[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 49, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 49CFR40.61]

[Page 597-598]
 
                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION
 
          SUBTITLE A--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION
 
PART 40--PROCEDURES FOR TRANSPORTATION WORKPLACE DRUG AND ALCOHOL TESTING PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart E--Urine Specimen Collections
 
Sec. 40.61  What are the preliminary steps in the collection process?


    As the collector, you must take the following steps before actually 
beginning a collection:
    (a) When a specific time for an employee's test has been scheduled, 
or the collection site is at the employee's work site, and the employee 
does not appear at the collection site at the scheduled time, contact 
the DER to determine the appropriate interval within which the DER has 
determined the employee is authorized to arrive. If the employee's 
arrival is delayed beyond that time, you must notify the DER that the 
employee has not reported for testing. In a situation where a C/TPA has 
notified an owner/operator or other individual employee to report for 
testing and the employee does not appear, the C/TPA must notify the 
employee that he or she has refused to test (see Sec. 40.191(a)(1)).
    (b) Ensure that, when the employee enters the collection site, you 
begin the testing process without undue delay. For example, you must not 
wait because the employee says he or she is not ready or is unable to 
urinate or because an authorized employer or employee representative is 
delayed in arriving.
    (1) If the employee is also going to take a DOT alcohol test, you 
must, to the greatest extent practicable, ensure that the alcohol test 
is completed before the urine collection process begins.

    Example to Paragraph (b)(1): An employee enters the test site for 
both a drug and an alcohol test. Normally, the collector would wait 
until the BAT had completed the alcohol test process before beginning 
the drug test process. However, there are some situations in which an 
exception to this normal practice would be reasonable. One such 
situation might be if several people were waiting for the BAT to conduct 
alcohol tests, but a drug testing collector in the same facility

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were free. Someone waiting might be able to complete a drug test without 
unduly delaying his or her alcohol test. Collectors and BATs should work 
together, however, to ensure that post-accident and reasonable suspicion 
alcohol tests happen as soon as possible (e.g., by moving the employee 
to the head of the line for alcohol tests).

    (2) If the employee needs medical attention (e.g., an injured 
employee in an emergency medical facility who is required to have a 
post-accident test), do not delay this treatment to collect a specimen.
    (3) You must not collect, by catheterization or other means, urine 
from an unconscious employee to conduct a drug test under this part. Nor 
may you catheterize a conscious employee. However, you must inform an 
employee who normally voids through self-catheterization that the 
employee is required to provide a specimen in that manner.
    (4) If, as an employee, you normally void through self-
catheterization, and decline to do so, this constitutes a refusal to 
test.
    (c) Require the employee to provide positive identification. You 
must see a photo ID issued by the employer (other than in the case of an 
owner-operator or other self-employed individual) or a Federal, state, 
or local government (e.g., a driver's license). You may not accept faxes 
or photocopies of identification. Positive identification by an employer 
representative (not a co-worker or another employee being tested) is 
also acceptable. If the employee cannot produce positive identification, 
you must contact a DER to verify the identity of the employee.
    (d) If the employee asks, provide your identification to the 
employee. Your identification must include your name and your employer's 
name, but does not have to include your picture, address, or telephone 
number.
    (e) Explain the basic collection procedure to the employee, 
including showing the employee the instructions on the back of the CCF.
    (f) Direct the employee to remove outer clothing (e.g., coveralls, 
jacket, coat, hat) that could be used to conceal items or substances 
that could be used to tamper with a specimen. You must also direct the 
employee to leave these garments and any briefcase, purse, or other 
personal belongings with you or in a mutually agreeable location. You 
must advise the employee that failure to comply with your directions 
constitutes a refusal to test.
    (1) If the employee asks for a receipt for any belongings left with 
you, you must provide one.
    (2) You must allow the employee to keep his or her wallet.
    (3) You must not ask the employee to remove other clothing (e.g., 
shirts, pants, dresses, underwear), to remove all clothing, or to change 
into a hospital or examination gown (unless the urine collection is 
being accomplished simultaneously with a DOT agency-authorized medical 
examination).
    (4) You must direct the employee to empty his or her pockets and 
display the items in them to ensure that no items are present which 
could be used to adulterate the specimen. If nothing is there that can 
be used to adulterate a specimen, the employee can place the items back 
into his or her pockets. As the employee, you must allow the collector 
to make this observation.
    (5) If, in your duties under paragraph (f)(4) of this section, you 
find any material that could be used to tamper with a specimen, you 
must:
    (i) Determine if the material appears to be brought to the 
collection site with the intent to alter the specimen, and, if it is, 
conduct a directly observed collection using direct observation 
procedures (see Sec. 40.67); or
    (ii) Determine if the material appears to be inadvertently brought 
to the collection site (e.g., eye drops), secure and maintain it until 
the collection process is completed and conduct a normal (i.e., 
unobserved) collection.
    (g) You must instruct the employee not to list medications that he 
or she is currently taking on the CCF. (The employee may make notes of 
medications on the back of the employee copy of the form for his or her 
own convenience, but these notes must not be transmitted to anyone 
else.)

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