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My friend is applying to some flight schools, and one of them is requiring a drug test (he is applying as cfi). I've never heard of a flight school drug testing before. Have any of you?
The FBO/school I worked at did, as well as randomly tested 25% of employees per year.My friend is applying to some flight schools, and one of them is requiring a drug test (he is applying as cfi). I've never heard of a flight school drug testing before. Have any of you?
A CFI is a professional pilot. As such, get use to drug and alcohol tests.
Do people think they can smoke weed during their CFI years, then quit when they get an interview at a regional airline? If so, good luck. Usually drug test is on interview day, and often you aren't given a lot of notice for interview. Likely not the 30 days it takes to purge the weed.
It was a general comment, not necessarily directed at one person in particular.Haha who said anything about weed, he has a separated shoulder and is on pain killers, he has a prescription but doesn't want to have to jump through any hoops.
The ignorance on this page is astounding.
If he has a prescription it shouldn't be a big deal. At one point in time there was a place on the form to put any prescribed medications. Think that might be gone now.
Might be worth mentioning which form. Since "Form" 8500-8 still requires listing medications.
Indeed we do fairly well. That said, there is always someone waiting to screw up. I personally knew two guys who failed for drugs.I've never heard of a school drug testing.
Whatever, not many pilots do drugs anyways, drink yes, but even then I've never met one that didn't honor the bottle to throttle / .04 rules.
If they don't they should.
My friend is applying to some flight schools, and one of them is requiring a drug test (he is applying as cfi). I've never heard of a flight school drug testing before. Have any of you?
...I've had far more problem with folks who were just plain stupid or crooked. No mandatory testing for that.
A CFI is a professional pilot. As such, get use to drug and alcohol tests.
Do people think they can smoke weed during their CFI years, then quit when they get an interview at a regional airline? If so, good luck. Usually drug test is on interview day, and often you aren't given a lot of notice for interview. Likely not the 30 days it takes to purge the weed.
There is a significant group of citizens that do not use drugs and, at the same time, consider drug tests without probable cause invasive, demeaning and generally inappropriate. The blanket assumption than anyone opposed to drug tests must be a drug user is flat wrong.
Haha who said anything about weed, he has a separated shoulder and is on pain killers, he has a prescription but doesn't want to have to jump through any hoops.
The ignorance on this page is astounding.
Aside from HR type hype, why?
I've had far more problem with folks who were just plain stupid or crooked. No mandatory testing for that.
What ever gives you the warm fuzzies I guess
There is a significant group of citizens that do not use drugs and, at the same time, consider drug tests without probable cause invasive, demeaning and generally inappropriate. The blanket assumption than anyone opposed to drug tests must be a drug user is flat wrong.
It is still illegal under Federal rules, and when acting as a pilot, you are subject to Federal rules.Now that many states have made marijuana legal for medical use, how is it one could loose a job or even be arrested for using this? And just because its in ones system does not mean they have used it within the last 24 or 48 or 72 yours. How does that work?
(a) No person may act or attempt to act as a crewmember of a civil aircraft—Now that many states have made marijuana legal for medical use, how is it one could loose a job or even be arrested for using this? And just because its in ones system does not mean they have used it within the last 24 or 48 or 72 yours. How does that work?
Aviation is governed by Federal law. Under Federal aviation law, marijuana use isn't legal no matter what any individual state may say, and the Constitution says Federal law takes precedence on such matters.Now that many states have made marijuana legal for medical use, how is it one could loose a job or even be arrested for using this? And just because its in ones system does not mean they have used it within the last 24 or 48 or 72 yours. How does that work?
I've never heard of a school drug testing.
Whatever, not many pilots do drugs anyways, drink yes, but even then I've never met one that didn't honor the bottle to throttle / .04 rules.
There is also a significant group of people who understand that when you apply for a job with a private company, constitutional provisions like "probable cause" are wholly inapplicable. The blanket assumption that things like probable cause apply to interactions not with the government is flat wrong.
Haha who said anything about weed, he has a separated shoulder and is on pain killers, he has a prescription but doesn't want to have to jump through any hoops.
The ignorance on this page is astounding.
You haven't been out much then.
I consider myself to have a pretty good amount of experience hanging out with flight crews in social situations, and I can only think of twice where someone pushed the limit to eyebrow raising levels. Both cases were outside the 8 hour window, but it was messy the night before. One was airline, the other a Hawker driver. Now that's obviously two more examples than I'd prefer to have, but I really don't think there's a huge problem out there with pilots flying while impaired.
Try attending a " birds of a feather" meeting. You might change your mind.
No.......your ignorance is astounding! " doesn't want to jump through the hoops indeed!" Check out the accident I witnessed in 2006 when the instructor was killed, student gravely injured when it went in after takeoff. See what the instructor had in the bloodstream, also being treated for "back pain"!!! As important are doctors and nurses who should be screened regularly and are not.
I'm sorry, but what are those?
All I know is that I have *never* shared a flight deck with an impaired pilot. Nor have most of my friends. I'd think that my experience would be different if this were some sort of widespread problem. I'm not saying it doesn't happen, of course.