Perhaps it's oversight, bureaucracy, or just plain refusal to face facts, but the lack of employee drug testing in the trucking industry is likely leading to the injury and death of employees and even innocent people.
Behind the wheel accidents account for the second leading cause of workplace fatality in this country. And, according to the article at Minneapolis' Star Tribune, the trucking industry isn't doing enough about it.
Employee drug testing is supposed to be enforced, but "shortcomings" in the industry are allowing some drivers to work without submitting urine samples, and allowing others to cheat.
In 2006, nearly 5,000 people were killed in crashes involving large trucks while 106,000 were injured. And, in a recent expose by Fox News, undercover investigators at 10 of 24 urine collection sites were not required to empty their pockets before providing a sample, an oversight that could easily allow for tampering of samples.
And of course, there are a lot of drivers who just don't show up for their testing, and haven't been punished for it.
By implementing stricter standards for employee drug testing countless lives could be saved, and injuries prevented; which is exactly why this aspect of background screening has become so popular in other workplace environments.