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FEATURED NEWS
2026-04-24T05:00:00Z
NewsDrug and alcohol policy - Motor CarrierDrug testing - Motor CarrierDrug and Alcohol Testing - DOTTransportationEnglishIndustry NewsIndustry NewsRecruiting and hiringRecruiting and hiringRandom alcohol and drug testing- Motor CarrierPre-employment drug testing - Motor CarrierFleet OperationsFocus AreaUSA
Wait and see on THC for DOT: Status quo for now
An order issued by Attorney General Todd Blanche places medical marijuana into the same classification as some prescription painkillers. However, this reclassification of medical marijuana as a Schedule 3 drug has no immediate impact on DOT employees. Marijuana is still a prohibited substance, prescribed or not.
DOT considerations
Any changes to marijuana classification on the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) scheduling won’t have an immediate impact on DOT testing procedures, even when updated in DEA’s regulations.
Changes to DOT lab procedures and instructions to medical review officers (MROs) can only occur when the U.S. DOT revises 49 CFR Part 40, Procedures For Transportation Workplace Drug And Alcohol Testing Programs. Part 40 applies to highway, air, rail, transit, maritime, and pipeline employers.
However, U.S. DOT can only initiate rulemaking changes to Part 40 after a chain of events occurs.
First, the Health and Human Services (HHS) must propose changes and then revise its Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs. This document defines analytes, cutoffs, specimen validity criteria, laboratory, and MRO processes. By watching HHS activity, you can anticipate DOT changes.
Once HHS finalizes its document, DOT has the green light to publish proposed changes to Part 40 to align with the Mandatory Guidelines. The DOT must adopt the HHS scientific standards and procedures into 49 CFR Part 40 to be used by DOT employers. DOT does not create its own scientific testing standards.
Lastly, before any implementation can occur, DOT must publish a final rule amending the DOT testing panel, lab procedures, and MRO instructions relating to marijuana.
Key to remember: Even though DEA is moving forward with its proposed reclassification of marijuana, how or even if it will impact DOT drug testing is yet to be determined.
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RECENT INDUSTRY HIGHLIGHTS
2026-04-24T05:00:00Z
NewsElements of a General Duty Clause ViolationBehavior Based SafetyRisk Assessment and ManagementTraining & DevelopmentEmployee RelationsSafety CommitteesIn-Depth ArticleAssociate Benefits & CompensationSafety & HealthEmployee RelationsGeneral Duty ClauseHuman ResourcesSafety and Health Programs and TrainingTrainingTrainingGeneral Duty Clause Enforcement AreasWorkplace SecurityHR ManagementEnglishFacility SecurityIndustry NewsWorkplace ViolenceActive ShooterWorkplace ViolenceGeneral Industry SafetyGeneral Duty ClauseHR GeneralistAssociate RelationsFocus AreaUSA
Workplace violence prevention: Working together to create safer work environments
April is Workplace Violence Awareness Month. Organizations earmark April to focus on ways to reduce the risk of a violent incident happening in the workplace. By increasing awareness and fostering a culture of safety, organizations can help protect their employees from harm.
Health care settings
Health workers worldwide face a high risk of violence, with 8–38 percent experiencing physical attacks, while others are subjected to threats or verbal abuse, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Most incidents involve patients or visitors. Those at greatest risk include nurses, patient-facing staff, emergency room personnel, and paramedics.
Violence against health workers harms staff well-being, morale, and retention, ultimately compromising quality of care and causing significant financial loss.
An OSHA proposed rule — ‘Workplace Violence in Health Care and Social Assistance’ — was moved to Long-Term Action status, according to the Spring 2025 regulatory agenda that was released on September 4, 2025. Long-Term Actions are items under development, but the agency doesn’t expect to have a regulatory action within the 12 months after the latest edition of the agenda.
This turn of events was surprising since OSHA had been working on a standard for preventing workplace violence in health care and social assistance settings. OSHA had planned to publish the proposed rule in the Federal Register in June 2025.
Even without a federal standard addressing workplace violence in health care, several states have their own health care violence prevention laws in place.
General Duty Clause
Although OSHA doesn’t have a workplace violence standard, employers must provide a workplace that’s free of known health and safety hazards. This is addressed in OSHA’s General Duty Clause (GDC), Section 5(a) of the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act.
The following elements are necessary for OSHA to prove a violation of the GDC:
- The employer failed to keep the workplace free of a hazard to which employees of that employer were exposed;
- The hazard was recognized;
- The hazard was causing or was likely to cause death or serious physical harm; and
- There was a feasible and useful method to correct the hazard.
