Canadian workplaces unready for legal pot: report - Action News
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Canadian workplaces unready for legal pot: report

Most Canadian workplaces are simply not ready for the impact of legalized recreational cannabis, according to report by the Conference Board of Canada.

Conference Board of Canada report highlights opportunity to educate employees on cannabis use

The Conference Board of Canada released its report, Blazing the Trail: What the Legalization of Cannabis Means for Canadian Employers, Tuesday. (David Donnelly/CBC)

Most Canadian workplaces are simply not ready for the impact of legalized recreational cannabis, according to a reportby theConference Board of Canada.

The board, which conducts research on behalf a variety of organizations from both the private and public sectors,releasedits report,titledBlazing the Trail: What the Legalization of Cannabis Means for Canadian Employers,Tuesday.

Weare consistently hearingtime and time againthat organizations are not fullyprepared.- Bryan Benjamin, Conference Board of Canada

The report combines survey results and literature on cannabis to explain the most common and pressing concerns employers should address once the drugbecomes legal in Canada.

"The awareness hasgoneup, but weare consistently hearingtime and time againthat organizations are not fullyprepared," said Bryan Benjamin, the board's vice-president of organizational performance.

"Most organizationsare now at the place where they accept this is coming, but realize there are still many unknowns that they haven't been able to wrap their head around."

Employee testing,company parties

Among the most common and pressing issues facing Canadian companiesis the question of how and when employerswill test workers to determine if they're under the influence of cannabis, Benjamin said.

"Unlike alcohol, where there's been years and decades of rigour around testingand understanding, with cannabis the testing is still in the very early stages and there's so much variance," he said.

Anotherfactor to consider is where and when the use of cannabis will be permitted in the workplace. For example, "do we allow this as part of a company function?" Benjamin asked.

Eugene Oscapella is an Ottawa-based lawyer and professor of criminology and drug policy at the University of Ottawa. (Submitted)

Opportunity to educate

The report includes a chapter on educating employeeson theimpacts of marijuana use, something Ottawa lawyer Eugene Oscapella supports.

"I think we might have the opportunity to get a good message aboutsocial and civic responsibility, because for so long we just said, 'The drugs are illegal, let's prosecute you,'" he said. "Let's start talking about the socially responsible use of cannabis now."

Oscapella, who also teaches drug policy at the University of Ottawa, notes how the perception of alcohol in the workplace has evolved.

"I think probably far fewer people have liquid lunches than they used to when I was starting my work 30or 40years ago, so I thinkthere's a way to get a message out, a way of creating norms of socially responsible use," he said. "Maybe with legalization it'll be easier to talk about those things then it was under thesystem whencannabis was illegal."

Oscapelladoesn't believe legalization will spark a massive shift in workplace culture.

"There may be an initial blip in cannabis use after after legalization, but that doesn't suggest to me that more people are going to come to work stoned," said Oscapella.

"Ifthere is a problem ofsubstance use in the workplace I don't think it's going to change after legalization. Employers have the right to expect their employees to be functional at all times and not to put other employers at risk,whether it be alcohol or cannabis or an over-the-counter medication."