And he got his job back, the FA wouldnt have unless but ALPA, AFA and a lawyer, stepped in to help her did you skip that part?
Yasuko Ishikawa, 40, a flight attendant since 1992, insisted that she never took drugs and didn’t alter her urine sample.
After she was fired in October 1999 without a chance to appeal, she took her case public, suing the airline and Lab One Inc.
“I was desperate because I know I didn’t do anything wrong,” Ishikawa said Thursday. “Somebody made a mistake, and no one would help me.”
Ishikawa was among four flight attendants and a pilot Delta fired in 1999 based on the Lab One tests, which the airline claimed were 100 percent accurate. Labor unions for flight attendants and pilots protest¬ed the firings. The unions have complained to the Federal Aviation Administration and U.S. Transpor¬tation Department about the sci¬entific legitimacy of the validity tests. The government agencies re¬quire testing of millions of trans¬portation workers each year in the name of public safety.
Last year, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services or¬dered a review of laboratory testing procedures at all federally certified labs that perform mandated drug tests after the Delta pilot appealed the revocation of his pilot’s license to the FAA.