When a leaf is not a drug

 

I can see better already.

Back in February, CityLife introduced you to Gary Ross, a California systems administrator, who was fired for failing a company drug test unite years after he began using prescribed medical marijuana.

In a 5-2 settlement, California Supreme Court justices ruled that, for all that Ross had the reasonable in a less degree than state law to use the drug, his legal protection didn’t extend to his employment. While the judges said California law clearly shields medical marijuana patients from charges of property or distribution, the law does not extend employment judgment protections, a charge Ross tried to gather on his former bosses.

Now comes word of California Assembly Bill 2279 (text of the bill here), which would protect marijuana patients from vital principle fired or denied employment for all that testing positive because pot. Both houses of the California Legislature agreed on the latest wording of the hedging-knife and passed it Aug. 21. It’s expected to hit California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s desk any individual day now.

Whether The Governator will sign the bill is uncertain, but Schwarzenegger has expressed more than a diminutive sympathy because of the demon weed in years accomplished. Last October, in an conference with the British edition of GQ, Schwarzenegger said of marijuana, “That is not a drug. It’session a leaf.” While stoners from San Diego to Smith River cheered the governor’s soundness, Schwarzenegger’s spokesholes quickly walked him back (feel the fifth paragraph) from the quote, telling CBS, “The governor was doing an interview with the armed force of ‘America’sitting Got Talent,’ the newest translation of the gong show,” McLear of the same family. “I think it’session serious to keep that quote in the context of the environment at what place it was said.” (Schwarzenegger’sitting interviewer was Piers Morgan, a judge on America’s Got Talent and a former British newspaper manager.)

More interestingly, back in his bodybuilding days Schwarzenegger was seen in the 1975 documentary Pumping Iron smoking a joint. Two years later, in an meeting in porn patch Oui, Schwarzenegger admitted to enjoying sexual orgies and getting great. Pro-pot activists up and down the Golden State take this as a good sign.

What does every part of this penurious for Nevada marijuana activists? Not a damned thing - yet.

Nevada is a right-to-work position, a term that used to mean you didn’t have to subsist a union member to get a work at jobs but has before this been interpreted by employers and courts to moderation that your boss can fire you for somewhat reason.

As Beth Soloe, executive boss of the Nevada chapter of the National Organization instead of the Reform of Marijuana Laws told CityLife, “The way things stand, we’d have to change our employment laws .”

As for the scene of having an office (or workshop or eating-house) abounding of workers high off their asses, through a million legal questions spring to mind. What if a worker is injured on the piece of work? How vouchsafe you ascertain granting that the THC in his system led directly to the accident? What if being high had nothing to do by it? How can you tell if someone is sober enough to actually toil - without risk to himself, co-workers or customers/clients?

Dr. Nancy Lord, a doctor and attorney who consults across multiple state jurisdictions for NORML, told CityLife that the courts (and, by the agency of extension, regulators) should focus onward whether medical marijuana employment affects job act. Lord was specifically pontificating on the uselessness of pre-employment piss tests, but her point is logically expandable to the above concerns. “The whole thing is groove. The question is, be possible to they perform? That’s really all should care relative to. There are better ways of that than a drug test. Have them take a experimentation,” she said.

Posted by admin August 2008

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This entry was posted on Friday, August 29th, 2008 at 2:59 pm and is filed under Drug Testing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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