Allegiant på gamle Willy Field Foto: Per Gram
Allegiant Air Pilots Raise
Safety ConcernsThe union that represents Allegiant
Air’s pilots–APA Teamsters Local 1224, currently in contract negotiations with
the airline–is to present its longstanding concerns about safety issues directly
to the carrier’s investors. The initiative, announced last week in a press
statement, comes after months of what it sees as fruitless efforts to resolve
the issues with the FAA and the airline’s management. Last November, Teamsters
attorneys filed a Freedom of Information Act Request with the FAA to learn the
results of the carrier’s recent Air Carrier Evaluation Process audit. The agency
refused the request, saying only that the airline was still part of an ongoing
FAA investigation. The Teamsters also filed a lawsuit in November accusing the
airline of violating the Railway Labor Act. The pilots say they have concerns
about the airline’s operational safety and are being told little or nothing by
Allegiant management when they raise questions. Last September the FAA grounded
the airline’s entire MD-80 fleet in response to issues with the aircraft’s
emergency slides. Last year the airline suffered at least three engine failures
shortly after takeoff. “Allegiant management has turned a deaf ear to serious
operational concerns raised by the pilots,” said David Bourne, director of the
airline division at the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. “We believe
Allegiant’s financial backers have a right to know what is going on and be given
a chance to weigh in on vital changes needed for Allegiant’s long-term success
before it’s too late.” A Teamsters spokesperson told AIN that the airline
shut down its training department for two weeks in late October, preempting the
FAA’s plans for the same action. “It had to do with training manuals for
dispatchers and pilots that were out of date,” he said. The union official also
said the company brought in a number of line pilots to assist with manual
updates, but demanded they sign non-disclosure statements before the work began.
The Teamsters also have complained of difficulties in making the airline’s
scheduling software properly track pilot duty times to comply with new Part 117
duty and rest regulations. An Allegiant spokesperson told AIN that the
company is considering a response to the Teamsters news release but declined to
say anything about the pilots’ concerns.
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