Pubdate: Mon, 09 May 2016 Source: Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2016 Associated Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/108 Author: Daniel Peters and Jennifer Smith For Daily Mail Australia CRITICAL AIRLINE STAFF TEST POSITIVE FOR COCAINE, CANNABIS AND METHAMPHETAMINE ON THE JOB - AS A QANTAS PILOT WAS SACKED FOR GROPING A COLLEAGUE WHILE 'HIGH ON WEED' A number of critical airline staff have tested positive for hardcore drugs and alcohol while on the job, leaving passengers concerned about the protocols in place to keep them safe in the air. At least 14 Australian airline and airport employees operating in 'safety sensitive' roles came to work affected by alcohol and drugs in 2015, according to The Daily Telegraph. Three ground staff were found with traces of cannabis and methamphetamine in their system, an engineer tested positive for cocaine and a student pilot tested positive for cannabis. Nine other workers - including an aircraft engineer, four cabin crew and three ground staff - all failed alcohol tests 'It is disappointing a few people are being detected carrying out aviation duties while affected by alcohol or drugs, and the testing program aims to identify these people,' a Civil Aviation Safety Authority spokesman told the Daily Telegraph. 'Everyone in aviation must understand they cannot perform aviation safety sensitive duties while affected by alcohol or drugs.' Just last week it was revealed that a Qantas pilot was sacked after groping the breast of a female colleague while high on cannabis during a stopover in 2014. Steven Gregory claimed he was wrongfully terminated by the airline after losing his job following the incident in Santiago, Chile, but lost an appeal to ever fly again. The 54-year-old claimed that his drink had been spiked when he groped the breast of a female colleague in the back of a taxi, denying responsibility for sexually harassing her. His claim was dismissed at a tribunal last year but he appealed the decision, alleging there was a lack of evidence. It was quashed again on Tuesday by the Fair Work Commission which maintained he was not the victim of spiking. In 2014 Gregory and the rest of his crew were staying in Santiago for a two-night stopover when he ventured out one evening with some co-workers. Among them was the plane's captain, his superior, the woman and another male colleague The group enjoyed a bottle of rum at his hotel before venturing out to an Irish pub where Gregory separated himself from the others for around 30 minutes. On their way back to the hotel, Gregory groped the woman's breast while they were travelling in a taxi. Upon questioning by the airline over the incident, he said he could not recall portions of the evening and suggested that his drink had been spiked. On Tuesday his claim was thrown out as the Fair Work Commission upheld Commissioner Ian Cambridge's 2015 ruling that 'he was not the victim of drink spiking.' 'We refuse permission to appeal. The appellant has not identified an error in the decision within or other grounds for granting permission to appeal. 'The Commissioner did not act on a wrong principle, allow extraneous or irrelevant matters to guide him, and did not mistake the facts let alone make a significant error of fact.' - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D