(c) The mandatory criteria for the Model Drug
Testing Policy For Residential Child-Care Operations include:
(1) Purpose. (Name of residential child-care
operation) has a vital interest in ensuring the safety of resident children
through the appropriate drug testing of employees, while also protecting the
rights of the employees.
(2) Scope.
This policy applies to all employees of residential child-care operations,
including child-placing agencies, that directly care for or has access to a
child in care, and applicants for such employment. With respect to allegations
of drug abuse (See paragraph (4)(D) of this subsection), this policy applies to
any person who works under the auspices of a residential child-care operation
and directly cares for or has access to a child in care.
(3) Definitions. The following definitions
apply to this section.
(A) Abusing drugs--The
use of any:
(i) Drug or substance defined by
the Texas Controlled Substances Act, Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 481;
or
(ii) Prescription or
non-prescription drug that is not being used for the purpose for which it was
prescribed or manufactured.
(B) Drug testing--The scientific analysis of
urine, blood, breath, saliva, hair, tissue, and other specimens for detecting a
drug.
(C) Employee--A person is an
employee of your operation if you pay the person a wage or salary and direct or
have the right to direct his work. For the purposes of this definition:
(i) Directing a person's work includes having
control over when, where, and how the person conducts his work and providing
the person with training that is necessary for the person to conduct his
work;
(ii) Controlling when a
person works includes setting the person's work hours;
(iii) Controlling how a person works includes
assigning the person the task(s) that he must accomplish and exercising
responsibility for the means and details by which the person accomplishes the
task(s); and
(iv) A person is not
an "employee" of a child-placing agency merely because the agency verifies him
as a foster parent.
(D)
Random drug testing--A testing cycle that varies the frequency and intervals
that specimens are collected for testing and selects employees in a random
manner that does not eliminate already tested employees from future testing.
The testing should ensure all employees are subject to random testing on a
continuing basis.
(E) Good cause to
believe the person may be abusing drugs--A reasonable belief based on facts
sufficient to lead a prudent person to conclude that the person who works under
the auspices of the residential child-care operation may be abusing drugs.
Sufficient facts may include direct observations of the person using or
possessing drugs, or exhibiting physical symptoms, including but not limited to
slurred speech or difficulty in maintaining balance; erratic or marked changes
in behavior, including a decrease in the quality or quantity of the person's
productivity, judgment, reasoning, and concentration and psychomotor control,
accidents, and deviations from safe working practices; or any other reliable
information.
(F) Person who works
under the auspices of the residential child-care operation--A person who meets
the definition in §
745.8553
of Title 40 (relating to Who works "under the auspices of an
operation"?).
(4)
Mandatory drug testing.
(A) All applicants
that are intended to be hired for employment are subject to pre-employment
testing, and may not provide direct care or have access to a child in care
until the drug test results are available;
(B) All employees are subject to random,
unannounced drug testing;
(C) Any
employee that is the subject of a child abuse or neglect investigation, when
DFPS determines there is "good cause to believe the employee may be abusing
drugs", must be drug tested within 24 hours of notification by DFPS to the
residential child-care operation; and
(D) Any person alleged to be abusing drugs
may be tested within 24 hours, if the person:
(i) Works under the auspices of the
residential child-care operation;
(ii) Directly cares for or has access to a
child in care; and
(iii) There is
"good cause to believe the person may be abusing drugs."
(5) Drug testing procedures. All
drug testing will:
(A) At a minimum screen
for marijuana, cocaine, opiates, amphetamines, and phencyclidine
(PCP);
(B) Use one of the following
drug-testing methods:
(i) A drug test
performed by a certified laboratory;
(ii) A testing kit with proven rates of false
positives below 2% and false negatives below 8% on all drugs screened;
or
(iii) Another testing method for
which there is scientific proof of accuracy comparable to either of the first
two choices, such as saliva, hair, or spray drug testing;
(C) Ensure the integrity and identity of the
specimen collected from the time of collection to the time of disposal to
minimize the opportunity for an employee to adulterate or substitute a
specimen; and
(D) Preserve the
privacy and rights of the person tested. This includes safeguarding the results
of any test and maintaining them, so they remain confidential and free from
unauthorized access.
(6)
Discipline.
(A) An applicant or employee's
consent to submit to drug testing is required as a condition of employment, and
the refusal to consent may result in refusal to hire the applicant and
disciplinary action, including discharge, against the employee for a
refusal;
(B) An employee who is
tested because there is "good cause to believe the employee may be abusing
drugs," may be suspended pending receipt of written test results and further
inquiries that may be required;
(C)
An employee determined through drug testing to have abused drugs is subject to
discipline, up to and including discharge;
(D) An applicant for employment or an
employee determined through drug testing to have abused drugs may not be
employed in a position with direct contact with children in care if the
employee presents a risk of harm to children; and
(E) An employee determined through drug
testing to have abused drugs may be offered the opportunity to complete a
rehabilitation program at the employee's expense.
(7) Appeal. An applicant or employee whose
drug test is positive may, at the applicant or employee's expense:
(A) Have an opportunity to explain and offer
written documentation why there is another cause for the positive drug
test;
(B) Request that the
remaining portion of the sample that yielded the positive results, if
available, be submitted for an additional independent test, including second
tests to rule out false positive results; and/or
(C) Submit the written test result for an
independent medical review.
(8) Documentation.
(A) All applicants that you intend to hire
for employment and employees must be provided a copy of your drug testing
policy and must sign a document consenting to these terms and conditions of
employment.
(B) All drug test
results of employees will be kept for one year after an employee's last work
day with the residential child-care operation, or until any investigation
involving the person is resolved, whichever is later. All other drug test
results required by this rule will be kept for one year from the date the drug
test was administered. The results must be available for review by Licensing
Division within 24 hours of the request.