Our local DOT drug and alcohol testing centers are located in Lehighton PA and the surrounding areas providing DOT drug testing, DOT alcohol testing and DOT physicals for all DOT modes regulated by Part 40. Same day service is available at our Lehighton PA DOT drug testing facilities and most of our DOT drug testing locations are within minutes of your home or office.
What type of DOT Testing is required?
Coastal Drug Testing provides DOT pre-employment, random, post-accident, reasonable suspicion and return to duty testing at our Lehighton PA DOT drug testing centers.
If you hold a CDL license, a large, medium or a small trucking company, Coastal Drug Testing has a complete DOT compliance package which includes all the requirements to comply with CFR 49 part 40.
All Coastal Drug Testing DOT drug testing centers utilize SAMHSA Certified laboratories and a licensed Medical Review Officer as required by DOT part 40 regulations.
The U.S Department of Transportation (DOT) requires that all DOT regulated "safety sensitive" employees have a negative DOT pre-employment drug test result on file and be actively enrolled in a DOT approved random drug and alcohol random testing pool (consortium).
In addition, if a DOT regulated company has more than one "safety sensitive" employee, the employer must also have a written DOT drug and alcohol policy along with an on-site supervisor that must have completed a reasonable suspicion supervisor training program.
On the road and need a DOT Drug or Alcohol test? No Worries!
To be compliant with DOT regulations, a company's DOT drug and alcohol testing program must have the following components:
- Employee Drug Testing
- Written Drug and Alcohol Policy
- Supervisor Training
- Substance Abuse Referral
- Employee Education
- Random Selection Program
- Post Accident Testing
- Designated Employer Representative
- Federal Chain of Custody Forms
- Part 40 Regulations on File
The Department of Transportation (DOT) has specific drug and alcohol testing requirements for the all transportation modes all DOT agencies.
Our modes included are:
- Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
- Federal Transit Administration (FTA)
- United States Coast Guard (USCG)
- Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)
- Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
Are You Enrolled in a DOT Consortium?
Individuals who are employed in a position designated as "safety sensitive" must be actively enrolled in a random drug and alcohol testing program. Oftentimes, covered employees will join a group of other DOT regulated employees in a random testing program and this is referred to as a DOT Consortium. Generally, an employer who has less than fifty employees or single operators will join the consortium which will comply with the random drug and alcohol testing requirements of 49 CFR Part 40. Employers that have over 50 employees who are regulated by Part 40 may elect to be enrolled in a "stand alone" random testing pool.
The DOT consortium is cost effective and complies with all requirements of 49 CFR Part 40 which mandates that all "safety sensitive" employees be enrolled in a random drug and alcohol testing program.
The Department of Transportation (DOT) has strict regulations requiring regulated companies and independent operators (CDL License Holders) to be an active member of a DOT drug and alcohol Consortium and failure to comply with these regulations can result in significant fines and other DOT sanctions.
We are fully versed in the DOT procedures for pre-employment drug testing, random drug testing, reasonable suspicion drug testing, post-accident drug testing, return to duty drug testing and follow up drug testing.
DOT regulated companies with multiple safety sensitive employees must also have an employee within the company who is assigned as the "designated employer representative" (DER). This is the person responsible for removing any DOT "safety sensitive" employee who is covered by 49 CFR Part 40 from performing a DOT safety sensitive position when a positive drug or alcohol test result has occurred or an employee has refused to take a required DOT test.
If you have recently become a DOT regulated company, within the next 18 months the Department of Transportation (DOT) will conduct a "new entrant" inspection to ensure that you are in compliance with all DOT regulations including the drug and alcohol testing requirements. If you are currently a DOT regulated company, you are subject to regular inspections to ensure compliance.
Avoid DOT fines, penalties and be complaint with all DOT drug and alcohol testing regulations! Coastal Drug Testing can assist small, medium and large DOT companies in complying with all requirements of 49 CFR Part 40.
