solidarity bro
Lrjtcaptain said:
Okay, so a Skywest CRJ-50 sits overnight in a frigid midwestern town.
The crew shows up at normal show time to get the a/c ready for its trip to SLC. They can't board the pax until over an hour past departure time because the plane is too cold and the emergency lighting has not yet come alive due to the cold frigid midwestern air.
So the flight leaves an hour late and half the pax miss their connecting flights.
Why didn't the crew arrive early and get the a/c ready for normal departure time?
There can be many reasons that the crew didn't arrive early. The most obvious is the FAR requirement to get at least minimum rest. The next most obvious is hotel van schedules. Crew hotels don't just run the van when the crew decides to leave, these trips are usually scheduled well in advance and the hotel just doesn't run an extra bus to accomodate crews who would like to leave a little early. Especially smaller city hotels; in NYC, you could probably catch an earlier van, but in podunk Kansas, you take the scheduled ride.
Maybe they didn't have their 8 hours rest but doesn't that only include the time the engines are running?????
Rest is release to report. It has absolutely nothing to do with engines.
Perhaps something logical could have been done to get this flight out ontime. Something to think about.
Unlike part 91 corporate ops, 121 operations don't encourage pilot input. The crap you've noticed frustrates us just as it does you. We see stupidity and inefficiency every day. But management (excepting SWA, JetBlue and AirTran) sees us as the enemy. Seriously, they DO NOT listen to us.
I'll bet that the crew did everything within their power to get an ontime departure. Behind the scenes, you might have seen the Captain begging for a heat cart, but the station person might have been busy with a cranky pax who wanted to unsure that her cat could come aboard in her purse.
P.S. Skywest and Delta, you just lost my vote.
Ill be flying American, America West, or maybe even United next time. Thanks for the wonderful service into Oakland as well, when it took an hour and a half to get my bag from the gate to the baggage claim. Wonderful service. Thanks a bunch.
Mark
Mark, as stated above, managment doesn't take many pilot suggestions. They will listen to you the PAYING passenger. If you have a beef, let me suggest that you fire off an email (followed by a snail-mail) to Delta and Skywest. Just please understand that the aircraft belongs to the station during the time period in which you refer.
I'm going to assume that you, being a pilot, will be sympathetic once you understand the system; so here it is: The scheduled service business is structured in this way.... Jobs are specialized and every member of the team in needed in order to accomplish the job with the fewest amount of people. The station manager is responsible for the airplane during it's time on the ground and he or his assignees (worker bees) ensure that the airplane is at the proper gate, it's stores are properly stocked, it's lavs are serviced, etc. If the airplane is cold soaked, the station is responsible for getting a heater hooked up, or a GPU plugged in, in order to ensure an ontime departure. It is not the pilots job to arrange for proper ground handling, etc; nor would it be efficient to give these jobs to pilots because scheduled service pilots are limited by the FAR to a certain amount of duty and pilots cost more per hour than do station personel. Yes, the company could require that pilots show up two hours early instead of 45 minutes in order to save the cost of a hours pay to a ramper, but that extra 75 minutes could cost the company a cancelled flight later in the day if the crew ran out of time. Simply put the system needs to be specialized in order to be efficient.
Here are a few more points to consider. ( I don't know the RJ so I could be slightly wrong ) Our companies are asking us to be a cost effective as possible, I'll bet that Skywest doesn't want the pilots to run the APU until it is absolutely needed for engine start. Back when times were good, I'd crank the APU before I ever sat down to do my checks. Now, I wait until five minutes before push because that is our procedure, I can imagine that Skywest also has procedures in place to save fuel, etc. These measures sometimes get in the way of normal ops. I'm not saying what happened to your flight, but I will say that I truly belive that the delay had nothing to do with the pilots duty arrival time.
The problem you faced was a breakdown in station procedures.
Now, go have a Merry CHRISTmas, and leave the gripping to those of us sitting in a hotel a thousand miles from home.
regards,
enigma
PS, it is entirely possible that your delay had nothing to do with cold egress lighting battery packs. They could have been run down because someone failed to disarm them the previous flight and they needed time to recharge, or it might have had nothing to do with batteries. Unless you personally know the crew, you'll never know.