Recommended Posts

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A Connecticut state worker fired after he was caught smoking marijuana on the job was punished too harshly and should get his job back, the state Supreme Court ruled Friday.

 

Gregory Linhoff was fired from his maintenance job at the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington in 2012 after a police officer caught him smoking pot in a state-owned vehicle. He had no previous disciplinary problems since being hired in 1998 and had received favorable job evaluations, according to his union. He was arrested, but the charges were later dismissed.

 

th?id=OIP.Ma23baf0c73d0ce5db6cbcecd70a10

 

State officials said firing the New Hartford resident was the only appropriate penalty for his conduct and not doing so would send a bad message to other employees. An arbitrator disagreed and overturned the firing, saying Linhoff instead should be suspended without pay for six months and be subject to random drug testing for a year after he returned to work.

 

The state appealed and a Superior Court judge overturned the arbitrator's decision on the grounds that it violated Connecticut's public policy against marijuana use. Linhoff's union, the Connecticut Employees Union Independent SEIU, appealed the judge's ruling to the Supreme Court.

 

All seven justices agreed that the lower court judge was wrong to overturn the arbitrator's ruling, saying that while state policy on drug use in the work place allows for firing workers it does not require it. Justices also said that judicial second-guessing of arbitration awards is uncommon and should be reserved only for extraordinary circumstances.

 

more

Now this is a question that I have been wondering, say I move to a state where it's legal to use marijuana, I'm sure that I couldn't smoke while at work, but what happens in a situation where on my day off I enjoy a joint or so and the next day I go to work and get injured, I'm sure the employer is going to want to ###### test, and when it shows THC in the blood, can they fire me? I have mixed feelings about this guy, yes he was doing something that in that state is considered illegal, and he was in a state owned vehicle (dumb ass move there) but I agree with the higher courts ruling in that termination was too extreme for a first time offense.

5 hours ago, jnelsoninjax said:

Now this is a question that I have been wondering, say I move to a state where it's legal to use marijuana, I'm sure that I couldn't smoke while at work, but what happens in a situation where on my day off I enjoy a joint or so and the next day I go to work and get injured, I'm sure the employer is going to want to ###### test, and when it shows THC in the blood, can they fire me? I have mixed feelings about this guy, yes he was doing something that in that state is considered illegal, and he was in a state owned vehicle (dumb ass move there) but I agree with the higher courts ruling in that termination was too extreme for a first time offense.

This is about precedent, what if it was drinking alcohol? I doubt people would be so forgiving then. If it's illegal, don't do it on or in state property. They are obligated to obey the laws as they are representatives of the law. Zero tolerance in this profession makes sense. Public servants should always be under more scrutiny since they are paid by those they serve.

So, as a critical care nurse, if I chose to smoke pot on the job in that state while taking care for one of those judge's family members, I wonder if they would have a different take. Juggling multiple life saving IV medicines, breathing machine settings, interpreting lab values, and other tasks is very difficult when you are sober, much less when you are impaired.

  • Like 3
2 minutes ago, Gary7 said:

It is not legal to smoke pot in Conn. He broke the law and should have been fired. This is plain nuts.

I don't know employment law (UK or US) so I'm asking this out of curiosity but in the UK if you do something "wrong" then you go through a process of warning. I think the more serious the offence it can call for an instant dismissal but could the better process here not to have warned him first?

 

I got the impression a few years ago when I spent 5 weeks in the US that you could pretty much be fired at any point for any reason rather than going through what seemed like a fair warning/dismissal process?

^ Yes. Every job that I am aware of would fire you in the US for being impaired. Employers are at risk of paying for injuries related to this activity if their employee gets hurt.

1 minute ago, Skiver said:

I don't know employment law (UK or US) so I'm asking this out of curiosity but in the UK if you do something "wrong" then you go through a process of warning. I think the more serious the offence it can call for an instant dismissal but could the better process here not to have warned him first?

 

I got the impression a few years ago when I spent 5 weeks in the US that you could pretty much be fired at any point for any reason rather than going through what seemed like a fair warning/dismissal process?

If this guy was drinking Jack Daniels, a legal beverage what would they have done. This is what happens in a Country run amuck with Politically Correct BS.

1 minute ago, Gary7 said:

If this guy was drinking Jack Daniels, a legal beverage what would they have done. This is what happens in a Country run amuck with Politically Correct BS.

