Virgin Australia Crew Incident in Fiji

andyrb

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May 4, 2023
Posts
128
Just saw a post on Reddit (that appears to have since been deleted maybe) about a serious incident involving a VA flight crew in Fiji.

Any goss?
 
Sounds ugly. I assume if drugs they wouldn’t be confined to a hotel. Sounds more company directed, ie split up. The weird bit is the families being flown over also, bit much for a simple code of conduct breach. 🧐
 
If it was drugs, I'd assume they would be detained at the Airport rather than the hotel. I'd suspect the incident is something else entirely, but serious enough to split up the original crew members (I'm assuming FAs are also (or the only ones) involved as the reports says 3 crews) of the plane.
 
Crew death: possible; but wouldn't explain why surviving crew members segregated or why families would be en route

Serious illness/medical/exposure: possible; would explain hotel segregation and families

Company policy breach: possible; explains hotel segregation (not talking to each other until interviewed), but not really families

Aviation incident: possible; explains hotel segregation but not families

Criminal matter: possible; explains hotel segregation and families

Re-reading the "news" report, it says welfare of flight crew, which suggests something happened to the staff involved.
 
Families and Management being sent to a foreign country reeks of criminal behaviour.

The vagueness in the article could also mean 3 crew are separated in the hotel while the other three are potentially in the cells or with the authorities. NYD drug and alcohol fuelled event the prior night?
 
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In my workplace, if a critical incident occurs, those involved are segregated and forbidden to speak about the matter, pending interviews etc. Phones are siezed and union contact is all that is allowed. Depending on the matter, critical incident leave applies as well. it will all come out in the wash and speculation is rarely what we assume.
 
Forbidden? How is that enforced?
Quite easily. The employees are given a lawful and reasonable instruction. Failure to comply may lead to serious consequences up to and including dismissal.

If not dismissed for the above, then any penalty for the original offence, if proven, may be treated even more seriously because it may be construed that the employee has a recent pattern of misbehaviour and/or following company policies.
 
Just saw a post on Reddit (that appears to have since been deleted maybe) about a serious incident involving a VA flight crew in Fiji.

Any goss?
It is back up and running and I have to say the comments are pretty off given the circumstances are unknown. Now I know why I don't usually read reddit
 
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Forbidden? How is that enforced? Just curious.
I’ll give a verbal warning with the associated dismissal message if anything is talked about, I will get a verbal confirmation and a witness also. I encourage them to seek out the Union as often they will keep them in line. I have issued a ‘Final Warning’ letter to an employee once, the occasion being for talking and spreading information around before the process started, which was lies anyway. I had him terminated before the process even finished purely to due talking outside the process, they just couldn’t help themselves. Legal and ER signed off on it.

The biggest headache in all the ER cases I’ve dealt with is keeping people in line during the process. Keeping people apart is key. So much he said, she said, glad I’ve moved on from dealing with all that stuff.
 
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Quite easily. The employees are given a lawful and reasonable instruction. Failure to comply may lead to serious consequences up to and including dismissal.
Appreciate your input. I guess that ‘lawful’ comes into play here. My employer had once used that excuse in the past, but had a big fail because it was never lawful as it turned out. Lots of egg on face.
 
I find it intriguing that it does not differentiate between flight crew and/or cabin crew.
Virgin comment to CH 7 was so vague it suggests major comms strategy is being worked out as we speak. Whatever this is. It is not minor. It's the family being flown over that is really interesting Virgin are under no obligation to do this if it is a pure code of conduct issue.
 

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