smoking illegal drugs on company property
T
175 Posts
I have a pt student who works a few hrs every day after school. Two weeks ago he and his buddy was caught smoking an illegal substance on our property. Unfortunately, I was just notified about this incident by the ee that caught him.
I don't think he was on the clock at that time, however, he did come to work after that. How can I get rid of him?
Thanks.
-T
I don't think he was on the clock at that time, however, he did come to work after that. How can I get rid of him?
Thanks.
-T
Comments
Additionally, this could fall under fitness for duty....but you'd probably have to have someone witness his inability to do the job. That doesn't seem to be the case here.
He's also PT....does he have some kind of contract with you???
You may just be able to let him go....I believe that Texas is an at-will state.
edit: and remind your management to clue you in much more quickly next time!!!!
Unless he's related to the company president, tell him to hit the road.
In our shop, zero tolerance is the stance - we deal with too many broken families and the effects on the children to have any kind of sympathy or tolerance for the illegal drug use.
1) How does the supervisor know it was an illegal substance? Has he been trained on detecting such substances? Was it so blatant that the ee was smoking a Bob Marley type of bong? A Lucky Strike smoked to completion is not necessarily what it may appear to be.....This is a gray area at best.
2) Why did the supervisor wait to tell you about it after the fact? Are there not procedures in place to handle illegal activities in progress?
Gene
If it was a stronger substance, such a crack or others that require a special pipe, that is also obvious.
Your point is a good one Gene, and the supervisor's response is something I was also focusing on. There is some obvious training to do here as well as the underlying policy or lack thereof, to look at.
I actually saw flavored and colored "blunts" for sale at a gas station not too long ago (pre Mary Jane blending), right next the scented rolling papers. How blatant, I thought!
The advice has ranged from discussions of policies and interdiction programs to why were the police not called to why were you not notified right away to a sidebar about bongs, rolling papers, blunts and masked scents.
Although I may be the world's worst (best?) at taking rabbit trails, with this particular one, I tried to answer the man's question.
(Call the police? Would you call the police if you saw someone run a red light?) x:-)
-T