If he were over the "impairment" limit, they would have bounced him - even if it were JD (which is legal, though regulated).  This is not a new issue - including in the US; consider HGV drivers (over-the-road tractor-trailer drivers - I used the EU-specific term on purpose, since a lot of Neowinians live in Europe); in the US, they are regulated by state DMVs, the Interstate Commerce Commission and (in the case of specialty transport, such as HAZMATs) the Departments of Energy and/or Defense.  (HAZMATs?  No - I'm not talking explosives - though they are ALSO transported by truck; I'm talking - surprisingly - common automotive parts such as air bags; the actuator of an airbag (or Supplemental Restraint System) - regardless of manufacturer - is typically a cartridge-actuated device (CAD for short) and is based on military technology of Korean War vintage.  The issue is, in fact, safety - nothing more OR less.

1 minute ago, PGHammer said:

If he were over the "impairment" limit, they would have bounced him - even if it were JD (which is legal, though regulated).  This is not a new issue - including in the US; consider HGV drivers (over-the-road tractor-trailer drivers - I used the EU-specific term on purpose, since a lot of Neowinians live in Europe); in the US, they are regulated by state DMVs, the Interstate Commerce Commission and (in the case of specialty transport, such as HAZMATs) the Departments of Energy and/or Defense.  (HAZMATs?  No - I'm not talking explosives - though they are ALSO transported by truck; I'm talking - surprisingly - common automotive parts such as air bags; the actuator of an airbag (or Supplemental Restraint System) - regardless of manufacturer - is typically a cartridge-actuated device (CAD for short) and is based on military technology of Korean War vintage.  The issue is, in fact, safety - nothing more OR less.

I cannot speak for the law in Conn. But where I live it is not legal to have an open container of any Alcoholic beverage in a car. In the 60's I went to Myrtle Beach with a bunch of friends from DC. When the bars closed they gave you what they called "Go Cups" so that you can finish what you were drinking . I found that to be strange--they do not do that there anymore.:)

Just now, Gary7 said:

I cannot speak for the law in Conn. But where I live it is not legal to have an open container of any Alcoholic beverage in a car. In the 60's I went to Myrtle Beach with a bunch of friends from DC. When the bars closed they gave you what they called "Go Cups" so that you can finish what you were drinking . I found that to be strange--they do not do that there anymore.:)

Practically NO state permits public consumption of any alcoholic beverage in its original container (this includes beer) over a certain BAL amount (where drive-up bars are permitted - which is only in certain Southern states - such as Louisiana and Texas - the served drinks themselves are monitored so as not to go above that limit - which differs from locality to locality).  Further, no casino in the US serves alcoholic beverages for off-site/off-sale consumption - this does include casinos owned OR operated by Native American tribes (such as the Hard Rock Casinos in both Florida and Nevada - which are owned AND operated by the Seminole tribe).  Safety again.

3 minutes ago, PGHammer said:

Practically NO state permits public consumption of any alcoholic beverage in its original container (this includes beer) over a certain BAL amount (where drive-up bars are permitted - which is only in certain Southern states - such as Louisiana and Texas - the served drinks themselves are monitored so as not to go above that limit - which differs from locality to locality).  Further, no casino in the US serves alcoholic beverages for off-site/off-sale consumption - this does include casinos owned OR operated by Native American tribes (such as the Hard Rock Casinos in both Florida and Nevada - which are owned AND operated by the Seminole tribe).  Safety again.

Apparently in Coon, they don't give a damn about safety.:(

31 minutes ago, Gary7 said:

If this guy was drinking Jack Daniels, a legal beverage what would they have done. This is what happens in a Country run amuck with Politically Correct BS.

i know 3 people who were caught drinking while working, and they were not fired, but sent to an alcoholic type rehab to get counseling. 

they were only warned that if it happened again, then they would be fired.

Just now, Buttus said:

i know 3 people who were caught drinking while working, and they were not fired, but sent to an alcoholic type rehab to get counseling. 

they were only warned that if it happened again, then they would be fired.

But they were not in a vehicle..

4 minutes ago, Gary7 said:

But they were not in a vehicle..

in fact, just a little background on it, he was a hard core alcoholic, he used to get up in the morning, drink a 6 pack, then get one during the day as he did his service calls and finish that during the day as he drove around, then have another 6 pack or two at night.

he made some boneheaded move while driving and got pulled over, got a DUI (again, while working) and didn't get fired.  got sent to rehab, cleaned up, and AT&T even promoted him from working with copper up to sending him to school to learn fiber optics and doing that.  (he's retired now)

 

so people don't always get fired for doing dumb things like that

4 hours ago, Barney T. said:

So, as a critical care nurse, if I chose to smoke pot on the job in that state while taking care for one of those judge's family members, I wonder if they would have a different take. Juggling multiple life saving IV medicines, breathing machine settings, interpreting lab values, and other tasks is very difficult when you are sober, much less when you are impaired.