DOT Drug Testing Locations in Lehighton PA
239 N 1st St 0.3 miles
Lehighton, PA 18235
211 N 12TH ST 0.7 miles
LEHIGHTON, PA 18235
1104 NORTH ST 3.3 miles
JIM THORPE, PA 18229
135 LAFAYETTE AVE 5.6 miles
PALMERTON, PA 18071
34 S RAILROAD ST 13.7 miles
TAMAQUA, PA 18252
231 CLAREMONT AVE 14.0 miles
TAMAQUA, PA 18252
1749 E BROAD ST 14.4 miles
HAZELTON, PA 18201
700 E BROAD ST 15.3 miles
HAZLETON, PA 18201
271 N CEDAR ST 15.8 miles
HAZLETON, PA 18201
20 N Laurel St, 16.0 miles
Hazleton, PA 18201
101 S CHURCH ST 16.1 miles
HAZLETON, PA 18201
1097B N CHURCH ST 16.9 miles
HAZLETON, PA 18202
1636 ROUTE 209, 111 17.2 miles
BRODHEADSVILLE, PA 18322
1324 N CHURCH ST STE 2 17.3 miles
HAZLE TOWNSHIP, PA 18202
400 N 17TH ST STE 207 FAIRGROUNDS MEDICAL CENTER 17.7 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
2069 Route 209, Lower Level 17.9 miles
Brodheadsville, PA 18322
1503 N Cedar Crest Blvd 18.1 miles
Allentown, PA 18104
4825 W TILGHMAN ST 18.6 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
4815 W TILGHMAN ST 18.6 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
FASHION DR 18.6 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18109
4144 W TILGHMAN ST 18.8 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
50 MOISEY DR STE 208 19.0 miles
HAZLE TOWNSHIP, PA 18202
227 S ROUTE 100 19.0 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18106
501 CETRONIA RD STE 105 19.1 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
1000 ALLIANCE DR 19.2 miles
HAZLETON, PA 18202
100 COMMUNITY DR STE 102 19.4 miles
TOBYHANNA, PA 18466
1608 W Allen St, 19.5 miles
Allentown, PA 18102
951 N 4TH ST 19.5 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18102
2015 W HAMILTON ST 19.8 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
1791 Airport Rd 19.8 miles
Allentown, PA 18109
2015 WEST HAMILTON ST, STE 104 20.0 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18104
1101 W HAMILTON ST STE 529 20.3 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18101
536 W COURT ST STE 105 20.3 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18101
1770 BATHGATE RD STE 200 20.4 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18017
153 BRODHEAD RD 20.5 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18017
6900 HAMILTON BLVD STE 145 20.5 miles
TREXLERTOWN, PA 18087
5325 NORTHGATE DR 20.6 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18017
1101 S Cedar Crest Blvd 20.7 miles
Allentown, PA 18103
2045 Westgate Dr Bldg Ste306, 20.8 miles
Bethlehem, PA 18017
1243 S CEDAR CREST BLVD 21.0 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18103
487 E MOORESTOWN RD STE 103 21.2 miles
WIND GAP, PA 18091
1251 S Cedar Crest Blvd, 21.2 miles
Allentown, PA 18103
2300 HIGHLAND AVE 21.3 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18020
2310 HIGHLAND AVE 21.3 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18020
1411 JACOBSBURG RD 21.5 miles
WIND GAP, PA 18091
2100 MACK BLVD 22.0 miles
ALLENTOWN, PA 18103
25 South Broad Street, Suite 102 22.1 miles
Nazareth, PA 18064
35 E ELIZABETH AVE 22.5 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18018
801 OSTRUM ST 22.9 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18015
Caramoor Village, 6465 Village Lane 22.9 miles
Macungie, PA 18062
406 Delaware Ave, 23.0 miles
Bethlehem, PA 18015
111 E Harrison St, 23.0 miles
Emmaus, PA 18049
1380 NACE AVE 23.7 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18015
1120 CENTRE TPKE 24.0 miles
ORWIGSBURG, PA 17961
4333 Easton Ave, Suite A 24.0 miles
Bethlehem, PA 18020
300 STROUD BUILDING Route 611 24.1 miles
STROUDSBURG, PA 18360
400-B South 4th Street, 24.1 miles
Hamburg, PA 19526
3601 Nazareth Rd, 24.4 miles
Easton, PA 18045
3941 FREEMANSBURG AVE 24.5 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18020
2101 EMRICK BLVD 1ST FL 24.9 miles
BETHLEHEM, PA 18020
(Don't see a location near you? Call us (800) 828-7086)
Local Area Info: Lehighton, Pennsylvania
Lehighton is a borough in Carbon County, Pennsylvania, United States, 77 miles (124 km) north of Philadelphia, and 54 miles (87 km) south of Scranton. In the past, it developed early industries because of water power from the Lehigh River. With the location of a repair facility here and its regional operations, the Lehigh Valley Railroad became for years a major employer of thousands of people from the area. Post-World War II railroad and industry restructuring led to job and population losses.
At the time of the first European's encounters with historic American Indian tribes, this area was part of the shared hunting territory of the Iroquoian Susquehannock and the Algonquian Lenape (also called the Delaware, after their language and territory along the Delaware River) peoples, who were often at odds. Relatives of the peoples of New England and along the St. Lawrence valley of Canada, the Delaware bands occupied much of the coastal mid-Atlantic area in Delaware, New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania and lower eastern New York, including Long Island. The Susquehannock confederacy's homelands were mainly along the Susquehanna River, from the Mohawk Valley in lower New York southerly to the Chesapeake and Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, but may have ranged into the 'empty lands' of West Virginia, Eastern Ohio, and Western Pennsylvania. The Dutch and Swedes first settled the Delaware Valley, and found the area north of the Lehigh Gap to be lightly occupied, probably by transients, but traveled regularly by the Susquehannock. This tribe traveled quite a bit according to the American Heritage Book of Indians, including being described in lofty terms by John Smith when a band visited the new Jamestown, Virginia colony. In the decades of the Beaver Wars in the mid-1600s, the Susquehannocks conquered and made the Lenape a tributary tribe — and also nearly inflicted an overwhelming defeat on the powerful Iroquois Confederacy,. Shortly thereafter, the Susquehannocks suffered a reversal, falling first to epidemic disease that raged for three years which killed off potentially 90% of their population, and a series of battles on most of their frontiers as various enemies took advantage. This vacated the southeastern and central Pennsylvania regions for the Delaware peoples. However, all tribes were thereafter displaced westwards by continued colonial growth. Delaware dominance at the time of European colonization is why William Penn's settlers adopted Lenape Lenki (Delaware) names for landscape features, and less than a handful of Susquehannock names.
Lehighton was built on the site of the German Moravian Brethren's mission station "Gnadenhütten" (cabins of grace) founded in 1746. It was established as a mission to the Lenape by Moravians from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, lower on the Lehigh River. The German name was transcribed as "Canatanheat" by missionary John Brainerd.