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ASA, DAL almost collide in ATL

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No....We do not!
(Great job ALPA!)

You should get educated on this issue before randomly assigning blame to the union.

The problem is on BOTH ends. An ASAP program will do no good if the company throws the pilot under the bus by creatively defining and interpreting what "sole source" report means. Again, if that doesn't make sense to you, then kindly shut your pie hole until you know what the hell you're talking about.

The union should NOT engage in ASAP discussions until the company has DEMONSTRATED an acceptable level of trust to make it realistic.
 
What I find interesting is that the mechanics and dispatchers at ASA are covered under the ASAP program but not the pilots or flight attendants.

The mechanics are not union. The dispatchers had less trust issues with management when they signed their letter. You're comparing apples to oranges.
 
Uga,
I cannot agree with you more. I have already fired off an angry email to my union press guys and local president. I am very angry about how this was handled. Five-minutes of free publicity is no good when its done on someone else's (the ASA pilot group) misfortune, or disdains their intregity.

VERY well said! Good to know we still have a friend in the tower.
 
Assuming it was the crews fault. That, in itself is an assumption at this point.

There could be much more to the story.


Medeco

There is not more to the story. They were instructed to hold short. They didn't. Pilot error cut and dry.
That being said, how many of you saw the AP (ASSociated Press) version? I quote "...crew ignored instructions not to taxi..."
I LOVE IT!!! Ignored. By definition, to ingnore means to hear, understand, and not comply. I seriously doubt that this crew heard, understood, and failed to comply. My money is that they got mixed up and inadvertantly boned it. ATL is a zoo.
 
Couple thoughts:

First that ASA does not have the ASAP program is unfortunate.

Second is that just because your airline has an ASAP program, doesn't necessarily mean a pilot will not face diciplinary action from the FAA. The ASAP program nearly guarentees that it won't get to that but in some cases, the Feds will still nail pilots to the cross, ASAP program or not.

Third thought is what we "hear" as pilots vs. what was actually said to us can be quite different. Workload, stress, etc. all play a huge part in this.

But the number one thing is to make sure both pilots, look both ways before crossing an active runway's hold short line. I'm as guilty as anyone else for not doing it 100% of the time, but we have to make this a habbit, especially at busy places with poor setups like EWR, LAX, ATL, ORD...........
 
I'm not suggesting that this had anything to do with this incident, but what do you all think about sterile cockpit?

It seems like a lot of guys I fly with think it is a ridiculous FAR, and one they choose not to follow.
 
There is not more to the story. They were instructed to hold short. They didn't. Pilot error cut and dry.

so you were there and heard it all take place?

Or are you just trusting the AJC???
 
so you were there and heard it all take place?

Or are you just trusting the AJC???

ASA is a briefing nightmare during taxi. I vote to change the idiotic briefing to "standard" for an airport and the aircraft unless there is something considerably abnormal or out of place. Not to mention that stupid briefing card can be read by both pilots individually at the gate before departure. Most that I fly with the first time attempt to brief ASAP off the ramp...that is until I make it known that I am framiliar with the details and don't need to be briefed again that month unless there is a significant deviation from normal procedures on that aircraft or airport. Works great and you actually hear the radio and don't miss calls. That may not have been a factor but I make sure it is not a factor when I am out there. Sterile cockpit is sterile cockpit...it means shut up and listen...not chatter about crap the company deems appropriate and pertinant to the flight.
 
Convince every captain out there to stop asking for takeoff briefings and your FO's will stop reading them.

-Brett
 

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