My 36 year old son is a paramedic/firefighter. Recently he applied for a job in a large department that recieved hundreds of applications. He scored #1 on the first round of written and oral review tests, and became one of 5 contenders for 3 openings.
Great. Then came the first part of the background investigation. His credit history has been excellent since he began working at age 16, he has never had as much as a traffic or parking violation, etc.
A few days after the first interview with the background investigator he recieved a letter informing him he was no longer being considered for the position, nor should he apply if future jobs became available in the department.
The investigator had told my son that they had even hired someone who had only been out of rehab a month for cocaine addiction, so to go ahead and tell him his entire drug history because it was unlikely to elimanate him. He fessed up.
In highschool (where he graduated 19 years ago), he smoked pot a few times, but didn't like it, and after about a month of experimenting with it quit and has not smoked it since. Fine. And one time, also in high school, when he was 16, he tried LSD. He hated it and has never done it since. Uh oh.
That was it. This is based on the belief that anyone who tried LSD even once in their life was always subject to flashbacks. This is why the letter informed him he would never be considered for this department.
Now this seems incredibly archaic to me. I understand that a certain high standard must be - or should be - expected of the people whose proffesions can mean life or death, but this seems over the top.
I have tried to find information that either proves or disproves the idea that a person - almost 20 years later - is subject to flashbacks. Can any one here help me find some answers?
Thanks everyone,
Julia
Great. Then came the first part of the background investigation. His credit history has been excellent since he began working at age 16, he has never had as much as a traffic or parking violation, etc.
A few days after the first interview with the background investigator he recieved a letter informing him he was no longer being considered for the position, nor should he apply if future jobs became available in the department.
The investigator had told my son that they had even hired someone who had only been out of rehab a month for cocaine addiction, so to go ahead and tell him his entire drug history because it was unlikely to elimanate him. He fessed up.
In highschool (where he graduated 19 years ago), he smoked pot a few times, but didn't like it, and after about a month of experimenting with it quit and has not smoked it since. Fine. And one time, also in high school, when he was 16, he tried LSD. He hated it and has never done it since. Uh oh.
That was it. This is based on the belief that anyone who tried LSD even once in their life was always subject to flashbacks. This is why the letter informed him he would never be considered for this department.
Now this seems incredibly archaic to me. I understand that a certain high standard must be - or should be - expected of the people whose proffesions can mean life or death, but this seems over the top.
I have tried to find information that either proves or disproves the idea that a person - almost 20 years later - is subject to flashbacks. Can any one here help me find some answers?
Thanks everyone,
Julia