Drug Testing of Public Assistance Recipients as a Condition of Eligibility (4/8/2008)
Drug testing welfare recipients as a condition of eligibility
is a policy that is scientifically, fiscally, and constitutionally
unsound.
The 1996 Welfare Reform Act authorized - but did not require
- states to impose mandatory drug testing as a prerequisite to receiving state
welfare assistance.[1]
Although no states currently subject welfare
recipients to random drug testing as a condition of eligibility, some are
considering doing so.
Random drug testing of welfare recipients
is scientifically and medically unsound:
- Welfare recipients are no more likely to use drugs than the
rest of the population.
- According to a 1996 study by the National Institute of Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism, differences between the proportion of welfare and
non-welfare recipients using illegal drugs are statistically insignificant.[2]
- Before the Michigan policy was halted, only 10% of recipients
tested positive for illicit drugs. Only 3% tested positive for hard drugs, such
as cocaine and amphetamines[3] – rates that are in line with the drug
use rates of the general population.[4]
- Seventy percent of all illicit drug users (and presumably a much
higher percentage of alcohol users), ages 18-49, are employed full-time.[5]
- Science and medical
experts overwhelmingly oppose the drug testing of welfare
recipients.
- The Center for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) recommended
against implementing random drug testing of welfare recipients. CAMH believes
that there was little benefit to testing and that the stigma associated with
testing impacted those on welfare negatively. They recommended that resources be
allocated towards better training for government workers to detect signs of
substance abuse and mental disorders, as well as to greater assistance and
treatment to those who need help.[6]
- In addition, mandatory drug testing of welfare recipients is
opposed by the American Public Health Association, National Association of
Social Workers, Inc., National Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Counselors, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, National
Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Association of Maternal and Child
Health Programs, National Health Law Project, National Association on Alcohol,
Drugs and Disability, Inc., National Advocates for Pregnant Women, National
Black Women’s Health Project, Legal Action Center, National Welfare Rights
Union, Youth Law Center, Juvenile Law Center, and National Coalition for Child
Protection Reform.[7]
Random drug
testing of welfare recipients is fiscally irresponsible:
- Drug testing is
expensive.
- The average cost of a drug test is about $42 per person tested,[8] not including the
costs of hiring personnel to administer the tests, to ensure confidentiality of
results and to run confirmatory tests to guard against false positives resulting
from passive drug exposure, cross-identification with legal, prescription drugs
such as codeine and legal substances such as poppy seeds.
- Another way to measure the cost is by
counting what it costs to “catch” each drug user. Drug testing is not used by
many private employers because of the exorbitant cost of catching each person
who tests positive. One electronics manufacturer, for example, estimated that
the cost of finding each person who tested positive was $20,000, since after
testing 10,000 employees, only 49 tested positive. A congressional committee
also estimated that the cost of each positive drug test of government employees
was $77,000, because the positive rate was only 0.5%.[9]
- Mandatory drug testing is an ineffective means to uncover drug
abuse.
- An Oklahoma study found that a questionnaire was able to
accurately detect 94 out of 100 drug abusers. The questionnaire was also useful
in detecting alcohol abusers, something drug tests fail to accomplish.[10]
- Certain counties in Oregon experimented with drug testing on some
welfare recipients, but the process was halted when it was found that drug
testing was less effective in identifying drug abuse than less invasive, cheaper
methods.[11]
- Most types of drug tests fail to detect alcohol abuse – the most
commonly abused substance among Americans – and are most likely to detect
marijuana use since the active ingredient in marijuana stays in the body’s
system longer than any other illicit substance. Therefore, drug tests often fail
to identify people who are using more powerful, more addictive and more
dangerous drugs like methamphetamine or cocaine, which exit the body’s system in
a matter of hours or days.[12]
- Many states have rejected the random drug
testing of welfare recipients as impractical and fiscally
unjustifiable.
- For example, New York and Maryland each considered a program to
randomly drug test those receiving welfare, but abandoned the plan as not
cost-effective, given that urinalysis is almost exclusively a barometer of
marijuana use and that welfare recipients are required to undergo regular
supervision, allowing for effective monitoring absent the cost and intrusion of
mandatory drug testing.[13]
- Louisiana passed a law in 1997 requiring drug testing for welfare
recipients. However, a task force set up to implement the law found more limited
drug testing of individuals identified by a questionnaire to be more
cost-effective than mandatory drug testing.[14]
- Alabama decided against drug testing because it found that
focusing on job training programs was a more effective method of moving
individuals off of welfare.[15]
Random drug
testing of welfare recipients is likely unconstitutional under both the U.S.
Constitution and some state constitutions:
Michigan is the only state to attempt to impose drug testing of
welfare recipients – a policy that was struck down as unconstitutional in 2003.
