much any more, we don't care about much any
more. We don't trust each other. We certainly don't trust or believe
government. And we are beginning to lose faith even in ourselves and
in our ability to choose elected officials.
A demoralized, dispirited people lack the will, the strength and
the desire to rescue their society economically. Having our urine
tested does nothing to contribute to our well-being or self-respect.
It will not make us better, more productive workers.
It will not increase the profit margins of American corporations.
Contributing to the breakdown of trust by implementing drug testing
will only exacerbate the breakdown of the other systems that depend
upon that trust and mutual respect... like our economic system for
example... thats what has happened to the stock market. The
individual investor, knowing he couldn't trust the system to be
fair, bailed out... and his presence traditionally provided the
stabilizing factor needed in the market.
Drug testing may prove to be the final blow. I doubt our
society/economy can take many more. We Americans do not get much
for our tax money and government is very insensitive to our needs,
our rights, and our desires. China, in all its repression, cannot
force motivation upon the worker making him more productive. It
took roughly 40 years for the repressive governments of China and
the Soviet Union to completely distroy their economies. We Americans
are not used to repressive governments... it won't take nearly
that long to distroy ours.
Mary
|
716.655 | <couldn't resist :-)> | FDCV06::OGRADY | George - ISWS - Overhead Support | Wed Dec 20 1989 14:05 | 6 |
|
�BTW. One class of people being tested is commercial airline pilots. How
�many commercial airline accidents have been attributed to drug abuse?
See how well it works.....:-) :-) *1000
|
716.656 | Back on track please | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Dec 20 1989 14:45 | 4 |
| Please keep replies on track with Digital spicific content. This
is not the conference to discuss politics in general. Thank you.
Alfred - co-moderator HUMAN::DIGITAL
|
716.657 | DEC pilots | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Dec 20 1989 18:11 | 13 |
| Re: .653
>> BTW. One class of people being tested is commercial airline pilots. How
>> many commercial airline accidents have been attributed to drug abuse?
None that I know of. There was a crash in Durango, Colorado, a
year or so ago, after which the captain tested positive for cocaine
by-products. There was no proof one way or the other that drugs
contributed to the accident.
As for the Digital pilots who fly our corporate aircraft, I don't see
any reason for them to be tested prior to an accident. I won't feel
safer if they are.
|
716.658 | | AOXOA::STANLEY | I need a miracle every day... | Thu Dec 21 1989 13:50 | 3 |
| I guess I'm missing something here. Is there a drug abuse problem at Digital?
Dave
|
716.659 | employees still valued when business turns south? | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Sun Dec 24 1989 08:55 | 23 |
| Dave, you ask a good question. Perhaps it should read, "To what extent
is the drug abuse problem at Digital better/worse than society as a
whole?"
The major "problem" in my view is that Digital wants to maintain a
business relationship with customers who now require drug testing from
their vendors, the DoD being just one such customer. Because of this,
Digital has left the door open for the possibility of future drug
testing...not only for newhires but also for current employees.
Drug and alcohol abuse are clearly a major health problem in this
country. The question becomes, to what extent will we employees of the
corporation allow an invasion into our privacy to help curb this
national health crisis, and to allow Digital to continue to conduct
business with those folks who mandate drug testing of their vendor's
employees. There is another topic somewhere in this conference that
conducted a poll of current employees on the subject; this is not that
note.
regards,
Marge
|
716.660 | Pointer to article on drug testing | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Tue Dec 26 1989 21:26 | 13 |
| For a limited time only, a copy of an interesting and informative
article on drug testing is available at
INTER::USER$653:[JONG.PUBLIC]DRUGS.TXT
It appeared in the Nolo News, a newsletter published by a small
California publisher specializing in books about the law. Their
corporate motto is doubtless "We hate lawyers!"
The article is 768-odd words long. I post this pointer instead of
cluttering the topic with another long reply. It is also highly
questionable that this pertains directly to the Digital way of
working...
|
716.661 | From Livewire | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Dec 27 1989 11:02 | 69 |
| Digital to institute drug & alcohol testing program
for certain jobs in the U.S.
Drug and alcohol abuse have been elevated to a major public problem in the
U.S. today. As a result, there is a growing expectation that large companies,
with employees in the U.S., should lead in the overall effort to deal with
this problem.
Digital has been wrestling with this issue for many months, working to develop
policies and practices that remain consistent with the company's basic values,
while meeting new and complex legal, customer and business requirements. At
the same time, Digital believes employees should be responsible for their own
behavior, and expects employees to conduct themselves in a safe and healthy
way.
Abuse of drugs or alcohol can show up at the workplace in the form of
performance problems such as absenteeism, tardiness and inability to do
quality work. It can lead to waste or safety hazards in a manufacturing
environment, or poor decision making or engineering errors. It can affect
customer relations because of behavior that endangers customers' workplaces
and profitability. Consequently, Digital does not condone abuse of drugs or
alcohol either inside or outside of the workplace.
Digital has strong substance abuse and employee conduct policies to deal with
problems that show up in performance on the job. For instance, the use,
possession or distribution of illegal substances on Digital property, or on
a customer site, could be cause for termination from the company.
Since alcohol and chemical dependencies are treatable diseases, Digital,
through its Employee Assistance Program (EAP), makes various resources
available to employees who may have a drug or alcohol problem. Employees who
have a problem are strongly encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity to
seek treatment, and are able to do so in confidentiality. For those who seek
treatment, the chances of recovery are great, but it is up to the employee to
take the first step toward treatment.
The U.S. government and customers have been putting increasing emphasis on
testing as the most visible means for combating drug abuse. In response to an
ever-increasing number of requirements and obligations from government
agencies and customers, Digital's Executive Committee has decided to test some
employees to determine whether they have used illegal or controlled substances,
or are under the influence of alcohol.
At first, this program will affect certain truck drivers in the U.S. (in
accordance with regulations from the U.S. Department of Transportation), some
employees in the Government Systems Group in jobs requiring security
clearances, and those who provide service to a few customers that are
particularly sensitive about this issue because of health, safety or security
considerations. But everyone should bear in mind that, in the current climate
of public opinion regarding drugs and drug testing, the number of people
affected will probably expand in response to further government regulations,
customer requirements and other business needs.
Digital is setting up a program which has four goals:
o to make sure the testing is done consistently, fairly and
accurately,
o to make sure people are treated with respect,
o to make sure employees know that treatment and other
assistance is available to those who seek it, and
o to make sure information about test results are districtued
only to those with a clear need to know.
The people affected will be notified in advance. Each will be given detailed
information and opportunities to ask whatever questions they may have in order
to help them understand their responsibilities under the program, if they
should become subject to it. Digital is aware of the complex legal
restrictions and employee relations issues surrounding testing, and will be
instituting quality training for affected managers.
|
716.663 | | SUBSYS::NEUMYER | | Wed Dec 27 1989 14:19 | 5 |
| To paraphrase -
"They can have my urine when they pry it from my cold dead body"
|
716.664 | corporate hypocrisy | JURAN::WILSON | | Thu Dec 28 1989 01:40 | 17 |
| I, for one, am disturbed by the tone versus the content of this policy
statement. Note that the term "abuse" is used throughout, which avoids
conveying any judgment of employee "use" of alcohol or drugs. Yet the
action prescribed for ("At first") some employees, is to test "to
determine whether they have used illegal or controlled substances, or
are under the influence of alcohol." The hypocrisy is evident.
It's clear that employee rights don't exist here; and it's clear that
Digital is pandering to the William Bennetts of this country while
posturing as an enlightened organization concerned about its employees
health and welfare.
Why not just say, "We don't have the courage to take a stand on this
issue, so you employees had better get ready for widespread violation
of your rights to privacy."
John
|
716.665 | ten scenarios - how are they different or not? | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Dec 28 1989 14:29 | 61 |
| re: .661 and "business" reasons for drug testing
How are any of the following scenarios different from one another,
and how do you think the Company would treat each instance?
Consider each question as if it were from a customer or potential
customer, from a vendor or potential vendor, in either the private
or public sector.
1) "We deal with a great deal of sensitive information at this site.
To control access, we'd like to take fingerprints of your employees
before we let them on-site to pursue our business together."
2) "Our inventory consists of easily transportable, valuable, and easily
fencible items. We'd like to search your employees as they leave
our site."
3) "Our inventory consists of easily transportable, valuable, and easily
fencible items. We'd like to search your employees' offices after
they leave our site."
4) "Our inventory consists of easily transportable, valuable, and easily
fencible items. We'd like to search your employees' homes after
they leave our site."
5) "Our employees are very health conscious here. We'd like to screen
your visiting employees for homosexuality so we can test them
for AIDS before we allow them to visit our site."
6) "Our employees are very health conscious here. We'd like to screen
your visiting employees for various communicable diseases
before we allow them to visit our site."
7) "One of our female employees was raped after she left work one night
last week. We'd like to take semen samples from your visiting
male employees to try to identify the rapist."
8) "We'd like to know if any of your employees who might vist our site
have ever been involved with illegal gambling, or have an extremely
ill family member, or other severe unexpected financial strains that
might cause them to try to steal from us or otherwise endanger
our employees or our business."
9) "We feel that illegal drug use and drug abuse in general are big
problems nowadays. We'd like to test your employees for their
contact with certain substances before we allow them onto our
site or work on our project."
10) "Society presents a lot of problems nowadays. We'd like to know
if any of your employees who might visit our site or work on
our project are under any strong emotional stresses (divorce,
loss of a family member, family member in trouble) that might
affect their performance."
This is NOT a rhetorical exercise on my part to say that if number 9 is
accepted all the rest will come to pass. I am, however, sincerely concerned
about how we will stop the rest from becoming acceptable if number nine
does so. Taking my opening questoin literally, how DO these instances
differ from one another, and what WOULD our company do if presented
with each?
- tom powers]
|
716.666 | Rights erode | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Dec 28 1989 16:37 | 61 |
| Re: [.665] (Tom Powers): Tom, these are challenging questions. In a
previous reply, I left a pointer to an article I typed in about drug
testing and the right of privacy. One point made in the article was
that in a few years, it might be considered reasonable to search
everyone who enters an area where drugs are dealt. That is, if you
live in, visit, or even drive through a bad neighborhood, you may in
future be subject to being stopped and searched. The Boston police are
engaged in a policy of stopping and searching known youth gang members,
on the assumption that they are some sort of criminal class. (They're
finding a lot of drugs and guns that way.) In Framingham,
Massachusetts, there is currently a furor over the action of the local
police, who have decided to crack down on auto thefts at the mall by
stopping *everyone* who drives cars of certain oft-stolen makes (!).
So it's true: what today are considered outrages against the rights of
citizens can tomorrow be routine police procedure. How far might it
go?
To answer your questions: Scenario 1 doesn't seem too awful to me. In
my opinion, the only difference between scenarios 2, 3, and 4 is that
#2 is easiest to implement (searching our employees as they leave) and
#4 is hardest to implement (searching their homes). Are not Digital
employees who call on customers subject to some form of search as they
leave, just as customers who visit our facilities are subject to some
form of search as they leave us?
Your scenario 5 is far-fetched, as tests for homosexuality have in the
past proven unreliable 8^) Extending to scenario 6, I'm not sure AIDS
is "communicable" in the sense of communicable diseases. This is the
same chain of logic that drove those wretched Florida residents to burn
the trailer of that family whose son had AIDS so as to drive the family
away and thus get the boy out of their public school.
Your scenario 7, aside from being a cumbersome way to catch a rapist
(as opposed to asking the woman to describe her assailant so as to
focus the search), is, at the moment, such an abandonment of probable
cause as to seem ridiculous. I hope it always remains so.
Your last three scenarios come to the heart of the matter. Accepting
#9 does seem to point, logically, in the direction of accepting #8 and
#10. I am under the impression that questions about the health of
family members, or financial conditions, are more appropriate to
interview situations, but that such questions are currently illegal.
If I were interviewing you, Tom, I might want to ask if you had a sick
family member, with the intent of evaluating whether you could devote
full time to the job in question; but I think it would be against the
law for me to ask. Can anyone clarify the matter?
If Digital can't legally ask a prospective employee these questions, I
don't see how a customer can.
On the other hand, if it ever becomes legally acceptable, or if it's
legally acceptable now, to ask such intrusive questions about the
background of workers, I would still wonder about the lack of trust it
would betray in our customers. Our customers would be saying, in
effect, "Digital, we don't trust your employees, and we don't trust
your ability to hire competent people. We'll make our own
determination, thank you."
Digital may be able to win the trust of its customers only by
certifying that its employees are drug-free. How will they determine
that?
|
716.667 | Degree by degree, step by step. | YUPPIE::COLE | Now is the time for ACTION, not proposals! | Thu Dec 28 1989 20:50 | 9 |
| > ................. Our customers would be saying, in
> effect, "Digital, we don't trust your employees, and we don't trust
> your ability to hire competent people. We'll make our own
> determination, thank you."
What the hey, they do that now with field delivery folks, and the
demand for resumes and interviews before we can start billing! We caved in on
that issue some time ago. Now, it may not be a constitutional issue, but it
is a business one!
|
716.668 | The steps get smaller | WORDY::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Fri Dec 29 1989 15:18 | 2 |
| Do they? Then drug testing our employees before allowing us on their
sites is not a large step.
|
716.669 | Yes. | ALOS01::MULLER | Fred Muller | Fri Dec 29 1989 16:02 | 5 |
| Yes, they do. And we cave in quite easily. Just like the pre-req
tests now required for some courses by EdServ. That's one I refuse to
accept. If my boss wants me to go, that should be enough.
Fred
|
716.670 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Tue Jan 02 1990 14:36 | 30 |
|
re .667, .669
Your analogies are weak.
It is perfectly reasonable for a customer paying large amounts for a
service such as a residency to seek proof of competence, and especially
understandable in light of the gaffs Digital has pulled in the past:
"You know anything about DECfoo?" "No." "Then take this book home
and study. You're the on-site expert a Framitz Manufacturing, starting
Monday."
