Airline Mechanics Pull Out of Federal Safety Program, Citing Retaliation

A union representing 530 mechanics and other workers at Delta Air Lines Inc.’s subsidiary Comair has withdrawn from a federal program to encourage reporting of safety problems, saying the company retaliated against employees who took part.

“We have discussed the problems with this dysfunctional program with both Comair and the [Federal Aviation Administration] for months,” Tom Higginbotham, president of  the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 142, said in a statement. Comair violated “the letter and the spirit” by acting against workers who raised safety issues, he said.

Launched in 2008, the Aviation Safety Action Program includes a promise of protection for workers who report safety concerns, according to the The Associated Press.

It is not the first time that airline workers have accused their employers of retaliation. Pilots at Delta and AMR Corp.’s American Airlines dropped out of the initiative in 2008 over alleged employee sanctions, and did not re-enter until Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and the former head of the FAA pressured the airlines to negotiate.

Comair operates 400 Delta Connection flights a day to 70 cities in the U.S., Canada and the Bahamas. Comair spokeswoman Christine Wever said the company supports the program and is ”committed to working with…union leadership to address their concerns.”

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