The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta: We'll listen to our employees revamp uniforms

Dermatolog­ists, more on board to help develop new outfits after lawsuits.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Delta Air Lines will redesign its uniforms after employees filed lawsuits complainin­g about allergic reactions to the new purple garments and thousands of flight attendants and customer service agents opted to come to work in their own clothes instead.

Atlanta-based Delta spent millions rolling out the Zac Posen-de

signed uniforms in the new “Passport Plum” color a year-and-a-half ago. But ever since, there have been grumblings about rashes, skin reactions and other symptoms, which the lawsuits say are caused by chemicals used to make garments waterproof, wrinkleand stain-resistant, antistatic and high-stretch.

Delta has about 25,000 flight attendants and 12,000 airport customer service agents. Ekrem Dim

biloglu, director of uniforms at Delta, said the number of employees opting to wear their own blackand-white attire instead of the uniforms “has grown into the thousands.”

“It’s just too many. We’ve got to be a unified force,” he said.

In late November, Delta simplified the process that allows employees to wear the black-and

white attire as an alternativ­e. Instead of going through a procedure of reporting on-the-job injuries with the airline’s claims administra­tor, employees can simply notify the company that they want to wear the alternativ­e.

“We believe the uniform is safe, but clearly there is a group that doesn’t,” Dimbiloglu said. “Having a subgroup of employees wearing black-and-white personal attire and having another group of employees wearing the uniforms just isn’t acceptable.”

He said that prompted Delta to “make a bold decision to go ahead and redesign the uniform.”

It’s yet to be determined whether it will be a wholesale redesign or more limited.

Delta aims to revamp the uniforms by December 2021, which will cost millions of dollars. “It’s not a cheap endeavor,” Dimbiloglu said, but “it’s about getting it right for employees.”

In the interim, Delta wants to shift some employees from black-and-white wear by offering alternativ­e uniform pieces. That includes allowing those flight attendants to wear dresses made of a different material, which only airport agents now wear, or a white cotton blouse. The company also will produce flight attendant uniforms for women in gray — the same color as men’s uniforms — with no chemical finish.

The uniform revamp does not apply to Delta’s baggage handlers and other employees who work on the tarmac. Those “below-wing” employees also have new uniforms, but in different fabrics and cuts that have not prompted issues “in any significan­t way,” Dimbiloglu said.

Multiple lawsuits have been filed by Delta employees against uniform maker Lands’ End. Plaintiffs, who are seeking class-action status, say the chemical additives and finishes are causing the reactions.

Delta’s flight attendants and customer service agents are not unionized, but the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants union has highlighte­d the uniform complaint as it pursues a campaign to unionize the airline’s flight attendants. The union said in December it would test the uniforms.

The union said some flight attendants affected by the issue “have lost pay and are experienci­ng mounting medical bills.”

The issues with skin irritation and other reactions arose in spite of the airline taking three years to develop the new uniform collection, which included testing for allergens, adjustment­s before the debut and developmen­t of alternativ­e uniform pieces in natural fabrics.

Dimbiloglu said Delta now has dermatolog­ists, allergists and toxicologi­sts specializi­ng in textile chemistry to help with fabric selection and testing.

Delta “continues to have faith in Lands’ End,” Dimbiloglu said, adding that “they have been great partners of ours to date.” But, he said, “We’re going to listen to our employees.”

He said the company will conduct employee surveys and will hold focus groups across the country to get employees’ input on how the uniforms should be redesigned.

 ?? REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM ?? Delta Air Lines rolled out the new uniforms in 2018, but thousands of employees have since opted not to wear them after complaints of rashes and allergic reactions.
REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM Delta Air Lines rolled out the new uniforms in 2018, but thousands of employees have since opted not to wear them after complaints of rashes and allergic reactions.

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