Is the President subject to random drug testing?
IBTL
Is the President subject to random drug testing?
I have worked for federal government and never took any drug testing during this tenure.It’s also a condition of employment written in the law for federal workers and federal contract holders.
Not to mention most safety critical roles, such as railway workers, bus drivers, and airline pilots, among others.
Mandatory OT isn't too bad, if used in the right circumstances. In industries where large fluctuations in activity occur (Oil & gas), you can avoid over-hiring in headcount (and then subsequently having to lay them off) by working additional hours to meet production demand. When a slowdown hits, you just walk everyone back to 40hrs without having to hand out pink slips. However, forcing everyone to work 60hr weeks for 9 months because you didn't want to increase headcount is a good way to cause burn out and introduce safety problems. Good managers know how to balance those business and employee needs.Not to mention some jobs have an on-call requirement, so you’re never really ever not at work.
Personally, I find mandatory OT and shift work much more draconian than being subject to drug testing as a condition of employment.
I have worked for federal government and never took any drug testing during this tenure.
Mandatory OT isn't too bad, if used in the right circumstances. …Good managers know how to balance those business and employee needs.
IMHO, the hours you are willing to work is a trade-off. If you have sufficient skills in a field with high demand, then you can, and have every right, to dictate your hours/shifts/time-off etc. Of course though, the company has every right to meet your demands; or not.I’m not disagreeing, just stating it’s one of the lines in the sand I refuse to cross to take a job; I’ve been there, done that, and have enough t-shirts for a quilt.
I've never worked for the federal govt, but I was still federally required to take drug and alcohol testing based on my job assignment at a private aviation company when requested. And any refusal to take a test either led to termination, or worse, suspension/revocation of any federal certificates held, if applicable. So I guess you may want to steer clear of most vocations that fall under the FAA or DOT.I have worked for federal government and never took any drug testing during this tenure.
I have worked for federal government and never took any drug testing during this tenure.
And how exactly do you now that these "many people" are not largely composed of those who have a vested interested in weakening and crippling the country? There are people in this world whose job it is to do precisely that, and some who would do it just for fun or to advance their own agenda. How many of them? We really don't have any way to know, but it's a pretty large number.And with that jerkery said, there are many people campaigning on multiple social media platforms to people my age (20-35) the foolishness of devoting one's life to nameless (faceless) corporations.
There is a lack of perspective evident in this view, which is evident in a significant share of our younger generation.I suspect that many my age believe that everything they want should be affordable while working simple full-time hours, regardless of the job. I had a coworker who thought forty hour weeks were too much
^This, 100%.I suspect that many my age believe that everything they want should be affordable while working simple full-time hours, regardless of the job.
Is the President subject to random drug testing?
Yeah, IIRC that started when you were about 12 or 13.I feel like talking arrogantly to men (and women) much my senior about topics I feel they know little about.
If there is no meaning, even the slightest effort becomes too great a burden.
If meaning is not to be found in work, why devote excessive time to it? If there is no meaning at home that requires the money of excessive work, why work excessively?
There is little guidance on finding meaning in one's life.
Yet somehow you managed to acquire a little wisdom anyway.
There is also this misguided notion that all a business has to do to pay their employees a "living wage" is for the owners to not take so much and to raise prices to whatever it takes to cover those salaries for people that don't want to work OT or Weekends.There's this seriously misguided notion that if you work 40h a week as, say a dentist's office receptionist, there's no reason you shouldn't be able to buy a $50k car. Afterall, you are employed and that's the average price for a car. Why shouldn't you have that? You've earned it. Incessant commercials and perverse financing solutions encourage people to think like this, too.
Or, maybe, he and others like him, are aware of that and remember also that back in the day companies refused to make changes without being forced to. Maybe he's aware of proposals in congress to change it again. Maybe he's aware of studies showing 32 hour weeks to be highly effective. Maybe he thinks that "but it used to be worse" isn't a good reason to stop trying and improve the present.I had a coworker who thought forty hour weeks were too much and "Why couldn't it be lowered to thirty? Or twenty-five?" He had no clue about the history of labor laws or the factory workers that worked 80 hours or more per week. He thought of the forty hour week as a great burden imposed on him by a malicious company instead of a limitation imposed on the company by a government trying to spare women and children- that was later expanded to men.
Or, maybe, he and others like him, are aware of that and remember also that back in the day companies refused to make changes without being forced to. Maybe he's aware of proposals in congress to change it again. Maybe he's aware of studies showing 32 hour weeks to be highly effective. Maybe he thinks that "but it used to be worse" isn't a good reason to stop trying and improve the present.
