Share This Article:
San Francisco, CA (CompNewsNetwork) - The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has ordered West Jet Aircraft of Scottsdale, Ariz., to pay $94,900 in back wages, compensatory damages, and medical and legal fees to a former employee who was wrongfully terminated after she raised aircraft safety concerns.
The charter coordinator was terminated after accessing the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA's) Web site in order to prepare a complaint she intended to file with the FAA against West Jet. During previous months, the employee had repeatedly informed West Jet of suspected violations of federal aviation regulations, including not performing a grounding inspection on an aircraft that landed overweight after being illegally topped off with fuel, attempting to schedule an unqualified pilot-in-command, and ordering an unqualified pilot to perform a test flight while carrying passengers.
A whistleblower investigation by OSHA found that West Jet terminated the employee in retaliation for her preparing to share her air carrier safety concerns with the FAA, and for her repeated aviation safety complaints to management. OSHA's investigation found merit to the employee's allegation that she had been discharged in violation of the whistleblower provisions of the Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century (AIR21). The U.S. Labor Department does not release the names of employees involved in whistleblower complaints.
"It is vital that employees be able to raise safety concerns to their employers and appropriate public safety agencies without fear of retaliation," said Richard S. Terrill, OSHA's acting regional administrator in San Francisco, whose office investigated the complaint. "This order reaffirms both the right of employees to raise air carrier safety concerns and the Labor Department's commitment to take the necessary steps to protect that right."
Read Also
- Jul 03, 2024
- WorkersCompensation.com
- Jul 02, 2024
- WorkCompCollege
- Jul 02, 2024
- Horizon Casualty Services
About The Author
About The Author
- WorkersCompensation.com
More by This Author
- Jun 24, 2024
- WorkersCompensation.com
- May 11, 2023
- WorkersCompensation.com
- May 10, 2023
- WorkersCompensation.com
Read More
- Jul 03, 2024
- WorkersCompensation.com
- Jul 02, 2024
- WorkCompCollege
- Jul 02, 2024
- Horizon Casualty Services
- Jun 24, 2024
- WorkersCompensation.com
- Jun 23, 2024
- WorkersCompensation.com
- Jun 21, 2024
- WorkCompCollege