SBD
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2006
- Posts
- 379
The pilots made an error. There were a number of factors that made that error easier to make than it should have been.
Managing distractions is something we all do on a daily basis. At some point every single one of us will reach a point where we cannot keep up with all the distractions, and one of the balls we're juggling will get dropped.
Hearing one's employer say that without yet another round of concessions the company will likely cease to exist can be a pretty big distraction for pilots who are already economically stressed.
Personally I know there's a pretty small chance I'd be discussing what Lady Gag wore at the Grammy's on the flight deck - but if I'd just heard my paycheck and my family's economic security was being threatened by my employer AGAIN....there is an increased likelihood I'm going to want to discuss options for mitigating the threat. Analyzing risk and planning strategies to reduce that risk is what good pilots do.
The situation is not unique to Comair, and I'm not writing the crew performed as well as they could have. Perhaps if they'd had a substantial amount of savings, or easily transferable skills that would not guarantee them a substantial cut in pay and quality of life, the crew wouldn't have been distracted by the very recent announcement that their jobs were at risk. Perhaps they'd have been discussing Eminem. It's just as likely they'd have been discussing nothing beyond what was required to do their job.
I don't want my attorney, doctor, accountant, or pilot wondering how they're going to pay their bills next month when they're working for me. Perhaps some of us think this is acceptable. We are, after all, an "everything for nothing is my constitutional right" Wal-Mart society. We feel like we've been ripped off if we leave a gas station after buying ten gallons of gas, then see a station just down the street that was a penny a gallon cheaper. Never mind that we've got six dollars worth of change rattling around on the floor underneath our seat.
The sad thing is, nothing has changed. Forty-nine people died, and we're still dealing with the same safety-compromising airline industry management.
Shame on the NTSB for taking the easy way out and blaming the dead instead of highlighting the numerous issues that contributed to the tragedy in LEX.
Word to the Mutha!