PhilosopherPilot
Well-Known Member
Just admit you are wrong. If ALPA ever comes on property, you are going to be as far from a safety position as they can manage.
ALPA has nothing to do with safety dept hiring. Nice try.
Just admit you are wrong. If ALPA ever comes on property, you are going to be as far from a safety position as they can manage.
ALPA has nothing to do with safety dept hiring. Nice try.
So, you have never heard of flex time, or you disagree with the premise that earned time is meant to be used?
ALPA has nothing to do with safety dept hiring. Nice try.
Or because they cannot afford it.What happens if you guys have an incident/accident where the pilot says they are sick, but were afraid to call in because they were reaching their 'limits'?
How is that going to play out with the NTSB?
Not well. Ask me how I know.
They should accept an answer of "I'm calling out sick ". They can require a fitness for duty note if they have a policy for, say, three or more consecutive days. They can't ask specifics about family members either due to GINA.There are HIPAA laws that prevent companies from asking that. Why don't you understand that? @HRDiva, and I wrong here?
They should accept an answer of "I'm calling out sick ". They can require a fitness for duty note if they have a policy for, say, three or more consecutive days. They can't ask specifics about family members either due to GINA.
First of all, there is no Hippo in HIPAA. Second, employers can't discriminate based on disabilities; it's hard to prove you did not have discriminatory intent if you fire someone due to the dependability policy and you knew they had a particular issue that you forced them to disclose. I responded by saying that employers should accept a statement of "I am calling out sick". I stand by that. You fly airplanes; I teach and run HR at my organization.My understanding of HIPPA is that doctors and hospitals are not allowed to release any information about you without your express premission. There is nothing in the law that precludes anyone from asking you about any sicknesses. It would be up to the individual to release their medical information or not to a company, but can't be punished if they choose not to.
Then why does ALPA sit on the ERC to review ASAP's?
With that, I'm pretty sure the gate keeper for our ASAP program is an ALPA position, but I'm not positive on that one.
On our side of the house, ALPA seems to do a lot of things the company isn't interested, or isn't capable of doing. Kind of like how our scheduling committee ended up going to A-Tech and were getting our crews hotel rooms when the scheduling department couldn't.
First of all, there is no Hippo in HIPAA.
I stand by that. You fly airplanes; I teach and run HR at my organization.
The only thing I took issue with is the blanket "all sick policies are unsafe" statement. I think that's false on its face, mostly because it's an absolute. Few things in life are absolute.
I'm not in favor of our sick policy, but I understand the business need for one. You can't fire someone for abuse if there isn't a line that was crossed.
Where I have a general question about sick policies and the like; what then is a company to do if someone calls in sick for their flight, and for example someone else sees that same person on vacation in Hawaii that same day, surfing at the beach or hitting the bars/clubs? I don't believe either that someone should be questioned for using sick leave (and they can't be asked), but when sick leave is used as normal vacation leave in some of these cases (based on what I've seen in my time), then there's the aforementioned line that has been crossed if there is indeed a policy. Otherwise why have sick leave? Just bundle sick leave hours and vacation hours into the same thing.
You don't need a sick policy to 'police' that very rare situation pertaining to pilots. There are honesty policies that cover that type of situation.
It's not rare.
Do you have a rough estimate of pilots who abuse the sick policy? Percentage wise?It's not rare. But it is rare that someone gets caught.
We have a PTO system, but people were calling in sick to get their trips dropped with PTO when there wasn't coverage to drop it legally. It was rampant. If it were rare, no one would've felt the need to police it.
For pilots, yes, it is rare that they use sick time to go on vacation.