realityman
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2004
- Posts
- 782
Dispatcher, once again you have hit the nail on the head. The problem is that if I show at 0300, and the possibility of an ASAP never happens, and then I'm calling in fatigued after only 7 or 8 hours of duty, it's being called a "union work action" or "difficult pilots" or some other such nonsense.
Actually, let me rephrase that. Even if I do fly an ASAP that early, thus justifying my being there, I'm still going to be too tired to fly after a relatively short duty day. And then the name-calling starts (maybe not to my face, but I know what gets said about pilots these days).
The question then becomes, do I give the pilots the 0300 show and end up dropping trips at the end of a relatively short duty because of a fatigue call, or do I have them show at 0530 for the 0700 trip, get a longer duty day out of them, and find something else to do with the early ASAP?
Truly, I don't envy scheduling, but it still seems like no one is doing anything proactive about rest cycles.
Sigh. I remember when this job used to be fun. I'm pretty much fed up with management-types AND unions.
Actually, let me rephrase that. Even if I do fly an ASAP that early, thus justifying my being there, I'm still going to be too tired to fly after a relatively short duty day. And then the name-calling starts (maybe not to my face, but I know what gets said about pilots these days).
The question then becomes, do I give the pilots the 0300 show and end up dropping trips at the end of a relatively short duty because of a fatigue call, or do I have them show at 0530 for the 0700 trip, get a longer duty day out of them, and find something else to do with the early ASAP?
Truly, I don't envy scheduling, but it still seems like no one is doing anything proactive about rest cycles.
Sigh. I remember when this job used to be fun. I'm pretty much fed up with management-types AND unions.