FLYLOW22
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2004
- Posts
- 2,382
FamilyGuy said:My personal favorite was the pilot who called in fatigued 15 minutes before an owner flight, even though he was coming off 15 hours of rest and no flights the previous day.
Yes, with behavior like that, its understandable that the schedulers will quickly learn who is a reliable professional and who is not...
It is hard to debate the actions of this pilot. You don't have all of the facts and neither do I.
Did the pilot sleep ok the night before? Did the pilot eat properly? Did the pilot just get off of a few min rest overnights? Did the pilot just finish several 14 hour days or do some back side of the clock/front side of the clock switcheroos? I would love to get you office types out here on the line for a tour or two. Love it.
Reliable professional or consumate professional?
Reliable sounds like Gary Hart talking. It has a double meaning. Reliable isn't always safe.
We are instructed by "management" to punch out for fatigue reasons at any time prior to a flight; 15 minutes included. We have seen "management" intimidate crews by bringing them into CMH for "counseling" as to why they fatigued out. We have also seem "management" terminate pilots for supposedly sleeping in the cockpit. "Management" seems to want it both ways. Pilots can't be tired according to NJA. They are supposed to be machines absent of any human characteristics resembling the need for adequate rest.
Fatigue will kill a crew and Owner(s) here one day if this attitude persists. It just will.
I think the pilot did the right thing. Flying fatigued makes no more sense than flying with no arms. Fatigue also doesn't just annouce itself to the pilot. It is quiet and insidious. Once it sets in... too late if your airborne.
I guess what "management" is telling us to do is hit the gas even thought the stop light is yellow. We might make it.