A general duty citation must involve both the presence of a serious hazard and exposure of the cited employer’s own employees.
During a violent incident investigation, OSHA inspectors would likely gather evidence about whether an employer knew that a potential workplace violence hazard existed and whether there were feasible means to prevent or minimize such hazards. Investigators might also look at evidence of any potential whistleblower retaliation in which workers complained about workplace violence risks or reported injuries from workplace violence incidents.
Health care facilities have been cited when staff were injured by violent patients or visitors. In one case, nurses were regularly assaulted, but the hospital had no prevention program, no staff training, and no reporting system. OSHA stepped in using the GDC. Prevention could have included de-escalation training, secure facility layouts, panic buttons, and post-incident support.
Tips for preventing violent acts
In most workplaces where risk factors can be identified, violent acts can be prevented or minimized.
Building respectful workplaces is one way to do this. The most common forms of uncivil behaviors are when employees:
- Address others in disrespectful ways,
- Interrupt those who are speaking, and
- Micromanage people to an excessive degree.
Providing employees with civility training — which differs from anti-harassment training — can help to create more respectful work environments with less conflict. While civility training isn’t only focused on preventing harassment, that could be a component.
Research has shown that incivility can be a precursor to harassment. In contrast to anti-harassment training, civility training tends to give employees positive examples of how to behave, versus actions to avoid.
The training typically includes a focus on:
- Interpersonal communication,
- Conflict resolution, and
- Effective supervisory techniques.
How civility training is presented will depend on the size of the workforce, demographics, location, industry, etc. There is no one-size-fits-all approach. The point is to get employees to be more aware of how their words and actions impact others, and how they should treat everyone with respect.
It’s also important to watch for signs that someone could turn violent. While there’s no guarantee that one or more questionable behaviors equate to a potential incident, some warning signs come from someone experiencing personal or work issues.
They could be struggling financially, going through a divorce, or having health issues. Work triggers could stem from negative employment actions, like a demotion or termination, or other types of conflict.
Key to remember: April is Workplace Violence Prevention Month. Now’s the time to focus on ways to keep all employees safe.
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2026-04-23T05:00:00Z
NewsIndustry NewsHuman ResourcesAssociate RelationsTraining & DevelopmentHR GeneralistExpert InsightsDisabilities and ADAUSAHR ManagementEnglishFocus AreaDisabilities and ADAReasonable Accommodations
New leaders, new risks?
When a company hires (or promotes) a new leader, it’s no surprise that some changes might take place. New leaders often like to make changes, and usually with good intentions. A new leader might, for example, wonder why an employee has a long-standing work accommodation.
Case in point
An employee works well with an accommodation for years. A new leader is hired and makes some changes, including removing the accommodation without reviewing its effectiveness. The leader instead:
- Forces the employee to take leave she didn’t want or need,
- Denies the leave, and
- Then fires the employee.
While this might sound far-fetched, it’s based on an actual situation that landed in the hands of the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, after an employee sued her former employer under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
In this situation, the new leader didn’t talk to the employee to determine if the previously provided accommodation was reasonable or if another was potentially available.
Changes and risks
Sometimes, new leaders make changes that can put the company at risk. Removing an effective accommodation without a valid reason puts the employer at risk of a disability discrimination claim.
Accommodations aren’t always forever
Employers don’t have to keep providing an accommodation forever, but before removing an effective one, they should have a good reason to do so.
Employers should ask themselves what has changed (other than leadership)?
- Did the job change?
- Did the employees’ needs change?
- Did the workplace change?
If leadership is the only thing that changed, the employer might have a tough time defending its actions, particularly if those actions lead to termination.
New leaders might question the validity of an accommodation. If so, they may review the accommodation by engaging in the interactive process with the employee to ensure that the accommodation remains effective and needed. Revoking a previously granted reasonable accommodation without any other action can violate the ADA.
The accommodations for the employee in the above story included using a walker and being allowed to occasionally sit. The employer is now facing the possibility of owing the employee back pay, front pay, reinstating the employee, plus paying compensatory and punitive damages.
Training
Training new leaders in the current accommodations the company is providing, and what not to do, might help avoid violations and reduce risks. All managers and supervisors should be familiar with accommodation obligations under the ADA and how to respond to employees seeking job accommodations. They should know that each situation must be addressed individually, and there’s no “one-size-fits-all” workplace accommodation.
Key to remember: A change in leadership can open employers up to risk if the new leaders aren’t familiar with the applicable laws and take actions they shouldn’t.
