terex herder
Senior Member
![www.nytimes.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic01.nyt.com%2Fimages%2F2024%2F02%2F06%2Fmultimedia%2F06Construction-Overdose-qpch%2F06Construction-Overdose-qpch-facebookJumbo.jpg&hash=435b532d1562dc698630938088937d49&return_error=1)
Construction Industry Grapples With Its Top Killer: Drug Overdose
Construction workers are more likely to die of overdose than workers in any other occupation, forcing the industry to rethink its approach to safety.
There has always been homeless-But the main portion, probably 90% of homeless came fromI have a different recollection of the homeless part,
Yes it took place, Medical Lake released many on the streets. It was obvious, even little placesI'll check out your books. My opinion did not come from the media.
My dad's last job was as a special investigator for the DSHS, and his last office was in Steilacoom at Western Washington State hospital, from 1976~85. He observed it as it happened. Those people are long gone now as he is, but it was the beginning of a shift away from caring for the mentally ill.
LOL. Try being in a pool of one. When it was two of us, I still caught every test.Didn’t read article/ paywall.
My son frames houses and a lot of the framers are weed smokers and party with harder stuff on the weekends. He's sick of working with them.
I pre-employment drug test and everyone is in a random pool. I get to send myself in for randoms.
The best I had -was a potential employee, get all the way through interview to hiring, and then asked if he "could just work a couple weeks" until he could pass the drug test. Sorry bud, but it don't work like that.