
IBEW Targets Emerging Trend in Construction
March 2003 IBEW Journal
Drug testing has become a condition of employment
for an increasing number of construction workers. But the reality
for many laboratories often means a test today and clearance for
work in three days.
So one Local 474, Memphis, Tennessee, signatory
electrical contractor has opened a new business that helps get members
to construction jobs faster with a higher quality drug test. And
in the process, a new laboratory set a higher standard for wages
and benefits in a largely nonunion lab industry in Memphis. Local
474 leaders said Sure-Test Laboratory is the only union drug testing
lab in the country.
"When we refer a member to a contractor, he
has to wait up to three days sometimes to get results," said
Local 474 Assistant Business Manager Mike Haley. "But at the
new lab, a negative result means he can go to work the next day.
Sometimes that means a lot to an employer. He needs a job done right
now, not in three days."
Drug testing is mandatory for workers on most federal
projects and many of the larger ones, Haley said. Contractors have
incentives to require testing because workers’ compensation
premiums are lowered as a result. Plus, many employers want to be
able to promote a "drug-free workplace" to their customers.
Fully half of Local 474’s electrical contracting jobs require
drug testing on initial employment. Rodney Criner, owner of Criner
Electric and co-owner of Sure-Test, recognized the emerging drug
testing industry as a business opportunity. With state-of-the-art
equipment, training and techniques, Sure-Test is among a small number
of federally certified drug testing labs in the country.
The lab’s seven workers were quickly organized
into a unit of Local 474. Their first contract, signed last November,
gained Sure-Test workers a 20 percent raise and enhanced standard
of living benefits, such as paid holidays, vacation, sick leave,
health insurance and pension plans. The company estimates that with
increased business, the lab could employ up to 150 workers.

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IBEWCURRENTS
(Left) Local 474 members at work
in the conformation lab at Sure-Test in Memphis, said to be the
only union drug testing lab in the country. From left are Neal Jackson
and Gary Smith (background) and Pat Weldon and Lori Irvin (foreground). |