NJASAP accuses luxury jet carrier of
suppressing workplace speech
COLUMBUS, Ohio, April 25,
2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The NetJets Association of
Shared Aircraft Pilots (NJASAP), the labor organization
representing the 3,000-plus pilots employed by Berkshire Hathaway's
(NYSE: BRK.A) NetJets, Inc., filed a complaint against the luxury
jet carrier in the United States
District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The lawsuit accuses NetJets of
attempting to suppress union-related pilot speech in violation of
federal labor law.
NJASAP filed the lawsuit after NetJets
threatened to discipline pilots for referring customers to the
Union's website.
NJASAP filed the lawsuit yesterday in response to NetJets's
threat to discipline or to discharge pilots for referring aircraft
owners and customers to the union's www.GenuineQS.com website when
they ask questions about contract negotiations. The Union website
provides visitors with information about the sustained U.S. pilot
shortage, the status of negotiations between the parties and how
career earnings at NetJets compare to the airlines.
On March 8, 2023, NetJets Chief
Operating Officer Alan Bobo sent an
email to NetJets pilots accusing them of violating the carrier's
work rules. Union representatives asked NetJets how pilots should
respond if they are asked questions about contract negotiations and
related issues. But NetJets refused to respond to the union's
questions and did not lift the ban on speaking about the
website.
"The aircraft owners and customers we fly engage our pilots in
conversations every day, including about their jobs and a wide
variety of other topics," NJASAP President Capt. Pedro Leroux said. "It is only natural that they
would ask us for basic information about our current labor dispute
when they see picketers. Referring to a union website is a
professional and legal way to respond to their questions. We
believe NetJet's discriminatory ban on union-related speech is
unprofessional and illegal."
While prohibiting pilots from speaking about the union website,
NetJets President of Sales, Marketing and Service Patrick Gallagher, on April 19, sent an email to hundreds of NetJets
employees claiming the pilot union's leadership is out of touch
with its members.
Gallagher's email, sent the same day that more than 350 NetJets
pilots engaged in an informational picket at the air carrier's
Columbus, Ohio headquarters, also
accuses NJASAP and unions at unnamed airlines of raising safety
issues "when negotiations heat up" as part of what he referred to
as "the union playbook." In the lawsuit, NJASAP calls these
allegations false, reckless, and part of a campaign to undermine
the pilot union and its elected leadership in violation of the
Railway Labor Act.
"NJASAP stands ready to resolve our disputes with NetJets in the
best interest of pilots, the company we work for and the people who
depend on us for world class safety and service," Leroux said.
"What we will not stand for is an attack on our members' workplace
speech rights or their federally protected right to elect union
leaders without management interference."
About NJASAP Founded in 2008 as an independent labor
advocate, the NetJets Association of Shared Aircraft Pilots
(NJASAP) represents the professional interests of the 3,000-plus
pilots who fly in the service of NetJets Aviation, Inc., a
Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) subsidiary. For more information,
please visit our websites, www.njasap.com and www.genuineqs.com, or
find us on Facebook, www.facebook.com/njasap, Instagram,
www.instagram.com/njasap, and Twitter, @njasap.
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SOURCE NJASAP