The purpose of this chapter is to establish
a Town-based alcohol and drug testing program to help prevent accidents
and injuries resulting from the misuse of alcohol and drugs by covered
drivers of commercial motor vehicles in compliance with the Department
of Transportation Regulations codified at 49 CFR Parts 40 and 382
and pursuant to The Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of
1991, enacted October 28, 1991.
These Town regulations apply to all Town employees
who operate commercial motor vehicles and are subject to the commercial
driver's license (CDL) requirements established by the DOT.
The objectives of this chapter shall be:
A. To establish rules and procedures to deter all illegal
drug use and deter on-duty, preduty and postaccident alcohol use,
as well as on-duty alcohol impairment stemming from preduty use, for
all covered drivers who perform safety-sensitive functions;
B. To detect and eliminate the possibility that Town-covered
drivers will perform safety-sensitive functions after testing positive
for alcohol or drugs;
C. To comply with applicable federal and state laws,
including the Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991;
D. To provide reasonable measures for the early detection
of personnel not fit to perform activities within the scope of these
Town regulations;
E. To maintain a workplace free of drugs and alcohol;
and
F. To inform employees through education, in-service
training and other appropriate forums about illegal drugs and alcohol
abuse, their use, possession, distribution and the effects of such
substances.
There are several occasions when an individual
will be subject to drug and alcohol screening tests pursuant to these
Town regulations. Prior to the administration of the following tests,
the Town or its testing agent will notify the covered driver that
the test is required under the Code of Federal Regulations. The testing
occasions shall include:
A. Preduty testing. Preduty testing is testing for drugs,
independent of the Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of
1991 and the regulations promulgated hereunder testing for alcohol,
that the Town will administer after a conditional offer of employment
has been extended and prior to any covered driver's performance of
a safety-sensitive function. The Town will not allow any covered driver
to commence the performance of any safety-sensitive function unless
the alcohol testing reveals an alcohol concentration of less than
0.04 and the drug testing reveals a verified negative test result.
If the preduty alcohol test reveals an alcohol concentration of 0.02
or greater but less than 0.04, the covered driver will not be allowed
to perform safety-sensitive functions for 24 hours following the administration
of the test. In addition, independent of the requirements of the Omnibus
Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991 and the regulations promulgated
thereunder, if the preduty alcohol test reveals an alcohol concentration
of 0.02 or greater, it will result in a revocation of the conditional
offer of employment. Also independent of the Omnibus Transportation
Employee Testing Act of 1991 and the regulations thereunder, if the
preduty drug testing reveals a presence of drugs, it will result in
the revocation of the conditional offer of employment. The Town may,
in its sole discretion, forego preduty testing where the exceptions
promulgated at DOT 49 CFR 382.301(b) or (c), relating to drug and
alcohol testing of covered drivers by their previous employers, are
satisfied.
B. Reasonable-suspicion testing.
(1) Reasonable-suspicion testing is alcohol and drug testing
that the Town will conduct when it has reasonable suspicion to believe
that a covered driver has engaged in conduct prohibited by these Town
regulations. (Reasonable-suspicion testing will not be conducted based
upon the suspicion that a covered driver has violated the provision
of these Town regulations prohibiting covered drivers from being on-duty
or operating commercial motor vehicles while the driver possesses
unmanifested alcohol.) Reasonable suspicion must be based upon specific,
contemporaneous, articulable observations concerning the appearance,
behavior, speech or body odors of a covered driver by a Town supervisor
who is specially trained to recognize alcohol misuse or drug use.
(2) The Town shall not administer a reasonable-suspicion
alcohol test more than eight hours following a determination that
reasonable suspicion exists to believe that the alcohol prohibitions
of these Town regulations have been violated. Notwithstanding the
absence of a reasonable-suspicion alcohol test, the Town will not
permit any covered driver to report for duty or remain on duty requiring
the performance of a safety-sensitive function while the driver is
under the influence of, or impaired by, alcohol as shown by the behavioral,
speech, and performance indicators of alcohol misuse, until an alcohol
test is administered and the driver's alcohol concentration measures
less than 0.02 or 24 hours have elapsed following a determination
that reasonable suspicion exists to believe that the alcohol prohibitions
of these Town regulations have been violated.
(3) A written record shall be made of observations leading
to reasonable suspicion, signed by the supervisor or person who made
the observations, within 24 hours of the observed behavior or before
the results of drug test are released, whichever is earlier.
(4) Covered drivers are subject to reasonable-suspicion
alcohol testing as follows: immediately prior to performing safety-sensitive
functions, while performing safety-sensitive functions, or immediately
following the performance of safety-sensitive functions. Reasonable-suspicion
drug testing may be conducted at any time the covered driver is on
duty for the Town.
C. Random testing.
(1) Random testing is unannounced testing for alcohol
and drugs administered in a statistically random manner throughout
the year to covered drivers employed by the Town in ratios as required
by the DOT regulations, so that all covered drivers have an equal
probability of selection each time a random test is administered.
