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Business Aviation Provider Must Pay Nearly $1M for Retaliation

Monday, March 7, 2022 | 0

The U.S. Department of Labor ordered a California business aviation provider to pay $958,000 in back wages and associated costs to a former employee who the company retaliated against for reporting flight safety issues.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration conducted an inspection of Pegasus Elite Aviation Inc. in Calabasas after an employee reported safety issues. Following the inspection and after the employee left the company, investigators discovered Pegasus had sent a falsified and negative Pilot Records Improvement Act report to the worker’s new employer, violating the whistleblower provision. The report also led to the employee’s termination.

OSHA also discovered that Pegasus had provided falsified information to the Federal Aviation Administration, contributing to the agency’s decision to suspend the former employee’s pilot certificates.

Based on the investigation’s findings, OSHA on Wednesday ordered Pegasus to pay more than $898,000 in back wages and associated costs, $50,000 in emotional damages and $10,000 in attorney’s fees to its former employee.

The company must also send a letter of correction to the FAA and other employers who received the falsified report, removing the derogatory information, OSHA ordered.

Business Insurance is a sister publication of WorkCompCentral. More stories are here.

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