OSHA Awards $350,000 in Damages to Railroad Whistleblower

 

Finding a “culture of retaliation” at Union Pacific, OSHA awarded $350,000 in damages to a 35-year locomotive freight engineer who suffered retaliation for reporting injuries.  OSHA concluded that Union Pacific violated the whistleblower protection provision of the FRSA.  Prior to reporting a work injury, the freight engineer had never been disciplined.

OSHA ordered Union Pacific to pay the engineer $350,000 in punitive and compensatory damages and reasonable attorney’s fees, remove disciplinary information from the employee’s personnel record and provide information about whistleblower rights to all its employees.

The Federal Railroad Safety Act prohibits retaliation against a railroad employee who provides information to a regulatory or law enforcement agency, a member of Congress, or any person with supervisory authority over the employee about a reasonably perceived violation of federal law relating to railroad safety or security, or the abuse of public funds appropriated for railroad safety.  In addition, the FRSA protects an employee who:

A prevailing FRSA whistleblower can obtain a wide range of remedies, including: (1) reinstatement, (2) back pay, (3) compensatory damages, (4) attorney fees and litigation costs; and (5) punitive damages up to $250,000.

For more information about whistleblower rights and protections, contact Zuckerman Law at (202) 262-8959.

Whistleblower Retaliation Damages

Categories: OSHA Whistleblower Protection ProgramRailroad Industry Whistleblower ProtectionRailroad WhistleblowerWhistleblower Protection Law
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