Portable Sanitation Association International

July 17 PDF

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W EEKLY EDITION JULY 17, 2019 Legal Marijuana: Driving the Portable Sanitation Industry Crazy…Part 1 By Karleen Kos, PSAI Executive Director …Continued from page 2 A ll of this would present a challenge for employers even if service technicians were falling from heaven – training and hiring costs are not cheap. In the present environment, though, it prese nts nightmares. There is a significant shortage of truck drivers in general, and the headaches that go along with legalized pot only make the challenge of staffing your company with reliable and competent drivers more difficult. An August 2017 article published by Trucks.com, notes that more trucking companies and commercial driver's license schools are telling candidates not to fill out applications if they're goin g to test positive. Even with that caveat, the article says that failure rates are still as high as 60 percent, according to Greg Fulton, president of the Colorado Motor Carriers Association. Meanwhile, the Journal of Commerce (JOC) predicts the number of eligible truck drivers will dwindle even further when the new national drug and alcohol test clearinghouse comes online in January 2020. So it is plain that these headaches for drivers' employers are not imagined and will not be going away any time soon. That's because federal law forbids both medical and recreational consumption of marijuana. Any portable sanitatio n company with drivers and trucks that fall under federal Department of Transportation (DOT)/Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) mandates must ensure that their drivers are clean for that drug – among many – to the best of their ability. (S ee a full list of federally prohibited substances in the DOT handbook on drug and alcohol testing here .) Is it e v e r ok ay f or p o rta b le s an i t ati o n d ri ve r s t o u s e p o t? In theory anyway, a portable sanitation company operating in a state where the use of marijuana is legal could sidestep these issues. To do that the company would: P AGE 10 CONTINUED ON PAGE 1 1

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