How about those that are capable of maintaining a class 1 be given the opportunity to continue to work?
How, exactly, does the traveling public know you're
maintaining your Class 1 physical?
Remember, you
self-certify most of your physical. That's right...your AME doesn't test you for headaches, depression, dizziness, occasional double vision, suicide attempts, blackouts, alcoholism, kidney stones, and dozens of other maladies or symptoms that each airman must self-certify are okie-dokie. All your AME does is check the basics (items that have an
established acceptable deviation) and issue you the certificate. The FAR's make it pretty clear that you must self-certify yourself prior to exercising the privileges of your Airman's Certificate.
We cool so far?
Here's the tricky part. The FAA hasn't set minimum standards for some of the things we need to fly airplanes safely...namely reflexes and cognitive ability. There is no "minimum cognitive function" to be a Pt. 121 pilot. [Note: If there was, I'm pretty sure I'd be right at that minimum...] Each of us must determine if we have our "A" Game before we slip the surly bonds.
At some age, each of us will slip below a safe cognitive ability...or we'll die prior to reaching that point via some other mechanism.
That is not an opinion. That is a clearly established medical certainty. We do not get sharper as we age...we get worse.
All of us.
By leaving Age 60 in place, the FAA has testified that they feel certain that they can exclude minimum reflexes and cognitive ability from the FAR's, since most 59-year olds still retain sufficient mental skills. They have also testified that self-certification is a serious concern (and I'm paraphrasing here) because a lack of cognitive skills can preclude a human from
detecting that they've suffered a loss of cognitive skills. John Kern, the former head of the regulatory division of the FAA, called it the "gray matter paradox".
You gotta have it to be able to tell if you've got it.
Read a few reports from 80+ year old drivers who plow their cars through crowds of pedestrians, and you'll see the same theme, "
I felt fine!", and "
I don't know what happened."
Before you respond with "But we take checkrides!"...let me tell you that I was a Check Airman for 10-years, and I know I was never taught how to distinguish between a "bad day" and a "bad brain". And even if all Check Airmen were sent to "Cog-Screen School" to get smart, we still have the issue of self-certification 2,3,4,5 months later...at night...in bad weather.
"
I felt fine!"