Originally Posted by
450knotOffice
2) If the writeup occurred at a non maintenance station, we would call Maintenance Ops Control (MOC), explain the writeup, and they would decide whether we could defer per a "Flight Crew MEL". If so, a "Flight Crew MEL" was issued, along with a MOC Control number and the MOC controller's employee number. THAT info would then be entered into the next Mechanical Discrepancies block below the original writeup, and a tiny little orange temporary Crew MEL sticker would be placed where the MEL book decreed it be placed. At that point we were good to go until the aircraft arrived at the next maintenance station (flying under a Crew MEL), at which point the local maintenance personnel would arrive at the aircraft, take the logbook, and issue a proper MEL per the procedures that I spelled out above, balancing out the original writeup and the block underneath it that the crew used to create the original "Crew MEL".
With the new procedures, regardless of whether or not we are at a maintenance station or not, if we have a writeup, we are to call MOC. MOC will then determine whether a MEL will be issued. If so, we will accomplish all of the rather convulated writeup procedures detailed above ourselves, and issue a permanent MEL. Local Hub Maintenance will never have been in the loop - only MOC in Dallas.
We've been told that we MUST dot every i and cross every t properly in terms of the data that must be entered (of course). If not, we may be subject to discipline and FAA enforcement. That's all fine and dandy except that we now have a LOT more data to enter and that data has to be entered not only on the LOG page of the logbook, but also on the MIC sheet, and the three sections of the MEL Placard - all with minimal training and no "experience". That's fine with me. However, as I've already told my base chief pilot, I will NOT be rushed when I do this and if it takes local maintenance 10-20 minutes to accomplish this, expect slow me to take significantly longer. They will take a big delay and will likely not recover it, considering our usual 25 minute turns.
If it makes you feel better, I counted 15 or 16 spots to fill out on a typical MEL in 4 locations: the irregularity write up side of the log page, the corrections side, the placard and the sticker. I just pull out the example they give me with the only change being what's inop and usually I copy what I got ACARS backed to me since it sounds more legit then "it ain't workin right, damnit."
Again, for AE to say there will be discipline and FAA enforcement sounds to me like:
that's a hand basket.