It is also perfectly reasonable to use pre-requisite tests as a method
of determining the applicability of a course to a student. If a course
is designed to being a student from C to D, and the student is only at
A, then taking the course is likely to be an expensive waste of time,
at least for that student, and possible for everyone else in the class.
In any case, these situations both relate to proving competence in
skill or knowledge directly related to a task. Do you take a driving
test before receiving a license? Do you provide a resume when applying
for a job? Do you demonstrate knowledge at a defined level before being
accepted for higher education?
The correlation between being able to do a job and having done
it successfully in the past, or at least posessing the knowledge and
skills to do it, is strong; between being able to do a job,
and having taken some drug at some time in the past, doubtful at best.
|
716.671 | Please supply resume. | ALOS01::MULLER | Fred Muller | Fri Jan 05 1990 23:14 | 7 |
| Bill,
Before I decide to jump in again and possibly continue another rat-hole
convolution; have you personal experience in the field (SWS/PSS in
particular)?
Fred
|
716.672 | Drug-test is personal, resume is professional ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Tue Jan 09 1990 02:55 | 29 |
| re: resumes, drug testing, etc.
I believe that a customer asking for resumes from potential residents
is narrowly justified by our past history in some cases, but even so,
it indicates that the account manager or PSS manager making the pitch
does not have the full confidence of the customer. It may not be their
fault, but that's my own personal view (as a former customer ...)
Even so, I don't see that the resume issue parallels the drug-test
issue in one critical area: employee privacy. Resumes submitted to
the customer don't include things like marital status, salary, or
anything else that is not *directly* related with job experience or
performance. Drug-testing has absolutely nothing to do with any of
those job-related categories, otherwise, it wouldn't be random, and
the only tests that would be performed would be on employees who
demonstrated a lack of performance - *on the job*.
A final irony: there is a book out called "Medicine on Trial", written
by a doctor named Inlander (or something that sounds close) who is head
of a health profession watchdog group. In the book, he makes claims
that there are statistics showing that healthcare professionals account
for one out of every six identified drug addicts in America and Europe,
and there was a nice little program on Lifetime about a year ago that
indicated the leading occupational hazard of doctors was drug abuse.
Nice to know exactly who is going to be carrying out these "infallible"
tests on you and me, right?
Geoff
|
716.673 | | CGOA01::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Wed Jan 10 1990 03:26 | 13 |
| Amusing scenario...
Health Person: Ms. Smith, I see by your random drug test here that
you have not been using recreational drugs lately.
Digit: That is correct.
Health Person: If you're having some difficulty with your supply...
It's all in the marketing... ;^)
Don
|
716.674 | | FDCV07::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Fri Feb 02 1990 12:51 | 40 |
| I've just been catching up on this conference, and spent my lunch hour
reading the last 50 or so notes on this topic. There's one question I
have yet to see answered, although I've seen it asked once or twice:
What is Digital going to do if it finds drugs in an employee's sample??
If someone is doing well in his or her job, it seems to me the drug
testing is quite irrelevant to that person's performance. In other
words, so what if someone wants to go home at night and smoke a joint,
as long as it doesn't interfere with his or her work? In an extreme
scenario, what if someone is a '1' performer, or a '2', and drugs
around found? Will Digital automatically fire that type of person,
regardless of the fact that he or she has been a valuable contributor
to the company?
And in response to the discussion about people driving home and
endangering others' lives, etc., the way I see it, I'm not endangering
anyone's life by sitting here at my desk doing my job, even if I was
high as a kite doing it! Moreover, that would show up in my
performance much more clearly and appropriately than it would in a drug
sample.
I guess I'm seeing a lot of talk about why they should or shouldn't
institute testing, but I'm not seeing anything about what they should
do with the results of such testing. I especially didn't see the
answer to that in the LiveWire announcement.
Any thoughts? Answers?
BTW, about 20 or so notes ago, there was something about a survey
wherein the surveyors indicate some kind of dramatic agreement that
drug testing should be done, yet the number they used with that
particularly emphasized statement was 51%. Maybe you statistics people
know something I don't know, but 51% doesn't seem like an overwhelming
majority!!! They did use the figure 70-something% regarding another
aspect of testing, but, even that seems to have room for controversy.
Oh well. That's MHO. I'd be curious to see what others have seen,
experienced, or heard in relation to Digital's intended action plan for
those who test positive.
|
716.675 | | FDCV07::LEBLANC | Ruth E. LeBlanc | Mon Feb 05 1990 12:16 | 24 |
|
My husband mentioned something interesting to me this weekend when I
was telling him about this drug testing discussion. He said that he
was watching a TV program about Air Force pilots who, instead of
receiving drug testing, receive impairment tests. Each day before they
fly, they have to take a quick test--something like a flying
simulation--to ensure that they have no physical impairments which
could endanger their lives (or the lives of others).
Seems to me that such a test would be an interesting alternative for
people such as DEC truck drivers, helicopter pilots, etc. I like the
fact that it deals specifically with the performance/non-performance
issue rather than something someone does in his/her private time. As
they program indicated, a drug can stay in someone's system for 45 days
(or something like that), while impairment is only temporary. [the
downside is that someone could always take the drugs after the test,
but...]
I just thought I'd throw that out as a thought. Seemed to me to be a
logical alternative to keeping the roads/airways safe, while not
infringing on civil rights.
Any thoughts??
|
716.676 | | VAXWRK::GOLDENBERG | Ruth Goldenberg | Mon Feb 05 1990 14:17 | 14 |
| re .675 (Ruth LeBlanc)
It makes a lot more sense to me - not only does it not infringe
people's rights, it also catches people likely to perform poorly and be
dangerous for any number of other reasons. Maybe they're on
prescription or over the counter drugs that impair their functioning.
Or maybe they're moonlighting and haven't had enough sleep for days.
Or maybe they're emotionally upset and distracted...
I suspect that the purpose of most of the drug testing is political
and psychological, however, and think it's unlikely that it would
would be replaced by anything so sensible as impairment testing.
reg
|
716.677 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Mon Feb 05 1990 14:35 | 3 |
| It's certainly more palatable than drug testing.
|
716.678 | did you expect rationality? | JURAN::WILSON | | Mon Feb 05 1990 21:58 | 15 |
| Re the last few responses.
Unfortunately the policy is clear on this - the test is to see if the
employee is under the influence of alcohol, or has used illegal drugs.
Impairment testing would be rational; but let's face it, we're in the
middle of a drug war which is anything but rational.
Excellent point about the consequences of testing positive - I assumed
that if an employee failed the test they'd be required to go for drug
counseling and be sujected to regular retesting. I imagined it to be
similar to pro sports - as long as you recant and stay clean you won't
be banned for life (i.e., fired). But maybe I'm confusing this policy
with Big Brother?
John
|
716.679 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Feb 06 1990 09:09 | 6 |
| re: impairment testing
Alas, it's becoming all too clear that the support for drug testing
is coming from people who want to look for drugs, not impairment.
The impairment arguments are becoming merely rhetorical wedges
to be driven into the cracks to force support.
|
716.680 | | AOXOA::STANLEY | A kinder, more gullible nation... | Tue Feb 06 1990 10:37 | 6 |
| Re: .675
I think that impairment testing is much more to the point. Drug testing will
not determine whether a person capable or incapable of performing his/her job.
Dave
|
716.681 | Yes for impairment testing | COMET::PAPA | Send Lawyers, Guns and Money | Tue Feb 06 1990 15:35 | 3 |
| I certently do not approve of drug testing without probable cause
but impairment testing I could support. Send letters to your
congressmen and senators.
|
716.682 | U.S. Field Drug Testing Program manager appointed | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Feb 16 1990 10:16 | 21 |
| <><><><><><><><> T h e V O G O N N e w s S e r v i c e <><><><><><><><>
Edition : 2005 Friday 16-Feb-1990 Circulation : 7873
VNS COMPUTER NEWS: [Tracy Talcott, VNS Computer Desk]
================== [Nashua, NH, USA ]
Digital - Sue Andrews appointed Drug Testing Program manager for U.S. Field
{Livewire, 15-Feb-90}
Sue Andrews has assumed a temporary assignment as Program manager for
implementation of drug testing in the U.S. Field, reporting to Cyndi Bloom,
U.S. Field Employee Relations manager. The drug testing program will encompass
policy setting, operational procedures, a medical program, an EAP program, and
education and training of Personnel, line managers and employees. Sue was most
recently Human Resources Service Delivery manager in the Mid-Atlantic Region.
She has had first-hand experience with employee relations issues involved with
customers who have required drug testing as part of their contractual
agreements with Digital. She has also had management responsibility for large
Personnel projects in the Mid-Atlantic Region. Her nine-year history with
Digital includes five years as Plant Personnel manager for Storage Systems
Manufacturing in Natick, Mass.
|
716.683 | Score 1 for the Constitution | JULIET::TEJA_DA | | Fri Jun 01 1990 13:09 | 10 |
|
The California State Supreme Court ruled yesterday that most
random drug testing of employees by their employers is in
violation of the employee's right to privacy.
They upheld a lower court ruling that a computer programmer
for Southern Pacific Railroad was wrongfully dismissed for
refusing to submit to a urine test. Big time damages had been
awarded by the lower court.
|
716.684 | | WMOIS::FULTI | | Fri Jun 01 1990 16:50 | 9 |
| RE: 683
Hurray for California!!!!!!!
One can only hope that this starts a trend amoung other states, Mass. included...
- george
|
716.685 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Jun 05 1990 18:21 | 10 |
| RE .683
Yep, they upheld a $485,000 suit against SP by a former employee who was
fired for refusing to take a drug test.
They stated that the California Constitution guarantees the right to privacy.
Where public safety is not involved, that privacy cannot be invaded by drug
testing.
/john
|
716.686 | Replies formerly in 249.29 through 249.42 | EXIT26::STRATTON | Playing golf with Eric Clapton | Tue Jun 05 1990 23:53 | 254 |
| This reply contains notes 249.29 through 249.42, which were
posted in the "testing by customers" topic. I've moved them
en masse rather than renumbering them, since some of them
refer to other notes in the string by number and I wanted to
keep the references relatively straight.
Apologies for the length of this reply.
Jim Stratton, co-moderator, DIGITAL conference
================================================================================
Note 249.29 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 29 of 42
JOET::JOET "Question authority." 5 lines 31-MAY-1990 14:10
-< We're there already? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anyone else hear that all of the techs (at least) in the Charleston,
West Virginia field office had to submit to a urine test last week?
-joe tomkowitz
================================================================================
Note 249.30 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 30 of 42
COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" 3 lines 31-MAY-1990 20:44
-< Do we, by developing software for the gummint >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do they all support Government contracts?
/john
================================================================================
Note 249.31 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 31 of 42
JOET::JOET "Question authority." 7 lines 1-JUN-1990 07:50
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re: .30
> Do they all support Government contracts?
I doubt it.
-joe tomkowitz
================================================================================
Note 249.32 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 32 of 42
CSOA1::TRAINI "Lou from Pittsburgh" 11 lines 1-JUN-1990 11:59
-< FYI on Charleston WV >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re .29
One of the district's largest customers is a large industrial chemical
manufacturer. Remember Bophal (sp) India? They make that kind of stuff among
other chemicals. The customer stated that ALL service people (DEC and others)
in the plant will be drug tested or else. Else what? Termination of contracts
of course. When big money talks, we like all companies listen. My understanding
is that all techs volunteered and passed.
Lou Traini
================================================================================
Note 249.33 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 33 of 42
SMAUG::GARROD "An Englishman's mind works best when" 10 lines 1-JUN-1990 13:14
-< How shallow >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re:
>My understanding
>is that all techs volunteered and passed.
Well shame on them then. I must admit that I find it upsetting that
people treat their right to privacy so lightly. But I guess everybody
to their own.
Dave
================================================================================
Note 249.34 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 34 of 42
REGENT::MERRILL "Ellen O'Three is the girl for me." 15 lines 1-JUN-1990 13:25
-< How noble >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re:
>My understanding
>is that all techs volunteered and passed.
Well Good for them! I'm proud of the fact that they felt they had
nothing to hide, nothing to fear, and wanted customers to have every
confidence in their ability to perform.
Rick
Merrill
================================================================================
Note 249.35 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 35 of 42
JOET::JOET "Question authority." 19 lines 1-JUN-1990 13:31
-< This is the first step...that I've heard about, anyway >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re: .32
> My understanding is that all techs volunteered and passed.
How convenient.
I mean, we have a real-life example of a customer making a demand that
requires that DEC employees do something that may be be personally
abhorrent to them. (Myself, I think that going along is not The Right
Thing for people, the company, and the country as a whole, but that's
another note in another conference somewhere.) I honestly wonder how
the thing actually went down and what the ramifications were/would have
been to those who wouldn't "volunteer".
If anyone knows more about this story, like what was said to the
testees, how they reacted, and what the policies are, I think that it's
important that they share it with the rest of us.
-joe tomkowitz
================================================================================
Note 249.36 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 36 of 42
BOLT::MINOW "There must be a pony here somewhere" 15 lines 2-JUN-1990 21:03
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re: .34:
>>My understanding
>>is that all techs volunteered and passed.
>
> Well Good for them! I'm proud of the fact that they felt they had
> nothing to hide, nothing to fear, ...
Not to mention an aversion to poppy-seed bagels.
Martin.
================================================================================
Note 249.37 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 37 of 42
COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" 4 lines 3-JUN-1990 00:15
-< An easy life, no headaches, no ibuprofen >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remember, this was Charleston, WV. Probably not a bagel or hamentasche in
the state.
/john
================================================================================
Note 249.38 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 38 of 42
SSDEVO::EGGERS "Anybody can fly with an engine." 16 lines 3-JUN-1990 13:56
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: .34
>> My understanding is that all techs volunteered and passed.
> Well Good for them! I'm proud of the fact that they felt they had
> nothing to hide, nothing to fear, and wanted customers to have every
> confidence in their ability to perform.
