Title: |
Workplace Substance Abuse |
Publication date: |
2/7/2022 |
Effective date: |
8/1/2013 |
BRIEF
Policy Summary
It is the policy of Berkeley Lab to promote and maintain a safe, healthy, and productive drug-free and alcohol-free work environment for the benefit of its employees and the communities in which it operates. The Laboratory strives to maintain a work site free from the use, possession, sale, distribution, or manufacture of alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substances.
The Laboratory considers substance abuse a serious issue. By recognizing that substance abuse is a treatable condition, and by establishing a program to address substance abuse in the workplace, this policy seeks to prevent its risks and ill effects.
Who Should Read This Policy
- This policy applies to both represented and nonrepresented employees in the following classifications: career, term, faculty, postdoctoral fellow, limited, visiting researcher, graduate student research assistant (GSRA), and student assistant (See Types of Employee Appointments for appointment definitions).
- This policy applies to all affiliates and visitors.
To Read the Full Policy, Go To:
The POLICY tab on this wiki page
Contact Information
For more information, contact your division's HR Field team or the Workplace Substance Abuse Administrator at [email protected].
Feedback on HR policies or procedures is welcomed. Send comments to [email protected].
Title: |
Workplace Substance Abuse |
Publication date: |
2/7/2022 |
Effective date: |
8/1/2013 |
POLICY
A. Purpose
It is the policy of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) to promote and maintain a safe, healthy, and productive drug-free and alcohol-free work environment for the benefit of its employees and the communities in which it operates. The Laboratory strives to maintain a work site free from the use, possession, sale, distribution, or manufacture of alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substances.
Berkeley Lab considers substance abuse a serious issue. By recognizing that substance abuse is a treatable condition, and by establishing a program to address substance abuse in the workplace, this policy seeks to prevent its risks and ill effects.
B. Persons Affected
- This policy applies to both represented and nonrepresented employees in the following classifications: career, term, faculty, postdoctoral fellow, limited, visiting researcher, graduate student research assistant (GSRA), and student assistant (See Types of Employee Appointments for appointment definitions).
- This policy applies to all affiliates and visitors.
C. Exceptions
Request that exceed what is allowed under current policy or that are not expressly addressed by current policy are considered exceptions to policy. A request for an exception to policy requires, at a minimum, the approval of the Chief Human Resources Officer.
D. Policy Statement
Resources
Employee Assistance Program (EAP)
University Health Services, Tang Center
2222 Bancroft Way, Suite 310
Berkeley, CA 94720-4300
(510) 643-7754
- Berkeley Lab recognizes alcohol and/or drug dependency as a treatable condition and offers programs and services for Laboratory employees with substance-dependency problems. Employees are encouraged to seek assistance, as appropriate, from employee support programs, health centers, and counseling or psychological services available through the Laboratory's Employee Assistance Program (EAP), which is provided by the University of California Health Services (the Tang Center) on the Berkeley campus. Participation in such programs or services will be treated as confidential, in accordance with federal and state laws.
- Berkeley Lab strives to maintain a work site free from the use, possession, sale, distribution, or manufacture of alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substances.
For Program Information
Related Policies
- Condition of Laboratory Employment
- Compliance with this policy is a condition of employment at Berkeley Lab. Employees will abide by the terms and conditions of this policy.
- Employees found to be in violation of this policy may be subject to corrective action (up to and including dismissal) under applicable Laboratory policies and collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) or may be required, at the discretion of the Laboratory, to participate and successfully complete a treatment program.
- Testing for Drugs and Alcohol
For Program Information
Testing Designated Positions Covered by the Department of Transportation
Any Laboratory position where the employee holds a Commercial Class C, Class B, or Class A driver’s license and drives for the Laboratory, including bus driver, truck driver, motor vehicle mechanic, and/or facilities technical supervisor.
- To ensure the accuracy and fairness of the Berkeley Lab testing program, all testing will be conducted according to the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs, 53 CFR 11979, as amended ("DHHS Guidelines"), and if applicable, other federal regulations.