(2) Covered drivers are subject to random alcohol testing
as follows: immediately prior to performing safety-sensitive functions,
or while performing safety-sensitive functions, or immediately following
the performance of safety-sensitive functions. Random drug testing
may be conducted at any time the covered driver is on duty for the
Town.
D. Postaccident testing.
(1) A postaccident test is a test for alcohol and drugs
administered following an accident involving a commercial motor vehicle
to each surviving covered driver:
(a) Who was performing safety-sensitive functions with
respect to the vehicle, if the accident involved the loss of human
life;
(b) Who receives a citation under state or local law for
a moving violation arising from the accident, if the accident resulted
in bodily injury to a person who as a result of the injury immediately
receives medical treatment away from the scene of the accident; or
(c) Who receives a citation under state or local law for
a moving violation arising from the accident, if the accident resulted
in one or more motor vehicles incurring disabling damages as a result
of the accident requiring the vehicle(s) to be transported away from
the scene by a tow truck or other vehicle.
(2) The Town will not administer a postaccident alcohol
test more than eight hours following the accident and will not administer
a postaccident drug test more than 32 hours following the accident.
A covered driver who is subject to postaccident testing shall remain
readily available for such testing or may be deemed by the Town to
have refused to submit to testing. This shall not be construed to
require the delay of necessary medical attention for injured individuals
following an accident or to prohibit a covered driver from leaving
the scene of an accident for the period necessary to obtain assistance
in responding to the accident or to obtain necessary emergency medical
care.
(3) The results of a breath or blood test for the use
of alcohol or a urine test for the use of drugs, conducted by federal,
state, or local officials having independent authority for the test,
shall be considered to meet the requirements of these Town regulations
concerning postaccident testing, provided such tests conform to applicable
federal, state, or local requirements and that the results of the
test are obtained by the Town.
E. Return-to-duty testing. Return-to-duty testing is
alcohol and drug testing conducted after a covered driver has engaged
in prohibited conduct under these Town regulations, completed counseling
prescribed by a substance abuse professional, if any, and prior to
his return to the performance of a safety-sensitive function. Before
a covered driver may return to the performance of safety-sensitive
functions, he/she must undergo return-to-duty testing with an alcohol
test result indicating an alcohol concentration of less than 0.02
and/or a drug test indicating a verified negative result for illegal
drugs.
F. Follow-up testing.
(1) Follow-up tests are given following a determination
by the substance abuse professional (SAP) that a driver is in need
of assistance in resolving problems associated with misuses of alcohol
and/or drugs. This is an unannounced test, given at least six times
within 12 months with the actual frequency and number of tests determined
by the substance abuse professional (SAP), but in no event may the
follow-up testing continue for a period beyond 60 months from the
covered driver's return to duty. The substance abuse professional
may terminate the requirement of follow-up testing at any time after
the first six tests have been administered if he/she determines that
follow-up testing is no longer necessary.
(2) Covered drivers are subject to follow-up alcohol testing
as follows: immediately prior to performing safety-sensitive functions,
or while performing safety-sensitive functions, or immediately following
the performance of safety-sensitive functions. Follow-up drug testing
may be conducted at any time the covered driver is on duty for the
Town.
A covered driver shall not refuse to submit
to a postaccident alcohol or drug test required under these Town regulations,
a random alcohol or drug test required under these Town regulations,
a reasonable-suspicion alcohol or drug test required under these Town
regulations, or a follow-up alcohol or drug test required under these
Town regulations. The Town will not permit any covered driver to perform
safety-sensitive functions subsequent to a refusal to submit to a
test required under the DOT regulations until the individual is evaluated
by a substance abuse professional and completes a substance abuse
program designed by the substance abuse professional, if any, and
undergoes a return-to-duty alcohol test revealing an alcohol concentration
of less than 0.02 and a drug test with a verified negative result.
In other words, a refusal to submit to testing is the equivalent of
an alcohol test revealing an alcohol concentration of 0.04 or greater
or a drug test with a positive result. A refusal to be tested shall
be defined as a refusal by an employee to complete and sign the breath
alcohol testing form, to complete the drug screening chain-of-custody
form, to provide breath, to provide an adequate amount of breath,
to provide an adequate amount of urine or otherwise to cooperate with
the testing process in a way that prevents the completion of the test.
The BAT or collector shall record such refusal in the remarks section
of the form. The testing process shall then be terminated and the
BAT or collector shall immediately notify the Town.
The Town shall provide a copy of these Town
regulations to each covered driver and to his/her collective bargaining
agent. Each covered driver is required to sign a statement certifying
that he/she has received this information. The Town shall maintain
the original signed certification for a minimum of two years. The
Town will provide a copy of the certification to the covered driver
upon request.
If any provision of these regulations is determined
in a tribunal of competent jurisdiction to be inconsistent with any
superseding legal requirements, that provision shall be considered
modified or deleted so as to comply with the superseding legal requirements
without any effect on the remaining Town regulations provisions.