This conclusion is not supported by the given information. They might
very well have submitted to the tests because there were no other jobs
available, and they feared a loss of their job or loss of management
perceived performance. Digital's current financial position, and the
transition plans, might have made those fears seem more likely,
I would expect everybody to pass the tests; the vast majority of the US
population doesn't do illicit drugs.
================================================================================
Note 249.39 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 39 of 42
JOET::JOET "Question authority." 29 lines 4-JUN-1990 12:16
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re: my own .35
There seems to be a lot going on here that no one wants to talk about.
A response I got personally from someone who wishes to remain anonymous
leads me to believe that, at least in some peoples' minds, there is a
willful lack of "openness" in this whole thing and a real fear of
retribution for even discussing it.
This is a portion of the VAXmail referenced above:
...The statements about volunteering are bullshit- they asked
for volunteers months ago. Most said no. How can you call
"conform or be dismissed" volunteering? There was no out. The
economic situation being as it is there, they've got a
totally captive audience...
...The policy and detail of this action is all vague and
secretive. The only knowledge that this has occurred is
grapevine. Certain forms were prohibited from being
distributed to other employees of the cost center...
The coercion and secrecy aspects are especially disturbing to me. I
fear that something bad is happening and it's being condoned by some
people pretty far up the ladder.
Does anyone have any data to contradict this?
-joe tomkowitz
================================================================================
Note 249.40 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 40 of 42
OVRDRV::BADGER "One Happy camper ;-)" 20 lines 5-JUN-1990 11:43
-< what evidence? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe [.39], I find it hard to place a lot of credit to speculations made by
a person who does not want to be identified.
> ...The policy and detail of this action is all vague and
> secretive. The only knowledge that this has occurred is
> grapevine. Certain forms were prohibited from being
> distributed to other employees of the cost center...
and then:
> Does anyone have any data to contradict this?
that's kinda like saying that a friend of my uncle says that digital is
selling A-bombs to Canada, I'm going to believe this unless someone
can provide proof to the contrary.
lets try to deal in facts.
ed
================================================================================
Note 249.41 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 41 of 42
AKOV13::POPE 17 lines 5-JUN-1990 17:12
-< Test negative...the evidence. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actions ARE unethical if they won't stand scrutiny.
Openness is the only way to disarm suspicion of motives. Openness is
not a panacea but it is essential for establishing trust.
I formally asked (via Area management) to publicly explain company
position on drug testing with respect to an article published in
Scientic American (March 1990) which raises serious questions about the
validity of the tests and the integrity/motives of the test advocates.
The response was, "I don't think Digital wants to argue our drug
testing policy in public."
What do you make of such a response?
Regards
================================================================================
Note 249.42 DRUG/ALCOHOL TESTING BY CUSTOMER'S 42 of 42
COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" 7 lines 5-JUN-1990 17:18
-< Ooops... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Would the moderators please do a
SET NOTE 249.29-249.l/NOTE_ID=716
That's the Drug Testing at Digital topic; this is Drug Testing by Customers.
/john
|
716.687 | Silence is Job Security? | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Mon Aug 13 1990 15:01 | 9 |
|
Is there no further word nor any actions taken about this anywhere in
the company? It's been over 2 months since my postings were moved to
this, the "politically correct" note.
What with the current UsofA War on Drugs fad, I expected that this
would be a hotbed of activity.
-joe tomkowitz
|
716.688 | Straight from the Horse's Mouth | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Tue Aug 14 1990 14:36 | 27 |
| Dear Fellow Employees,
This is not a friend of friend that heard something somewhere, this is
the Horse's Mouth. Yes, FSE's in Charleston, WV are being drug tested,
it was not a volunteer basis, its test or else. It doesn't matter, John
if this note is for customer testing because in the Fact Sheet that we
were presented it says that the Customer can give you a breathelyzer
test. You people may choose not to believe it but its true. As to the
other comments we all did not give up our right to privacy so easily, I
for one am fighting it. Granted I'm the only one, but some of us do
have ethics. As for the person that says if you don't have anything to
hide what does it matter. The answer is this
1) According to WV state law drug testing is an invasion of privacy
except in very isolated cases.(Which do not apply to us)
2) Drug testing is not 100% accurate. In some cases it has been found
to be from 10-30% inaccurate. When the ACLU asked 120 forensic
scientists if they would stake the jobs, reputations, etc on the
results of these tests every one of them said NO.
3) This is still America! Our law says innocent until proven guilty not
the other way around.
An Employee that's living it
Cindy
|
716.689 | Congratulations | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Tue Aug 14 1990 17:38 | 8 |
| Re .-1
Cindy. All power to you. I wish you the very best of luck. I wish more
people had the guts to stick up for their rights and their right to
privacy. Keep us updated on what happens. I hope you are the first
of many to refuse this travesty.
Dave
|
716.690 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 14 1990 21:01 | 12 |
| >It doesn't matter, John, if this note is for customer testing ...
Well, actually, now we're back in the "Drug Testing at Digital" topic.
The notes which the moderators had moved from the "Drug Testing by Customers"
topic were mostly discussing "Drug Testing at Digital", which is why I had
requested that they be moved here.
Now, if you want to talk about "the Customer can give you a breathalyzer test",
please do that in the other topic.
/john
|
716.692 | | STAR::HUGHES | You knew the job was dangerous when you took it Fred. | Wed Aug 15 1990 16:20 | 15 |
| re .688
Was the entire unit or branch tested at the request of one or more
customers or was this testing initiated by local management?
Good luck.
re .691
'Almost always conducted by an approved vendor'?? That sounds like an
enormous hole to me.
Why the sudden interest in breathalyzer tests?
gary
|
716.693 | Some more info... | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Wed Aug 15 1990 17:24 | 20 |
| re.692
The entire branch was not tested, only my unit at the request of one
customer.
Their legal department has not been very cooperative.
re.690
What's the problem, John? I was just trying to point out that it
doesn't matter if this note is for Customer testing of Digital testing,
in this case its one and the same.
In General:
The customer that requested this is E.I. DuPont. Of course when it came
down to money or peoples rights you know who won. I'm hoping the
publicity that I'm getting will help our cause. There's been two
newspaper articles and an interview with me that will be aired on West
Virginia Public Radio probably tomorrow.
Cindy
|
716.694 | No chance | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Fri Aug 24 1990 10:43 | 13 |
| FYI
I refused to sign Digital's drug testing consent form and have now been
put on 90 days notice. The chances of finding another job in my area
are slim to none. I didn't write this note for sympathy just a way of
informing the people who may be facing this decision soon. When it
comes to Employee's Rights versus money, the money wins every time.
P.S. DuPont has already fired the worker who contacted me, and later
refused a drug test.
Cindy
|
716.696 | Post away | MCIS2::WALTON | | Mon Aug 27 1990 12:29 | 3 |
| I agree Marge.
I will help you out if I can.
|
716.697 | Thanks, but... | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Tue Aug 28 1990 13:29 | 6 |
| Thanks folks. For reasons too many to name, moving is almost
impossible. Also legal reasons dictate that I should hold my ground.
Will give updates as they come. Thanks so much for the support and
interest that all of you have shown.
Cindy
|
716.698 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Aug 28 1990 19:39 | 6 |
| Cindy,
good luck. I admire your courage. If the demand is ever made of me, I
hope I have the courage to refuse.
Deb
|
716.699 | Best of luck and keep us posted if you can | COOKIE::WITHERS | Slipping into madness is good for the sake of comparison | Wed Aug 29 1990 19:20 | 0 |
716.700 | Update | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Fri Oct 05 1990 09:57 | 6 |
| This is to let everyone know that I filed suit against Digital, DuPont,
my manager and the plant manager of Dupont. We will be in court Oct.22
seeking a preliminary injunction to keep them from firing me until we
can have a full trial.
Cindy
|
716.701 | It realy hurts to say this, but... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Fri Oct 05 1990 10:34 | 7 |
| re: .700
As much as I love Digital and consider everyone part of my extended family,
I HOPE AND PRAY THAT YOU WIN YOUR SUIT!
Bob
|
716.702 | good for you | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Oct 05 1990 11:41 | 10 |
| re: .700
It doesn't hurt me at all to wish you luck. I can't comment on the
merits of your case, but I certainly hope, whatever the outcome,
that your brave stand for personal freedom against organizational
safety will provide inspiration for those of us for whom drug testing
represents an unreasonable degree of mistrust.
Please continue to keep us posted, if you can.
John Sauter
|
716.703 | another view | BTOVT::CACCIA_S | the REAL steve | Fri Oct 05 1990 12:58 | 20 |
|
re .-1
John, I hope that when you praised Cindy"s stand for freedom, you
really meant "organizational dictatorship, ignorance, other term",
and not safety.
I agree with Cindy. It is not anyones business what I do off duty.
It is only the corporation's business when what I do off duty affects
my performance, my coworkers performance, or the public/corporate
safety. Example: a lift truck driver who is crocked on crack, or a
shuttle driver groovin on grass, or a chopper pilot cruisin on coke.
I don not drink or do drugs. I very seldom even take aspirin. so I
could care less about the test, but, just to be a pr**k, I would
probably eat a pound of sesame seed candy and then sue them when the
test came back wrong.
|
716.704 | Best wishes, Cindy | DECWIN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sat Oct 06 1990 14:15 | 9 |
| Re: .700
I wish you the best of luck, Cindy.
If management is following this note, the message I'd like to give them is
that there are many employees, like me, who are following this case with
grave concern. I urge Digital to settle this out of court in Cindy's favor.
-- Bob
|
716.706 | fingers crossed for ya | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Mon Oct 08 1990 08:52 | 2 |
| repl
re .700 Way to go Cindy.
|
716.707 | Just my thoughts | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Mon Oct 08 1990 10:52 | 55 |
| First of all let me say that it makes my heart proud to see all these
responses in here and know that I am not the only one concerned about
this. Also I would like to take a moment to state my views about drugs
and drug testing. I realize some of you won't agree and I will gladly
listen to your point of view.
First of all let me say that I believe that drug abuse is a grave
problem in American society today. I do not advocate going to work high
on drugs or abusing them in any manner, but I do not believe drug
testing is the answer. Here's why....
If you do several lines of cocaine, crack, etc or smoke a joint on your
way to work and are tested that morning it will not show up in your
urine. It takes many hours to break down into the metabolytes that show
up in your urine. Therefore this test is not infallible.
These tests are in many cases inaccurate. There are many documented
cases of people or whole departments being fired because of incorrect
results. They have also used these tests for screening women for
pregnancy, for AIDS, diabetes, or medicines taken regularly for such
conditions as epilepsy. This in itself is a violation of someones
privacy but the act of drug testing itself is a humiliating and
degrading practice.
There are alternatives. Is anyone familiar with performance testing?
It is being used in California where random drug testing is illegal and
they have had very good results. These tests were developed by NASA and
have been proven effective, and it can detect drug use a lot more
accurately than urine testing. I, and the ACLU suggested this to
Digital and they wouldn't even talk about it. I also suggested that I
just not go to DuPont but they wouldn't hear of that either. This is
very interesting to me because two of my fellow engineers have been
excused from another plant because they have a rule against facial hair
and these guys have beards. They can't impose on them to shave their
beards but I must urinate for an audience or lose my job. Is this
justice?
Finally I think the war on drugs is never going to win with the methods
they're using now. It does not address the reasons why drug use is so
rampant. Namely, poverty, lack of education, children growing up
without supervision, and people turning to them because of stress from
the All-American competetion to acquire as many possesions as
possible. Until we address these problems drug abuse is going to get
worse not better.
One more note, when we contacted one organization for help they told us
they could help people pass the test if they did drugs and theres a store
here in town that sells a similar type kit. It seems if this is true
people that have a drug problem can still hide it.
Well I'll get off my soapbox now and I look forward to your replys.
MONTANI SEMPER LIBERI (Mountaineers are always free)
Cindy
|
716.708 | Sorry, forgot a few things | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Mon Oct 08 1990 11:58 | 24 |
| A couple of things that I would like to add is that like Bob I look on
the people here as my extended family. I came here as a brash young
woman straight out of Tech school at the age of 21. I have made some
wonderful friends here at DEC not only in my office but in other ones
as well. I really feel like I grew up here. I did not make this
decision without a lot of consideration of the consequences to myself
and my family. It took a lot of soul-searching, seeking the advice of
people I trust, prayer and a renewed look at the Constitution and what
it stood for. I have always admired Thaomas Jefferson and I don't think
that this is what he had in mind.
Let me also say that I also had to accept that people would immediately
think I had a drug problem because that is most of society's attitude,
if you don't have anything to hide, why bother? I bother because I
care. About myself, the future of this country, the Constitution, and
what will happen to this country if this drug hysteria is allowed to
continue, such as McCarthyism did in the '50's. If people think I'm
trying to hide something, that is their problem, not mine. I know that
I don't do drugs and so does my family. I had just come from maternity
leave when this happened. Do they think I did drugs carrying my child?
These are the attitudes of the ignorant and unenlightened. Maybe my
willingness to fight this will change a few attitudes.
Cindy
|
716.709 | Freedom isn't free | MLTVAX::SAVAGE | Neil @ Spit Brook | Mon Oct 08 1990 13:45 | 2 |
| Yep, it was people with courage like yours that helped establish the
United States of America, free from England's yoke, Cindy!
|
716.710 | good luck | BANZAI::NEEDLEMAN | no good deed goes unpunished | Mon Oct 08 1990 13:51 | 9 |
| re .700
Cindy, I applaud your courage. Like other here, I hope that your suit
is successful as a reminder of what freedom is about. I will regret the
financial loss to my company, but your cause is too important to gloss
over.
Barry
|
716.711 | Boo, hiss, spoilsport! | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Oct 08 1990 14:36 | 5 |
| Although many of us are opposed to drug testing, I find it particularly
inappropriate for us to comment on pending litigation against Digital in
this semi-official forum.
