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...........
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...........