Pubdate: Fri, 10 Oct 2003 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2003 New Zealand Herald Contact: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300 Author: Mathew Dearnaley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) AIR NZ CHIEF DEFENDS DRUG TESTS A drug or alcohol-related oversight in almost any part of its business could prove catastrophic, Air New Zealand told the Employment Court in Auckland yesterday. Deputy chief executive Craig Sinclair acknowledged that the airline did not consider drug or alcohol abuse "endemic" among its 10,000 workers. But he had no reason to consider his workforce any different to the general population, a percentage of which had substance abuse problems. Mr Sinclair was defending the airline's plans to put all staff on notice of random drug and alcohol testing. He told Chief Judge Tom Goddard and Judges Graeme Colgan and Barrie Travis, who are considering a challenge by six unions, that his concerns were heightened by reported increases in Ecstasy and P use as well as cannabis use. If almost any job in his organisation were not done properly, the failure could snowball into "potentially catastrophic results". In one case several years ago, an aircraft ended up in the wrong place after a "back office" employee's failure to process an invoice stopped the airline receiving the latest update of overseas aeronautical information. Although drugs or alcohol were not implicated, he cited "isolated" reports of pilots preparing for duty while possibly affected by such substances. Most were stopped from working after notification by colleagues, but one pilot completed a duty before being reported for breaching a 12-hour "bottle to throttle" non-drinking requirement. Mr Sinclair said the Employment Relations Authority recently dealt with the case of a flight attendant rendered unfit by alcohol, and three others had been dismissed in recent weeks for the same reason, although they denied drinking. He did not mention any incidents involving hard drugs, but said a flight attendant was discovered with cannabis and an employee was also caught selling the drug at one of the airline's engineering bases. To a suggestion by union lawyer John Haigh, QC, that this was a minute list of examples among such a large workforce, he said it was not exhaustive and "one of these incidents is too many". Mr Sinclair said the testing was part of a never-ending safety drive, and he was unaware of any resentment against what union witnesses said earlier would be a humiliating ordeal for workers in having to give urine samples. "I take the view that our people will understand why we are doing this. It is not punitive, it is not driven by a disciplinary process, it is driven by safety." He described the testing as an extension of a "just culture" approach in which workers were encouraged to admit mistakes without fear of retribution so safety breaches could be investigated. But disciplinary action would be considered for workers whose breaches of a policy of zero tolerance of drugs or alcohol at work was deemed reckless or negligent. To a claim by Mr Haigh that the "just culture" reference had "a degree of waffle about it" if the decision to refer an employee to rehabilitation or start disciplinary action was purely that of the airline, Mr Sinclair said safety was ultimately Air NZ's responsibility. And he said no blanket policy would allow religious or cultural beliefs as excuses for refusing to give samples. Each case would have to be considered on its merits. Airline lawyer Robert Fardell, QC, said earlier that making allowances for some workers on the basis of such beliefs would discriminate against the rest. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk