Reasonable suspicion situations are where weak programs fail fastest. Supervisors need a simple path: observe, document, escalate, act. The more complicated the process feels, the more likely a manager is to delay action or create inconsistent records.

What supervisors should document

Documentation should focus on observable facts: speech, coordination, smell, behavior change, appearance, and safety concerns. Avoid speculation or medical conclusions. The goal is to preserve what was actually observed.

When mobile testing helps most

If an employee is already at the jobsite, warehouse, office, or yard, mobile collection keeps the process controlled and shortens the time between observation and collection.

Supervisor checklist

  • Pause the employee from safety-sensitive work
  • Have a second manager confirm when possible
  • Write observations immediately
  • Call the collection vendor with exact location
  • Document who authorized the test

Program risk to avoid

The biggest risk is inconsistency. Similar situations should be handled through the same policy path every time.

Need a faster setup? On Point Drug Testing can help you build a mobile testing workflow for new hires, random selections, post-accident collections, and same-day service across San Diego County. Contact us or call 619-241-4415.