News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Smoking Casual Joint Is Not A Disability, Tribunal |
Title: | CN BC: Smoking Casual Joint Is Not A Disability, Tribunal |
Published On: | 2009-05-21 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2009-05-22 03:22:47 |
SMOKING CASUAL JOINT IS NOT A DISABILITY, TRIBUNAL
DETERMINES
A sawmill manager fired for allegedly smoking pot on the job and
offering a joint to a co-worker has had his human rights complaint
tossed out.
David Geldreich, a manager at the Whisper Creek lumberyard in Houston,
filed a complaint with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal after he was
fired in April 2008. He argued that Whisper Creek had discriminated
against him because of a mental disability when it decided to fire
him.
"If [Whisper Creek] fired me because of smoking drugs, [it] was
obligated . . . to accommodate me and to offer assistance as a
disability," Geldreich wrote.
However, tribunal chair Heather MacNaughton said that casual drug use
is not a disability.
DETERMINES
A sawmill manager fired for allegedly smoking pot on the job and
offering a joint to a co-worker has had his human rights complaint
tossed out.
David Geldreich, a manager at the Whisper Creek lumberyard in Houston,
filed a complaint with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal after he was
fired in April 2008. He argued that Whisper Creek had discriminated
against him because of a mental disability when it decided to fire
him.
"If [Whisper Creek] fired me because of smoking drugs, [it] was
obligated . . . to accommodate me and to offer assistance as a
disability," Geldreich wrote.
However, tribunal chair Heather MacNaughton said that casual drug use
is not a disability.
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