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Marijuana Users Being Turned Away From Cannabis Industry Jobs

R

Robrites

One of the first rules of operating a successful black market drug dealing operation is to never get high on your own supply. Well, it turns out this thug-life ethos is being practiced by parts of the legal cannabis industry. Medical marijuana cultivation facilities, dispensaries and other pot-based businesses operating in the post-prohibition landscape are reportedly rejecting job applicants with a strong admiration for weed. Even those marred by marijuana-related criminal convictions are often turned away. The overall message is that while stoners and potheads may be the ones responsible for the present state of pot reform in America, they are, in a lot of cases, not welcome to work in weed.
In Florida, where the state’s medical marijuana market is just now starting to build some momentum, cannabis operations are in a frenzy to hire budtenders, cultivation experts and various other team members to assist in serving the hundreds of thousands of patients expected to participate in the program. The state already has around 147,000 patients in the pool, so finding quality, reliable talent to run the show is top of mind for most human resources managers.
However, the process is not going as smoothly as expected. Many of these businesses are simply refusing to hire marijuana users and people with drug-related blemishes on their record -- regardless of their qualifications. Such high standards have disqualified the majority of job applicants. Roughly only about “10 percent” of those who apply for positions in Florida's cannabis market are employable, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

This is not entirely the fault of the cannabis industry. Florida law dictates that all employees of medical marijuana operations be felony free. So while it is conceivable that a job applicant with a misdemeanor for pot possession could receive the green light to grow and sell marijuana in the legal sector, anyone convicted of engaging in these activities on the pre-legal scene can be automatically blacklisted.
In an attempt to combat this borderline hypocrisy, some job recruitment firms, like Miami-based HempStaff, are telling people interested in securing a cannabis industry job that, “they should avoid bringing up any illegal activity regarding cannabis in an interview.” Bragging about growing primo black market bud or being the top selling weed slinger in the county are not things that should be listed on a resume.


The no-stoners-allowed policy is not as problematic in states that have legalized the leaf for recreational use. In fact, a study published earlier this summer in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine found that a large percentage of cannabis industry workers in Colorado are getting high both before they go to work and during business hours. Researchers at Colorado State University found that 63 percent of the state’s cannabis industry employees showed up to the job high within the last month while another 45 percent admitted to getting stoned on the clock. So, obviously, there are plenty of cannabis companies hiring people passionate about maintaining a daily buzz.
Still, for those people not yet locked in to a lucrative pot job, it might be best to wait until after the interview to get high. The cannabis industry has been fighting hard to eliminate stoner stereotypes, so getting dabbed out of your gourd prior to discussing a career in cannabis with a company on the hook to investors for millions of dollars might not be the best way to make a solid first impression. The objective is to hear an HR manager say "you're hired," not "you're high...get out."


FORBES
 

Douglas.Curtis

Autistic Diplomat in Training
It works for the 'legal' industry. They don't know how to produce high quality cannabis, so it helps to have ignorant people working for them. Talk to the tens of thousands of Colorado workers who have left the industry already. Until things change it's best to be a clueless newbie in the ranks, since not knowing how messed up your work happens to be is a lot smoother on the psyche. ;)
 

gaiusmarius

me
Veteran
of course you can't blame the industry if the government makes such rules, unless the industry is going further then whats legally required. they shouldn't discriminate, give folks a chance and let them prove them selves as a worker whether they toke or not.
 

troutman

Seed Whore
Employers should only care that you can do the task at hand.

What you do on your time is of no concern to them.

Do employers fire people who get drunk on the weekend?
 

gaiusmarius

me
Veteran
Employers should only care that you can do the task at hand.

What you do on your time is of no concern to them.

Do employers fire people who get drunk on the weekend?

word brother! WORD!

the piss testing is just discrimination, they have also made it mandatory for many positions, but it's totally against the free market to force this bs on employers who force it on the employees. recreational drug use is no bodys business. if you can d the job in the way your boss wants it done, that should be it, as long as you not coming in drunk or reeking of weed etc, it shouldn't be an issue. they will lose some very talented people with this bullshit.

who watches boondocks? i said bullshit just like grampa says it on the show, almost bull sheet, but not quite. that show is so politically incorrect that im surprised that someone didnt start a petition to have it banned, lmao.

sorry for the off topic ramble there but that sheet is funny...
 
Pretty hypocritical, but this is all about (potential) workplace theft. I grew up with this guy who used to work for K Mart, and got busted stealing PS3s and X Box 360s when they first came out... Guy has only been able to work for family/friends since then.
 

PDX Dopesmoker

Active member
The double standards.

Its not double standards, the people who are willing to go to the government and beg permission to work in the weed store for minimum wage are not the same class of people who are willing to grow their own and sell it 3k/lebow. The type of free thinker who sees violating the law as a challenge, opportunity, calling or religious sacrament isn't a good fit for corporate hourly wage, by the book bullshit labor. Legal business bullshitters are smart enough to realize this and the average pothead should look on that as a bit of good luck rather than an insulting exclusion.
You're a bad fit for slavery, why does that offend you?
 
They probably assume the average stoner would just be trying to steal bud all day, in order to smoke themselves or sell to a buddy. Worst case scenario, guy who's slanging buds on the side gets caught and makes it look like the operation is selling to the black market.. Operation gets shut down..
 

Andyo

Active member
Veteran
Its not double standards, the people who are willing to go to the government and beg permission to work in the weed store for minimum wage are not the same class of people who are willing to grow their own and sell it 3k/lebow. The type of free thinker who sees violating the law as a challenge, opportunity, calling or religious sacrament isn't a good fit for corporate hourly wage, by the book bullshit labor. Legal business bullshitters are smart enough to realize this and the average pothead should look on that as a bit of good luck rather than an insulting exclusion.
You're a bad fit for slavery, why does that offend you?

Violating laws and growing weed made my life.
Defiance is a good life = non serf,non tax payer.A
 

siftedunity

cant re Member
Veteran
Employers should only care that you can do the task at hand.

What you do on your time is of no concern to them.

Do employers fire people who get drunk on the weekend?
no but they would fire them if they came to work drunk.


im not sue I could do most jobs as high as a kite...
 

MJPassion

Observer
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Pretty hypocritical, but this is all about (potential) workplace theft. I grew up with this guy who used to work for K Mart, and got busted stealing PS3s and X Box 360s when they first came out... Guy has only been able to work for family/friends since then.


Most STRICTLY stoners aren't thieves, IME. They're rather honest human beings. I might be paranoid though!


Definitely keep the meth heads outa the biz though.
I've not met an honest one in the lot!
 

MJPassion

Observer
ICMag Donor
Veteran
They probably assume the average stoner would just be trying to steal bud all day, in order to smoke themselves or sell to a buddy. Worst case scenario, guy who's slanging buds on the side gets caught and makes it look like the operation is selling to the black market.. Operation gets shut down..


I could see this before pot heads stealing from their jobs!
 

JustSumTomatoes

Indicas make dreams happen
Man these are some odd times indeed. Hiring employees based on whether or not they can pass drug tests for the legal drug you are selling to everyone else on the street while denying people the opportunity who did it before it was state legal, even though what these places are doing is still illegal and no bank can accept their deposits cause of it. Wait what?

As far as stoners being pot thieves in the business, couldn't this be applied to other professions? Drive cars and work on them, well you can't be a mechanic. Love destroying lives and lying, well you can't be a cop... Oh wait.
 
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