/john
|
716.712 | THere's a method in my madness, or is it vice versa? | CHESS::KAIKOW | | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:05 | 3 |
| re: 716.711
I agree, and that's one reason I entered 1221.
|
716.713 | my mind has been changed!!! | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:11 | 24 |
| RE:.707
You have changed my mind. I knew that tests were not always accurate,
etc. But, I have always thought that drugs were such a serious problem
that it would be worth sacrificing a little privacy to see the problem
cleaned up.
But, if you look at who the government goes after, it is end users,a
few lower level middlemen, and kingpins from countries other than the
US. I wonder how many allegedly respectable big businessmen are
profiting big time from drugs and are left alone because of their
political connections.
The solution needs to be focussed on the manufacturer, the large
distributor, not so much on the end user. The end user is a symptom,
the guys who are making megabucks off of other people's addiction and
misery are the problems.
I don't use drugs, nor do I condone people driving vehicles or working
when they are impaired. I honestly don't know if I would have the guts
to risk my job by refusing to submit to a test. I admire and support
those who make that choice. I also hope that I am never in a position
where I would have to require drug testing of people who are working in
my group.
|
716.714 | What is the problem? | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Mon Oct 08 1990 16:52 | 9 |
| Re:.711
Why is talking about pending litigation particularly inappropriate? Is
it biting the hand that feeds you? One reason this problem has gone as
it has is because of everyone's hush hush attitude. I thought this
notes file is for us and this is the only way I have of communicating
with anyone.
Cindy
|
716.715 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:04 | 7 |
| > Why is talking about pending litigation particularly inappropriate?
Because it scares the lawyers. Actually I think the concern is
that the notes here could be called as evidence (of what I'm
not sure.)
Alfred
|
716.716 | privacy is obsolete | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:13 | 6 |
| re: .715
Ours has become such a litiginous society that these notes could be
called as evidence for just about anything. Don't write into a topic
unless you are willing to have it read to a jury in open court.
John Sauter
|
716.717 | What does your attorney say? | NRADM::PARENT | IT'S NOT PMS-THIS IS HOW I REALLY AM | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:15 | 11 |
| RE .714
Since you have retained an attorney for the purposes of suing Digital,
and this notes file is the property of Digital, you might want to ask
your attorney how he/she feels about your discussing the case in this
forum.
Your attorney may advise it's in your best interest not to comment
about the case.
ep
|
716.718 | Cindy's lawyer might request these notes during "discovery" | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:25 | 5 |
| My warning about discussing Cindy Lilly's case was directed to persons other
than Cindy. I assumed that she had already discussed with her lawyer what
she should or should not write into company documents (such as this conference).
/john
|
716.720 | What about your manager, Cindy ? | BEAGLE::BREICHNER | | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:44 | 7 |
| If drugs cause a performance issue, it's the person's manager
who is responsible to control/fix it.
If not, it's none of DIGITAL's business as employer.
In Cindy's case, I'd like to hear about involvement of her
manager ? Was there any ?
/fred
|
716.721 | Career limiting for the mgr, too! | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Wed Oct 10 1990 11:24 | 8 |
| That's an interesting slant - corporation or no corporation, if I were
Cindy's mgr, I'd be pretty nervous about this whole thing.
It can't be good for one's career to be the mgr who got DEC sued...
K.
PS I'm with Marge - "No drug testing" and quote me all you want.
|
716.722 | A valid point | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Wed Oct 10 1990 15:19 | 15 |
| First of all John has a very valid point. Others may be liable for what
they contribute to the conference. My lawyer knows of this notes
conference and knows that I participate in it. They have gone over
speaking to the press, etc with me and I try to speak in only general
terms. There is nothing in here that hasn't appeared in the newspaper.
I only continue to participate in this conference because of the
seriousness of the issue. Please be aware though that there is a case
pending and someone could subpeona these notes. I will not suggest or
encourage this.
As far as my managers involvement, he told me it was not a performance
issue. I am still confused on what the official reason for termination
will be.
Cindy
|
716.723 | Wouldn't want to be in his/her shoes | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Oct 10 1990 16:34 | 19 |
| re: <<< Note 716.721 by A1VAX::BARTH "Special K" >>>
> -< Career limiting for the mgr, too! >-
>It can't be good for one's career to be the mgr who got DEC sued...
Very astute observation. It seems perfectly clear to me that Cindy's manager
was obviously in a position to avoid this whole issue (with no detrimental
effects on DEC) by reassigning her, as her stand on the issue was clear.
To have chosen not to do so certainly appears on the surface to have been a
poor business decision.
> PS I'm with Marge - "No drug testing" and quote me all you want.
Right on! Ditto, and you can quote me as well.
Best of luck, again, Cindy!
-Jack
|
716.725 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Wed Oct 10 1990 20:19 | 19 |
| Re: .723
You don't say.
Re: .724
At the risk of being labelled both insensitive and a facist, by what
stretch of the imagination is someone who refuses job assignments a '1'
performer?
Regardless of how one feels about drug testing (I happen to think it's
mostly a half-baked idea), it is now part of the job requirement for some
people. If some of those people are unable or unwilling to meet the
requirements, that is the very definition of non-performance. If a
legal challenge is mounted and won, terrific. If not, why should
anyone be suprised at the outcome?
Al
|
716.726 | Huh? ??? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Oct 10 1990 20:29 | 16 |
| re: <<< Note 716.725 by ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ "Shoes for industry" >>>
> Re: .723
>
> You don't say.
>
I don't say what, Al? What am I missing here?
And before you allude to manager bashing on my part, please recall once again
that I, too, am a manager. Then again, you and I always do tend to disagree on
most issues in here. Perhaps on one of my trips through Albany one day we
should meet for lunch.
-Jack
|
716.727 | Sort of a one horse town | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Oct 11 1990 01:04 | 12 |
| re .723 "It seems perfectly clear that Cindy's manager was obviously in a
position to avoid this whole issue by reassigning her."
That's not clear to me.
The location is Charleston, West Virginia, population 75,000.
The customer is E.I. DuPont.
There is probably not a whole lot else going on there.
/john
|
716.728 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Oct 11 1990 08:28 | 4 |
| I would call refusal to take a drug test "insubordination" rather than
non-performance of the job one was hired to do. Perhaps the
termination classification isn't sensitive to this difference.
John Sauter
|
716.730 | Just to point out | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Thu Oct 11 1990 10:05 | 8 |
| re: .725
>If those people are unable or unwilling to meet the requirements, that
>is the very definition of non-performance.
If the WV Supreme Court has ruled it as un-Constitutional, how can it
be a job requirement? Digital cannot supersede state law.
Cindy
|
716.731 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Oct 11 1990 10:08 | 19 |
| I certainly may be mistaken regarding the availability of other assignments
in the office in question, but somehow I would think that that's not
necessarily the case in this day and age. There are probably other customers
serviced by the same office, albeit not many. The statement about bearded
colleagues being given other assignments was what led me to believe that
alternatives existed.
And while it's always possible that the "skills mix" wasn't the best match
for such reassignment, I'm reminded that at least when I was a customer
that was never of too much concern to local DEC management. As an OEM, I
was constantly having different specialists assigned to my account who
invariably knew little or nothing about the areas I was involved with.
The story was always "That's how we grow people". Luckily, I rarely needed
to rely on them. This is not meant to disparage anyone's ability, but to
point out that management must sometimes choose less than perfect options,
especially if it's important to them to honor the values of their employees.
-Jack
|
716.732 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Oct 11 1990 12:24 | 38 |
| Jack,
I was rather stricken by the stridency of your reply. You presumed
many facts to be obvious that, at least from my perspective, are just
not.
And I would be more than happy to treat you to lunch any time you pass
through Albany!
re: .726
Insubordination is non-performance. Obviously, not all non-performance
is insubordination. Does the appellation really matter?
re: .730
If indeed that is what the court ruled, then Digital cannot ignore
state law. Of course, a court can rule that the right to bear arms
means we are allowed to wear short-sleeve shirts. The point being that
you have started a process to determine your rights. Only the courts
can decide how to interpret law in your case, not the amateur lawyers
in NOTES. Good luck to you.
re: in general
This practice is becoming extremely common in the chemical
manufacturing industries. Companies are hypersensitive to safety
practices and want to avoid another Bhopal at all costs. The problem
is that rational discussion about the fairness or effectiveness of drug
testing is not possible in the current environment. To argue against
testing is to argue against safety. Companies want to be proactive,
not reactive. Understanding that, at least in this industry segment,
the driving force for drug testing is a desire to protect employees and
the community, and NOT an irrational compulsion to control peoples
lives is crucial to modifying the terms of the debate.
Al
|
716.733 | Only job-related issues should affect your job | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Oct 11 1990 12:54 | 12 |
| >To argue against testing is to argue against safety.
Not necessarily true. If safety is the issue, then employees should be
required to regularly (maybe even daily) have their reaction times and
other safety related aspects tested by non-intrusive means.
Analysis of someone's blood or urine is subject to error. Even if it's
not subject to error, it's truly none of DEC's or DuPont's business if
one of their employees happened to eat some space cake on a vacation in
Amsterdam six weeks ago.
/john
|
716.734 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Oct 11 1990 13:39 | 8 |
| You missed the point, John. What you say is true in the abstract.
Unfortunately, the way the discussion on testing in the chemical
industry is framed, it's entirely a question of safety. Placed in this
context and depending upon your point of view, the arguments for testing
can easily be viewed as having merit.
Al
|
716.735 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Thu Oct 11 1990 14:28 | 12 |
| If safety were the primary motivation for drug testing, then there would be
tests for the use of the most common drug - alcohol. I don't hear about
breathalyzer tests for workers, which, however unreliable, would find workers
who had a couple of beers before going to work.
I'm sure there are more than ten drinkers for every one who uses other drugs.
I'd also rather have someone working near me who took some drugs a week ago
than someone who just had a few beers. I'd feel safer knowing they were
running alertness tests than urine tests.
If they are trying to improve safety, then let them do it directly with
tests which measure reaction time and alertness.
|
716.736 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Oct 11 1990 14:44 | 9 |
|
No, I think John hit the point squarely. If an industrial accident is
caused by an impaired operator hitting the wrong switch, a test can be
devised to determine whether the operator can hit the correct switch
under simulated conditions. Testing that operator for blood alcohol
or the residue of poppy seeds is the easy/intrusive way out. And much
more importantly, it may not catch other impairments that could just as
easily cause the error (eg, is the operator color-blind).
|
716.737 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Oct 11 1990 16:16 | 26 |
| re: .736
Um, gee, I'm the one trying to make the point. I'm the only one who
can judge whether or not John 'hit' it.
And like I said before, what you say is absolutely true, but it is an
argument that is effectively (or more precisely ineffectively) an
abstraction.
Look, I'm not going to belabor the point. My observation (and I do
have regular contact with the industry) is that the entire basis for
drug testing is safety, not some evil desire to control facets of
peoples private lives. Whether or not drug testing is the best (or
indeed even a) way to enhance safety is immaterial to those formulating
the policies. They want to be proactive and even if drug testing is not
foolproof, they strongly believe that it is infinitely better than doing
nothing at all.
It's interesting to note that at one particular customer of ours who
implemented a drug testing program a few years ago, the plan was
enthusiastically embraced by virtually all employees except the
programmers in the Information Systems organization. A bunch of them
quit. Must be something about computer people.... :-)
Al
|
716.738 | Salient points | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Thu Oct 11 1990 16:23 | 12 |
| First of all, John is right, Charleston is a city of about 75,000
but... the metropolitan area is approx. 1 million. There are plenty of
other accounts because we not only service Charleston but the whole
southern half of West Virginia.
Secondly, in my opinion chemical plants opt for drug testing because it
is easiest for them. It makes for good public relations. It does not
determine if a worker is under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the
time. Performance testing would. It also would catch alcohol abusers
which the present system doesn't.
Cindy
|
716.739 | Other motivations | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Thu Oct 11 1990 18:20 | 10 |
| c
Safety? Good public relations? Maybe, but secondarily. As a prime
motivation for testing, consider liability. How would you like to be
the company that was sued because its drug-befuddled employees caused
another Bhopal, because you were negligent in enforcing a sober
workplace? So as much as executives might be "personally opposed to"
imposing these rules on workers, the lawyers may demand it.
|
716.740 | if lawyers are the problem test for that :-) | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Thu Oct 11 1990 22:16 | 6 |
| RE: .739 With regards to lawyers "demanding" things. Someone
(J P Morgan perhaps) once said, "I don't pay lawyers to tell
me what I can do. I pay them to tell me how I can do what I
want."
Alfred
|
716.741 | | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Oct 12 1990 07:59 | 23 |
| re: <<< Note 716.739 by SX4GTO::BERNARD "Dave from Cleveland" >>>
> motivation for testing, consider liability. How would you like to be
> the company that was sued because its drug-befuddled employees caused
> another Bhopal, because you were negligent in enforcing a sober
> workplace?
OK - let's assume for a minute that I were to buy that line of reasoning.
This topic is about drug testing at Digital. DECcies are probably not handling
any customer equipment other than the stuff we make. Even if our machines
are driving customer gear, one would suspect that the overall operation
is being overseen by customer employees (I pray to god), whom, as far as
I'm concerned, they can watch pee in a bottle till the cows come home - I
didn't sign any employement agreement with DuPont when I started working
for DEC and I have no allegience to their requirements. So what does testing
our people have to do with this case if it's a safety/liability issue?
Sorry - I still see it as DEC buckling to the government's war on drugs
in order to assure continued receipt of government contracts requiring
drug free workplaces, and using the "since we do it then we can do it now"
rationale to test anybody anytime any customer suggests it for any reason.
-Jack
|
716.742 | test the world | SAHQ::CARNELLD | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Fri Oct 12 1990 09:21 | 12 |
| REF: <<< Note 716.739 by SX4GTO::BERNARD "Dave from Cleveland" >>>
>><<, the lawyers may demand it.>>
Then let them also demand that ALL executives and ALL managers be
tested, and ALL lawyers, here, PLUS in every client company demanding
this, AND in EVERY government office, AND not only for drugs but ALSO
for alcoholism.
