Pilot fails drug test, DGCA removes him from flight duty
New Delhi: A pilot of a prominent airline has been removed from flight duty after he failed a drug test, a senior DGCA official said on
Friday.
He is the fourth pilot to fail the drug test since the procedure for examination of aviation personnel for consumption of psychoactive substances came into effect from January 31.
The test is done for the flight crew and ATCs on a random basis.
So far, four pilots and one Air Traffic Controller (ATC) have tested positive for psychoactive substances.
According to the official, a pilot of a prominent airline was subjected to the drug test in the national capital.
He was found positive in the confirmatory test report received on August 23 and has been removed from the flight duty, the official said.
However, details about the airline or pilot were not disclosed.
As per the Civil Aviation Requirement (CAR), in case the result of the confirmatory drug test is positive for the first time, then the personnel concerned will be referred to a de-addiction centre by the organisation concerned for de-addiction and
rehabilitation.
If the same personnel tests positive for the second time, then his or her licence will be suspended for a period of
three years.
And if the violation happens for the third time, then the personnel's licence will be cancelled.
In the introduction to the CAR, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has mentioned that the worldwide spread of use of psychoactive substances, their general availability and the ever-increasing number of addicted users is a serious concern to aviation safety.
"Their use causes behavioural, cognitive and physiological changes. This manifests in dependence, major health related issues and negative effect on performance," it had said.
Citing a study conducted by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment and a subsequent report published in February 2019, Directorate General of Civil Aviation had said after alcohol, cannabis and opioids are the most commonly used psychoactive substances in India.
Moreover, Aviation regulator Directorate General of Civil Aviation has suspended the licence of a helicopter pilot for six months following an incident while landing on an offshore platform in the Mumbai high seas.
A senior official at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said the helicopter descended below the desired flight path during approach for landing on the helideck.
The issue was brought to the notice of the Pilot In Command (PIC) by the first officer and the PIC took corrective action.
However, during the process, the horizontal stabiliser of the helicopter hit the edge of the helideck, the official
said.
"The pilot had exceeded the maximum takeoff weight and maximum landing weight of the helicopter during the operation of incident flight," the DGCA official said, adding that the pilot's licence has been suspended for six
months.
Specific details about the incident could not be immediately ascertained.