The National Drug & Alcohol Screening Association (NDASA) is hosting a national conversation to discuss the public safety implications surrounding the rescheduling of marijuana on Tuesday, December 16, at 4 p.m. (EST).
This is a live streaming event open to the public.
NDASA asserts that rescheduling marijuana could disrupt mandatory drug testing protocols for employees in critical public safety roles like airline pilots, air traffic controllers, school bus drivers, and truck drivers, posing significant risks to transportation safety nationwide. Additionally, the American workforce outside of transportation safety is poised to feel the effects of rescheduling, as safety programs could face multiple unintended consequences, should protective measures not be addressed.
“If marijuana is rescheduled without regard to workplace safety, transportation employees may very well find a loophole where they would be free from marijuana testing,” warns Mark Magsam, Chairman of NDASA. “This poses a significant risk to the safety of our roads, skies, and rails.”
Federally regulated drug testing, which includes marijuana, has long been integral to maintaining safety standards within the transportation sector. Over three decades, these protocols have effectively mitigated marijuana-related accidents in commercial transportation. However, a potential rescheduling of marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule II or III could disrupt Department of Transportation (DOT) testing protocols, impacting safety programs nationwide.
As such, NDASA is hosting a national conversation with federal policymakers (to be announced) and industry experts to discuss the potential outcomes and solutions should the White House decide to reschedule marijuana outside of the protocols outlined in the Controlled Substances Act under the auspices of the Drug Enforcement Administration.
The live streaming event will include Patrice M. Kelly, the longest serving director of the Office of Drug & Alcohol Policy & Compliance under DOT and now president of Patrice Kelly Consulting, Dr. Todd Simo, president of the American Association of Medical Review Officers and William Judge, senior research attorney for Drug Screening Compliance Institute.
NDASA has long advocated for a safety carve-out that would protect transportation safety in the event of a change in marijuana scheduling or status. Without the carve-out in place, a myriad of challenges will have employers scrambling to uphold their responsibilities to provide safe workspace environments and to protect their safety records.
M. Jo McGuire, executive director of NDASA, emphasizes, “NDASA stands ready to work with our nation’s decision makers to ensure that any changes in scheduling consider all aspects of public safety and that of the American workforce. Without protective measures in place, our nation could feel the effects for decades to come. We must have responsible decision-making that includes all of the pertinent stakeholders providing input and feedback.”
Questions? Contact NDASA for at info@ndasa.com.