U.S. judge orders striking ABX Air pilots back to work

By Nick Carey CHICAGO (Reuters) - A federal judge on Wednesday upheld a temporary restraining order sought by cargo airline ABX Air, whose major customers include DHL and online retail giant Amazon , against its striking pilots and ordered them back to work immediately. ABX said in a statement it expects flight operations to resume immediately. The pilots, represented by the Teamsters union, walked off the job early Tuesday over what they said were violations of the collective bargaining agreement with the unit of Air Transport Services Group Inc . The union said that due to a pilot shortage, ABX Air had asked them to work emergency hours over the last two years, but then failed to grant them compensatory time off or allow pilots to take earned vacations as per their contract. The work stoppage came at a critical time for the likes of Amazon and Deutsche Post AG unit DHL, in the run up to the U.S. holidays. DHL had warned of delays to inbound and outbound shipments to portions of the Americas through Thursday as a result of the stoppage. Amazon, which has contracts with other carriers, including United Parcel Service Inc and FedEx Corp , said it had sufficient alternatives to avoid service disruptions because of the strike. Judge Timothy Black of the U.S. court for the Southern District of Ohio said there was "no evidence" to support claims by the Teamsters who represent ABX's pilots that the airline had violated the terms of its collective bargaining agreement with the union. Judge Black ruled in granting a temporary restraining order that this was a "minor dispute" and was thus subject to arbitration rather than a matter for a federal court. (Additional reporting by Ankit Ajmera; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)