court case debates question of off-duty marijuana use

SCARHOLE

Well-Known Member
http://www.denverpost.com/news/marijuana/ci_22065335/colorado-appeals-court-case-debates-question-off-duty



Colorado appeals court case debates question of off-duty marijuana use
John Ingold
The Denver Post






Denver joins Boulder in dropping prosecution of limited pot possession
A case pending before the Colorado Court of Appeals could have a big impact on whether employers will be able to fire workers who smoke marijuana off duty.


The case concerns a former Dish Network telephone operator and medical-marijuana patient who was fired after testing positive for pot, even though there was no evidence he was impaired on the job. The operator, Brandon Coats, says it is against state law to fire someone for doing something off duty that is legal.


While Coats' case concerns medical-marijuana law, it is drawing extra attention after the passage of Amendment 64, which legalized marijuana use for everyone age 21 and older in Colorado. Some employers said during Amendment 64's campaign that they worried that the measure would prevent them from enforcing workplace drug policies that prohibit any marijuana use at all.


What Coats' case may answer: Does it?


"These are things that employers are definitely concerned about," said Vance Knapp, an attorney for the Denver firm Sherman & Howard who specializes in employment law. "For policy reasons, we want to make sure we have a safe workplace. And obviously, that has to be balanced against employees' rights in Amendment 64."


Previous cases have found that medical-marijuana patients do not have a right to cannabis under Colorado law. Coats' case, though, asks a different question.


Colorado's Lawful Off-Duty Activities Statute prevents employers from firing workers because of the legal things those employees do outside the office — such as smoking cigarettes, for instance — as long as those activities do not conflict with the employees' work. Coats' case is the first to challenge whether that protection extends to marijuana use that is legal under Colorado law but illegal under federal law.


Coats' attorney, Michael Evans, argues in his brief to the Colorado Court of Appeals that taking a narrow reading of the law would mean Colorado's roughly 100,000 medical-marijuana patients "would likely face immediate termination or become unemployable."


"It should be broadly and liberally construed to effectuate its purpose, which is to protect employees from unfair or discriminatory employment practices when they are in full compliance with state law," Evans writes in the brief.


But attorneys for Dish Network argue that marijuana's federal status makes it ineligible for protection under the Lawful Off-Duty Activities Statute.


"All use of marijuana is illegal under federal law," the attorneys write in their brief to the appeals court. "Accordingly, using medical marijuana is not a 'lawful activity.' "


In countering employers' concerns, Amendment 64's backers point to language in the measure that says: "Nothing in this section is intended ... to affect the ability of employers to have policies restricting the use of marijuana by employees."


Knapp, though, doesn't see that passage as crystal clear when it comes to off-duty use.


"I think there is some wiggle room," he said.


Still, Knapp expects the Court of Appeals — which has not indicated when it will rule on the case — to side with Dish Network.


"As long as it's illegal under federal law," he said of marijuana, "it cannot, by definition, be lawful."


John Ingold: 303-954-1068, [email protected] or twitter.com/john_ingold


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colonuggs

Well-Known Member
i think if its a federal job... then federal law should take presidence.

Yep soon they wont have a piss test to stand on.....the main thing they test for is marijuana....

I can snort a few lines of coke or meth or drop a hit of acid on Friday night.... take a piss test on Monday and pass......

smoke some weed and piss a week later..... your still positive.....WTF

Medical patients should be exempt (they will always test positive) just as long as they dont get high at work

A Michigan appeals court ruled this week that a Walmart employee with an inoperable brain tumor and cancer was not wrongfully fired over medical marijuana use.

Upholding a decision by a federal judge in Grand Rapids, Mich., last year, the appeals court said that "Michigan law doesn't stop employers from firing people who use medical marijuana," the Associated Press reports.

Joseph Casias was an inventory-control manager at a Walmart in Battle Creek, Mich., until he was fired after he tested positive for marijuana in 2009.

According to a 2010 report by the Associated Press, Casias uses medical marijuana to treat symptoms of an inoperable brain tumor and cancer. The married father of two has been in remission for several years, but the medical condition causes him pain and interferes with his ability to speak.

His oncologist had prescribed the treatment after Michigan voters approved medical marijuana use in 2008. "No patient should be forced to choose between adequate pain relief and gainful employment, and no employer should be allowed to intrude upon private medical choices made by employees in consultation with their doctors," said Scott Michelman, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, in 2010. The ACLU and its Michigan branch, along with attorney Daniel W. Grow, represented Casias in the lawsuit against Walmart.

"For some people, working at Walmart is just a job, but for me, it was a way of life," Casias said in a statement released in 2010. "I came to Walmart for a better opportunity for my family, and I worked hard and proved myself. I just want the opportunity to continue my work."

Addressing the case, Walmart said that marijuana use "conflicts with its safety policy in stores."

"The doctor prescribed treatment was not the relevant issue. The issue is about the ability of our associates to do their jobs safely," the company said in 2010. ACLU insists that Casius complied with "all applicable state laws and never once smoked marijuana at work or came to work under its influence."

Nonetheless, a federal appeals court said Wednesday that the "state medical marijuana law provides some immunity in criminal cases, but it doesn't offer protection to people in the workplace," according to the Associated Press.
 

Halley9A

Member
Yeah I totally agree. When I was much younger, a couple of my buddies got caught with Mary and had to take two to three state-ordered random urine tests per month. They ended up cutting way back on Mary and instead took up other things that leave their the body right away. Honestly made me wonder about stuff.
 
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