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Workforce Management, October 2003, pp.
35-40
Convinced by shaky economic data and
appeals to civic virtue, employers have long allowed themselves to be persuaded
that testing employees for drug use is the right thing to do. Now, after hard
looks at budget and some long-simmering issues about trust and efficacy, they're
not so sure.
By Andy Meisler
Joseph Reilly, a bearded middle-aged man
who is the founder and president of Florida Drug Screening, Inc., stands at a
lectern in a Washington, D.C., hotel meeting room less than 300 yards from the
White House. His topic is selling employee drug-testing programs to small and
medium-sized businesses. Reilly is preaching to the choir. He's
The attendees are an earnest-looking group
of primarily boomer-aged entrepreneurs and executives who seem utterly
unconcerned about shifting attitudes toward their industry. As he speaks,
members of the audience nod and scribble notes in "Drug and Alcohol Testing
Programs for Non-Mandated Employers" workbooks.
What Reilly doesn't mention, and no one
else in the room brings up, is this: the drug-testing industry is coming under
scrutiny, its value questioned as never before. While the efficacy of drug
testing continues to be a subject of debate, there is a more relevant question
being raised at businesses where testing isn't a federally mandated safety
requirement. Does workplace drug testing pay? While many in the field and their
colleagues in government and industry speak optimistically of a time when every
American worker, from the CEO on down, will have to prove his drug-free status,
there's been a small but significant shift in corporate thinking. Under the
pressure of hard times, neither the philosophical nor the economic reasons for
drug testing are as convincing--or affordable--as they once were.
Last year the American drug-testing
industry conducted between 20 and 25 million tests and had revenues of $737
million, a growth of only 1 percent from the previous year. The drug-testing
industry grew at an annual rate of 12.5 percent during the 1990s. However, two
years ago, according to the latest survey conducted by the American Management
Association, 61 percent of companies administered drug tests to job
applicants--down from 68 percent in 1996. In July, Quest Diagnostics Inc., a
leading processor of employee drug tests, which also provides diagnostic
services to the medical industry, reported a 9 percent increase in revenue in
the second quarter even though there was a 10 percent drop in the drug-testing
portion of its business.
Reduced hiring during the recession is
responsible for much of the drop. But there are other causes. Meldron Young, the
American Management Association's human resources practice consultant, says that
a growing number of employers regard off-work-site marijuana use, which produces
more than half of all positive results on non-mandated drug tests, as not worth
the time, expense or hard feelings it costs to detect. "You have people moving
into the upper echelons of corporate America now that kind of take the stance
that if [casual off-site drug use] isn't affecting the person's performance,
it's not an issue."
A small, quiet revolt
The main theme of Reilly's speech is his
own belief in the complete necessity, the absolute righteousness, of workplace
drug testing. "Many of the fears and misconceptions surrounding drug testing
have been resolved in the minds of employers," he declares. "The science of drug
testing has passed the test of time."
That was not the conclusion of top
executives at electronics giant Hewlett-Packard three years ago, shortly before
they decided to drop drug testing. So few applicants were testing positive, a
company spokesperson said at the time, that the procedure was no longer cost
effective. Cisco and Sun Microsystems, like many other high-tech firms that
attract highly skilled, self-motivated employees, have never conducted drug
tests.
Neither does Trader Joe's, a 200-store
nationwide specialty supermarket chain. Carol Impara, vice president for human
resources, says that the company doesn't test because of the value it places on
creating employee trust. "Basically, it's wanting to show that we trust people,
and showing that from the start," she says. "Our managers aren't sitting in t
On the other hand, a number of firms whose
CEOs or workforce executives were recommended by DATIA members as proud,
satisfied consumers of their drug-testing services, including Sheetz, a
fast-growing chain of convenience stores, and Carrier West, a heating and air
conditioning distribution company in Denver, either refuse to comment or don't
respond to telephone calls. Other firms that will comment offer statements that
are less than illuminating. Hewlett-Packard, for instance, has backed off its
two-year-old financial explanation for suspending drug testing and now cites its
companywide code of conduct, summarized by the phrase "HP must maintain the
highest standards of integrity," as the reason it no longer tests for drug use.
Its arch rival Dell Inc. cites the exact same reason for taking the opposite
approach. It tests every one of its approximately 42,000 employees.
One significant reason for this
inconsistency is that no companies that administer such tests have conducted any
studies of either the efficacy or effect of their own drug-testing programs on
the bottom line. Beverly Potter, a consultant on corporate drug testing and
co-author of both Drug Testing at Work: A Guide for Employers and Pass the Test:
An Employee Guide to Drug Testing, says that to do so would be at best
irrelevant and at worst embarrassing. "They're worried about their image,"
Potter says. "They're afraid that to say they don't support drug testing implies
that they support drug use."
She and other critics of drug testing
charge private-industry drug testers with capitalizing on such corporate
caution. They rely on vague ROI figures extrapolated from decades-old research
studies. The by-no-means undisputed results of these studies are used to show
the undeniable financial incentives of screening for the presence of marijuana,
cocaine, heroin, PCP, amphetamines and up to a dozen or more other illicit
substances in employees' bodies. The benefits are said to include increased
productivity, fewer accidents, lower health-care costs and decreased employee
turnover. The next rhetorical bulwark is the Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988,
which requires companies doing $25,000 or more in business with the federal
government per year to certify that they are, well, a drug-free workplace. The
act does not, however, require a drug-testing program.
