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East Riding: Campaigner criticises workplace testing plan: Drug screening 'invades privacy'

Hull Daily Mail

Wednesday 01 Jan 2003

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The chairman of the Hull and East Riding Legalise Cannabis Alliance today
warned against launching a major new work-place drugs policy in the county.
Carl Wagner, of Ella Street, West Hull, is urging East Riding councillors
not to rubber stamp plans to randomly test hundreds of frontline staff who
work for the local authority - as well as thousands of others whose
performance "may be impaired by drugs or alcohol."

Personell officer Zoe Martin said a workplace drugs policy, which would
affect more than 15,000 employees, has been agreed in principle but has yet
to be voted on by members and implemented.

The move would be a first for East Riding Council, the country's largest
unitary authority. Chief executive Darryl Stephenson and all 66 councillors
could be amongst those tested under the system.

Council leaders claim the controversial measure would be a safety net for
the public.

But Mr Wagner said evidence provided by drug tests was unreliable and could
have serious consequences for workers and their families.

Mr Wagner said: Drug testing in the workplace is a sinister extension to
the misguided war on drugs, and represents a gross invasion of an
individual's privacy.

"Whether or not drug use impacts on workplace performance, drug testing is
a poor solution because drug tests do not measure impairment.

"Rather than looking for drugs, drug tests look for metabolites -
by-products which are excreted from the body hours, days or even weeks
after a drug was ingested. As a result, drug tests mainly identify drug
users who may have used a drug at the weekend, but are not under the
influence of a drug when at work or when tested.

"Workplace drug testing is an expensive and demeaning method of
surveillance rather than a safety net for workers or the public, and the
profiteers will be the usual suspects - the lawyers, the drug testing
industry, and the ever increasing drug enforcement agencies whos pay and
advancement depend on getting more and more people into treatment."

"I hope those councillors who can think of better ways to spend tax payers
money have the courage to oppose this tyranny."

But Councillor Symon Fraser, joint chairman of the council's reduced crime
review and scrutiny commitee, said the move was not "a draconian attitude
towards people."

Councillor Fraser, who represents the Driffield and Rural ward, said: "Our
main concern is where someones performance could pose a risk to the public."
Councillor Bob Tress, who represents South Hunsley ward said: This is an
important safety net for workers and the public."

A spokesman for East Riding Council said: "The Government has requested
that all large organisations have procedures in place for drug and alcohol
testing. So far, no policy for this has been agreed by the council."


 

 

 

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