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No pressure fatigue calls?

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I like the terms "pilot induced fatigue" and "company/schedule induced fatigue"

If your baby is up all night screaming and you got NO sleep, are you fatigued? Of course. But that is "pilot" induced and not the fault of the company.

If at an overnight a soccer team keeps kicking the ball up and down the halls all night long and you get no rest, is that fatigue? Of course. But it is clearly not your fault. Hell, it's not really the company's fault either. But fatigued is fatigued.

If you stayed out too late drinking on an overnight, I might ask you to call in SICK. and IRRESPONSIBLE, but not fatigued.

Look, this is the ONE tool we have to say uncle, and it used to be no questions, no foul in the past. But we are screwing ourselves by abusing it.
 
I like the terms "pilot induced fatigue" and "company/schedule induced fatigue"

If your baby is up all night screaming and you got NO sleep, are you fatigued? Of course. But that is "pilot" induced and not the fault of the company.

If at an overnight a soccer team keeps kicking the ball up and down the halls all night long and you get no rest, is that fatigue? Of course. But it is clearly not your fault. Hell, it's not really the company's fault either. But fatigued is fatigued.

If you stayed out too late drinking on an overnight, I might ask you to call in SICK. and IRRESPONSIBLE, but not fatigued.

Look, this is the ONE tool we have to say uncle, and it used to be no questions, no foul in the past. But we are screwing ourselves by abusing it.


The questions aren't to give you a hard time. The company is doing research to see how to mitigate the fatigue issues. They are even convening groups of reserve pilots to discuss the issue, and looking into software to evaluate trips to reduce circadian rhythm swaps.

Just because someone asks you about your fatigue, that doesn't mean you are being pressured, or disciplined. The safety department wants the form filled out to help with determining the risk to the operation.

Believe me folks, if the safety department feels that there is a substantial risk, things will get changed. The only way to determine the risk is to compile data. Be honest, and report what you're seeing out there, reserve guys. It will be a good tool for you to speak directly to the management about the issue.
 
I agree with ASA Aviator, but they have been collecting data for what, 2 years now? When are the changes coming?
 
ASA Aviator,

I completely agree with you. I don't think the company is doing it to give you a hard time. The company NEEDS to gather data about fatigue so they can avoid those types of schedules.

What I am saying is I HOPE the only ones getting a hearing (and given a hard time) are the ones who drank too much last night or had to pick their roommate up at a bar at 2 AM. Sorry....not valid
 
Ahh, come on!! If you buy that..

I can look at a pairing and tell you in 5 seconds if it's fatiguing or not. So ASA is suddenly trying to convene panels and conduct "studies" on things that have been known for YEARS. It's a farce. They know if (when) they put one in the dirt they can fall back on this and say-

Hey, we tried but stimed by those bad boy pilots who wouldn't fill out the survey

I've got a suggestion- hire someone with an IQ over 100 who can put together a trip to save their life.
 
If it is just to gather data... then why can it not be anonymous? I asked around and found that Netjets does the same thing but it is supposedly anonymous. Anyway, just saying.
 
good point, but they probably want to see the pairing involved, maybe see what hotels are involved etc...in case there's a pattern
 
Ahh, come on!! If you buy that..

I can look at a pairing and tell you in 5 seconds if it's fatiguing or not. So ASA is suddenly trying to convene panels and conduct "studies" on things that have been known for YEARS. It's a farce. They know if (when) they put one in the dirt they can fall back on this and say-

Hey, we tried but stimed by those bad boy pilots who wouldn't fill out the survey

I've got a suggestion- hire someone with an IQ over 100 who can put together a trip to save their life.

Absolutely. The company couldn't care less about your health. You are, after all, just an employee number. The only things that matter to them are $$$ and CYA. If it ever happens to benefit the pilot group, it's merely coincidence
 
Ahh, come on!! If you buy that..

I can look at a pairing and tell you in 5 seconds if it's fatiguing or not. So ASA is suddenly trying to convene panels and conduct "studies" on things that have been known for YEARS. It's a farce. They know if (when) they put one in the dirt they can fall back on this and say-

Hey, we tried but stimed by those bad boy pilots who wouldn't fill out the survey

I've got a suggestion- hire someone with an IQ over 100 who can put together a trip to save their life.

So Oakum....Is a "red eye" from the west coast fatiguing? Should we ban them? Should a crew just be able to wave the "fatigue" flag before a "red eye" from the west coast?

What do we do with those who are abusing the "fatigue" flag? Give them a free pass?
 
Absolutely. The company couldn't care less about your health. You are, after all, just an employee number. The only things that matter to them are $$$ and CYA. If it ever happens to benefit the pilot group, it's merely coincidence

You're an idiot if you don't think the company cares about fatigue induced incidents. From a cost issue, don't you think they worry about accidents? An accident costs far more than giving you rest. The issue is those who abuse the fatigue issue for personal reasons....what do we do about them?
 
You're an idiot if you don't think the company cares about fatigue induced incidents. From a cost issue, don't you think they worry about accidents? An accident costs far more than giving you rest. The issue is those who abuse the fatigue issue for personal reasons....what do we do about them?


Thank you for further proving my point, JB. Reading comprehension is a good train. You should get on it.
 
You're an idiot if you don't think the company cares about fatigue induced incidents. From a cost issue, don't you think they worry about accidents? An accident costs far more than giving you rest. The issue is those who abuse the fatigue issue for personal reasons....what do we do about them?

Don't forget to factor in productivity. A guy at work is more cost effective than one who is sick for a few weeks. The company is still paying taxes and bennies while he isn't working.
 
Thank you for further proving my point, JB. Reading comprehension is a good train. You should get on it.

So you agree that the company doesn't want pilots being fatigued? Somehow I doubt that is what you think....
 
So you agree that the company doesn't want pilots being fatigued? Somehow I doubt that is what you think....


I agree that the company wants to avoid something as devastating to the bank account as a crash. At the same time, the company wants the flight completed. We've all been in a situation where we were just fatigued enough to successfully complete a flight and at the same time narrowly avoid a major violation.

The company has no right to tell me when to put my career on the line. And the fact that they care about fatigue, as we do, is merely coincidental.

It's all about $$$ for them. You have to watch out for #1.
 

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