The ACLU challenged the mandatory drug testing program as unconstitutional,
arguing that drug testing of welfare recipients violates the Fourth Amendment’s
protection against unreasonable searches. The case, Marchwinski v.
Howard, concluded when the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit upheld a lower court’s decision
striking down the policy as unconstitutional.[16] At the time Michigan’s drug testing scheme was struck down, the 49 other states had rejected such a
program for a variety of fiscal and practical reasons: at least 21 states
concluded that such a program “may be unlawful”; 17 states cited cost concerns;
11 states had not considered drug testing at all; and 11 gave a variety of
practical/operational reasons.[17] In halting the implementation of Michigan’s drug testing law, U.S.
District Court Judge Victoria Roberts ruled that the state's rationale for
testing welfare recipients “could be used for testing the parents of all
children who received Medicaid, State Emergency Relief, educational grants or
loans, public education or any other benefit from that State.”[18] Indeed, any of
the justifications put forth to subject welfare recipients to random drug
testing would also by logical extension apply to the entirety of our population that receives
some public benefit and/or that is a parent. It is clear that our
constitution – and common sense – would object to the random drug testing of
this large group of people, making the drug testing of an equally absurd
category of people – welfare recipients – unconstitutional as well. Some states’ constitutions actually offer greater privacy
protection to individuals than does the U.S. Constitution. It is very possible
that random drug testing schemes for welfare recipients will run afoul of these
state-specific protections as well.
[1] Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act (1996). Internet. Available:
http://www.usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/laws/majorlaw/h3734_en.htm. [2] National
Institutes of Health Press Release, NIAAA Researchers Estimate Alcohol and
Drug Use, Abuse, and Dependence Among Welfare Recipients, (1996). Internet.
Available: http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/oct96/niaaa-23.htm [3] Brief of
Plaintiffs-Appellees, Marchwinski v.
Howard, 309 F.3d 330 (6th Cir.
2002) (No. 00-2115), rev’d en banc,
2003 WL 1870916 (Apr. 7, 2003). [4] Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Servs. Admin., 2006
National Survey on Drug Use and Health (available at http://www.drugabusestatistics.samhsa.gov/nsduh/2k6nsduh/2k6Results.cfm#Fig2-1). [5] Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Servs. Admin., Worker Drug Use and Workplace Policies and
Programs: Results from the 1994 and 1997 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse 1 (1999). [6] Ctr. for Addiction
and Mental Health, Position Statement on Mandatory Drug Testing and Treatment
of Welfare Recipients (2000) (available at http://www.camh.net/best_advice/mandatory_drug_tests2000.html). [7] Brief of Amici Am.
Pub. Health Ass’n et al., Marchwinski v. Howard, 309 F.3d 330 (6th Cir. 2002)
(No. 00-2115), rev’d en banc, 2003 WL 1870916 (Apr. 7,
2003) (available at http://www.aclu.org/FilesPDFs/marchwinskiamicusbrief1_22_01.pdf). [8] U.S. Dep’t of
Educ., Robert L. DuPont, Teresa G. Campbell and Jacqueline J. Mazza, Report
of a Preliminary Study: Elements of a Successful School-Based Student Drug
Testing Program 8
(2002). [9] R. Brinkley
Smithers Inst., Cornell Univ., Workplace Substance Abuse Testing, Drug Testing: Cost and
Effect (Jan. 1992). [10] Oklahoma Dept. of Human Servs, “TANF: Focus
on Substance Abuse” (March 5, 1998) [11] Ctr. for
Addiction and Mental Health, Forcing
Welfare Recipients into Drug Testing and Treatment, (2001) (available at
http://www.camh.net/journal/journalv4no2/forcing_welfare_drugtests.html). [12] "Drugs
of Abuse Reference Guide," LabCorp Inc, Internet. Available:
http://www.labcorpsolutions.com/images/Drugs_of_Abuse_Reference_Guide_Flyer_3166.pdf [13] Nancy Young and
Sidney Gardner, Implementing Welfare Reform: Solutions to the Substance Abuse
Problem (1997). [14] New York Times,
Opposition to Plan to Test Welfare
Applicants For Drugs (1999). [15] The Lindesmith
Ctr., Drug Testing Welfare Applicants: A
Nationwide Survey of Policies, Practices, and Rationales (Nov.
1999). [16] Marchwinski v.
Howard, 113 F. Supp. 2d 1134 (E.D. Mich. 2000), aff’d, 60 F. App’x
601 (6th Cir. 2003) [17] The
Lindesmith Ctr., Drug Testing Welfare
Applicants: A Nationwide Survey of Policies, Practices, and Rationales (Nov.
1999) [18] Marchwinski v.
Howard, 113 F. Supp. 2d 1134, 1142 (E.D. Mich. 2000), aff’d, 2003 WL 1870916 (6th Cir. Apr. 7,
2003).
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