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cbabe

(6,814 posts)
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 11:15 AM Oct 2022

Delta 'weaponized' mental health rules against a pilot. She fought back

https://www.adn.com/nation-world/2022/10/26/delta-weaponized-mental-health-rules-against-a-pilot-she-fought-back/

Delta ‘weaponized’ mental health rules against a pilot. She fought back

By Dominic Gates, The Seattle Times
Updated: 12 hours ago
Published: 12 hours ago

SEATTLE — On Christmas Eve 2016, Karlene Petitt, an international long-haul pilot for Delta Air Lines, received a devastating letter that threatened to end her career.

She had been grounded since March pending an evaluation by a company-assigned doctor. The letter informed her of his diagnosis: She was mentally unfit for duty and would not be permitted to fly again.

Petitt had then been flying commercial jets for 35 years. She’d raised three children, earned a doctorate and two master’s degrees and wrote a series of books, all while performing perfectly as a pilot.

In early November of the previous year, she had sent emails to her superiors criticizing Delta’s safety culture, initiating a series of interactions with them about safety issues.

Just six days later, captain Jim Graham, then Delta’s vice president of flight operations, in an email to a pilot manager under him, indicated clearly his intention to put a stop to Petitt’s critique and to do so using a Kafkaesque process called a “Section 15,” which would label her too mentally unstable to be a pilot.

“We should consider whether a Section 15 is appropriate,” Graham wrote. “If she cannot embrace and understand the reasons behind our actions, it stands to reason she might not be able to make appropriate decisions for the safe operation of a flight.”

Hired by Delta for $74,000, Dr. David Altman produced the necessary diagnosis: In 2016, he evaluated Petitt as having bipolar disorder.

Altman later testified that his diagnosis was driven in part by Petitt’s accomplishments. The books, the degrees, the piloting job, all while raising kids, it was “well beyond what any woman I’ve ever met could do” — and therefore suggestive that she was manic.

This extraordinary process brought the full weight of a big corporation to bear on Petitt. She was grounded. Her career looked over.

Yet she fought back. She resisted. And she won.

Friday, a final settlement of Petitt’s case after a six-and-a-half-year legal battle sealed a comprehensive loss for Delta and a rare instance of complete vindication for a whistleblower.

Administrative Law Judge Scott Morris upheld his earlier order characterizing Delta’s use of the psychiatric diagnosis as an abuse of a mental evaluation system in place for cases of last resort.

Morris ruled it “improper for [Delta] to weaponize this process for the purposes of obtaining blind compliance by its pilots.”

Delta must pay Petitt $500,000 as compensation plus years of legal fees.

Meanwhile, Altman in 2020 forfeited his medical license rather than face charges over his conduct.

Earlier, after Altman’s diagnosis fell apart, Delta was forced to reinstate Petitt.

Petitt’s attorney, Lee Seham, has represented 50 or 60 aviation industry whistleblowers in his career but said he’s “never before been in such an ugly war of attrition as with Delta.”

“They lost before an administrative law judge, they lost before the appellate body, they got thrown out by the 11th Circuit,” he said. “They were willing to litigate it to the death.”

Yet even after Altman’s discrediting and loss of the case, Delta didn’t discipline any employees for deploying what Seham calls a “Soviet-style psychiatric examination” to try to silence Petitt.

In response to a request for comment, Delta provided a statement that made no apology and admitted no wrongdoing.

“We made a business decision to settle the matter rather than appeal a decision that we disagreed with,” spokesperson Catherine Morrow wrote in an email. “Delta’s fitness for duty testing process for pilots is in place to ensure safety and it works.”

Seham finds that worrisome.

“I don’t know that the message to the Delta pilots is anything other than, keep your mouth shut,” he said.

“That an airline can act with that level of impunity is troubling,” Seham added. “Because you can’t have a safe airline if pilots are afraid.”

…more…

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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BComplex

(9,959 posts)
1. That puts Delta out of the running for any of my future flights.
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 11:29 AM
Oct 2022

Period. Full stop.

I don't care if they're the only airline left on the planet. This case is absolutely horrific.

 

dembotoz

(16,922 posts)
2. i understand deltas caution...consider the liablility if she was nutso
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 11:33 AM
Oct 2022

and they let her fly

 

dembotoz

(16,922 posts)
5. i did do you want an airline to be careful or say she is accomplished so she can not
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 04:24 PM
Oct 2022

be nuts.



delta caught is a bad spot.
trust or ignore your medical staff

whathehell

(30,547 posts)
9. I think you misunderstood the article..
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 07:16 PM
Oct 2022

because, yes, for safety reasons,we do want airlines to
make legitimate Inquiries into the physical and mental health of pilots, but, as the article (and the judge) in the case made clear, this was NOT a legitimate inquiry. It was retaliation against her for being a "whistle blower", i.e. finding safety hazards in the airline that the airlines did not want to deal with. The pilot HAD no mental illness -- It was just a lie they used to silence her..This is what the court found.






 

dembotoz

(16,922 posts)
10. a medical professional signed off It was wrong but he signed off
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 07:46 PM
Oct 2022

what do you expect delta to do

whathehell

(30,547 posts)
11. Maybe you should argue with the judge about it...
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 08:01 PM
Oct 2022

What I "expect Delta to do" is what they actually did:

Rehire her and reimburse her for six plus years back pay, giving her a half million dollar settlement.

As for the "medical profesdional" the article strongly suggests he was "bought" by the airlines to find a BS excuse to lay her off. End of story.

FreeState

(10,702 posts)
12. Did you read the article?
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 09:13 PM
Oct 2022

The doctor resigned his license rather than testify. He gave up his livelihood rather than stand behind his judgement. He’s about as credible as Dr. Conley.

 

dembotoz

(16,922 posts)
14. so a licensed professional says the pilot is nuts...you wait till after the trial?
Fri Oct 28, 2022, 12:14 PM
Oct 2022

after the plane crashed?

Probatim

(3,298 posts)
4. Dude - read this paragraph. I mean holy misogynist shit Batman...
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 11:55 AM
Oct 2022

Altman later testified that his diagnosis was driven in part by Petitt’s accomplishments. The books, the degrees, the piloting job, all while raising kids, it was “well beyond what any woman I’ve ever met could do” — and therefore suggestive that she was manic.

Jedi Guy

(3,501 posts)
8. Yeah, that jumped out at me, too.
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 04:32 PM
Oct 2022

A reasonable person would conclude that the person in question is exceptional and worked extremely hard. A misogynist like Altman concluded that a person can't possibly accomplish all those things while being in possession of a vagina. I'm sure the $75k payday from Delta also had no influence at all on his diagnosis.

LAS14

(15,537 posts)
7. Did you read this from the article????????
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 04:29 PM
Oct 2022

The books, the degrees, the piloting job, all while raising kids, it was “well beyond what any woman I’ve ever met could do” — and therefore suggestive that she was manic.

LAS14

(15,537 posts)
6. This part I believe.
Thu Oct 27, 2022, 04:27 PM
Oct 2022
“well beyond what any woman I’ve ever met could do” — and therefore suggestive that she was manic.


I can just imagine he lives in a world populated by Stepford Wives.

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