January 28, 2011 3:55 AM PST
Having been a welfare recipient, with a child, and also a former addiction problem, I, too, wonder what happens then?
While I think Missouri, or any other state is well within their right to drug test, (Do they get booted off for alcohol?) what happens to the people who have come to depend on this help, and without it, would go homeless? For those about to apply, it's a greater deterrent. Having walked in these shoes, I can tell you, simply getting kicked off the dole, so to speak, won't help the one's with addiction, and certainly won't benefit the children. It just puts them all in a more desperate situation. They really need a better solution, like real help, not just referrals to this or that entity, which usually ends up NOT being covered by medicaid, so the wheels just keep spinning. I was one of the fortunate ones, who came out the other side. My homelessness wasn't caused by using. That was the economy. But the mere fact of the matter is, until this government can offer real solutions to real problems, they are just wasting OUR money paying for drug testing. Ride Free
Tweek
January 28, 2011 11:09 AM PST
As I said in the other thread, there will no doubt be a lot of work to be done to be sure this is done accurately and fairly for all persons involved. I've been on welfare and I'd have no trouble submitting to a drug screen just as I do with work. Welfare was meant to help people get back on their feet, not sustain a lifestyle. There are too many programs out there for people to just sit at home and collect our tax dollars.
In regards to medical marijuana, if the patient has a prescription, then it's considered a negative result if it's legal in that state to use the medication. If it's just someone lighting up a joint then it's illegal, same as meth, crack, and other substances.
There's no easy answer to this situation, nor is there one simple solution. But I still have a problem with people on welfare who live and eat better than me because I'm the one paying for THEM to sit at home while I bust my duff at work all week. There IS real help out there, but that would mean a lot of folks going and getting it. Unfortunately, a lot of them simply don't want it. There are programs to train people for new careers, day cares to help with watching their kids, housing allowances, clothing banks, and so much more. Welfare was not meant to sustain people for a lifetime but rather help them out of the situation they are trying to recover from.
Drug tests aren't that expensive anyway, so I don't really think the burden on the taxpayers is going to be substantial. I've also worked for the state in retraining people for new careers and the those who really wanted the help, got it. Those who didn't, quit.
I can't do drugs and work, so why should someone be able to do drugs and reap from what I earn?