Community Alternatives, Inc., fired April L. Collier for violating its drug-free workplace policy after she tested positive on a drug test. The Virginia Employment Commission (VEC) awarded Collier unemployment benefits. The circuit court reversed the award after concluding the VEC misapplied Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l), which precludes employees fired for testing positive for drug use from receiving unemployment benefits. Agreeing with the circuit court’s reasoning, we affirm.
I.
In August 2007, Collier began working for Community Alternatives, Inc. The employer maintained a drug-free workplace policy and required employees to submit to random drug screening. Collier signed the policy, verifying: “I understand procedures for testing and reviewing of results are conducted in accordance with recognized standards of the National Institute of Drug Administration.” App. at 14. Randomly selected for a drug test, Collier tested positive for marijuana use in September 2008.
The Sentara Medical Group collected the sample and forwarded it to Quest Diagnostics. Quest Diagnostics issued a report identifying the specimen tested, the test results, the date and time the sample was collected, received, and reported, and the “Certifying Scientist” who verified the results. The report also confirmed the specimen was received by Quest Diagnostics and processed in its “DHHS” certified lab. DHHS is an acronym
Based on the drug test results, the employer fired Collier for violating the drug-free workplace policy. Collier filed a claim with the VEC seeking unemployment benefits. In response, the employer argued Collier was ineligible for benefits under Code § 60.2 — 618(2)(b)(l) because she had been fired for misconduct. A VEC deputy claims examiner awarded benefits. The employer sought review by a VEC appeals examiner.
During the telephone conference hearing, the VEC appeals examiner asked for a chain-of-custody affirmation — which she explained as the “form the Claimant would sign-off on before giving her specimen to whoever’s conducting ... taking the specimen.” App. at 172. The employer’s representative replied, “I can try to find that and ... fax it to you if you want me to.” Id. The appeals examiner answered, “[i]f you do have it in her file, I would like for you to fax it please----” Id. The employer’s representative telefaxed the separate chain-of-custody affirmation to the VEC about an hour after the evidentiary hearing. Collier did not participate in the proceeding. Nor did she file any later statements contesting the authenticity of the chain-of-custody form or her signature on it. The VEC appeals examiner reversed the award.
Collier then requested a full VEC review of her claim. Acting with delegated power from the full VEC, a “special examiner” reversed the appeals examiner and reinstated the award. The special examiner refused to consider the employer’s chain-of-custody affirmation because the telefax was received after the telephonic hearing. Because the appeals examiner did not expressly “hold open the record,” the special examiner concluded, the VEC would not treat the chain-of-custody affirmation as an exhibit. The VEC special examiner then held the drug test was “insufficient” as a matter of law to establish a statutory prima facie case of misconduct because the test was not accompanied by a separate chain-of-custody affirmation. App. at 10. The VEC reached this conclusion even though Collier never challenged the chain of custody for her test specimen.
The employer appealed to the circuit court arguing that neither the statute nor the VEC administrative regulations required a separate chain-of-custody affirmation. The employer’s Petition for Judicial Review also pointed out that “Collier never challenged the chain of custody of her test specimen.” App. at 3. The VEC expressly admitted this fact in its Answer to Petition for Judicial Review. See Tr. Ct. R. at 24. 1 In a commendable abundance of judicial caution, the circuit court nonetheless remanded the case to the VEC to clarify whether it rejected the drug test as factually unreliable given the specific circumstances of this case or as insufficient as a matter of law to constitute a statutory prima facie showing of misconduct. See App. at 33-39.
On remand, the VEC restated its view that the statute required an employer in all cases (even cases in which no one contests the reliability of the drug test) to file a chain-of-custody affirmation in order to establish a prima facie showing of misconduct. The failure to do so, the VEC believed, was a fatal omission in any misconduct case based upon a positive drug test. In a detailed and thorough letter opinion, the circuit court reversed the VEC’s decision as inconsistent with Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l). The VEC appeals to us, asserting the circuit court erred in doing so.
II.
Under the Unemployment Benefits Act, “[t]he legislature intended unemployment benefits to be paid only to those who find themselves unemployed ‘without fault on their part.’ ”
Va. Emp’t Comm’n v. Trent, 55
Va.App. 560, 568,
Code § 60.2-618(2)(b) provides examples of disqualifying misconduct. By statute, misconduct includes, but is not limited to:
An employee’s confirmed positive test for a nonprescribed controlled substance, identified as such in Chapter 34 (§ 54.1-3400 et seq.) of Title 54.1, where such test was conducted at the direction of his employer in conjunction with the employer’s administration and enforcement of a known workplace drug policy. Such test shall have been performed, and a sample collected, in accordance with scientifically recognized standards by a laboratory accredited by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, or the College of American Pathology, or the American Association for Clinical Chemistry, or the equivalent, or shall have been a United States Department of Transportation [DOT]-qualified drug screen conducted in accordance with the employer’s bona fide drug policy. The Commission may consider evidence of mitigating circumstances in determining whether misconduct occurred.
Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l) (added to Code § 60.2-618 by 1998 Va. Acts ch. 241 and 2008 Va. Acts ch. 719). Subsection 2(b)(1) breaks down into a simple premise: An employer makes a prima facie showing of misconduct by presenting a “confirmed positive test” that satisfies three requirements:
• the test was conducted pursuant to a “known workplace drug policy,”
• the testing and sampling were performed “in accordance with scientifically recognized standards,” and
• the testing lab was “accredited” or the test was a DOT qualified drug screen.
Id. 2 Once the employer presents a prima facie case, the burden shifts to the claimant to present “mitigating circumstances” which the VEC may consider “in determining whether misconduct occurred.” Id.
The question we must answer is whether this statute expressly or implicitly requires the employer to present a separate chain-of-custody affirmation to establish a
prima facie
case of misconduct. Our analysis should begin, “as always, with the language of the statute.”
Meador v. Va. Birth-Related Neurological Injury Comp. Program,
The text of Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l) nowhere states the drug test results are
per se
invalid without a separate chain-of-custody affirmation. Instead, subsection (2)(b)(l) merely requires the test be performed, and the sample collected, in accordance with “scientifically recognized standards.” Conspicuously absent from subsection (2)(b)(l) is any freestanding statutory requirement that the drug test be accompanied by a separate chain-of-custody affirmation. Nor can the putative requirement be implied from the procedural guidelines governing VEC evidentiary hearings. By statute, they “need not conform to common law or statutory rules of evidence and other technical rules of procedure.”
It is not as if the General Assembly has never addressed the chain-of-custody concept in the context of scientific testing. Code § 19.2-187.01, for example, considers certificates of analysis issued by the “Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services, the Department of Forensic Science or any of its regional laboratories, or by any laboratory authorized by such Division or Department, ... [as] prima facie evidence that the person receiving the material was an authorized agent and that such receipt constitutes proper receipt by the laboratory for purposes of this section.” Code § 19.2-327.1(A) addresses the “chain of custody” showing necessary for a felon seeking a new post-conviction scientific investigation of any human biological evidence. Code § 20-49.3 states the “documentary evidence of the chain of custody” essential for admission of genetic tests in parentage proceedings. That the General Assembly has specifically addressed the chain-of-custody concept on several occasions, but did not do so here, implies a specific legislative choice.
In response, the VEC contends that even though “Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l) does not mention ‘chain of custody’ by name,” it can be implied from the statutory requirement that the testing and sample collection be performed pursuant to “scientifically recognized standards.” App. at 43-41. We agree with the thread of reasoning underlying this argument but fail to see how it leads to the VEC’s conclusion.
It stands to reason that “scientifically recognized standards” — if truly scientific and well recognized — would seek to ensure the sample collected for testing is in fact the sample actually tested. See, e.g., DHHS’s Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs, 69 Fed.Reg. 19644 (April 13, 2004) (requiring testers to ensure the sample’s chain of custody) (later revisions summarized at 75 Fed.Reg. 22809 (April 30, 2010)). That truism, however, does not mean an accredited laboratory cannot provide certified test results without separately verifying this assertion. If we were to infer anything, it would be that an accredited laboratory would not certify its findings if they did not rest upon a secure chain-of-custody foundation. The absence of a separate document in addition to the certified lab results does not necessarily imply the lab failed to follow proper chain of custody protocols.
However one parses the statutory language, the VEC concludes, it has consistently imposed a separate-document requirement affirming the chain of custody and, thus, we should defer to its interpretation of the statute. We decline the invitation to do so. While VEC factfinding receives the highest degree of appellate deference,
Trent,
The narrow nature of our holding, however, should not be overlooked. Like the circuit court, we reject only the VEC’s broad view that a positive drug test can never constitute a prima facie case of misconduct under Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l) unless accompanied by a separate chain-of-custody affirmation. We hold only that a positive drug test, without any additional chain-of-custody affirmation, presents a prima facie case of misconduct if the test complies with Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l).
That said, we do not mean to invert the VEC’s error by implying chain-of-custody affirmations can play no role in the decisionmaking process. In cases where, unlike
III.
Because the circuit court correctly interpreted Code § 60.2-618(2)(b)(l), we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This factual concession constituted a binding judicial admission, conclusively establishing an unchallenged chain of custody.
See generally Jones
v.
Ford Motor Co.,
. Proof of a positive drug test, however, is not the sole means of proving disqualifying misconduct based on drug use.
See, e.g., Barkley v. Peninsula Transp. Dist. Comm'n,
.
Accord Snyder v. Va. Emp't Comm’n,
