The point is you don’t know when they smoked the joint.
So if you smoke a joint 2 weeks ago and crash a fork lift or smoke a joint Monday morning and crash the fork lift you are getting fired in both scenarios. And that’s the way companies HAVE TO handle it.
Well, you said the guy crashes a forklift and dies.
I’m not really sure they are too worried about whether the guy that’s dead should be allowed to come back to work on Tuesday.
But expanding further, if he doesn’t die, there’s an investigation. Perhaps he gets tested (if the facts point that direction), he passes or fails, then the company acts according to their policy.
Any company can determine if weed is something they want to test for, or not. And if they decide they do want to test for it, they can also decide how (urine vs. hair follicle). That is the case whether it’s legal or not. Legalized marijuana does not mean companies have to change their testing policy or safety protocols. That’s a company by company decision.
So again, whatever companies decide to do should be whatever they do now. There is no relationship whatsoever between the legality of weed and safety protocols of private enterprise…..hence the previous comparison to alcohol which is of course already legal.