COOPERVANE
Member since 1967
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2002
- Posts
- 2,167
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back in the 1930/40's (and into the 50's from what I know) the whole crew shared a room on layover. PAN AM , TWA, AA, UAL, EAL ect.....
We've recently had one not make it into the sky in the first place where sleep deprivation is one of the suspected contributing factors. The MESA pilots should just roll out their sleeping bags in the terminal where the passengers can see them napping. At least they'd be able to watch cable.As long as RJ's aren't falling from the sky, this will continue to be the norm.
back in the 1930/40's (and into the 50's from what I know) the whole crew shared a room on layover. PAN AM , TWA, AA, UAL, EAL ect.....
Not to beat a dead horse, but:
1. The 1 (ONE) hotel room "policy" shared by 4 mixed gender crewmembers has been in place for at least 4 months. It certainly pre-dated the TV story by at least 2 months.
2. The 1 (ONE) hotel room policy was driven by legal issues, not company concern for properly rested crews. Issues like:
3. The 1 (ONE) crew room acts as a subtle pressure to not call fatigued. ("didn't you get a hotel room?")
- Continuous use APU noise complaints in smaller airports (ex: MRY)
- Unattended crews in a secure ramp area w/o proper SIDA badges (everywhere)
- The hotel room is really a "crew room" away from the airport
News story didn't change squat. All (!) crews are still sleeping on the airplane, because nobody wants to share a hotel room with 3 strangers, and you get more rest sleeping on the plane anyway (at least 1.5 hrs more).
And really, with one bed, one desk chair, and one (sometimes) comfy chair, who wants to go play "musical chairs" (last one doesn't get a chair, remember) with a bunch of strangers anyway?
I don't understand where this CDOs are unsafe stuff comes from. Ever hear of UPS and FedEx? Their duty day is just about the same as a typical CDO. Flying the backside of the clock isn't unsafe as long as sufficient work-rules are in place.
"ROTFLMAO" as in "Rolling on the floor laughing my ass off"
????
I don't quite understand why this is a laughing matter to you. Your company only provides a single room for the entire crew on short CDO breaks and this has you laughing why???
And what floor are you rolling on, is it the cabin floor?
I'm not talking about night freight- that's a way of life and your schedule stays (roughly) the same. You fly at night and sleep during the day, like a 3rd shift employee.
I'm talking about you getting 3 hours of sleep overnight. But you can't magically will yourself to sleep before that in order to be properly rested- you probably woke up at 8 am or something like that. So, instead of getting a proper nights' rest, you get less than half that, then go fly an expensive plane with strangers entrusting you with their lives. That's why standups are bad.
As long as you are flying CDOs consistently and not jumping back and forth between day flying and night flying, then it shouldn't be a problem.
I still don't see the problem. When I do CDOs, I do just as the cargo guys do: I sleep about 6 hours during the day in the crashpad and get a little nap in during the CDO layover in the hotel. As long as you are flying CDOs consistently and not jumping back and forth between day flying and night flying, then it shouldn't be a problem.
Unfortunately, not all carriers build CDO-only lines. With the regional I was at, there were usually a good number of regular lines each month in the bid packet with a CDO tacked on to the end of a trip. So in that case, one could go from flying days to a quick CDO or standup. And it was never fun or sometimes even possible to get much of a nap on the during the break period.
Who wants to bet Mesa pilots will see a rise in sexual harrassment lawsuits, divorce filings, pregnancies, and a push for the legalization of same-sex marriage?
Who wants to bet Mesa pilots will see a rise in sexual harrassment lawsuits, divorce filings, pregnancies, and a push for the legalization of same-sex marriage?