Stamp out hypocrisy -- demand total testing for everyone, or not at all
for anyone.
|
716.743 | Double Standards? | ODIXIE::QUINN | | Fri Oct 12 1990 10:39 | 6 |
| We have concientious objectors at DEC who are allowed to say what
Government or Prime Contractors jobs they will work on. I think this is
fair for them. Why can't we do the same for people opposed to drug
testing?
- John
|
716.744 | It's what it is | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:18 | 33 |
| > So what does testing
> our people have to do with this case if it's a safety/liability issue?
Say a monitor failed to detect a gas leak that resulted in a
catastrophe. Victims could sue the plant, and could also sue
every one who had a hand in the monitoring system. If we sold
the company a workstation that was supposed to display the
alarm, we could be tainted. We could be sued by the victims as
well as the company. If there's any suggestion of evidence that
anyone's employees were less than drug-free, damage awards could
be compounded. Diligence in enforcing a drug-free workplace
could be a partial defense.
What does it matter if there's any merit to any of the suits? They
can be filed, and cost millions to fight. Heading off this kind
of potential loss is the business of lawyers.
> Sorry - I still see it as DEC buckling to the government's war on drugs
>in order to assure continued receipt of government contracts requiring
>drug free workplaces, and using the "since we do it then we can do it now"
>rationale to test anybody anytime any customer suggests it for any reason.
Of course you're right. It's a corporation's duty to protect itself,
and human rights come second. It's the duty of humans to make sure
their own rights are protected.
Testing of all employees, from stock room to board room, sounds like
a good idea. It would send a clear message to all that the company
means business. But it would still beg the issue of presumed
innocence, wouldn't it. Unfortunately, mistrust breeds mistrust.
Dave
|
716.745 | Why Not Push To Find Problem? | NAC::NORTON | Charles McKinley Norton | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:53 | 17 |
| An argument that says only one type of test must be used, rather than
focusing on testing to find problems is confusing to me. Some notes in
this string mention performance testing. If independent tests prove it
works better or as well as urine or blood testing, why is there all the
fuss?
If any employee is peformance tested, fails, is reassigned and
counceled (before an accident), then where is the basis of the law suit
that would not already be there, just because Digital happens to be one
of many companies that could be sued at the site of an accident? For
example, a company that makes a speaker to announce a problem or an
alarm can be sued, just because they put something into the site.
Charles Norton
Decnet For PCs
LKG1-3/A17
226-5457
|
716.746 | | DWOVAX::EROS | Cardinals gone... :-( | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:32 | 25 |
| I've been following this string for a while now and I'm not real clear
on a thing or two. Is this a situation where the tech is being told
"submit to the drug test or find another job" or has the person decided
that she considers the drug testing policy wrong and is making a stand.
Digital certainly has other customers in WV than DuPont and I find myself
wondering if this is a case of forcing the issue by refusing alternate
assignment.
There's no doubt that the tests are intrusive - I'm not real sympathetic
to the objection to "taking a leak in front of an audience" but then
again, urinals have had a tendancy to demystify the process - nonetheless,
periodic physicals are also intrusive but are required by some employers.
Of course, if an objection to "public" urination was the only obstacle,
there are blood tests that are far more accurate than urine tests.
Workplace safety is a big concern to DuPont - not just at Belle, but at
all their sites. It's also not new - depending upon the site, it's
been done for years (and at Savannah River, it was done with great
frequency...)
BTW, with all the references to Bhopal being bandied about, does anyone
have details about Union Carbide's testing policies? Their Institute plant
(which also made MIC) is right next door to DuPont's AG plant at Belle.
-- Tony
|
716.747 | deadly logic | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Fri Oct 12 1990 15:31 | 15 |
| re Note 716.744 by SX4GTO::BERNARD:
> What does it matter if there's any merit to any of the suits? They
> can be filed, and cost millions to fight. Heading off this kind
> of potential loss is the business of lawyers.
With logic like that, almost any intrusion on any right could
be justified!
(The trouble is, some courts might agree with it --
individual rights are probably not high up on the list of
concerns of the typical civil court in cases involving
multi-billion dollar companies.)
Bob
|
716.748 | | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Fri Oct 12 1990 16:02 | 15 |
| >> What does it matter if there's any merit to any of the suits? They
>> can be filed, and cost millions to fight. Heading off this kind
>> of potential loss is the business of lawyers.
> With logic like that, almost any intrusion on any right could
> be justified!
It's true, but my favorite logic for intrusion on rights is "we're
only doing this to protect you." There's always a tension between
corporate (beyond the business sense) and individual rights.
Impositions on individual rights occur when the individuals
relinquish those rights. Individuals rarely relinquish important
rights or all rights at once... it's usually done in small slices.
Give up one or two, and the rest become easier.
Dave
|
716.749 | safety is just PR, profit and control are the ture reason | TOHOKU::TAYLOR | | Sat Oct 13 1990 10:03 | 9 |
| re: entire basis for drug testing is safety, not some evil desire to
control facets of peoples private lives.
If this were true then the US President and Congress would be tested
daily. Those folks have 200,000+ people sitting in the desert getting
ready to die. If the intent was for safety, then the law would ensure
George Bush and company were somber when that decision was made.
mike
|
716.750 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Oct 13 1990 14:16 | 8 |
| re: .749
Actually, I heard they weren't somber at all. Rumor has it that Bush
was making fart noises with his armpit and Secretary Baker was telling
"knock knock" jokes. Not the kind of behavior I would call somber...
Al
|
716.751 | Conference pointer | STKMKT::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sat Oct 13 1990 19:31 | 1 |
| Al, this is HUMAN::DIGITAL and not PEAR::SOAPBOX
|
716.752 | Take a chill pill, home boy! | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Oct 13 1990 21:07 | 6 |
| re: -1
Humor respects no boundaries.
Al
|
716.753 | Article on performance testing | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Mon Oct 15 1990 10:18 | 167 |
| Performance Testing: New Approach to Workplace Drug Abuse
By Lew Maltby
Bill Nelson had been working for a major New York trucking com-
pany for about a week, when he was summoned to the personnel office.
The personnel manager told him he was fired because he had failed a
drug test.
Jim Davidson works as a driver for San Diego Trolley, a company
that runs sightseeing tours. Every morning, upon arriving at work,
he plays a kind of video game that lasts 30 seconds. At the end of
the game, a pass prints out that says that Jim is able to work that
day. He hands the pass to his dispatcher, who assigns him to one of
the trolleys. Jim has a productive work day.
Neither Bill Nelson nor Jim Davidson takes illegal drugs, nor
is either man unfit for work. But the urinalysis testing method
Bill's company uses confused codeine, a drug Bill had been taking
for a week under a doctor's prescription, with heroin. Such testing
errors are common. Reports by the Centers for Disease Control have
cited widespread accuracy problems with urinalysis testing.
Jim's company, on the other hand, uses a performance testing
machine that measures only his ability to do his job. Because the
test said he was able to do his job, he was allowed to go to work.
In a hypothetical situation, another worker at Bill's company
snorts five lines of cocaine at lunch, less that an hour before a
surprise drug test. He takes the urinalysis test and passes with
flying colors because the cocaine has not yet entered his urine. He
returns to work, even though he is a serious safety hazard to him-
self and to all around him.
At San Diego Trolley, a driver comes to work and fails the per-
formance test twice. He explains to his boss that he has just bro-
ken up with his fiance'e and is having a hard time emotionally. He
and his boss agree that he shouldn't drive a trolley that day, and
he goes home. "In that situation, he was as dangerous as anybody
hopped up on drugs," says Don Harrison, general manager for San
Diego Trolley. "I don't want someone carrying passengers if his
mind is clearly on something else."
These scenarios exemplify the value of a new workplace safety
device called performance testing. Unlike urinalysis drug testing,
which measures the presence of drug traces in people's urine, per-
formance testing measures current impairment from any factor --
drugs, alcohol, fatigue, stress. It measures the employee's ability
to do his job that day. Period.
No invasion of privacy
Unlike urinalysis testing, performance testing does not require
workers to strip from the waist down or urinate into a cup, or re-
quire an observer to watch them to make sure they don't put bleach,
eyedrops, or orange soda in their urine sample. All it requires is
less than a minute of video game-playing.
Harrison, one of the newest devotees of performance testing,
says San Diego Trolley has been using the method for more than five
months, "and we have come to like it very much." He adds that he
prefers performance tests to random urine testing. "By the time you
get information from a urine test it's too late .... I need to know
whether someone can drive right now." He adds: We're interested in
safety. We're not interested in what our employees have done in
their private time months ago. We just want to know if they're able
to drive the vehicle safely, and whether our passengers are at
risk."
Harrison's employees seemed to like it too. "I wasn't too sure
how it would go over." says Operations Manager Mark Berlin, "but now
it's almost a fun thing, like a game."
Urinalysis tests only for the presence of metabolites (small
inactive by-products) of drugs, not the drugs themselves, and cannot
detect impairment or tell when a drug was ingested. A person who
smoked marijuana on his vacation more than a month ago may still
have metabolites in his system.
Performance testing, in contrast, tells employers exactly what
they need to know: whether the employee is able to work that day.
It does so in a non-intrusive manner and reveals nothing about the
employee's medical, genetic or personal history and lifestyle.
San Diego Trolley performs probable cause urinalysis tests on
workers involved in accidents of $1000 or more -- "mostly for in-
surance purposes," says Harrison. If an employee develops a pattern
of failing the performance tests, the company might require the per-
son to undergo urinalysis. Harrison reports that so far that hasn't
happened.
Immediate results
The performance test consists of a video screen, a cursor, and
a control knob. The test taker manipulates the control knob to keep
the cursor centered on the screen, while a computer program randomly
sways the cursor away from the center. Scores are based on the
speed and accuracy with which the test taker keeps the cursor cen-
tered. Scores are compared with the individual's own average score.
If the current score is within range of the average, the individual
may go to work that day. Because test takers usually improve their
scores after taking the test many times, their average score
gradually increases, but the sophisticated algorithms that drive the
computer program prevent mastery of the test.
"This is not like Pac-Man, where you can get so good that
you're guaranteed to go through all the screens," says Todd Richman,
Vice President of Performance Factors, a California company that
makes performance testing machines.
Performance tests are accurate
However, because it measures impairment rather than the pres-
ence of drugs, performance testing challenges the entire way we look
at accuracy in testing. An individual who fails a performance test
may or may not be legally drunk according to his blood-alcohol con-
tent. But for whatever reason, he is incapable of working that day.
"We're not looking to identify people who just haven't had their
first cup of coffee yet," says Richman. "We're looking for people
who are grossly impaired."
"If after several tries you can't reach your previously
established level, we feel very confident that something is wrong,"
says Richman. He estimated that less than five percent of the work-
force, a number equivalent with drug use figures, would fail the
performance test.
Harrison says that test failures are rare. "If someone fails
the first time, we let him take it again. If he fails the second
time, I bring him into my office and talk with him. Usually, the
driver has failed because he's sick, and I send him home. Other-
wise, I reassign him to a non-driving position that day."
Cost-efficiency
The cost of performance testing is based on the number of em-
ployees. As with other industries, the larger the workforce, the
cheaper it is. Richman says that on average, performance tests cost
between 60 cents and $1.00 per employee. Compared with the about
$10 for the cheapest drug screen (or $70 for the more sophisticated
and more accurate gas chromatography / mass spectrometry), perfor-
mance tests are practically a bargain.
Harrison says that his insurer is considering subsidizing the
cost of his company's performance testing program. Meanwhile, he
reports, there have been no serious accidents since San Diego Trol-
ley began the program.
No civil liberties violation
Civil libertarians and responsible employers alike have always
been concerned about the limitations of urinalysis drug testing as a
technique for reducing workplace drug abuse. They have also
questioned its impact on employees' privacy. Many employers have
relied on drug testing because they saw no better alternative,
especially for safety sensitive jobs. Performance testing may well
be that better alternative.
-----
Copied w/o permission from Civil Liberties, Summer, 1990. Copyright
1990 American Civil Liberties Union
|
716.754 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:12 | 5 |
| re .-1:
If the guy working for the trucking company was a driver, he should have
told his boss that he couldn't drive that day because he was taking codeine.
Codeine causes drowsiness. (Yes, I know it's a hypothetical situation).
|
716.755 | .-1 sounds good to me. Any objections? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:19 | 19 |
| re: .-1
Well, that certainly sounds like a rational approach to the problem, doesn't
it?
> Civil libertarians and responsible employers alike have always
> been concerned about the limitations of urinalysis drug testing as a
> technique for reducing workplace drug abuse. They have also
> questioned its impact on employees' privacy. Many employers have
> relied on drug testing because they saw no better alternative,
> especially for safety sensitive jobs. Performance testing may well
> be that better alternative.
Why do I have this sad, sick feeling that DEC isn't soon going to be among
the enlightened, responsible employers alluded to?
-Jack
|
716.756 | | KEYS::MOELLER | Born To Be Riled | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:29 | 11 |
| re -1
>Why do I have this sad, sick feeling that DEC isn't soon going to be among
>the enlightened, responsible employers alluded to?
I agree. It probably looks easier to force (on pain of dismissal)
employees to urinate in a bottle, and pay for hundreds/thousands of
'drug' tests over a period of years than to buy a small electronic
device ONCE for each required work site.
karl
|
716.757 | What's the responsibility? | OAXCEL::KAUFMANN | Fight the good fight | Mon Oct 15 1990 16:12 | 8 |
| As with any individual right, there is also an accompanying individual
responsibility.
Just curious, but if employees were given the right to privacy in
the area of drug testing, what is the responsibility that accompanies
that right?
Bo
|
716.758 | you huh ? | KEYS::MOELLER | Born To Be Riled | Mon Oct 15 1990 17:14 | 9 |
| <<< Note 716.757 by OAXCEL::KAUFMANN "Fight the good fight" >>>
-< What's the responsibility? >-
> Just curious, but if employees were given the right to privacy in
> the area of drug testing, what is the responsibility that accompanies
> that right?