- The Laboratory will test for the use of the following drugs or classes of drugs: marijuana, cocaine, opiates, phencyclidine (PCP), and amphetamines. However, when conducting reasonable-suspicion or occurrence testing, the Laboratory may also test for any drug listed in Schedules I or II of the Controlled Substances Act, including alcohol.
- If an employee refuses to cooperate with the testing, the employee shall be treated in all respects as if the employee had tested positive for an illegal drug or alcohol.
- Employees in Testing-Designated Positions (TDPs).
For Program Information
Testing-Designated Positions Covered by the Code of Federal Regulations
Currently, there are no testing-designated positions under this regulation.
- Pre-employment drug test
- Post-accident testing
- These are accidents involving the operation of a Laboratory motor vehicle or motorized machinery such as a forklift.
- Employees must be tested in a reasonable amount of time, regardless of fault.
- Random testing
- Reasonable-suspicion testing
- Return-to-duty testing
- Follow-up testing
- Employees in Non-Testing-Designated Positions (Non-TDPs), Affiliates, and Visitors. Non-TDP employees, affiliates, visitors, and subcontractors may be required to participate in reasonable-suspicion drug and alcohol testing. If the employee, affiliate, visitor, or subcontractor has tested positive and is allowed back on Laboratory property, the employee may be required to adhere to follow-up testing for drugs and alcohol.
- Retest. Any employee, affiliate, visitor, or subcontractor who has been notified of a positive test result may request a retest of the same sample at the same or another certified laboratory. The employee, affiliate, visitor, or subcontractor is responsible for the cost of transportation and/or testing of the sample.
E. Roles and Responsibilities
Role |
Responsibility |
Affiliates and visitors |
|
Chief Human Resources Officer (CHRO) |
Has functional responsibility for this policy |
Employees in non-testing-designated positions (Non-TDPs) |
Must provide written notice to the Laboratory through their immediate supervisors or managers no later than five calendar days after being convicted of any criminal drug-statute violation occurring in the workplace or while on Laboratory business |
Employees in testing-designated positions (TDPs) |
|
Human Resources (HR) Division |
|
Managers and supervisors |
Are responsible for the Laboratory's drug- and alcohol-abuse prevention and testing program, including:
|
Workplace Substance Abuse Program (WSAP) Administrator |
Has the responsibility to coordinate efforts with the WSAP Facilitator to ensure compliance with the WSAP and to maintain alcohol- and drug-testing records |
Workplace Substance Abuse Program (WSAP) Facilitator |
Has the responsibility to coordinate with the testing laboratory to conduct tests, to schedule and initiate employee testing, and to oversee the collection of samples by the testing laboratory |
Workplace Substance Abuse Program (WSAP) Manager |
|
F. Definitions/Acronyms
Term |
Definition |
Accident |
An incident that occurs on the job where:
|
Alcohol intoxication |
A determination is made when alcohol tests show a blood-alcohol content (BAC) of 0.04% or greater (49 CFR 40.285) |
BAC |
Blood alcohol content |
CBA |
Collective bargaining agreement |
CDL |
Commercial driver's license |
CFR |
Code of Federal Regulations |
CHRO |
Chief Human Resources and Diversity Officer |
CMV |
Commercial motor vehicle |
Controlled substances |
Controlled substances as defined in schedules I-V of the Controlled Substances Act (21 United States Code [USC]) §812) and 21 CFR 1308 |
Criminal drug statute |
A criminal federal or nonfederal statute involving the manufacture, distribution, dispensation, use, or possession of any controlled substance |
Designated Employer Representative (DER) |
An employee authorized by the employer to take immediate action(s) to remove employees from safety-sensitive duties, or cause employees to be removed from these cover duties, and to make required decisions in the testing and evaluation processes. The DER also receives test results and other communications for the employer, consistent with the requirements of 49 CFR 40. |
DHHS |
Department of Health and Human Services |
DOE |
Department of Energy |
DOT |
Department of Transportation |
Drug or alcohol conviction |
