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APAAD regrouping to challenge age 60

  • Thread starter Thread starter Andy
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Andy,
Some bonehead on the swapa forum is saying that all appropriations bills that were roled over to the 110 congress will also have all attachments including S65. I didnt think this was true, can you give me some ammo?

All bills die at the end of a session of Congress. The bills from the 109th don't roll over to the 110th. I can dig up some references, but sometimes it's just easier to let them live in their delusional world.

Perhaps use this: http://www.school-house-rock.com/Bill.html
And ask the bonehead what it takes for a bill to die.

Bottom line: new session of congress. Clean slate. All bills from previous session of Congress die.

Don't be surprised to see an age change bill introduced in the 110th. But any bill is unlikely to get out of subcommittee.
 
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!"
 
Great post, Occam's Razor!

Unfortunately, you're trying to reason with the same people who are suffering from the gray matter paradox. They are just not gonna recognize this as a valid argument.
 
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You don't know your limits

Sounds like you're trying to convince each other. Good Luck.

Flybynite, do you know your limits. Do you fly with a cold? Do you fly without your glasses? Do you fly through thunderstorms? Do you land after an unstable approach? I am sure the answer is yes to all.

I am also sure that you have no idea when to quit. You are the reason self regulated doesn't work. I look forward to the new medical certification you and your cohorts are bringing on us all with this new age limit crap. I am sure it will eliminate guys like you.
 
Flybynite, do you know your limits. Do you fly with a cold? Do you fly without your glasses? Do you fly through thunderstorms? Do you land after an unstable approach? I am sure the answer is yes to all.

I am also sure that you have no idea when to quit. You are the reason self regulated doesn't work. I look forward to the new medical certification you and your cohorts are bringing on us all with this new age limit crap. I am sure it will eliminate guys like you.

Because I want the age to change I am guilty of all this? Surely you can do better than that. Sounds like you are afraid of a more stringent medical. I would have no problem. I'm outa here, the playground mentality of FI is too much for me.

When the rule changes and I hit 60 and feel like continuing, I will. If at 55 I've had enough I'll retire then. For some reason having the option pisses off the vocal minority. No need to respond I'm gone.
 
Because I want the age to change I am guilty of all this? Surely you can do better than that. Sounds like you are afraid of a more stringent medical.

You're not guilty of anything! Wanting to fly as long as you're "able" is rational. The issues I'm raising are the inherent problems with pushing the limit. There are two that just haven't been satisfactorily addressed by anyone on the Change Age 60 side. 1. What is the minimum standard? 2. How do we self-certify our self-certifier mechanism?

When the rule changes and I hit 60 and feel like continuing, I will. If at 55 I've had enough I'll retire then. For some reason having the option pisses off the vocal minority.

Try to separate the bandit from the chaff.
 
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Boy, you guys must be a real joy to fly with.

Personally I don't give a damm if they raise the age or not, but on second thought I'd prefer thay leave it at 60 so I wouldn't have to fly with the self serving twits that seem to dominate this board.

Just out of curiosity do you guys have the guts to express these sentiments to the older Captains you fly with? I think not.

What a bunch of loser's

Losers are people who cannot grasp the proper use of punctuation marks while insulting people. I just had "the conversation" with my last Captain (mid-fifties in age).

Feel free to shut your piehole.

PIPE
 
4 to 1 SWA pilots want an age 60 change?

SWA is the problem. And SWA can fix the problem.

So is this news article quoting Ike Eichelkraut correct that 80% of the SWA pilots want an age change?


"This particular rule is arbitrary, discriminatory, and it needlessly throws out experienced pilots," said Southwest Airline Pilots Association president Joseph "Ike" Eichelkraut.

While Frontier and United Airlines do not have a position on the rule, Southwest Airlines backs a change to raise the retirement age.

"We just feel that forcing our most experienced pilots to retire because of a rule that as far as we know is not based on any data or medical history is just unfair," said Southwest spokeswoman Paula Berg.
At Southwest Airlines, which doesn't have a pension plan, pilots are 4 to 1 in favor of changing the rule, according to Eichelkraut.
 
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The rule is not in place because of medical data. It's there because of medical certainty and the problematic nature of self-certification.
 
You're not guilty of anything! Wanting to fly as long as you're "able" is rational. The issues I'm raising are the inherent problems with pushing the limit. There are two that just haven't been satisfactorily addressed by anyone on the Change Age 60 side. 1. What is the minimum standard? 2. How do we self-certify our self-certifier mechanism?