..uh, to take drugs in private ?
karl
|
716.759 | RE: .- a couple: It may run counter to this country's ... | YUPPIE::COLE | A CPU cycle is a terrible thing to waste | Mon Oct 15 1990 17:22 | 3 |
| ... current "culture", but how about the drug users who wish to walk about
in society being TOTALLY liable for their actions when they screw up under the in-
fluence! Think the insurance industry could come up with a premium schedule?
|
716.760 | Am I missing something? | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Mon Oct 15 1990 18:16 | 22 |
| re.744
>Say a monitor failed to detect a gas leak that resulted in a
>catastrophe. Victims could sue the plant, and could also sue every one
>who had a hand in the monitoring system
What if the monitor failed due to the power supply going belly up.
Presumably these people have backups for everything due to natural
disasters. If not, they are being irresponsible.
re.746
MIC is not made by Union Carbide anymore. That plant, which is several
miles from Belle is owned now by Rhone-Poulenc. They do not require us
to be tested.
I asked to be reassigned to other accounts and just be excused from
DuPont but they would not agree to that. I did everything I could to
keep from "forcing the issue"
Another note, those who are concerned should find out their states'
laws about drug testing and privacy.
Cindy
|
716.761 | | JARETH::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Oct 15 1990 19:22 | 138 |
| Below are a number of items from _Steal This Urine Test_ by Abbie
Hoffman, Penguin Books, 1987. (These are paraphrased unless quoted.)
Amtrak-Contrail Accident (pp. 122-123)
Remember the Amtrak-Conrail accident which was much touted because THC
was found in the blood of crew members? Well, the Supervisor for the
FAA's Forensic Toxicology Unit, Dr. Delbert J. Lacefield, was put on
"temporary reassignment" following allegations of irregularities in the
Amtrak-Conrail investigation. "Dr. Lacefield claimed to find THC in
the blood of two crew members", but "Dr. Lacefield's associates said
they could find no documentation supporting the THC conclusion". "On
May 26, 1987, Dr. Lacefield pleaded in connection with falsified
blood-analysis reports from 1986 train wrecks. Officials at the
Federal Railroad Association, which had contracted for Dr. Lacefield's
services, said, 'he was unable or unwilling to do the tedious and
complicated job of preparing blood plasma extracts for analysis. As a
result, he routinely reported that any drug use had occurred more than
six hours before an accident when no testing had been done to confirm
that.' Prosecutors claimed that Dr. Lacefield was familiar with
urinalysis but lacked equipment and the knowledge to test blood plasma
for drugs." IT WAS A FRAUD; TRAIN CREW MEMBERS DID NOT HAVE VALID
POSITIVE TESTS FOR DRUGS.
Drug Babies (pp. 40-41)
From "Pregnancy in Narcotics Addicts Treated by Medical Withdrawal" by
Drs. Blinick, Wallach, and Jerez in _American Journal of Obstetrics and
Gynecology_, December 1969, it appears that the amount of drugs that
reach the placenta are too minute to be measured by the best-known
chemical methods (at that time, of course). Further, in one hundred
"births from heroin-addict mothers, not one baby was born a junkie or
required additional opiates to stay alive. Pediatricians today believe
that the terrible physical condition of poor addict mothers leads their
babies to show many _symptoms_ of addiction, but not true dependency."
"This has been reaffirmed several times since the initial study." The
baby's symptoms are due to malnutrition and other poor health of the
mother, but doctors interpret that as drug addiction. "The unfortunate
part of the myth is that unsophisticated doctors delivering babies of
addicts will sometimes look at symptoms other than withdrawal and
immediately prescribe small doses of opiates to 'stabilize the baby's
condition,' forcing the baby into drug dependency." THE BABY IS NOT
ADDICTED UNTIL THE DOCTOR'S PREJUDICES CAUSE THE ADDICTION.
Drug Bust Inflation Increases Dealing (p. 38)
Hoffman discusses how inflated dollar values are given for drug
confiscations by reporting street values multiplied by several
transactions and dilutions the drugs would have gone through had they
not been confiscated, and ignoring loses along the way. He points out
that this may seem harmless, but it actually makes dealing drugs look
good to poor people. They see the figures and figure that smuggling is
like winning the lottery; there is lots of easy money to be made.
Did Reagan Fail a Drug Test (p. 134)
To set an example, President Reagan took a urine test. "The chief
executive's vital fluid was tested for marijuana, PCP, cocaine,
amphetamines, barbiturates, and heroin." Fine, right? But the results
were never made public! What kind of test is that? It's not a test
unless it has results. There are hints "that several other
prescription drugs tested positive. Publicizing the results would have
alerted the public to the all-spying nature of the tests."
Test Flaws (pp. 183-184)
Tests are flawed because they are affected by cross-reactions with
prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs, and foods, because "urine
should be within 5.5 to 8.0 pH _and_ within 20 degrees Farenheit of
room temperature". Samples are often refrigerated, and labs often
contain stoves or radiators. The US Attorney General says both
temperature and pH will be checked at the time the sample is given --
"but nothing is said about measurement when it gets evaluated
clinically."
Animals Destroyed (pp. 193-194)
The immunoassay tests (EMIT and RIA) are created by injecting live
animals with conjugates containing the substance to be tested for.
"Somewhere in the great American West Syva raises sheep exclusively for
its EMIT THC assay." "The sheep are injected with conjugates to create
the desired biological brew in their livers. After a few years, the
sheep die." "Roche Diagnostics uses antibodies from rabits, goats, and
donkeys."
Test Materials Vary (pp. 194-195)
Since animals are used to create the test antisera, no two antisera are
the same; they differ in their sensitivity to the test substances.
THERE IS NO GUARANTEE OF TEST ACCURACY.
Covert Testing Being Developed (p. 208)
A Minneapolis firm named E.K. Tech is working on covert detection.
"Hidden cameras will videotape toilets at the workplace. When flushed,
the camera takes a picture, the urine passes into a dehydration
chamber, and then to some sort of analyzer. Within minutes, a computer
will not only be able to tell a person's recent drug history, but get
this, _whether or not the person has had sex during the past
twenty-four hours_."
Cross-Reactivity (p. 187)
This table lists substances that can cause false positives for test
targets. The format is "Target substance: list of cross-reactives".
One thing Hoffman observes is that putting a cross-reactive on the list
of substances you have taken recently and having a partially-used
container of that substance provides a good explanation for a positive
result. The table is reformatted but otherwise quoted.
Amphetamine: Phenylpropoanolamine (found in OTC [over the counter]
cold medications: Nyquil, Vicks Nasal Spray, Neosynephren, Sudafed),
Methamphetamine/Phenmetrazine/Phentermine (found in prescription diet
medicines), Dopamine HCL, Ephedrine (found in prescription asthma
medicines).
Barbiturate: Mephobarbital, Barbituric acid (rarely prescribed
compounds).
Cannaboids: Ibuprofen (Advil, Nuprin, Motrin, Mydol, Trendar --
extremely common pain relievers).
Methaqualone: None reported to date.
Morphine: Codeine (in any prescription form), Dihydrocodeine
bitartrate/Levorphanol/Oxycodone (found in prescription analgesics),
Poppy seeds, Hydromorphone (found in prescription antitussives).
Doxylamine: (found in OTC antihistamines and sleeping pills).
Phencyclidine (PCP): Dextromethororphan (found in some prescription
cough medicines), Diazepam (found in Valium).
LSD: Methysergide maleate, Ergonovine maleate, Tryptophan (all the
above are derivates of LSD; rarely medicinal).
-- edp
|
716.762 | | JARETH::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Oct 15 1990 19:32 | 41 |
| Below are some questions I am considering asking Digital. Suggestions
are welcome.
What tests does Digital use? (What types of tests? EMIT, RIA, TLC?
What company's tests are used?)
Who processes the tests? (Is it internal or external? What training
have the testers had?)
How long is it from a sample is taken until it is tested? How long is
a sample refrigerated, and how long is it not?
Are the temperature and pH checked at the time of the tests?
How old are the antisera used for the testing?
What animals are used and/or abused to make the tests Digital uses?
What are the false positive rates of the tests under ideal lab
conditions?
What are the actual false positive rates of the labs being used?
What are the cut-off levels of the tests?
What are the sensitivity levels of the tests?
What cross-reactions are the tests subject to?
Have complete scientific studies or papers on the tests been published
in respected, peer-reviewed journals? If so, where?
Will Digital use the most respected clinical procedure, gas
chromatography/Mass Spectrometry, to test positive results?
Has Digital or an independent agency tested the labs Digital uses by
sending those labs unmarked samples known to be positive or negative
and seeing how well the labs do at reporting results?
-- edp
|
716.763 | Here's one Eric | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Oct 15 1990 20:26 | 11 |
| Well, Eric, my suggestion for an additional question would be phrased around
"Has DIGITAL considered alternative performance testing similar to
[that alluded to in the article quoted by Jim Williams in 716.753,
however, let's not drag Jim's name into the issue], rather than
the drug testing currently being used? And, perhaps more importantly,
if not, why not?"
Thanks,
-Jack
|
716.764 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:54 | 22 |
| > <<< Note 716.757 by OAXCEL::KAUFMANN "Fight the good fight" >>>
> -< What's the responsibility? >-
>
> As with any individual right, there is also an accompanying individual
> responsibility.
WHY? A person's "rights" are innate and not negotiated, as opposed
to one's "privileges."
If you insist, the only "reciprocal responsibility" is mutual recognition
of rights. You don't test me and I won't test you. If you insist
on a test for me, so will I for you (and I mean the person of the employer
and the subordinates requiring the test).
If someone has the "right" to test, what responsibility accompanies THAT right?
Among these responsibilities are accountability, verifiability,
confidentiality, and the long list of other concerns expressed here
and elsewhere.
The "right/responsibility" argument is not universally applicable,
and, where it does fit, it cuts both ways.
- tom]
|
716.765 | | MU::PORTER | Small Change got rained on | Tue Oct 16 1990 18:21 | 13 |
| re .753
Whilst interesting, I think that it (use of a "performance testing
machine" versus drug testing) is a bit of a red herring.
I am a software engineer. I cannot think of any good reason why
I need to take any kind of performance test on a frequent
basis, regardless of whether the test involves pissing into
a cup, or playing some sort of video game. My actual job
performance should be adequate indication of my competency.
Anything else I find personally demeaning, and entirely
contrary to DEC's professed concern for the individual.
|
716.766 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Save time -- see it my way. | Fri Oct 26 1990 15:48 | 14 |
| >Note 716.700 PFSVAX::LILLY
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> This is to let everyone know that I filed suit against Digital, DuPont,
> my manager and the plant manager of Dupont. We will be in court Oct.22
> seeking a preliminary injunction to keep them from firing me until we
> can have a full trial.
>
> Cindy
October 22 has come and gone. Can we assume that no word from Cindy
on this date means that she is gone?
Joe Oppelt
|
716.767 | She's still in ELF's database. | YUPPIE::COLE | Opposite of progress? Con-gress! | Fri Oct 26 1990 16:38 | 0 |
716.768 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Oct 26 1990 17:55 | 13 |
| THE FOLLOWING ARE ONLY GUESSES:
Her lawyer has advised her to stop writing here.
Her management has advised her to stop writing here.
She didn't get the injunction, and she was terminated, but won't disappear
from ELF for a few weeks.
She did get the injunction, but DEC has appealed, and during this time she
is on paid leave.
ALL THE ABOVE ARE ONLY GUESSES.
|
716.769 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | Go for 1000% more | Fri Oct 26 1990 19:45 | 9 |
|
re: last few
Cindy's account is still active, and sice that's one of the first
things they remove, I would believe that she is still in Digital's
employ.
Dennis
|
716.770 | Supreme Court ruling | MPO::GILBERT | No on 3 Yes on 5 Keep Mass. Alive | Mon Oct 29 1990 13:39 | 7 |
|
I just heard on the news that the U.S. Supreme Court has just ruled
against a private company's right to random drug testing. Sorry,
but I have no details so I don't know if this would have any bearing
but it appears to be a step in the right direction in terms of employee
privacy issues.
|
716.772 | Still here... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Tue Oct 30 1990 09:20 | 5 |
| re: past few
Cindy is still here as of 10/29 as I received a mail message from her.
Bob
|
716.773 | court award | EBBV03::BROUILLETTE | MTSND | Tue Oct 30 1990 09:29 | 6 |
| RE: 770
Looks like Digital is going to lose this one. The Supreme Court let stand
a $485,000 award to a computer programmer from Southern Pacific Transportation
Co. The programmer was fired for refusing to provide a urine sample. This
should make companies afraid to conduct drug tests that are not safety-related.
|
716.774 | salient points | MPO::GILBERT | No on 3 Yes on 5 Keep Mass. Alive | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:35 | 11 |
| There are some points of this case that may or may not help Cindy.
1. Southern Pacific's appeal was based on the premise that Federal
Transportation laws superceded a state's constitutional right to
privacy provision.
2. The test was random.
3. The test involved a non-union employee in a union shop.
|
716.775 | And yet another possible variance is ... | YUPPIE::COLE | Opposite of progress? Con-gress! | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:54 | 3 |
| ... that the customer in Cindy's case is Dupont, and the contract may
involve flow-downs from Dupont's contract with Uncle Sam. That may be a
tough nut to crack.
|
716.776 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Oct 30 1990 15:42 | 8 |
| I guess the reason there's nothing about this on the AP wire is that
the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Southern Pacific's appeal of
the decision by the California Court of Appeals.
IANAL, but I'm pretty sure California law is involved in the SP case;
we'll have to see if Cindy is similarly protected by West Virginia law.
/john
|
716.777 | | HERON::PERLA | Tony Perla | Wed Oct 31 1990 05:54 | 3 |
| I may have this wrong but refusal by the Supreme Court to hear a case on appeal
does have a bearing. It is not as forceful as precedence which is a forceful
argument. It has nonetheless a bearing whilst arguing the case.
|
716.779 | I'm still here | PFSVAX::LILLY | | Thu Nov 01 1990 15:00 | 9 |
| Hi Folks,
Yes, I'm still here. To update whats going on, here's where I stand.