Additional arguments for drug testing
include the absolute necessity of preventing drug-induced workplace accidents.
It is also argued that drug testing can work as a kind of informal IQ test to
screen out job applicants too dim to abstain before a pre-announced drug test,
and that the average employee is revolted by the prospect of working alongside
unsafe or work-shirking individuals who are under the influence of drugs.
Professional drug testers also introduce the possibility of armies of
drug-addicted job applicants showing up at the front door of employers that
don't do drug tests after being turned away by drug-testing employers.
Given a cost of only $25 to $35 per urine
test per employee, down to $14 to $28 for companies of more than about 10,000
employees, these talking points were surefire deal clinchers during boom times.
Moreover, in an era when DARE chapters are in most school districts despite
evidence that they do little to prevent student drug abuse, and an
anti-drug-testing position can be easily twisted by politicians or competitors
into a "pro-drug" stance, most companies are loath to even mention the matter of
drug testing. But with a stagnating economy, the pro-testing arguments are not
the slam-dunks they once were.
"Now employers look at drug testing like
everything else and say, 'Where's the payoff?' And if nobody sees a payoff,
programs get cut--or, more often, cut back."
The American Management Association's
Meldron Young says that many companies that previously demanded drug tests of
both job applicants and current employees are now testing only job applicants.
Lewis Maltby, president of the liberal National Workrights Institute in
Princeton, New Jersey, points out that the economic climate has significantly
changed corporate attitudes about drug testing. "Initially, in the late '80s or
early '90s, employers looked at drug testing and said, 'Why not?' " Maltby says.
"Now employers look at drug testing like everything else and say, 'Where's the
payoff?' And if nobody sees a payoff, programs get cut--or, more often, cut
back."
Dynamite data
The meatiest part of Reilly's presentation
is his own tried-and-true sales pitch, which he illustrates with the aid of a
felt-tip pen and a whiteboard. Since 17 percent of the American population are
currently substance abusers, he says, and since substance-abusing employees cost
their businesses a national average of $7,000 apiece per year, the ROI yielded
by yearly drug tests is a stunning 288 percent. Additionally, companies that use
drug testing enjoy reduced absenteeism and turnover, increased productivity and
fewer accidents.
What he doesn't mention is the
considerable body of research that supports the economic case against drug
testing. Much of this research was conducted by respected academicians and
government agencies. The most convenient access to this information, however, is
through two unabashedly political organizations: the National Organization for
the Reform of Marijuana Laws and the American Civil Liberties Union.
On NORML's Web site, nestled among
advertisements for polo shirts made of hemp-based cloth and appeals against
police harassment of "rave" parties, is a reference to a 1990 article in
Scientific American by John Horgan, one of that publication's senior writers at
the time. He explores the genesis of a finding by the federal government's
National Institute on Drug Abuse that illegal drug use costs American society
$47 billion, in 1990 dollars, per year.
"Here's how the figure was derived,"
Horgan writes. "In 1982 NIDA surveyed 3,700 households around the country. The
Research Triangle Institute, a NIDA contractor in North Carolina, then analyzed
the data and found that the household income of adults who had ever smoked
marijuana daily for a month, or at least 20 out of 30 days, was 28 percent less
than the income of those who hadn't. The RTI analysts called this difference
'reduced productivity due to daily marijuana use.' They calculated the total
'loss,' when extrapolated to the general population, at $26 billion. Adding the
estimated costs of drug-related crimes, accidents and medical care produced a
grand total of $47 billion for 'costs to society of drug abuse.' "
In Horgan's opinion this conclusion is
scientifically indefensible. Marijuana-reform activists and representatives of
other civil-libertarian organizations chime in that urine tests, which register
positive for marijuana use if the test subject has used the drug even once in
the previous one to three months, are the wrong instruments for filtering out
hard-core users anyway.
Other anti-drug-testing arguments are
available from the ACLU, which in 1999 issued a little-noticed 28-page report
titled Drug Testing: A Bad Investment. This report criticizes the methodology
and conclusions of studies frequently cited by members of the drug testing
industry. It confirms the workforce-wide substance-abuse figure of 17
percent--but
Most claims of reduced absenteeism,
turnover and injuries, it contends, are based on several late-1980s studies of
postal and power workers, which the ACLU interprets quite differently. The
organization says that the studies are either inconclusive or show no
correlation between drug use and poor or dangerous workplace performance. The
ACLU concedes that one postal study does show a correlation between drug use and
turnover/termination. It also points out that the same data shows an equally
strong correlation, unmentioned by the pro-drug testers, between the likelihood
of a new postal
The ACLU report also quotes a much longer
but no less obscure study, Under the Influence? Drugs and the American Work
Force, also commissioned by NIDA. Among that 1994 study's conclusions, the ACLU
points out, were that the data "[does] not provide clear evidence of the
deleterious effects of drugs other than alcohol on safety and other
job-performance indicators" and that "widely cited cost estimates of the effects
of alcohol and other drug use on U.S. productivity are based on questionable
assumptions and weak measures." The ACLU report also includes a Kaiser
Permanente study that compared the medical histories and health-care costs of
people who used marijuana and those who did not. Kaiser found no significant
differences. Theoretically at least, that means that pot-smokers don't strain
their employers' health-plan budgets any more than their abstinent cohorts.