Agreed, several countries who don't generally require drug testing still require it for professions such as nursing. Not only that, but he was on the job, it's ludicrous not to throw the book at him. I am all for allowing people on there own time to do as they please, but never on the job.

"...while state policy on drug use in the work place allows for firing workers it does not require it...."

 

Nor does it prohibit it. And Connecticut is not a "right to work" state.

 

State court is out of bounds on this one.

On 8/22/2016 at 3:34 PM, Hum said:

An arbitrator disagreed and overturned the firing, saying Linhoff instead should be suspended without pay for six months and be subject to random drug testing for a year after he returned to work.

Justice has been served.

Well, here is the real bottom line "received favorable job evaluations, according to his union". The outright firing of a union employee in a non right to work state is just not going to happen.  That guy could have gotten stoned, driven into a group of school children at a bus stop in his work truck and his union would have prevented him from being fired. I'm surprised his supervisors even got the termination paperwork started to be honest.

On 8/23/2016 at 8:11 AM, Gary7 said:

It is not legal to smoke pot in Conn. He broke the law and should have been fired. This is plain nuts.

Agreed.For me, it doesn't matter whether it's illegal but whether the company allows it. Like Barney said below, I don't know of any job in the US except maybe at a pot dispensary, that you can be impaired on anything and keep your job. For the

 

record, I am not against pot as medicine or even own time recreational use but rules are rules. Like drinking is legal but there are a subset of rules that go with it. Drink, obtain a BAC above .08 (in Florida) and it becomes illegal to drive, etc, etc. Also for

 

me it's about common sense. All the pro pot folks think that if they legalize pot, it just opens the floodgates and you can smoke anytime, anywhere is naive at best. 

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • The only reason I want to know where you from is because if you are not from the U.K, then why should you care what we in the U.K do or don't do? Racist I am not, I am fed up with the amount coming over here and feel they can come over here and think we need to support them. Do you know how much it costs this country to support these people coming over here? Even when we give them a place to live it is not good enough. We had a barge that was being used to house immigrants, oh but that was not good enough. A mate said to me at the time, when he was homeless, he would have been happy to live on the barge, instead of ending up sleeping on a bench on the beach. I am not scared to say what my family heritage is, unlike you who is scared to say where they are from or where they live. Father side U.S, mother side Wales, still have family living in the U.S. A mate who sadly died a few years ago, had a load of people from different races recording in his studio, I got on with all of them. Skin colour don't bother me, where they are from don't bother me. Religion don't bother me as long as they don't push it onto me and it is not crazy stuff. I am not religious. But if you are not living in the U.K, then why should you care if we are in the E.U or not? This the problem, too many people poking their noses into where it don't belong. But you believe what you believe, if you think I am racist, then be it, I really do not care. Just grow a pair
    • If he hasn't been able to figure that out, then why is he obsessed with tariffs? Because that's one of the most prominent tools to level the playing field when you have high cost of labor.
    • Microsoft released Windows 11 KB5102558, KB5095615 Setup and Recovery updates by Sayan Sen This past week Microsoft released the newest preview update (C-release) under KB5095093. Alongside those, Microsoft also released new dynamic updates. For those who may not know, dynamic updates bring improvements to the Windows Recovery process in the form of Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) updates, which are also called Safe OS updates. The dynamic updates also affect the Setup file binaries in the form of Setup updates. These Dynamic Update packages are meant to be applied to existing Windows images prior to their deployment. Dynamic Updates also help preserve Language Pack (LP) and Features on Demand (FODs) content during the upgrade process. VBScript, for example, is currently an FOD on Windows 11 24H2. This time both recovery and setup updates were released for Windows 11. The company writes: "KB5095186: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 11, version 26H1: June 23, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.28000.2335. KB5102558: Setup Dynamic Update for Windows 11, versions 24H2 and 25H2: June 23, 2026 This update makes improvements to Windows setup binaries or any files that setup uses for feature updates in Windows 11, version 24H2 and Windows 11, version 25H2. KB5095615: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 11, versions 24H2 and 25H2: June 23, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.26100.8737." Microsoft notes that both the Recovery and Setup updates will be downloaded and installed automatically via the Windows Update channel.
    • The high cost of labor and operating within the US. Donald hasn't been able to figure that out--pathetic.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      jessse3334 earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • Reacting Well
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • One Month Later
      Excellence2025 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Excellence2025 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      200
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      151
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      73
    5. 5
      macoman
      62
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!