Chief.....
Been there, reported, changed careers (others stayed after reporting and are all flying for major airlines), so the scare campaign set about by operators is trifle. In fact most of these pilots went straight on to prime seats after their relevant incidents, and freeing themselves from their "dodgy companies" was the best thing they could have done for their careers...
I have always had a personal rule, if I screw up, I own up- straight up... if I have the power to have it fixed, I will... If my company puts a life at risk or asks me to put someone at risk, I wont.
I would rather walk away, than explain to someones family why their loved one is deceased, or hurt, or too frightened to fly again....
My own personal values, I know, but I have worked for some brilliant companies who really look after their crews and in turn the crews look after the clients... and then I worked for a company that almost killed me twice.
I tried to take my problem through the chain of command, there were some pretty major regs that werent being followed, safety was severely compromised and as a result, I went to CASA and sought advice. They went out of their way to protect my identity.
If there are concerns, the whistle blowers act covers in most cases. Unfair dismissals under the relevant job positions are also persued through state relevant Industrial Law. There are some things to think about though. First is why are the hackles up... is it vindictive, is there a genuine reason? If the reason is genuine, collect facts, the more relevant, the better.
Nothing is going to happen without them, except that the accusing party looks like a vindictive fool. Thats where so many cases fall over. There is not a shred of applicable evidence. Keep diaries, records, accurate logbooks and time sheets etc. The other is be familar with the regs that apply to your operation, be open to learning. Just because change may sweep across the company you work for, doesnt mean its worng or unsafe.
Follow the channels, and if in the end you are still looking down that tunnel of no return....
The best advice you can give your self, is to ask "if that were my son or daughter as a passenger in that aircraft, with a pilot I didnt know, would I still be comfortable in letting them go."
If the answer is no... then there is soul searching to be done, but get the relevant advice from the relevant folks on the way, after all you dont get advice about heart surgery from a truckdriver....
Oh yeah

.... Im anything but Dammed!!!
