Pubdate: Wed, 27 Dec 2000 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: 200 Liberty Street, New York, NY 10281 Fax: (212) 416-2658 Website: http://www.wsj.com/ Authors: Jayson R. Jones and Stephen Young Note: 2 PUB LTEs Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1883/a09.html MOST DRUG-TESTING IS UNFAIR I read with interest your Dec. 15 article "U.S. Issues New Rules on Drug-Test Accuracy." The accuracy of the tests is certainly in question, but so is the rationale behind the drug-testing. Outside of DOT-mandated drug tests, private industry demands even tougher pre-employment drug testing for 75% of minimum-wage and blue-collar jobs, but for very few management or executive jobs. The Journal of Analytical Toxicology July/August 1997 shows that eating many commercially available health foods can cause a positive test result. Once you have tested positive for any reason, it is almost impossible to ever clear your good name. I question whether it is necessary to test every burger-flipper and parking-lot attendant, while politicians are exempt from testing. I wonder at the rationale for urging the testing of public schoolchildren when their teachers, coaches and other staff members aren't tested (at least in Oregon). Except for DOT-mandated positions, few public employees at any level are drug-tested. I am not opposed to drug-testing for police and certain positions such as those who operate airplanes, trains, buses and big trucks, but I can see no benefit from the testing of blue-collar workers, while their managers and executives aren't tested. The poorest segments of our population are the most heavily tested, and that is discriminatory. Jayson R. Jones, Swisshome, Ore. While it's heartening to see the federal government finally recognizing some unfair aspects of drug testing, the whole procedure should be abandoned. Drug tests can destroy the reputation of those who have nothing to do with drugs, but may actually encourage the use of more dangerous drugs by others. Marijuana can be detected by urine tests for weeks after use; traces of heroin and cocaine can be found for only a couple days. As the weekend starts, a savvy illegal drug user knows to stick to the hard stuff. Marijuana never leads to death, as heroin, cocaine and alcohol sometimes do; but in a professional sense, it's the least safe drug. As usual, the disastrous zero-tolerance tactics of the drug war aggravate drug problems while solving nothing. It's reasonable to implement performance-based testing to confirm or reject suspicions that an employee may be impaired on the job. Urine tests, on the other hand, have as little intrinsic value as the fluid anaylzed, unless a high price is placed on an employer's ability to intrude on the private life of a worker. Stephen Young, Roselle, Ill. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D