A finding of guilt (including a plea of nolo contendere) or imposition of sentence, or both, by any judicial body charged with responsibility to determine violations of any criminal drug or alcohol statutes |
EAP |
Employee Assistance Program. A program of counseling, referral, and educational services concerning illegal drug use and other medical, mental, emotional, or personal problems of employees, particularly those that adversely affect behavior and job performance. Employees are encouraged to self-refer for substance-abuse problems and to seek confidential assistance. The Lab's EAP provider is UC Berkeley Health Services. |
GSRA |
Graduate student research assistant |
HR |
Human Resources |
Illegal drugs |
A controlled substance, as specified in Schedules I through V of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 USC 811, 812. The term "illegal drugs" does not apply to the use of a controlled substance in accordance with terms of a valid prescription, or other uses authorized by law. |
Medical Review Officer (MRO) |
A third-party licensed physician responsible for receiving and reviewing laboratory results generated by an employer's drug-testing program and evaluating medical explanations for certain drug-test results |
Non-TDP |
Non-testing-designated position |
Reasonable suspicion |
A suspicion based on an articulable belief that an employee is either under the influence of alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substances; or is engaged in use, possession, sale or distribution, or manufacture of alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substances, drawn from particularized facts and reasonable inferences from those facts |
Testing-designated position (TDP) |
Employees in jobs designated as TDPs are subject to drug and alcohol testing under one or more the following regulations:
|
UC |
University of California |
Under the influence |
An employee's work performance or on-the-job behavior that may be affected in any way by alcohol, illegal drugs, or controlled substance |
WSAP |
Workplace Substance Abuse Program |
1 Vehicle refers to either (1) a Department of Transportation (DOT) commercial vehicle that is 26,001 pounds gross vehicle weight rating (gvwr) or greater, or a vehicle that carries 16 passengers or more including the driver, or that is required to display a DOT placard indicating the transportation of hazardous material; or (2) any Laboratory-owned motorized vehicle, including cars, trucks, forklifts, and GEMs (Global Electric Motorcars).
G. Recordkeeping Requirements
Role |
Responsibility |
Human Resources Division |
Is responsible for maintaining the following records:
|
Third-party vendor |
Is responsible for maintaining drug and alcohol test results |
H. Implementing Documents
None
I. Contact Information
For information regarding this policy, contact your division's HR Field team or the Workplace Substance Abuse Administrator at [email protected].
Feedback on HR policies is welcomed. Send comments to [email protected].
J. Revision History
Date |
Revision |
By whom |
Revision Description |
Section(s) affected |
Change Type |
1/2/2012 |
0 |
M. Bello |
Rewrite for wiki |
All |
Minor |
8/1/2013 |
1 |
M. Bello |
Added and revised roles and responsibilities of Lab staff |
All |
Major+ 30 days |
2/7/2022 | 1.1 | W. Crosson | Periodic review with editorial revisions: updated links and removed gendered pronouns and replaced with gender-neutral language. Removed outdated implementing documents. | All | Editorial |
DOCUMENT INFORMATION
Title: |
Workplace Substance Abuse |
Document number |
02.02.005.000 |
Revision number |
1.1 |
Publication date: |
2/7/2022 |
Effective date: |
8/1/2013 |
Next review date: |
2/7/2027 |
Policy Area: |
Work Environment |
RPM Section (Home) |
Human Resources |
RPM Section (cross-reference) |
none |
Functional Division |
Human Resources |
Prior reference information (optional) |
RPM Chapter 2.23(C) |
Source Requirements Documents
Source |
Document number & effective date |
Document Title |
Department of Energy (DOE) |
DE-AC02-05CH11231, Sec. J, Appendix A |
|
University of California (UC) |
November 1, 1990 |
|
California |
LC 1025 |
California Labor Code Section 1025 (time off for voluntary drug or alcohol rehabilitation programs) |
DOE |
10 CFR 707 |
|
DOE |
I.88 |
DEAR 970.5223-4 Workplace Substance Abuse Programs at DOE Sites (December 2000) |
Federal |
Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 (Public Law 100-690, Title V, Subtitle D) |
Implementing Documents
None