The hearing did not take place on Oct.22 DEC's lawyers got it removed
to Federal Court where it is now pending. We still have not had hearing
so as it stands right now my last day is Nov.19. I think I didn't
reveal anything my lawyer told me not to.
Cindy
|
716.781 | An election issue? | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | | Tue Nov 06 1990 15:03 | 12 |
| For those voting today in Massachusetts, I thought I might shed
some light on the local politician's views on the subject of drug
testing in the workplace.
Last week's Boston Globe reported that John Silber supports
mandatory drug testing of all employees, while Bill Weld supports
a person's right to privacy when it comes to drug testing in most
cases. I'm not sure what the other candidates views are on this issue.
-davo
p.s. I can dig up the actual newspaper articles if anyone is interested.
|
716.782 | Yesss!! Let's open the rat-hole again! | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Fri Nov 09 1990 16:58 | 22 |
| re .781
> Last week's Boston Globe reported that John Silber supports
> mandatory drug testing of all employees, while Bill Weld supports
> a person's right to privacy when it comes to drug testing in most
> cases. I'm not sure what the other candidates views are on this issue.
Personally, if somone takes a blood sample from you, who is protecting your
rights that other medications, medical conditions, etc. won't be tested for?
I don't find not objecting to drug testing in appropriate situations
objectionable. I do find support of mandatory drug testing an objectionable
invasion of privacy. More than that, I am deeply saddened by any such
advocate's cynical and morosely pessimistic outlook on society -- and would
certainly not want such a person building my civic future for me.
I suggest that any such candidate first suggest a bill mandating monthly
drug testing of all elected and appointed officials and their staff.
Perhaps Mr. Silber has a relative in the blood analysis business?
/Peters_who_is_VERY_tired_of_politicians_building_careers_on_negativism
|
716.783 | | RTL::CMURRAY | Chuck Murray | Fri Nov 09 1990 17:33 | 14 |
| Re .782:
>> "Perhaps Mr. Silber has a relative in the blood analysis business?"
I recall reading somewhere that Seragen, the bio-technology company that
Silber got Boston University to invest heavily in, was working on something
to do with blood (maybe plasma?). I don't know if it's doing anything
directly related to drug testing.
However, whether or not Seragen has any connection with drug testing, I
think Silber would take that position because it's consistent with "the
kind of guy he is."
- Chuck (no fan of John Silber)
|
716.784 | Just checking in | PFSVAX::LILLY | Montani Semper Liberi | Mon Dec 10 1990 09:47 | 9 |
| Hi Folks,
Just wanted to let everyone know I'm still here. I was supposed to have
a hearing for the preliminary injunction Dec.6 but Digital requested
another postponement till Dec.19. Patience is a virtue.... To the folks
that have contacted me about newspaper clippings, etc please be
patient, I will get them to you.
Cindy
|
716.785 | Thought you'd like to know | PFSVAX::LILLY | Montani Semper Liberi | Wed Jan 02 1991 15:22 | 36 |
| Hello Everyone,
I just wanted to let you know what has happened in my case. On Dec. 12
my lawyer contacted me at home late to let me know that it was going to
be announced the next morning at a meeting that Digital had changed
their drug testing policy. The next morning at a meeting where my
manager, the district manager, district operations manager and a
personnel representative were present they announced that Digital and
DuPont had "revisited" their policy and had made some changes. They
tried to present it as it was all done due to the change in the law and
not because of whats been going on. Their new policy is that not all
engineers have to be tested. Three engineers have to be tested and the
rest of us have to be escorted onto the plant. When it was asked what
was to happen to the rest regarding consent forms that were already
signed and tests that were already done, we were told..."well you can
tear them up if you want, but if you don't, obviously thats goodness."
I am ashamed to say that most of the people turned theirs back in that
very day and the last I heard two people were still deciding. I don't
care about the ones that truly believe in drug testing but the ones
that turned them in just to be considered a "good boy" make me ill.
Some people feel this is a victory for me because I get to keep my job
and don't have to take the test. I feel that Digital did as little as
they could to dodge a bullet. It also makes me furious that they were
informed of this law in August and told us that it didn't matter and I
had to get a lawyer and sue the crap out of them to stop them. I said
as much in the meeting and made even more enemies. These people put me
through four months of hell because they thought they could bully me
into submission and they only changed their policy when I fought back,
not out of the goodness of their hearts. Do I feel its a victory? Not
really. Do I feel it was worth it? Yes. Do I still believe in justice?
Not at all. I would also like to note that when we were told of this
policy, we were told it was in accordance with state law. Don't belive
them. Always question. I don't think this is the end of Digital's drug
testing.
Cindy
|
716.786 | thanks! | DELREY::PEDERSON_PA | Hey man, dig this groovy scene! | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:20 | 12 |
| Cindy,
Thank you for keeping us all informed on your case. In reading
the outcome, I, too don't believe there was a "victory" per se.
But you sure ought to be congratulated for sticking to your
priciples throughout your ordeal. I'm sure your ordeal will
inspire others to challege "policy" when it flies in the face
of personal privacy and strongly held beliefs. You *did* win!
You are one to be admired...
pat
|
716.787 | She fought so we might be free... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:30 | 0 |
716.788 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | Aussie Licensing Devo | Wed Jan 02 1991 22:51 | 20 |
| re .785
> signed and tests that were already done, we were told..."well you can
> tear them up if you want, but if you don't, obviously thats goodness."
> I am ashamed to say that most of the people turned theirs back in that
> very day and the last I heard two people were still deciding. I don't
> care about the ones that truly believe in drug testing but the ones
> that turned them in just to be considered a "good boy" make me ill.
>
Cindy, while I respect your right to refuse to take a drug test, I object
most strongly to your cynical classification of your fellow employees as
being "good boys" because they chose to respond to the corporations'
request. I fail to see how you, without a detailed and comprehensive
interaction with a large number of other employee's, could come to the
conclusion that they are acting out of either self interest or community
awareness.
Peter Q.
|
716.789 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jan 03 1991 08:10 | 29 |
| re: .785
Cindy, Could you tell us more about what was decided? In particular,
why are three engineers still required to be tested? Are they doing
something special or were they singled out arbitrarily?
On the issue of "conforming to State law", once when I was asked
a question that I did not wish to answer I was told that State law
required that I answer it. I asked for the number of the law, and
was given it. I then went to the public library in my town and
looked up the law. It did not give the state the authority to
require that answer of me! After a phone call to the responsible
official I got the problem straightened out.
re: .788
I think Cindy is offended because she fought for her rights while
others, who have demonstrated that they agreed with her, did not fight.
That doesn't seem fair, but it happens all the time. I, as a citizen
of the United States of America, enjoy a certain amount of freedom
because some people who lived here 200 years ago fought for it.
Similarly, certain of Cindy's co-workers benefit from _her_ effort.
I think Cindy has the right to be offended, because her co-workers
had the opportunity to join her and declined to do so. However,
Cindy should keep in mind that not everyone has the courage that she
has exhibited. Also, some of her co-workers, while preferring not
to be tested, may not have felt as strongly about the issue as she did.
John Sauter
|
716.791 | | TERZA::ZANE | Consciousness before being -- V. Havel | Thu Jan 03 1991 11:34 | 15 |
|
It appears that Digital has not really changed its policy, only made
enough modifications to get this monkey off its back. I can hear Cindy's
cynicism; there has been no victory here. There is no consideration for
the individual, only the minimum activity required to keep up
appearances. And that is disgusting.
Still, my hat's off to Cindy for sticking this through as far as she did.
Even a change for appearance's sake is something; some motion in the
right direction. Maybe next time (and yes, I would expect there to be a
next time) a little more can be accomplished.
Terza
|
716.792 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jan 03 1991 13:25 | 8 |
| re: .791
I don't agree. With the possible exception of the "three engineers"
Cindy's posting says to me that if you don't want to be subjected to
drug testing you won't be. That sounds to me like a clear victory
for individual rights. I don't care if Digital's policy is to test
people; I only object to involuntary testing.
John Sauter
|
716.793 | THIS IS JUST A BEGINNING. | CSOA1::ROOT | North Central States Regional Support | Thu Jan 03 1991 14:06 | 12 |
| RE:-1 While those of us who read this notes file might agree to some
extent try and convince the overwhelming majority of Dec managers who
could care less what this conference has to say about drug testing and
who will continue to brow beat the troops into submission to justify
their cause or protect their rear ends and remain inconspicuous in the
eyes of their bosses. In other words DON'T MAKE WAVES or your out
syndrome.More people will have to push back before this issue is
setteled company wide. Congratulations though on a good beginning.
Regards
AL ROOT
|
716.794 | Land of the Oppressed. | AYOV28::DHUNTER | | Fri Jan 04 1991 03:58 | 19 |
| I don't think digital realises how lucky it is to have employees of
the calibre of Cindy Lilly.
If this had happened in the UK, it is not outwith the bounds of
possibility that digital Manf. UK would swiftly have become unionised
with resultant potential for massive disruption of the European
backlog and digital's bottom line.
I would like to think that the management have the smarts to learn from
this experience never assume again that they can infringe the basic
human rights (and that is what we have here) of an individual whilst
at the same time creating the morale environment which exists in Hell.
Congratulations Cindy, your a very brave lady.
Don H.
|
716.795 | Read it again | PFSVAX::LILLY | Montani Semper Liberi | Fri Jan 04 1991 10:28 | 14 |
| re: .788
Peter,
If you would reread my statement you would see that I do not hold
anything against the people that truly believe in drug testing. My
reference to "good boys" meant the ones that came to me and said "i
really didn't want to do it either but I didn't have the guts to
refuse" People made those kind of statements to me. And if acknowledge
that what they are doing is directly against WV State Law, how can you
justify it. Thats like the corporation urging you to bait and switch
even though you know there's a law against it. And none of this was at
the corporations "request". It was mandatory.
Cindy
|
716.796 | To add to the previous | PFSVAX::LILLY | Montani Semper Liberi | Fri Jan 04 1991 10:47 | 13 |
| Sorry, I should have read further before I replied. In answer to
someones question about the criteria for the three that have to go, I
can only say this. Two of them were designated account reps and also
advocated drug testing. The third was just someone that they could be
sure of. When I asked personnel rep why they had to be tested and the
rest could go in and work without testing, she said that they do the
more dangerous work. When I pointed out that we all do the same work
in there she disagreed but when I put it to my manager, he agreed with
me. She didn't have any answer then. I firmly believe that they did
this so they could have people they could be sure of be tested, satisfy
DuPont, and avoid a law suit most felt they were going to lose.
Cindy
|
716.797 | a pratical/paranoid suggestion | JBEICH::BEICHMAN | its only information if its in your head | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:06 | 19 |
| 1. congratulations and thanks cindy for what you have done for all of
us.
2. I know this is going to be attacked as cynical and paranoid, but
let me make a suggestion. Some people, as evidenced by the many
replies to this note, are full of admiration for what you have done.
Others will not be. I strongly recommend you write a letter/report
which states your position on this whole affair, why you felt compelled
to do it etc., and get that letter put into your personnel file.
Indeed, get a copy of this note and its replies and keep it in hardcopy
for your records. You may not need it today, but you might tomorrow.
Because of your stand you have made trouble for some people who detest
trouble above all things and, as a result, undoubtedly acquired a
"reputation". Take this simple step to get your side of the story read
into the official record.
keep the faith,
johnb
|
716.798 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Jan 07 1991 07:19 | 4 |
| re: .797
I think this is a very good idea. Make sure your letter is dated.
John Sauter
|
716.799 | Thanks, Cindy | TALK::COTTAY | _ \* no comment *\ | Thu Jan 10 1991 06:12 | 4 |
| If you are going to use this note as a record, I'd like to voice my
support and appreciation.
Will Cottay
|
716.800 | Update on Digital's Drug Testing Program | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Thu Jun 06 1991 16:21 | 47 |
| Digital Internal Use Only
TM Volume 10, #4
digital mgmt memo May, 1991
UPDATE ON DIGITAL'S DRUG TESTING PROGRAM
In response to requirements and obligations from government
agencies and customers, Digital instituted a drug testing program
in January 1990. To date, the program has only affected a small
number of employees in the U.S.: those where testing is required
by federal law or regulation (such as truck drivers under U.S.
Department of Transportation regulations); and those who provide
service to a few customers who, because of the risks in
conducting their operations, have determined that testing is
required. In addition, some employees in the Government Systems
Group in jobs requiring security clearances have been notified
that they may become subject to testing.
The people afffected are notified in advance. They are given
detailed information and opportunities to ask whatever questions
they may have in order to help them understand their
responsibilities under the program, if they should become subject
to it. Tests are conducted by an independent laboratory under
contract to Digital and following strictly defined procedures, to
ensure accuracy and confidentiality.
The greatest pressure to expand the number of employees to be
tested is coming not from government but rather from commercial
customers. For instance, some customers, who test their own
employees for drugs, have requested that all Digital employees
who come to their sites also be tested. Each customer request
for drug testing is evaluated on an individual basis to determine
if the need is legitimate based on the risks of their operation.
If that is the case, that account may become part of Digital's
Drug Testing Program. If not, Digital negotiates with the
customer to determine the most reasonable way to proceed, given
the actual work to be performed. On a case-by-case basis, these
negotiations have led to mutually acceptable alternatives,
including the use of volunteers.
While such decisions affect a very small number of people, this
is another indication of the current climate of public opinion
regarding drugs and drug testing, and the likelihood that the
drug testing program may have to expand in response to further
customer requirements, government regulations and business needs.
|
716.801 | Does the camel have his nose in the tent? | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Thu Jun 06 1991 17:24 | 7 |
| > While such decisions affect a very small number of people, this
> is another indication of the current climate of public opinion
> regarding drugs and drug testing, and the likelihood that the
> drug testing program may have to expand in response to further
> customer requirements, government regulations and business needs.
