Huh?
The FAA is not going give a crap about your union.
True.
And yes, you can talk yourself right into a violation.
If it's against the FAR's, don't touch it with a ten foot pole. The FAA is after blood and once you
willfully violate an FAR, you're on your own.
"Yes, I thought it was not in accordance with the FARs, the company threatened to fire me and my ALPA duty pilot was on coffee break..."
Here's something that if you don't have an ASAP program in place at your company that you need to know.
The FAA has instituted a "Threat and Error Matrix". Which more or less looks at any reported error, weighs it against the phase of flight and dictates your minimum suspension. Now if it's "willful" which is interpreted as "careless and wreckless", the simple 30 day suspension becomes a 90 day, or 120 day at the drop of a hat.
And here's the kicker. Say the captain makes a rotten decision which violates an FAR and you, as FO, don't speak up. Guess what folks, in the 121 world, violations are issued in pairs. So if the captain screws up and you're
complicit by not speaking up? Enjoy that time off because you're getting it.
I had a captain that did something a little crazy, which I will not speak about on the internet, and don't even think that I wasn't at the "big brown desk" along with the other pilot who was on break during an international trip. If Skipper's screwing up, and if you don't speak up, it's your ticket too. And when the feds pull your record to look at the "overall picture" which they do, they're looking at the first incidence which you showed up on their "radar" scope from your first medical, ALL of your checkrides, phase checks, everything. If you sneezed and didn't cover your face, the feds
WILL bring it up at your hearing.
You're not there as an education experience gaining dual cross-country, if you're in a 121 cockpit, you're paid and expected to perform. Period. "Learning" is a byproduct of your presence, not the sole purpose.