Lawyer, Esquire
1. Employment Classification: At-Will vs. Union Contract
Under U.S. law, most employment is considered at-will, meaning an employer can hire, fire, promote, or demote an employee for any reason — or no reason — except for reasons based solely on age, race, sex, disability, or national origin.
However, since you’re covered by a union contract, your employment rights are governed by the collective bargaining agreement (CBA), not at-will employment laws.
Your rights and remedies are therefore contractual, not statutory.
2. Wrongful Termination (Union Context)
Because United is unionized, “wrongful termination” in your case would fall under a breach of the union contract, not a traditional wrongful termination lawsuit.
Under your CBA, you are entitled to due process, which typically includes:
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An investigation (which was conducted),
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A pre-termination hearing to present your defense, and
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The right to grieve and arbitrate the termination through your union.
If the union files a grievance on your behalf, that process must play out before you can take legal action against the company.
3. Arbitration and Court Review
If arbitration occurs and you lose, you may request a judicial review — but courts rarely overturn arbitration awards.
You can challenge it only under limited circumstances, such as:
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Fraud or corruption (e.g., bribery or falsified evidence).
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Arbitrator bias or misconduct (e.g., refusal to hear relevant evidence).
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Exceeding authority (e.g., the arbitrator rewriting contract terms).
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Award not based on the CBA (“fails to draw its essence” from the contract).
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Violation of public policy (e.g., reinstating someone who committed a serious offense).
Otherwise, arbitration is final and binding.
4. Defamation Claim Against the Co-Worker
If your co-worker made knowingly false statements about you that caused your termination or reputational harm, you may have grounds to sue them personally for defamation.
That would be a civil lawsuit against the individual — not United Airlines.
You could seek money damages for:
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Lost wages,
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Emotional distress, and
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Reputational harm.
You would need to prove that:
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The statements were false,
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They were made to others (e.g., HR or investigators),
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They were not protected by privilege, and
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They caused you measurable harm.
Under federal law (COBRA), your employer must offer continued health insurance coverage after termination.
Since United told you that your benefits would last through August but canceled them in July, that could violate COBRA notice or coverage requirements.
If you were not offered COBRA continuation coverage, or it was terminated prematurely, you can file a complaint with the:
U.S. Department of Labor (Wage & Hour Division):
www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/contact/complaints
Keep all written communication regarding your termination date, insurance cutoff, and HR correspondence — they will be key evidence.
6. Summary of Your Next Steps
- Continue the grievance/arbitration process with your union. That’s your primary route for reinstatement or back pay.
- Consult a local attorney about a potential defamation lawsuit against your co-worker.
- File a COBRA complaint if your insurance was terminated prematurely. Keep copies of all documents, emails, and union correspondence related to your termination.