New drug test rule cuts cheating chances

July 15, 2008
A new Department of Transportation (DOT) rule will make it more difficult for transportation workers to cheat on their required drug tests

A new Department of Transportation (DOT) rule will make it more difficult for transportation workers to cheat on their required drug tests by requiring drug testing labs to analyze every test for tampering, according to DOT information.

"We want to make sure there are no doubts about the ability of anyone working in transportation do their job as safely as possible," Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said in a news release. "There is no margin for error when it comes to the safety of the traveling public."

She said that the new rule would cover the nation’s approximately 12.1 million transportation employers, safety-sensitive transportation employees, collectors, labs, and medical review officers. She noted that under the terms of the rule, labs would no longer have the option of testing urine samples for signs of cheating, but instead would be required to test every specimen for possible adulterants and urine substitutes.

"In addition, all collectors will be required to put in place new procedures designed to prevent tampering with drug tests," she said.

For example, observation procedures will include checking employees for items designed specifically to cheat the test. The rule also requires collectors to observe all tests for transportation workers who return to their jobs after a previous test failure. DOT would treat any invalid test results as the same as a refusal to be tested by any employee who admits to tampering with or adulterating their test.

DOT regulates drug and alcohol testing of safety-sensitive transportation employees in the aviation, motor carrier, railroad, transit, pipeline, and maritime industries. DOT publishes rules on who must conduct drug and alcohol tests, when to conduct those tests, and what procedures to use when testing.

The Drug and Alcohol Testing Final Rule was published June 25, 2008 in the Federal Register. The effective date of the Final Rule is August 25, 2008. More information about the rule is posted on bulktransporter.com.