Ways and Means Members Encourage DOL Not to Stifle Pro-Work Unemployment Insurance Reforms

Webp 11edited

Ways and Means Members Encourage DOL Not to Stifle Pro-Work Unemployment Insurance Reforms

The following press release was published by the U.S. Congress Committee on Ways and Means on May 9, 2013. It is reproduced in full below.

Ways and Means Members Encourage DOL Not to Stifle Pro-Work Unemployment Insurance Reforms

Federal Drug Screening and Testing Policy Promotes Work Readiness

May 2, 2013 - Press Releases

Yesterday, key Republican Members of the Ways and Means Committee sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Labor expressing their continued support for unemployment insurance (UI) reforms signed into law in 2012 that authorize States to screen certain UI applicants for drug use. In anticipation of the Department’s upcoming notice of proposed rulemaking on this provision, the Members encouraged the Department to take a broad interpretation of the law’s scope so that States can use this new authority to help prepare more unemployed workers to successfully return to the workforce.

The 2012 reforms permit States to screen (and, if individuals are screened as likely to be using illegal drugs, test) any UI applicants who either (1) lost their job because of drug use, or (2) are seeking a job that generally requires a drug test, which will be defined by the Department of Labor.

A recent hearing of the Human Resources Subcommittee confirmed the importance of the critical, pro-work UI reforms contained in The Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Public Law 112-96), which President Obama signed into law on Feb. 22, 2012. During the hearing Members of the Subcommittee as well as expert witnesses expressed first hand concerns about the work readiness of individuals who are unable to pass a pre-employment drug test:

80 percent of Ohio employers require drug testing

Testing improves workplace safety and reduces liability

People who can’t pass a drug test are “not ready and able to go back to work"

Inability to pass a drug test is a major reason PA employers don’t hire job applicants

Biggest problem employers face is finding and keeping workers

who can pass a drug test

Source: U.S. Congress Committee on Ways and Means

More News