Non-DOT Urine — Introduction
Non-DOT urine collection — also called workplace urine collection — is the lab-based drug testing method used by employers outside the DOT-regulated transportation sector. The specimen is collected at a site, shipped to a lab for full immunoassay + GC/MS confirmation, and results route through an MRO. This module covers the full collection procedure for non-DOT lab-based testing.
What This Module Covers
- Who can serve as a non-DOT urine collector
- Where collections take place and how to set up the site
- The non-DOT chain-of-custody form (varies by lab)
- The collection procedure step-by-step
- Handling shy bladder, refusals, tampering, and temperature issues
- Documentation that makes the result defensible
Who This Is For
Current and prospective non-DOT urine collectors, clinic staff, HR generalists handling workplace testing, and anyone setting up an in-house non-DOT testing program.
DOT vs. Non-DOT Urine — At a Glance
| Element | DOT (Part 40) | Non-DOT |
|---|---|---|
| Federal regulation | 49 CFR Part 40 | None (employer policy) |
| Collector qualification | §40.33 | Voluntary / lab IFU |
| Form | Federal CCF (5-part) | Non-DOT form (3-4 part) |
| Lab | HHS-certified only | Any qualified lab |
| Split specimen | Required | Optional (lab-dependent) |
| Panel | Federal 5-panel | 5, 10, expanded — employer chooses |
| MRO review | Required | Strongly recommended |
| Refusal consequences | SAP + RTD required | Per employer policy |
Regulatory Context
Non-DOT urine testing is governed by employer policy, state workplace drug testing laws, and (when used clinically) CLIA. There's no federal Part 40 equivalent — but most defensible programs follow Part 40 procedures voluntarily.
The Legal Framework
Non-DOT workplace urine testing operates under multiple overlapping rules:
- Employer written policy — must be distributed to employees and acknowledged in writing before testing
- State workplace drug testing law — varies widely; some states (FL, GA, OH and others) have voluntary "drug-free workplace" programs with insurance incentives
- CLIA — only if devices used at collection are CLIA-Waived AND the program is clinical (rare for non-DOT employment testing)
- FUO (Forensic Use Only) — most non-DOT employment testing is treated as forensic, removing it from clinical CLIA scope
- ADA / EEOC — testing for current illegal drugs is allowed; testing that reveals lawful medication use can raise disability discrimination issues
State Variations
A handful of states regulate non-DOT testing more heavily:
- CA · California — state CLIA layer, marijuana-use protections (2024)
- MD · Maryland — state CLIA, specific notice rules
- PA · Pennsylvania — state CLIA + occupational testing license
- RI · Rhode Island — state CLIA, reasonable suspicion limits
- NY · New York — partial alternative program, marijuana protections
- WA · Washington — full alternative program, marijuana protections
Why Follow Part 40 Procedures Voluntarily?
Even though Part 40 doesn't apply, most defensible non-DOT programs follow its procedures voluntarily because:
- Part 40 is the most-litigated and most-defended testing protocol in the country
- Plaintiff's counsel will compare your procedure to Part 40 if a result is challenged
- Labs prefer it — easier intake, fewer fatal flaws
- MROs require it for proper verification
The Collector
A non-DOT urine collector verifies the donor, prepares the site, manages the chain of custody, packages the specimen, and ships to the lab. No federal qualification standard applies — but lab IFU compliance and training records do.
What a Non-DOT Collector Does
- Verifies donor identity per employer policy
- Prepares the site and supplies
- Walks the donor through the procedure
- Receives the specimen, verifies temperature + volume
- Manages the chain of custody form
- Seals, packages, and ships to the lab
Conflicts of Interest
Mirror the DOT exclusions even though they're not regulated:
- ! Don't collect for the donor's direct supervisor
- ! Don't collect for a close relative or close friend
- ! Don't collect for yourself
- ! Avoid testing co-workers in a small office where the appearance of bias is high
Recommended Training
- Knowledge of non-DOT vs DOT differences
- Lab-specific IFU walkthroughs (the CCF form differs by lab)
- 5+ supervised mock collections
- Annual refresher
- Documented per-collector training records
The Collection Site
A non-DOT urine collection site has the same privacy + security needs as a DOT site. The "right way" is the same: restroom with bluing, secure work area, no adulterant access.
