Your Bad, Boss
That decision would not bode well for Mike. His workplace, a staffing agency, saw him interviewed about his plan on TV that night, then asked him to submit to a drug test, which—duh—he failed to pass. They fired him, and the aggravated fellow posted about it on Craigslist, where he also posted his resume, writing: “I lost my job due to the news coverage of me being the FIRST PERSON TO BUY MARIJUANA LEGALLY IN SPOKANE! I regret nothing. But now im jobless” (sic).
Luckily for him, however, the staffing agency flip-flopped on its original decision and quickly hired him back. Boyer accepted the offer and had this to say about it: “The reason they said they gave me my job back was because their policy says you cannot be under the influence at work, which I was not, and since I officially had the day off, what I did on my time was my time. And they gave me my job back, and even gave me a day’s worth of pay that I missed.”
As Long As You’re Not on the Clock…
Now, what do we have to say about it? While I have semi-mixed feelings on the legalization of the green stuff (I lean toward pro-, but I do believe pot can be addictive), I certainly don’t think employers should be able to old it against current or future employees if said employees legally use pot. If it’s legal, it’s legal.
But…just because it’s legal, does that make it OK? The right thing to do? Boxer’s case isn’t a stand-alone situation. Just a few days ago, Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes was also among the first people to buy legal marijuana (he said he bought one gram of weed for posterity and one “for personal enjoyment”)—and his workplace didn’t exactly support that move, either. Some Seattle police officers griped about Holmes’ actions to reporters, and a memo soon went out to city employees reminding them that city buildings are still a “drug-free workplace.”