General Policy. All applicants and employees are prohibited from possessing, dispensing, distributing, manufacturing, consuming, selling, transferring, or in any way encouraging the sale, possession or consumption of illegal drugs, alcohol or any other impairing substances, to include non-FDA-approved medications prescribed by a medical doctor outside the United States of America. If the employee is taking any legally prescribed medications from a U.S. medical doctor or over-the-counter medications that may cause impairment, the employee must notify the employer of the employee's possible impairment, prior to performing safety-related duties. To ensure safety, while taking medications that have been properly prescribed by a U.S. medical doctor, the district may require an employee/applicant to undergo a fitness for duty medical evaluation and medical clearance prior to resuming or entering into a safety-related duty. Written prescriptions issued outside the United States, such as Mexico or Canada, will not be accepted.
All employees are prohibited from having any detectable amount of illegal drugs within their bodily system during compensable work time or while on district property or assignment. This will be determined by the use of employee drug testing procedures performed by Cal-Test, Inc.
All employees are prohibited from having any measurable amount of alcohol within their bodily system during compensable work time, resulting in a confirmed reading of 0.02 percent BAC or higher. Any employee with a confirmed reading of 0.02 percent BAC, but less than 0.04 percent BAC, must be removed from duty for no less than 24 hours, and then provide a negative breath alcohol test prior to resuming duty with the district. Any alcohol violation of 0.04 percent BAC or higher shall be treated the same as a positive drug test.
All employees and/or supervisors are required to cooperate with Cal-Test staff at all times. All employees and/or supervisors are also required to report suspected illegal drug use or suspected violations of this policy to the district general manager or HR manager, without delay. Failure to report or ignoring such violations may lead to immediate termination of the employee and/or the supervisor.
All DOT-regulated employees are prohibited from consuming alcohol within four hours of their assigned work shift, which includes all compensated on-call or standby work time. All employees are encouraged to discontinue alcohol use at least eight hours prior to reporting for duty.
All employees are required to cooperate with the Cal-Test collector and promptly submit to any testing requested by the district, without delay or hindrance. No employee, sample donor or any other person is permitted to interfere, disrupt or threaten the Cal-Test collector. All employees are prohibited from interfering, delaying, harassing, threatening, and intimidating or in any way disrespecting the Cal-Test sample collector.
All employees are required, under the district's own authority, to supply a valid bodily sample, upon request of the district. This may consist of urine, hair, fingernail, saliva, blood, breath, or any other medically acceptable sample for the detection of drug or alcohol use. The district may require an employee to submit to one or more of the above samples, if needed. (Example: urine and hair.)
All employees must report to the sample collection facility within 30 minutes upon verbal notification, whenever possible. The employee then has no more than three hours to produce a valid sample for testing, otherwise a hair sample may be requested. DOT-regulated employees are allotted three hours, by regulation.
All employees are prohibited from performing any type of safety-related function, while under the influence of a controlled substance or any other substance that may cause impairment. This includes any legally prescribed medication(s) or over-the-counter medication(s). If you are taking medications that may cause impairment, you must notify the district immediately, so the district may offer you an alternative work assignment, if available. The name of the medication need not be disclosed, only the fact that impairment may be possible. The district doctor may allow you to return to your safety-related duties upon proper medical clearance.
Any employee convicted of violating any state or federal drug or alcohol law is required to notify the employer within five calendar days of such conviction. Conviction does not include arrests, but does include court findings of guilt, a plea of no contest or an imposition of sentencing by any judicial body.