Two people in a bright room hold up white sheets with large question marks, obscuring their faces.

Excerpted from a Constangy Brooks Smith & Prophete Blog by Robin Shea

What’s the world coming to?

A probation and parole officer (we’ll call her “Suzie”) employed by the Oklahoma State Department of Corrections was diagnosed with attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder and had been on prescription Adderall since 2019. Adderall is an amphetamine. When Suzie began taking Adderall, she promptly notified her supervisor (we’ll call him “Jason”) as well as Human Resources about her ADHD condition and the Adderall. The information was noted in her file.

Suzie allegedly began having some unspecified attendance and disciplinary issues. Then, Jason reported that her office was smelling like weed, and I don’t mean crabgrass. He requested permission from the powers that be to send her for a “for cause” drug test.

The request for a “for-cause test” was granted, and Suzie was suspended with pay pending the outcome.

Jason drove Suzie to the drug testing facility, and she told him that she was afraid her Adderall might cause her to have a positive test result. Jason replied that, if the Adderall was the only drug that showed up on the result, she would be fine.

Either Suzie or “the system” provided Suzie’s contact information to the lab. Whoever or whatever it was listed her office phone number for daytime (even though she was suspended from work), and her cell number for evenings.

Suzie underwent the test, which came back positive for amphetamines.

The Medical Review Officer’s procedure for positive drug tests was for the MRO to contact the employee who tested positive and try to determine whether the positive result might have been caused by a legal medication or substance.

Under that policy, the MRO was required to make three attempts to contact the employee before reporting the positive result to the Department. If the MRO could not contact the employee, he was supposed to notify the Department’s HR representative. The Department policy said that HR was supposed to try to contact the employee and warn that serious consequences would ensue if the employee did not contact the MRO. The policy said that if the employee couldn’t be reached by phone or in person, HR should send the warning by email or snail mail, or by some other means.

In this case, the MRO made the required three attempts and got no response. The record did not indicate which number(s) he tried. But all three calls were made during normal business hours, so I suspect he may have called the daytime office number. If so, he probably got voice mail and no return call because Suzie was suspended and wouldn’t have been at the office.

Jason said that the “drug testing company” contacted him after the MRO’s three unsuccessful attempts to call Suzie. Jason said that he provided “the number I had for [Suzie].” But he apparently didn’t notify HR and didn’t try to contact Suzie on his own.

Of course, Suzie was fired for failing her drug test. Then she sued the Department, claiming disability discrimination and failure to accommodate her ADHD condition.

Last week, a federal judge granted summary judgment to the Department on Suzie’s discrimination claims. But he said that her “failure to accommodate” claims should go to a jury.

Here is where the court was coming from:

Employers, the moral of the story is:

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