The ACLU cites an $11.7 million
drug-testing program, conducted in 1990, that uncovered 153 drug users out of
29,000 government employees tested. The organization calculates that it cost
taxpayers $77,000 for each drug abuser found by the program. Then, as its pièce
de résistance, the ACLU points to yet another study, this one commissioned by a
pro-labor publication, Working USA, and carried out by economists from Le Moyne
College, a small Jesuit-run school in Syracuse, New York. The 1998 report, it
says, proves that drug testing can actually decrease productivity. It allegedly
does this by dissuading talented high-tech workers, who have a choice of
employers, from working for companies that they feel do not trust them or
respect their privacy. This limits the already small and select hiring pool for
these companies.
The drug-testing industry generally treats
these reports with scorn. It advises doubters, in effect, to value the drug
testers' experiences on the front lines above dry, abstract studies and, above
all, to consider just who is making the arguments against them. Susan Ramsden, a
forensic toxicologist who is founder and president of Comprehensive Medical
Center, a drug-testing service in Sacramento, California, says that whatever the
national statistics happen to show, she does business in what she believes to be
the illegal amphetamine production and consumption capital of the world, parts
of Northern California.
"If I go into warehouses, small
construction companies or temp agencies that use day labor, we'll have as high
as a 30 percent positive drug rate," Ramsden says. "When I get a call from a
business owner, saying, 'Oh my God, I just was told we have a problem,' or 'I've
just found some drugs,' I've sometimes found 100 percent of his employees
positive for amphetamines."
Eric Hess, a DATIA board member and vice
president of drug and alcohol testing services for U.S. Investigations Services
in Annandale, Pennsylvania, scans the 1999 ACLU report and says, "This was
written around the time in which the ACLU was trying to fortify a position that
states should legalize marijuana use." He mentions the increased abuse of
amphetamines and "designer drugs" like Ecstasy in recent years, and declares
that the ACLU policy is badly out of date. Referring to the organization's
stance, he adds,
"This is obviously a political
commentary."
Flashback
Pass A Drug Test
The modern history of workplace drug
testing began in 1986, when President Ronald Reagan signed an executive order
declaring all federal agencies drug-free workplaces. In 1991 President George
Bush the elder signed the Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act, which,
among other measures, mandated pre-employment and post-accident drug and alcohol
testing for safety-sensitive workers such as truck drivers, airline pilots, and
maritime, pipeline and railway workers. Unannounced random drug tests for 50
percent of all safety-sensitive workers per year were mandated. Over the years,
as the percentage of positive tests has stabilized at about 2 percent, the
random-testing requirement has been progressively lowered to 25 percent for
several industries, including airlines and railroads.
Private industry initially adopted
non-mandated testing programs enthusiastically. Although civil libertarians and
marijuana advocates quickly took employers like Southern Pacific and Times
Mirror Co. to court, accusing them of invading their privacy or conducting
illegal searches, a number of cases established the right of private employers,
under the "at will" employment principle, to mandate pre-employment drug tests.
To a lesser extent, other cases gave employers the right to institute tests on
current employees on the grounds of reasonable suspicion. Nancy Delogu, a
partner in the Washington, D.C., office of Littler Mendelson, a large labor and
employment law firm, says the playing field has been tilted toward employers
since the early 1990s. "We haven't seen a new restriction on [workplace] drug
testing in years," she says. William Rittenberg, a lawyer in New Orleans who is
a member of NORML's legal committee, is also familiar with the situation and
agrees that employers have the upper hand. "I get calls from fired
private-sector workers all the time," he says. They tell him they've tested
positive. "I tell them, 'I'm sorry. I'm afraid you're out of luck.'"
This may not be the case for much longer.
When the economy picks up, say experts brave enough to tackle the uncomfortable
subject, employers facing a sellers' market will have to put aside their
feelings and assumptions and address the subject of drug testing anew. Companies
certainly will be against employee drug use, but they'll make their point about
their disapproval of drugs without testing bodily fluids, says Roger Herman,
Pass A Drug Test a
management consultant and head of The Herman Group in Greensboro, North
Carolina. "They'll have to be more open, more tolerant."
Like the supposed economic benefits that
brand-new publicly funded NFL stadiums bring to their local economies, or the
effectiveness of "boot camps" in turning teenage delinquents into productive
citizens, the absolute necessity of employee drug testing now has the status of
a concept that, well, just feels right, conclude many of those close to the
issue. For complicated and mostly admirable reasons, few companies are inclined
to question these good feelings too deeply. But much of the data on drug testing
is inconveniently and annoyingly contrary to the conventional wisdom and can not
be ignored.
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