Millennium Post

Roon, cgba to conduct drug test on aviation personnel

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation has for the first time proposed testing of aviation personnel for psychoacti­ve substances such as cannabis, opioids and their variants, officials said on Friday.

The civil aviation watchdog stated that once the regulation­s are finalised, flight crew members and Air Traffic Controller­s (ATCS) would be subjected to this examinatio­n at six airports — Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad — in the first phase.

The tests would consist of screening test and a confirmato­ry test. Screening test will be carried out at the airport or the ATC complex and will be recorded on video.

If a person is found positive in the screening test, then the confirmato­ry test will be carried out in one of the Dgca-approved laboratori­es.

The testing would be done at random under the supervisio­n of the DGCA officers of and will cover 10 per cent of employees of each organisati­on in a period of one year, the regulator noted.

For the testing, personnel’s urine sample would be used, it added.

If any person is found positive in the screening test, he or she will be removed from safety sensitive duties till the results of the confirmato­ry test are received, the regulator stated.

If the confirmato­ry test is also positive then the person will be subjected to rehabilita­tion and will return to active duties only after having undergone the tests for the consumptio­n of the psychoacti­ve substance, clearance by treating psychiatri­st and the certificat­ion by the Chief Medical Officer of the organisati­on concerned.

“If after return to safety sensitive duties, a person again tests positive in the confirmato­ry test, the license of the involved person will be cancelled,” the DGCA asserted.

If a person refuses to undergo examinatio­n, he or she would be taken off the safety sensitive duties and will be required to clear “detailed drug testing profile” within a week, failing which his or her license will be suspended for three years.

This is in line with the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO) policy and procedures which has already been prescribed by other leading aviation agencies such as the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) of the USA and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), the DGCA stated.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India