Try to separate the bandit from the chaff.

OR-
Logic is not your strong suit, is it? How can a limit of 60 be safer than any other number only because it's been that way "forever"? Your argument would favor doing away with all age limits and introducing a series of tests that would truly represent the physical and mental health of all medical applicants; a so-called "astronaut physical".

So save your breath defending the status quo and embrace the freedom that medical technology offers. And should you flunk the new physical standards (should any be determined as necessary) then it's been a good run and you've made way for the new generation whose cause you have so tirelessly championed.
 
The tide of change is at the ankles of the age discrimination advocates and rising, yet they fail to see the need to move.

Do we shed a tear for anybody that lost their job making "Whites Only" drinking fountain signs?
 
Bringupthebird's is senile

OR-
Logic is not your strong suit, is it? How can a limit of 60 be safer than any other number only because it's been that way "forever"? Your argument would favor doing away with all age limits and introducing a series of tests that would truly represent the physical and mental health of all medical applicants; a so-called "astronaut physical".

So save your breath defending the status quo and embrace the freedom that medical technology offers. And should you flunk the new physical standards (should any be determined as necessary) then it's been a good run and you've made way for the new generation whose cause you have so tirelessly championed.

You quote O.R. about wanting a minimum medical standard and the inherit problem of the airman daily knowing he meets the standard. And then you put words in his statements saying he wants an "astronaut physical" and then in your next paragraph you want us all to embrace "the freedom that medical technology offers."

Contradictions from one sentence to another sure does not make you look logical.

The tide has not risen to want an age 60 change. The votes are in at ALPA and the MAJORITY are OPPOSED. And soon another vote will occur at SWAPA and now that everyone has recognized the threat you and your cohorts have tried to slip by us, the same results will occur at SWAPA as ALPA.
 
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Bringupthebird hasn't done much in aviation

Bringupthebird, how is it that a near 60 pilot such as yourself has such little flight time, 12,500? 12,500 indicates you must of started flying as a second career late in life and are selfishly wanting more because you were a late bloomer.
 
O.R.... see what I'm saying?

Gotta say it again:

You're trying to reason with the same people who are suffering from the gray matter paradox.
 
OR-
Logic is not your strong suit, is it?

Maybe my cognitive skills are slipping. Oh course, I self-certified today that they were "good to go!".

How can a limit of 60 be safer than any other number only because it's been that way "forever"?

That's not my argument. The logic is in the conservatism of the limit. 60 is just a number, and I accept that.

Given that aircraft are not plummeting to Earth because of cognitive lapses by pilots, the FAA is comfortable with not setting a different age limit, which would lead to the unanswerable paradoxes of empirical minimum standards and self-certification of cognitive ability. The arbitrary limit (60) just happens to be working, since it's conservative enough to preclude (according to safety data) 100% of the age-based cognitive lapses by Pt. 121 pilots.

Your argument would favor doing away with all age limits and introducing a series of tests that would truly represent the physical and mental health of all medical applicants; a so-called "astronaut physical".

That ain't my argument either. My argument is that the rule is a safety issue, and that changes to Age 60 would lead to two requirements that can't be done with any degree of certainty...namely Standards and Self-Certification.

Right now we have an arbitrary age that is grating to some pilots. They seek to change it without concern that it may lead to even more arbitrary numbers (the standards), and subjective tests to ascertain compliance with those numbers.

I don't that's good for our profession.

So save your breath defending the status quo and embrace the freedom that medical technology offers.

What sort of "medical technology" are you advocating? An implantable "cog-tester"? A tin-foil hat with Alpha-wave readouts downlinked to a white-coated technician? A preflight analogies test for all pilots?

The hypocrisy in many of the arguments I've heard from the pro-change crowd has been their desire to change one "arbitrary number" (their term), with another arbitrary number! The rest in that crowd advocate no age limit, but rather the ability to pass the physical and the checkride. When that argument is countered with the gray matter paradox...they start mumbling and staring at their feet.

And should you flunk the new physical standards (should any be determined as necessary) then it's been a good run and you've made way for the new generation whose cause you have so tirelessly championed.

If I were to flunk any new physical (or the current one for that matter), I wouldn't start screaming "discrimination!". I'd throw a retirement party at the O'Club with the theme, "Not All The Little Turtles Make It To The Sea", and take up my fallback career: porn star.
 

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