Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

WestJet Hires Ernst & Young To Review Practices After Sexual Assault Suit

The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2016 11:12 AM
  • WestJet Hires Ernst & Young To Review Practices After Sexual Assault Suit
CALGARY — WestJet has hired Ernst & Young to investigate after it says several employees came forward with new information about workplace assault and harassment.
 
The Calgary-based airline is facing a lawsuit filed by a former flight attendant who says the company failed to adequately investigate after she alleged a pilot had sexually assaulted her.
 
CEO Gregg Saretsky said the company asked staff to raise any issues they might have related to workplace assault or harassment. Some responded and in light of the new information Ernst & Young has been asked to investigate, he said.
 
"WestJet intends to defend this lawsuit in court. However, the broader issues of sexual assault and harassment in the workplace that were raised are matters we take most seriously," he said in a statement issued Friday.
 
Ernst & Young will review WestJet's investigative and reporting procedures as well as its practices for a safe and harassment-free work environment, the statement said.
 
Lauren Stewart, a spokeswoman for the airline, said once the review is complete, the general recommendations will be made public.
 
"However, out of respect for the privacy of any individuals identified or described in the report, we will not make public sections of the report involving our employees and their personal information," she said in an email.
 
Stewart said once WestJet learned of the lawsuit, it immediately began reinvestigating the allegations and encouraged employees to come forward with information about them or any other behaviour that violates its respectful workplace policies.
 
The airline now has sufficient information to ask Ernst & Young to conduct a review of its practices and procedures, she said.
 
Ernst & Young declined comment and referred questions to WestJet.
 
None of the allegations has been proven in court, but former flight attendant Mandalena Lewis alleges in a statement of claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court that WestJet failed to adequately respond to an alleged incident during a stopover in Hawaii in 2010.
 
Lewis alleges an unnamed pilot invited her back to his hotel room for a drink where he pulled her onto his bed and began kissing and groping her.
 
She says she reported the incident to WestJet and to police, and the airline instructed her to keep quiet out of respect for the pilot's privacy, telling her there was nothing it could do.
 
Five years later, a colleague told her she had made a sexual assault complaint about the same pilot in 2008, Lewis alleges.
 
WestJet said last week that two employees mentioned in the lawsuit have been taken out of active flying duty while the company reviews its investigations into the complaints.

MORE National ARTICLES

5 Things That Could Push The Federal Budget Deficit Past $20Billion Next Year

5 Things That Could Push The Federal Budget Deficit Past $20Billion Next Year
Finance Minister Bill Morneau released updated fiscal projections Monday that predict an $18.4-billion deficit in 2016-17.

5 Things That Could Push The Federal Budget Deficit Past $20Billion Next Year

Seven People Named To Investigate Real Estate Flipping In B.C.

Lawyer Howard Kushner, Central 1 Credit Union president Don Wright and British Columbia Securities Commission head Audrey Ho are among those who will sit on the panel.

Seven People Named To Investigate Real Estate Flipping In B.C.

Winnipeg Family Wants Apology, Charges After Worker Hurls Racial Slur At Teen

Winnipeg Family Wants Apology, Charges After Worker Hurls Racial Slur At Teen
The 14-year-old, who asked that his name not be used, says he was hanging out on the grounds of a community centre near his Winnipeg school earlier this month when the worker told him and a friend to leave.

Winnipeg Family Wants Apology, Charges After Worker Hurls Racial Slur At Teen

Beyond The Inquiry: Families Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women Want Action

Beyond The Inquiry: Families Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women Want Action
Grieving families are hoping premiers will take action on their own following a second roundtable on missing and murdered indigenous women.

Beyond The Inquiry: Families Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women Want Action

Uber Gets Bylaw From Calgary City Council, But Says It Won't Work

Calgary city council has passed a bylaw that would allow for the operation of ride-sharing companies, but officials with Uber say the rules are too strict.

Uber Gets Bylaw From Calgary City Council, But Says It Won't Work

Grandmother Reads Statement At Marco Muzzo Sentencing, Tells Of Pining For Husband

Grandmother Reads Statement At Marco Muzzo Sentencing, Tells Of Pining For Husband
A woman who lost her three children and father in a horrific drunk driving crash broke into tears Tuesday as she spoke to the man responsible for their deaths before a packed Ontario courtroom.

Grandmother Reads Statement At Marco Muzzo Sentencing, Tells Of Pining For Husband