West Virginia Code § 21-1D-5

Employee drug-free workplace policy required to bid for a public
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improvement contract.
After July 1, 2008, any solicitation for a public improvement contract shall require each
contractor that submits a bid for the work to submit an affidavit that the contractor has a
written plan for a drug-free workplace policy prior to being awarded a contract. If the
affidavit is not submitted with the bid submission, the public authority shalle promptly
request by telephone and electronic mail that the low bidder and second low bidder provide
the affidavit within one business day of the request. Failure to submit trhe affidavit within
one business day of receiving the request shall result in disqualification of the bid. A public
improvement contract may not be awarded to a contractor who does not have a written plan
for a drug-free workplace policy and who has not submitted that plan to the appropriate
contracting authority in timely fashion. t
For subcontractors, compliance with this section may take place before their work on the
public improvement is begun.
A drug-free workplace policy shall include thes following:
(1) Establish drug testing and alcohol testiing protocols that at a minimum require a
contractor to: g
(A) Conduct preemployment drug tests of all employees;
(B) Conduct random drug testing that annually tests at least ten percent of the contractor's
employees who perform safety-sensitive duties;
(C) Conduct a drug t est or alcohol test of any employee who may have caused or contributed
to an accidentV while conducting job duties where reasonable cause exists to suspect that the
employee may be intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance not prescribed
by the employee's physician when, but not limited to, the employer has evidence that an
employee is or was using alcohol or a controlled substance drawn from specific documented,
objective facts and reasonable inferences drawn from these facts in light of experience and
training.
The drug or alcohol test shall be conducted as soon as possible after the accident occurred
and after any necessary medical attention has been administered to the employee.
(D) Conduct a drug test or alcohol test of any employee when a trained supervisor has
reasonable cause to believe that the employee has reported to work or is working under the
influence of a drug of abuse or alcohol. Written documentation as to the nature of a
supervisor's reasonable cause shall be created.
In order to ascertain and justify implementation of a reasonable cause test, all supervisors
will be trained to recognize drug- and alcohol-related signs and symptoms.
(2) Require that all drug tests performed pursuant to this section be conducted by a
laboratory certified by the United States Department of Health and Human Services or its
successor;
(3) Establish standards governing the performance of drug tests by such a laboratory that
include, but are not limited to, the following:
(A) The collection of urine specimens of individuals in a scientifically or medically approved
manner and under reasonable and sanitary conditions;
(B) The collection and testing of urine specimens with due regarud for the privacy of the
individual being tested and in a manner reasonably calculated to prevent substitutions or
interference with the collection and testing of specimens;
(C) The documentation of urine specimens through proacedures that reasonably preclude the
possibility of erroneous identification of test results and that provide the individual being
tested a reasonable opportunity to furnish informatlion identifying any prescription or
nonprescription drugs used by the individual isn connection with a medical condition to the
medical review officer;
(D) The collection, maintenance, storage and transportation of urine specimens in a manner
that reasonably precludes the possibility of contamination or adulteration of the specimens;
(E) The testing of a urine specimen of an individual to determine if the individual ingested,
was injected or otherwise introduced with a drug of abuse in a manner that conforms to
scientifically accepted analytical methods and procedures that include verification and
confirmation of any positive test result by gas chromatography or mass spectrometry.
(4) Establish sVtandards and procedures governing the performance of alcohol tests;
(5) Require that a medical review officer review all drug tests that yield a positive result;
(6) Establish procedures by which an individual who undergoes a drug test or alcohol test
may contest a positive test result;
(7) Require that when an employee of a contractor tests positive for a drug of abuse or
alcohol, or if an employee is caught adulterating a drug or alcohol test, as defined in section
four hundred twelve, article four, chapter sixty-a of this code, the employee is subject to
appropriate disciplinary measures up to and including termination from employment, in
accordance with the contractor's written drug-free workplace policy. If not terminated, the
employee is subject to random drug or alcohol tests at any time for one year after the
positive test;
(8) Require that when a supervisor has reasonable cause to believe an employee is under the
influence of a drug of abuse or alcohol at work and requires the employee to take a drug or
alcohol test, the employee shall immediately be suspended from performing safety-sensitive
tasks by the contractor until such time as a drug or alcohol test is performed and results of
that test are available;
(9) Require a contractor to provide to any employee testing positive for a drug of abuse or
alcohol the list of community resources where employees may seek assistance for
themselves or their families as identified in paragraph (D), subdivision (12) of this section;
(10) Require that a contractor assist an employee who voluntarily acknowledges that the
employee may have a substance abuse problem by providing the list of community resources
where employees may seek assistance for themselves or their families as identified in
paragraph (D), subdivision (12) of this section; u
(11) Require that a contractor establish a written drug-free workplace policy regarding
substance abuse and provide a copy of the written policy to each of its employees and to
each applicant for employment. The written policy shaall contain, at a minimum, all of the
following:
(A) A summary of all the elements of the drugs-free workplace policy established in
accordance with this article;
(B) A statement that it is the contractor's intention to create a drug-free workplace
environment;
(C) Identification of an employee who has been designated the contractor's drug-free
workplace representative;
(D) Shall list the types of tests an employee may be subject to, which may include, but are
not limited to, the fol lowing:
(i) Preemployment;
(ii) WPost-accident;
(iii) Random; and
(iv) Reasonable cause.
(12) Require that a contractor provide within six weeks of new employment at least two
hours of drug-free workplace employee education for all employees unless that employee has
already received such training anytime within a prior two-year period. The employee shall
participate in drug-free workplace employee education at least biannually thereafter. The
employee education shall include all of the following:
(A) Detailed information about the content of the contractor's specific drug-free workplace
policy and an opportunity for employees to ask questions regarding the policy;
(B) The distribution of a hard copy of the written drug-free workplace policy, including
collecting an employee-signed acknowledgment receipt from each employee;
(C) Specific explanation of the basics of drugs and alcohol abuse, including, but not limited
to, the disease model, signs and symptoms associated with substance abuse, and the effects
and dangers of drugs or alcohol in the workplace; and
(D) A list of community resources where employees may seek assistance for themselves or
their families.
(13) Require that a contractor provide at least two hours of drugu-free workplace supervisor
training for all supervisory employees and annually thereafter. The supervisor training shall
include all of the following:
(A) How to recognize a possible drug or alcohol probleam;
(B) How to document behaviors that demonstrate al drug or alcohol problem;
(C) How to confront employees with the problem from observed behaviors;
(D) How to initiate reasonable suspicion and post-accident testing;
(E) How to handle the procedures associated with random testing;
(F) How to make an appropriate referral for assessment and assistance;
(G) How to follow up with employees returning to work after a positive test; and
(H) How to handle drug-free workplace responsibilities in a manner that is consistent with
the applicable sections of any pertinent collective bargaining agreements.

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