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2026-04-23T05:00:00Z
NewsCommercial drivers license CDLIndustry NewsIndustry NewsCommercial learners permit CLPCommercial drivers license CDLFocus AreaFleet OperationsEnglishTransportationUSA
FMCSA withholds more than $73 million from New York
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) is holding back over $73 million from New York. This withholding is in response to the state failing to revoke illegally issued non-domiciled commercial learner’s permits (CLPs) and commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs).
An FMCSA audit of New York’s non-domiciled commercial license issuance procedures noted:
- A 53 percent failure rate for issued licenses that violated federal law, and
- A default system that issued 8-year licenses to drivers regardless of when their legal status expires.
According to the FMCSA, New York has failed to execute corrective actions, including taking back noncompliant non-domiciled CDLs and CLPs.
The $73,502,543 being withheld represents 4 percent of the state’s National Highway Performance Program and Surface Transportation Program Block Grant funds.
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2026-04-23T05:00:00Z
NewsChange NoticesWage and HourChange NoticeOregonAssociate Benefits & CompensationAssociate RelationsHR GeneralistMinimum WageHR ManagementEnglishFocus AreaHuman Resources
Oregon minimum wage to increase
Effective date: July 1, 2026
This applies to: Employers with employees in Oregon
Description of change: The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries released information on the hourly minimum wage increases effective July 1, 2026:
- Standard: $15.55
- Portland Metro: $16.80
- Non-Urban Counties: $14.55
The Oregon minimum wage rate is indexed to inflation based on the Consumer Price Index, a figure published by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics.
View related state info: Minimum wage - Oregon
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2026-04-23T05:00:00Z
NewsDriver qualification and hiringReasonable suspicion drug and alcohol testing - Motor CarrierRecruiting and hiringSafety & HealthFocus AreaAssociate RelationsTransportationDisabilities and ADAReasonable AccommodationsDrug and Alcohol TestingDrug and Alcohol TestingDisabilities and ADAMarijuanaHuman ResourcesUSADrug and Alcohol Testing - DOTDriver qualificationsDrug testing - Motor CarrierDrug and alcohol training - Motor CarrierHiring standards - Motor CarrierHR ManagementEnglishDriver recruiting and retentionTalent Management & RecruitingIndustry NewsIndustry NewsFleet SafetyGeneral Industry SafetyDrivers qualification (DQ file)HR GeneralistApplications/Applicants
Federal government reschedules medical marijuana
Medical marijuana has been reclassified into a lower drug category, placing it into the same classification as some prescription painkillers.
Attorney General Todd Blanche issued an order on April 23 moving medical marijuana from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act to Schedule III, a class of drugs with a moderate to low potential for dependence, that includes ketamine, Tylenol with codeine, and anabolic steroids. Schedule III drugs can be obtained with a prescription.
Under the order, products containing marijuana approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and marijuana products regulated by a state medical marijuana law are now in the lower drug category.
Rescheduling the drug into a lower classification will support research into marijuana safety and use of the drug for medical purposes, the attorney general noted in a press release.
Impact on the workplace
The order doesn’t address how the rescheduling of medical marijuana impacts compliance with other federal laws, but to avoid the risk of a discrimination claim under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act, employers in states where medical marijuana is legal should treat individuals using medical marijuana as they would treat any individual using a prescription medication.
This includes having a discussion with the employee about accommodations, which may include off-duty use of medical marijuana.
In states where medical marijuana isn’t legal, employers would only need to consider accommodations for use of marijuana products approved by the FDA.
Recreational marijuana considerations
The order doesn’t legalize recreational marijuana, but does announce a June 29 hearing to evaluate broader changes to marijuana’s status under federal law.
The order notes that it doesn’t apply to synthetically derived THC, such as Delta-10 products. The final order notes that synthetically derived THC is outside of the definition of marijuana.
The order also establishes a federal licensing system for state medical marijuana manufacturers and dispensaries. It notes that states where medical marijuana is legal have established systems to regulate the sale and use of medical marijuana.
How does this affect safety-sensitive jobs?
The Drug Enforcement Administration’s reclassification order doesn’t address the impact the change would have on federal drug testing regulations. Specifically, it doesn’t offer insights into Department of Transportation (DOT) drug testing of truck drivers, airline pilots, pipeline operators, and others in safety-sensitive positions.
Before any changes can be implemented by the DOT, drug testing procedures in 49 CFR Part 40 must go through the rulemaking process.
Key to remember: The federal government has moved medical marijuana to a lower classification of drug. To reduce the risk of a discrimination claim, employers in states where medical marijuana is legal should treat it as a prescription medication to lower the risk of a discrimination claim. Employers in all states should consider accommodations for FDA-approved marijuana products.
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