Bob
|
716.802 | Did all end well? | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Jun 06 1991 20:43 | 9 |
| This is an open question to Cindy Lilly.
What came of your courageous fight for civil liberties? Did you get a
just outcome. Do you feel your career was hurt at all by your stand?
I ask these questions because I was reminded of your stand when I the
last couple of notes just popped up as unseen.
Dave
|
716.803 | | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Not turning 39... | Fri Jun 07 1991 08:04 | 12 |
|
ref .800
"Forshadowing - common literary technique"...
Didn't we get a "motherhood and apple pie" speil a few months
before the medical stuff was drastically changed too?
-al
|
716.804 | maybe she got the "package" | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:05 | 3 |
| I don't see any answers to .802. Perhaps ms. Lilly is no longer here?
Ken
|
716.805 | | FSDEV2::MGILBERT | Kids are our Future-Teach 'em Well | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:14 | 2 |
| Ms. Lilly is still listed in ELF at CNO (Charleston, W.Va.).
|
716.806 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Jun 11 1991 16:46 | 5 |
| Nope, she's gone.
ELF entries do not go away for people who receive the package until after
their final weekly pay check is issued, which can be several months from
the time they actually stop working.
|
716.807 | | AIWEST::ARVIDSON | Just look at the size of those tomatos, Jack! | Tue Jun 11 1991 20:07 | 3 |
| How do you know that she has left the company?
Dan
|
716.808 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | Cooooiiiieee, cobber... | Wed Jun 12 1991 00:58 | 3 |
| Knowing John, he probably rang her. (or tried to...)
q
|
716.809 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Can I get there by candlelight? | Wed Jun 12 1991 01:07 | 9 |
|
Does anywhere beside Boston have a paper that carries the comic strip
"Dilbert"? It's doing a nice little satire on drug testing this week.
"We realize it would be illegal for us to ransack your home or break
into your car to find drugs! However, we have no serious ethical problem
with demanding that you give us samples of your bodily fluids..."
:-( paul
|
716.810 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | I am the captain of my soul | Wed Jun 12 1991 08:26 | 3 |
|
Her last account that I sent mail to no longer exists...
|
716.811 | ELF is no help | ASDS::CROUCH | Sugar Magnolia blossoms slowly | Wed Jun 12 1991 09:30 | 9 |
| ELF is a joke. There was a person in my group who was terminated
about a year and a half ago. The person is still listed on ELF.
Personnel can't understand why and has said they will look into
it. That was six months ago.
Never go by ELF in determining if someone still works here.
Jim C.
|
716.812 | yes, it is true | PFSVAX::MATSCHERZ | | Fri Jun 14 1991 11:54 | 6 |
| To all,
I am located in the Pittsburgh District and yes they told us that
Cindy has recieved the "package".
Steve M.....
|
716.813 | | AYOV10::DHUNTER | | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:50 | 9 |
| re: .811
May I suggest that ELF is not a joke. Now Personnel, that's another
matter!
(-:
Don H.
|
716.814 | Personnel Policies have been Extended | BOLTON::PLOUFF | Devoted to his Lawn | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:12 | 23 |
| Many of my questions about Digital's plans for drug testing were
cleared up by a look through the online Orange Book. Drug testing
programs must still be approved by the Executive Committee. However,
several policies were changed last December.
Section 6.18 allows disclosure of drug testing results to customers
with a need to know.
6.21 instructs managers to omit verbal warning to employees who fail
job-required drug tests. Such persons now get a written warning as a
first step, which explicitly says that failure of a second test within
one year is grounds for immediate dismissal.
6.33 discusses drug tests of incapacitated employees.
6.36 discusses legal and business needs for drug testing. It also
instructs managers when to consider suspected substance abuse outside
the work environment.
Policies are clearly in place which would allow widespread drug testing
within the corporation.
Wes
|
716.815 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Sat Jul 13 1991 13:52 | 26 |
| Some information for those who might be facing a decision on this
subject:
One of our customers, GE Plastics, has had a drug testing policy for a
number of years. No one is exempt, from the group VP right down to the
people on the shop floor. Some plants have recently made testing a
requirement for vendors, especially service people, who desire access
cards which would allow them to visit the plant site unescorted.
What the local sales reps discovered when they went to the local lab
authorized to conduct drug tests for Digital was apparently that when
they agreed to let Digital do this, they were subject to tests FOR THE
DURATION OF THEIR EMPLOYMENT WITH DIGITAL. Even if you are not mortally
offended at the prospect of testing in general, this requirement is a
big pain in the ass at the very least. Job assignments change every
few years and sales reps are not likely to be covering the account any
more.
What they did find was that GE's requirements were not as strict - you
were subject to testing only as long as you desired unescorted access
to the plant. They apparently had the option of signing GE's agreement
instead of Digital's, thus allowing them to stop testing when they
stopped covering the account.
Al
|
716.816 | This seems to have quieted down? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Mar 23 1992 15:33 | 8 |
| Has anyone heard of any further activity in these quarters (drug testing of
DECcies) over the last eight months or so?
Just wondering if this was a bogie-man poised to spring again soon, or whether
maybe the WoD was declared a draw. :^)
-Jack
|
716.817 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Mon Mar 23 1992 16:08 | 4 |
| Well, it depends if you consider losing your job a draw. As an earlier reply
mentioned, Cindy Lilly got the TFSO package last summer.
Bob
|
716.818 | | ALIEN::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Mar 23 1992 16:42 | 13 |
| re: .-2
The lastest issue of DECworld sent to homes has an article in it about
drugs. It lists 'signs' of drug abuse (things like Alcohol breath,
execssive sick days, lateness, memory loss). Of course some of the
list would seem to be what one would expect from overstress as well,
but no one in the company is overly stressed, are they :-)? I'll
bring in my copy if you would like to see it. There were some bizarre
(to my mind) things in the article.
-Joe
|
716.819 | | FIGS::BANKS | Still waiting for the 'Scooby-Doo' ending | Mon Mar 23 1992 16:53 | 12 |
| One thing that troubles me about so many of those articles is the tricks they'll
resort to in order to obtain startling statistics.
For instance, they'll include alcohol in the list of "drugs" when they want to
come up with a huge number of "drug users", while alcohol disappears from the
list of things they're really going after. It leaves the impression that 10%
of the country is hooked on illegal drugs. That's used as a justification.
Then, when they really do crack down on people, the alcohol users are generally
not considered a problem, even when they're the lion's share of the startling
statistic.
Oh well, ... Anything to push an agenda.
|
716.820 | Is testing actively happening, though? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Mar 23 1992 20:43 | 12 |
| re: .817, Bob,
Yes - I was aware of that action. It was post-July activities I was wondering
about. The "draw" statement had to do with what I thought was a "cease fire".
re: .818, Joe,
I must admit that DECworld has gone straight into the circular file, unread,
for the last several years. Has to do with lost faith, I guess. Apologetically,
yes, if I could look at your copy of that article I'd appreciate it.
-Jack
|
716.821 | | MU::PORTER | just drive, she said | Tue Mar 24 1992 13:31 | 17 |
| re .818 (DECworld)
No, you're wrong. The DECworld isn't about "drugs", it's about
"substances". DEC is apparently concerned that employees
depend on substances.
Now, I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm certainly dependent
on substances. I depend quite heavily on the substance
from which my chair is made, for example -- I depend on
it not to give way and deposit me in an undignified heap
on the floor of my cube. The floor is, of course, also
made from "substance".
Perhaps DEC is trying to get us to aspire to a more ideal,
perhaps Platonic, level of existence, this world being but
an imperfect corporeal reflection of the pure unchanging
essence (etc etc)?
|
716.822 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Mar 24 1992 13:55 | 3 |
| Re: .-1
Really? Just "substances"? Not "illegal substances"?
|
716.823 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Tue Mar 24 1992 14:44 | 6 |
| I thought they were concerned with "substance abuse". Therefore, if the
substance in your chair breaks, and you fall to the floor, you could be charged
with abusing the substance of your chair and abusing the substance of the
floor.
:-) <- for the humor-impaired.
|
716.824 | | ALIEN::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Mar 24 1992 20:15 | 59 |
| > Really? Just "substances"? Not "illegal substances"?
The article title is "Chemical Dependency: The Hidden Disease".
Some stirring highlights:
1) 'Dependence is a disease...'
2) 'Alcohol is the most widely used and abused drug'
3) 'Stimulants refer to several groups of substances,
such as some weight control products, many which
contain caffeine, that tend to increase alertness
and physical activity'
4) 'Aspirin is the most used and abused drug...'
There was also a section titled
"everything you wanted to know about substance abuse"
which contained the paragraphs (each about 4 sentences long)
- Is every individual a potential substance abuser
[does not do anything to answer the question]
-How do people get started
[it seems people get started by taking 1 drink, or 1 pill and
then escalating over time.]
- How do you know you are addicted
[you are when you experience problems at home, work, spirituallly
or physically, which can be linked to substance abuse]
- Who is using what
[Alcohol and other drugs often go hand in hand]
- Is substance abuse hard to detect
[Most people cannot tell is some one is unless their behavior
gives them away... such as alcohol breath,excessive use of
prescription/over-the-counter drugs, arrests/possession of
illegal drugs, physical difficulties, memory losses, frequent
illnesses, family issues, financial problems, etc. In the
workplace, one signal is declining work performance]
- Can users stop on their own
[when they are ready to be cured]
- Is substance abuse treatable
[basically, it is the most treatable disease there is]
All through the article the phrases "chemical dependency", "substance abuse",
"drugs" are used interchangeably. Of course, it seems from this article that
both aspirin AND alcohol share the most used/abused category. It is also
interesting that most of the list of 'signals' for substance abuse apply
equally as well to stress! And as for 'declining work performance' in the
work place, any traditional DEC meeting will have the exact same effect on
performance :-).
-Joe
|
716.825 | | MU::PORTER | just drive, she said | Tue Mar 24 1992 21:55 | 5 |
|
My favourite line from the article:
"All substances, both legal and illegal, are dangerous."
|
716.826 | don't forget us chocoholics! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Mar 25 1992 07:00 | 6 |
| Re: <<< Note 716.825 by MU::PORTER "just drive, she said" >>>
based on that quotation I will seek out help for my addiction to
chocolate and other dextrose/sucrose contaminated substances.
:-)
|
716.827 | huh? | CSOA1::FOSTER | Frank, Mfg/Distr Digital Svcs, 432-7730 | Wed Mar 25 1992 08:45 | 12 |
| re. <<< Note 716.824 by ALIEN::MELVIN "Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2" >>>
> 2) 'Alcohol is the most widely used and abused drug'
> 4) 'Aspirin is the most used and abused drug...'
Well, which is it?? Is there a difference in meaning of these two sentences
due to the presence/absence of the word "widely"???
I guess I'm part of the problem....I use them both!! :-)
Frank
|
716.828 | Is this about drugs, drugs, or drugs? | TALLIS::PARADIS | Music, Sex, and Cookies | Wed Mar 25 1992 13:21 | 26 |
| >> 2) 'Alcohol is the most widely used and abused drug'
>> 4) 'Aspirin is the most used and abused drug...'
>Well, which is it?? Is there a difference in meaning of these two sentences
>due to the presence/absence of the word "widely"???
Actually, this is part of the problem I have with the whole
"substance abuse" brouhaha -- people talking about it tend to
play fast and loose with terminology depending on their agenda.
As such, words tend to acquire multiple meanings. In the above
example, (2) uses "drug" to mean "recreational psychoactive
substance", whereas (4) uses it to mean "medicinal substance".
Both are technically correct: alcohol is the most widely used
and abused "recreational psychoactive substance" (most of the
adult population drinks at *some* point, some drink entirely
too much), and aspirin is the most widely used and abused "medicinal
substance" (a lot of people treat it as a cure-all for *every*
ache and pain and bother... I've heard of some people trying to
use it as a sleeping pill, f'rinstance!)
The trouble is, when you overload a word with too many meanings
like this, it's hard to tell what somebody means. When people
speak of the "drug problem", ask yourself: *WHICH* problem are
they referring to?
--jim
|
716.829 | a byline can mean big bucks! | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Mar 25 1992 13:50 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 716.828 by TALLIS::PARADIS "Music, Sex, and Cookies" >>>
Its about getting your name in the papers! Remember the old
show biz adage, "There's no such thing as bad publicity!"
You have to overstate whatever to get the jaded news media to
listen to the message that you are "the savior of the
generation".
Don't take it so seriously, nobody else does.
Dick
|
716.830 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 25 1992 14:49 | 1 |
| Aspirin abuse?! Could somebody explain?
|
716.831 | i explain for last caller about abuse of aspirin | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Wed Mar 25 1992 15:27 | 13 |
| i think he just means dont take too much asirin just nilly willy like
that if you dont really need it, espcially since they say it good
for the heart, some started bying a lot of it and cosume it in large
quantity hoping to help the hearts.
i like to moderate , i never take more than 5 tablets a day, 2 in
the mornings, two when i go home, and one befor sleep, and take the
buffered ones for your stomach, i hear some crazy peoples take 12
each day, if their finger hurt, they take aspirin, it is crazy.
every thing in moderate is good, except ice cream offcourse.
/nasser
|
716.832 | Aspirin causes bleeding | TPS::FALOR | Ken Falor | Thu Mar 26 1992 11:16 | 9 |
| Aspirin was recently found to be good for the prevention of
death from colon cancer. However, a number of doctors
think the reason why could be that aspirin normally causes
minor bleeding in the intestines and so people go to the
doctor for examinations of the bowell, and that way early
cancers are detected.
So be careful in using too much aspirin; it's not totally
benign by any means.
|
716.833 | | MU::PORTER | just drive, she said | Thu Mar 26 1992 17:03 | 3 |
|
This reply is entirely substance-free.
|
716.834 | Can you substantiate that? | STAR::BECK | Beware OSI Layers 8 and 9 | Thu Mar 26 1992 17:28 | 0
|