Cargo Pilot Wrongly Fired for Reporting Safety Concerns to Receive $2M

The pilot refused to fly a cargo plane that they believed had an unreliable engine.

Cargo Plane Engine
iStock.com/Chalabala

The U.S. Department of Labor ordered Asia Pacific Airlines to pay over $2 million in wages, damages and attorney’s fees to an employee reprimanded, suspended and fired after raising concerns about aircraft safety and refusing to fly a cargo plane they believed had an unreliable engine.

OSHA investigators found the Guam airline, operated by Aero Micronesia Inc., dismissed the pilot’s unease and retaliated against them for exercising their federally protected rights to raise safety concerns.

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OSHA learned the pilot repeatedly expressed concerns that the airlines’ maintenance team approved the aircraft maintenance and repair reports without diagnosing the engine problems correctly. A parallel FAA investigation determined the pilot accurately assessed that the Asia Pacific Airlines’ maintenance team used the wrong procedure to troubleshoot and diagnose the engine malfunctions, making it impossible to identify the cause of the problem and fix it before clearing the aircraft to fly. 

Despite the FAA’s findings, the airlines’ then-chief pilot and Director of Operations Ralph Freeman maintained throughout OSHA’s investigation that disciplining and terminating the employee was a legitimate action. The agency concluded the pilot’s efforts to report safety concerns contributed to Asia Pacific’s disciplinary actions. 

OSHA ordered Asia Pacific Airlines to pay $419,267 in back pay plus interest, eight years of future salary, $27,596 in interest on loans and restoration of 401k contributions, $75,000 in emotional damages and reasonable attorney fees.

Additionally, Asia Pacific Airlines was ordered to expunge the employee’s record and provide training to current employees on their rights. Asia Pacific Airlines may appeal the order to the department’s Office of Administrative Law Judges.

In 2019, an Administrative Law Judge ruled that Asia Pacific Airlines violated the Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century whistleblower protection provision by illegally terminating a pilot who raised several safety concerns. Since 2014, OSHA has received safety complaints from several of the airline’s pilots.

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