Site Requirements
- 1Single-stall restroom OR multi-stall with controls (others sealed)
- 2Bluing in the toilet bowl AND tank water
- 3Water sources secured (faucet shut off OR taped)
- 4No accessible soap, cleaners, disinfectants, perfumes
- 5Clean work surface adjacent for the form + supplies
- 6Privacy — no observers, no traffic during collection
Security During Collection
- Donor under continuous observation outside the restroom
- Outer clothing (coats, jackets) removed before entering restroom
- Pockets emptied; nothing in hand except the collection container
- Specimen never leaves the collector's view after the donor exits
- Sealed specimen stored in secure / restricted-access area pre-shipment
Why Bluing?
Bluing agent is the first line of defense against substitution — a donor can't fill a cup with toilet water if the water is blue. Add to both the bowl AND the tank. Cheap and effective.
Supplies & Kit Contents
Non-DOT collection kits are different from DOT kits — the form is non-federal, the bottles may differ, and the lab supplies its own preferred packaging. Always use what your lab partner supplies.
Standard Kit Contents
- Collection cup with temperature strip (90–100°F) and integrated lid or separate seal
- Specimen bottle(s) — single bottle OR split A/B per program
- Non-DOT CCF — lab-supplied (LabCorp, Quest, CRL, etc.)
- Tamper-evident seals for bottle(s)
- Leak-resistant transport bag with absorbent material
- Shipping box / lab pouch
- Gloves
- Bluing agent (toilet + tank)
Pre-Collection Kit Check
- Kit expiration date current
- Seals present and intact
- CCF matches the lab in your employer's contract
- Lot number recorded
- Cup temperature strip undamaged
Lab IFU
Every lab provides Instructions for Use specific to their kit. Read them before your first collection with that lab. Differences include split-bottle vs single-bottle, seal placement, packaging order. Keep printed IFUs at the collection site.
The Non-DOT Custody & Control Form
The non-DOT Custody & Control Form is the legal chain of custody for workplace testing. Forms vary by lab — LabCorp, Quest, Clinical Reference Lab, and others each have their own. Most are 3- or 4-part carbonless.
Non-DOT CCF Components
Form layout varies by lab, but standard fields include:
- Donor name, SSN/ID, date of birth
- Employer name + address + DER contact
- Reason for test (pre-employment, RS, post-accident, random)
- Panel ordered (5-panel, 10-panel, expanded opioids)
- Collection date + time
- Specimen ID number(s) — must match bottle label(s)
- Specimen temperature (in range / out of range)
- Specimen volume confirmation
- Collector signature + printed name + date + time
- Donor signature + date + phone
- Seal numbers
- Courier / lab routing
Copy Distribution
| Copy | Goes To |
|---|---|
| 1 | Lab — with specimen |
| 2 | MRO (if applicable) |
| 3 | Employer / DER |
| 4 | Donor |
Employer Information
For non-DOT testing, the employer or testing program supplies the donor data, panel, lab, and MRO routing. Always confirm a non-negative pathway is in place BEFORE you collect.
Required from Employer
- Donor name + ID number
- Employer name + DER contact
- Reason for test
- Panel (5, 10, expanded)
- Lab name + shipping address
- MRO contact (essential for non-negative routing)
- Whether observed collection is requested
Donor ID & Eligibility
Donor identity verification follows employer policy. Photo ID is standard. The donor must agree to the collection — non-DOT programs are consent-based.
Acceptable ID
- Government photo ID (driver's license, passport, military)
- Employer photo badge
- In-person ID by an employer representative
Reasons to Defer or Reject
- ! No ID and no employer representative present
- ! Donor visibly impaired to the point of being unable to consent
- ! Donor refuses to provide a signature on the chain of custody
- ! Donor refuses to remove outer clothing or empty pockets
Medication Disclosure
Do not ask the donor about medications at the collection site. The MRO handles all medical-explanation interviews after a non-negative result. Asking at the site invites bias and adds nothing to a defensible test.
The Collection Procedure
The non-DOT urine collection mirrors the DOT 23-step procedure with a few simplifications: no observed-collection default, no requirement for split A/B (though most labs prefer it), no §40 documentation mandates.
The Procedure
Prep the Site
Bluing in, water sources secured, work surface clean.