"Highly effective" from what perspective? Crashing the economy?Or, maybe, he and others like him, are aware of that and remember also that back in the day companies refused to make changes without being forced to. Maybe he's aware of proposals in congress to change it again. Maybe he's aware of studies showing 32 hour weeks to be highly effective.
Nope, not that. Read the link."Highly effective" from what perspective? Crashing the economy?
Without knowing what 2-Bit does, no way of knowing if an 32 hr work week would be as productive as a 40 hr week. Some sort of office work?
Or, maybe, he and others like him, are aware of that and remember also that back in the day companies refused to make changes without being forced to. Maybe he's aware of proposals in congress to change it again. Maybe he's aware of studies showing 32 hour weeks to be highly effective. Maybe he thinks that "but it used to be worse" isn't a good reason to stop trying and improve the present.
I did. I read a highly biased review of a "study" limited to low-level office staff in the UK. Now, go back and read what I wrote in light of this.Nope, not that. Read the link.
I could work from home… “Hop in the sim, fly for a couple of hours, and I’ll have a Notice of Disapproval in your email inbox when you’re done.”Without knowing what 2-Bit does, no way of knowing if an 32 hr work week would be as productive as a 40 hr week. Some sort of office work? Sure, you could get just as much done at 32 hrs but plenty of jobs require workers to physically be at work. A reduction of hrs for a service based industry means reduced service hours. That affects productivity. I’d love to either have a reduced work week or work from home but that just ain’t happening.
It might also be worth pointing out the people working on production lines, working in hospitals, emergency services staff, construction crews, food service professionals, military, and the rest of the regular workforce who have to show up every day and work their hours.If you're in a tech job working on a long term development project where hours sitting at your desk isn't necessarily correlated to quantity of good output? Yeah, sure, that might work fine. But if you're operating a grocery store, an assembly line, a landscaping business, etc... less time inputted = less revenue = employees are not going to get paid the same.
Wasn’t there something in the UAW strike about wanting to work 32 hours and get paid for 40?It might also be worth pointing out the people working on production lines, … who have to show up every day and work their hours.
3 per year maximum random with 1 hour notice. Job that paid 25% more than others. Working in an industry where inattention would kill me and others. Not demeaning and disrespectful at all, a point of pride to be able to take and pass it. I’m 57 years old, maybe generational?Being asked to take a drug test is demeaning and disrespectful. I understand the reason behind it, but I would never want to work for an employer who asked me to pee in a cup.
To be honest I'm careful about not pushing this point.How do you think they feel when they hear these young people whine that they should be paid full salary for 32 hours, spent sitting at home? Has it occurred to the whiners that perhaps they are coming across as more than a bit self-centered and entitled? Just maybe?
I’m 57 and I don’t consider not doing things that are illegal and may be harmful to myself and others in my job as a point of pride.a point of pride to be able to take and pass it. I’m 57 years old, maybe generational?
I’m 57 and I don’t consider not doing things that are illegal and may be harmful to myself and others in my job as a point of pride.
Not demeaning and disrespectful at all, a point of pride to be able to take and pass it. I’m 57 years old, maybe generational?
I'm older than you by a few years, and personally feel that it is indeed demeaning to be made to pee in front of someone like a three year old, and disrespectful to assume that without being forced to do that I'll be off doing drugs. I take no more pride in not smoking dope or whatever than I do in not robbing liquor stores, breaking into my neighbors' houses, or embezzling money.I’m 57 and I don’t consider not doing things that are illegal and may be harmful to myself and others in my job as a point of pride.
May be different with some companies, but our drug testing isn't done "while someone is watching". You are handed a sample cup, you go into a bathroom and do your business, then come out of the bathroom with a filled sample cup. One person in, one person out. The 3rd party testing staff do all of the interactions, and they are pretty good at detecting synthetic urine both by visual and temperature analysis.I'm older than you by a few years, and personally feel that it is indeed demeaning to be made to pee in front of someone like a three year old, and disrespectful to assume that without being forced to do that I'll be off doing drugs. I take no more pride in not smoking dope or whatever than I do in not robbing liquor stores, breaking into my neighbors' houses, or embezzling money.
If my employer trusts me and I trust them, then we'll get along fine. If either of those two things are not true, then I'm looking for somewhere that they both will be.
Now get off my lawn.
It's a pretty formal process here. You empty your pockets, go into the bathroom and squirt into a cup, and tell the person when you are done. You leave the sample and do not flush the toilet. You wash your hands outside of the bathroom while the other person inspects the area and puts the sample into a small window in the bathroom wall.May be different with some companies, but our drug testing isn't done "while someone is watching". You are handed a sample cup, you go into a bathroom and do your business, then come out of the bathroom with a filled sample cup. One person in, one person out. The 3rd party testing staff do all of the interactions, and they are pretty good at detecting synthetic urine both by visual and temperature analysis.