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Sounds to me like we can either start applying some common sense to our personal management of rest and fatigue or wind up with more "solutions" thru regulation. The same regulating that allows 24 hour duty days with double crews on ultra long-haul.
I still don't think this was a fatigue driven event, as much as it was lack of training and inexperience. Either way the Media/Feds/Capitol Hill have gotten a hold of it, and the circus has begun. There will be something coming out of this. |
Originally Posted by JetPiedmont
(Post 609933)
Sounds to me like we can either start applying some common sense to our personal management of rest and fatigue or wind up with more "solutions" thru regulation. The same regulating that allows 24 hour duty days with double crews on ultra long-haul.
I still don't think this was a fatigue driven event, as much as it was lack of training and inexperience. Either way the Media/Feds/Capitol Hill have gotten a hold of it, and the circus has begun. There will be something coming out of this. |
[quote=ChickenFlight;608685]Airlines benefit from commuters just as much as pilots do. Commuters (such as I) have more motivation to make sure overnight legs do not cancel, to keep on schedule and to get weight restrictions lifted. (Though the last example is more an issue for the regional forum, it makes sense that we might be able to get a few revenue pax on in addition to our fellow commuters. )
Except that pilots, in general, do not have operational control and thus cannot cancel legs. I have seen a few write up certain items in such a colorful language that it could not be MEL'd, and as a result had to either shift to another aircraft (causing a delay), or the cancellation of the leg (from dispatch). However, it was a "slippery slope" because the crew, or parts of, could be reassigned. Sometimes it worked, other times it didnt. Especially when crew scheduling knows it is the last turn of a multi-day pattern. I have to imagine that some rules might start to develop with the respect to commuting. I was one for almost eight years with a regional carrier. But there is no way in frickin' heck that I would ever move to the base I was at! |
Originally Posted by JetPiedmont
(Post 609933)
Sounds to me like we can either start applying some common sense to our personal management of rest and fatigue or wind up with more "solutions" thru regulation.
However, we all know that the FAA is famous for their tombstone mentality in that they move at a glacial pace until prompted by passenger deaths. Add in a good old public uproar, and some pressure from the New York Senate delegation and there's no telling what they will do. Unfortunately, the public will latch on to the most sensationalistic aspects that may or may not have anything to do with this accident. For right or wrong, the ones that have sparked the most media/public furor have been sterile cockpit 'chattiness' and crewmembers who commute on redeyes and sleep in crewrooms. You can bet that the next Fed on your jumpseat will take a keen interest in Sterile cockpit procedures.....and if I'm correct, Colgan already broached the idea of pulling random CVRs to monitor for the same thing (something that should cause the full wrath of ALPA). I'm just hoping they don't come up with some equally ridiculous 'fix' for commuting. |
Originally Posted by jayray2
(Post 609947)
There is no way they can come up for a regulation for this.
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Originally Posted by jayray2
(Post 609947)
There is no way they can come up for a regulation for this. Its nearly impossible. Where do you draw the line?... They would have to come up with a book thicker than an Encyclopaedia describing the rules. And if they did come up with some scheme and enforced it there would be total chaos...
There you had one management pilot's attempt to land an airplane in an extremely violent weather situation, and the FAA's focus was on how fatigued they were. |
Everyone that wants to comment on this accident should read the CVR that is available for public viewing. From cruise flight until intercepting the localizer there was so much mindless chatter. Very little of which was concerned with the weather conditions that they were in. A direct violation of the sterile cockpit rule below 10,000 feet.
Reading that transcript one does not get the feeling that this was a fatigued crew. This will be an interesting investigation and will cover all aspects of Colgan's operation from training, checking and adequate crew rest for their flight crews |
Originally Posted by KC10 FATboy
(Post 608869)
What I find interesting is that commercial vehicle operators have higher rest and shorter on duty requirements than airline pilots. Crazy.
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I really hope things change sad that people had to die but its about time for management to kick a nice carpet dance. I just went to colgan website and they are doing their absolute best to stay out in front of this rock slide but the boulders are just comming to hard and fast. The fact of the matter is for the indstry, cal, and colgan the chickens are comming home to rootse.
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Originally Posted by Sniper
(Post 609810)
A good hour, at least, has been spent discussing the accident FO's commute. (wake in SEA, SEA-MEM-EWR redeye on FedEx, with a 4 hour sit in MEM, and then a 6 hour sit in EWR before her show time). Please be responsible with your commute, or the FAA will ensure this is done for you.
I'm not talking about day 1 of a trip with a commute in on that day, I'm talking about days 2 and 3 of many "regional" type 4 day trips. |
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