Verify ID
Photo ID. Match name on form.
Explain Procedure
Walk through the steps; show donor the form.
Complete CCF Step 1
Employer, donor, panel, reason, MRO routing.
Outer Clothing + Pockets
Coats, jackets removed. Pockets emptied. Items displayed.
Donor Washes Hands
Under observation. No water access after.
Provide the Cup
Donor (or both of you) opens the sealed cup in your view. Donor enters restroom alone with cup only.
Donor Provides Specimen
At least 30 mL (lab-dependent). No flushing. Returns ASAP.
Verify Temperature — within 4 minutes
Strip must read 90–100°F. Out of range = follow tampering protocol.
Verify Volume + Appearance
Sufficient quantity; normal color (not blue); no foreign material.
Pour Into Bottle(s)
You — not the donor — pour. If split, follow lab IFU for A/B volumes.
Apply Seals
Tamper-evident seals on each bottle. Date them. Donor initials each seal.
Complete CCF Step 2
Temperature, volume, anomalies in Remarks. Collector signature.
Donor Completes CCF Step 5
Donor signs, dates, phone.
Package + Seal Bag
Bottle(s) + Copy 1 → leak-resistant pouch. Seal.
Distribute Copies
Copy 4 to donor. Others per program routing.
Ship
Same business day if possible. No later than next business day.
When Things Go Sideways
Same disruptors as DOT: shy bladder, refusal, tampering, temperature out of range. Response is similar but driven by employer policy + lab IFU rather than §40.
Shy Bladder
Same protocol as DOT:
Discontinue First Attempt
Document start time.
Fluid Period
Up to 40 oz over 3 hours.
If Still Insufficient
Stop, document, notify DER. Employer may require medical evaluation.
Temperature Out of Range
- ! Below 90°F or above 100°F = suspect tampering
- Document the actual reading on the CCF
- Per most program policies: start a second observed collection
- Send the original to the lab too — they can test for adulterants
Observed Collection
Non-DOT observed collections are employer-policy driven — not required by federal regulation. Common triggers:
- Temperature out of range
- Signs of tampering (color, odor, suspected device)
- Return-to-work after a previous positive (employer choice)
Refusal Triggers
- ! Refuses to provide specimen
- ! Leaves the site before collection complete
- ! Refuses to sign chain of custody
- ! Caught adulterating or substituting
- ! Refuses observed collection when required
Training & Documentation
Non-DOT collectors don't have a federal qualification standard. But documented training, lab-specific IFU compliance, and ongoing QC keep the program defensible if a result is challenged.
Recommended Training Path
- aRead this module + the Part 40 Foundations module
- bLab-specific IFU walkthrough for every lab you use
- c5+ supervised mock collections (mix of uneventful + problem scenarios)
- dAnnual refresher
- eDocumented per-collector + per-lab certification
Recommended Retention
| Record | Period |
|---|---|
| Negative CCFs | 1 year |
| Non-negative CCFs + lab reports | 5 years |
| Refusals / RS / post-accident records | 5 years |
| Collector training records | While active + 2 years |
| Kit lot numbers / QC logs | 2 years |
Best Practices
Most non-DOT collection problems come from the same place as DOT: skipping temperature check, applying seals out of view, weak chain of custody. Build a checklist.
Top 10 Non-DOT Urine Mistakes
- 1Missing the 4-minute temperature check
- 2Letting the donor enter restroom with pockets full
- 3Walking away from the specimen, even briefly
- 4Applying seals out of donor view
- 5Forgetting bluing → donor dilutes with toilet water
- 6Not documenting anomalies in Remarks
- 7Letting the donor pour into bottles
- 8Forgetting donor initials on seals
- 9Asking the donor about medications
- 10No MRO pathway in place for non-negatives
Best Practices Checklist
- Follow Part 40 procedures voluntarily — sets the defensibility ceiling high
- Temperature within 4 minutes — no exceptions
- Keep the specimen in donor view through sealing
- Use Remarks for every anomaly
- Confirm non-negative pathway BEFORE you collect
- Photograph the specimen + seal if program permits and a dispute is foreseeable
- When in doubt, treat it like a DOT collection
When you're ready, contact us about live mock-collection sessions or program setup.