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Georgia’s Medical Marijuana Law Includes No Employment-Discrimination Protection

05/21/15

Author: SuperUser Account/Monday, May 18, 2015/Categories: Georgia

Executive Summary

Coverage:  All employers with employees working in Georgia

Effective Dates: Currently in effect.

Overview:   Last month the state of Georgia legalized the use of a low-potency form of cannabis oil for medicinal uses. However, unlike many other medical marijuana laws enacted recently, the Georgia law contains no language protecting medical marijuana users from employment discrimination.

Action Required:   Contact your HR Business Partner for guidance concerning particular circumstances as needed.



The Details

The law provides considerable protections for employers from employees reporting to work or remaining on duty after consuming the drug. It states: “Nothing in this article shall require an employer to permit or accommodate the use, consumption, possession, transfer, display, transportation, sale or growing of marijuana in any form, or to affect the ability of an employer to have a written zero tolerance policy prohibiting the on-duty, and off-duty, use of marijuana, or prohibiting any employee from having a detectable amount of marijuana in such employee’s system while at work.”

The new law, House Bill 1, known as “Haleigh’s Hope Act,” permits patients suffering from cancer, Crohn’s disease, Lou Gehrig’s disease, mitochondrial disease, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, seizure disorders, and sickle cell disease to possess up to 20 ounces of “low THC oil.” The low-THC oil can contain no more than five percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive agent in marijuana. Smoking marijuana is not permitted under the law. (The Act is named after a child suffering from chronic seizure disorders who, having had hundreds of seizures a day, moved from Georgia to Colorado, where medical marijuana is legal.)

Although the law is effective immediately, the state Department of Public Health must promulgate rules and regulations for the establishment and operation of the patient registration process and dispensing of registry cards to individuals and caregivers. The law creates a Georgia Commission on Medical Cannabis to prepare comprehensive recommendations regarding the potential regulation of medical cannabis in the state, among other things. 

Despite the apparently employer-friendly language in the new law, employers are not relieved from complying with other legal requirements, such as any obligation to reasonably accommodate an employee’s underlying medical condition.   

Clients should contact their HR Business Partner to determine whether and how their particular circumstances are affected by the new law.

This content provides practical information concerning the subject matter covered and is provided with the understanding that ADP is not rendering legal advice.

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