Thursday, April 18, 2013

Marijuana in the Workplace: Amendment 64 – Same Can, More Worms for Colorado Employers


Amendment 64 would, among other things, allow individuals age 21 and over to possess and use one ounce or less of marijuana. If the Amendment passes next week, employers will face increased uncertainty when it comes to the enforcement of workplace drug testing policies. A reckoning is inevitable because the debate over the scope of employers’ rights to terminate workers who use marijuana outside of work and then test positive in violation of company policy has been brewing for several years in the context of Amendment 20 (which decriminalized the use of medical marijuana by registered patients). Amendment 64 does not clarify the extent of employers’ right to terminate for marijuana use. On the contrary, it fans the flames by incorporating language that fueled employment litigation in the medical marijuana context following Amendment 20′s passage, and by extending coverage to the general workforce, not just a handful of employees who are registered medical marijuana patients.

Click here to continue reading

No comments:

Post a Comment