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Pilot Fatigue Article

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F9 Driver

Wear The Fox Hat
Joined
Dec 15, 2001
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Article Launched: 6/11/2006 01:00 AM
business
Losing sleep in the wild, blue yonder
"We can only kill them one at a time, but (pilots) can kill them 300 at a time," says Donald Hudson, a doctor and a pilot, on the importance of battling pilot fatigue.
By Kelly Yamanouchi
Denver Post Staff Writer
DenverPost.com
Airline pilots remember American Airlines Flight 1420. It crashed in 1999 after overrunning a Little Rock, Ark., runway, killing 10 people and the pilot, Richard W. Buschmann, 48. More than 100 people were injured.

The National Transportation Safety Board investigated the crash and blamed the accident on the crew's 14-hour workday and the stress of trying to land in severe weather.

Pilot fatigue has been an issue in the airline industry for years. Pilots and leaders of the 62,000-member Air Line Pilots Association union are bringing the issue back to the forefront now, saying that pilots are working longer hours as airlines seek more productivity.

The union is focusing on "forcing (airlines) to live up to the agreements they have signed," improving work hours and schedules, and pressuring Congress and the Federal Aviation Administration to put "more appropriate" regulations in place, ALPA president Duane Woerth wrote last year in the union's journal.

"Bone-crushing pilot fatigue, and the mental errors it leads to, is still one of the largest threats to aviation safety," Woerth wrote.

Over the past six years, labor contracts at larger airlines have moved toward increasing the cap on pilot flight hours from 70 to 75 hours a month to as many as 95, according to ALPA. Pilots are typically away from home much longer than that because of commuting, flight preparation and layovers.

The FAA regulates how long domestic airline pilots can work. They cannot be scheduled to fly more than 1,000 hours per year, 100 hours per month, 30 hours per week or eight hours between rest periods. There are exceptions, such as some weather delays.

"We feel that the rules on pilot flight time and rest are fundamentally sound and serve the public well," said FAA spokeswoman Alison Duquette. "Over the years the pilots have had to make a lot of concessions because of the financial issues facing the industry, but as far as safety goes, we're confident that they're working within the FAA's rules."

United Airlines, the largest carrier at Denver International Airport, said safety is a top priority and that it works with ALPA to review pilot schedules.

JetBlue, whose pilots are not unionized and not members of ALPA, "takes very seriously the issue of alertness management," said spokeswoman Jenny Dervin. "We are just as concerned about pilot fatigue and managing pilot schedules so that it is not an issue."

JetBlue is paying for a study by Mark Rosekind of scientific consulting firm Alertness Solutions. Dervin said JetBlue wants to better understand how crew members' schedules interfere with their circadian rhythm. Rosekind will publish his results in a scientific journal, JetBlue said.

Pilots aren't the only airline employees who are losing sleep over the issue. The Association of Flight Attendants held a "sleep-in" at the FAA's headquarters last week in Washington. The group called for release of a study mandated by Congress on flight-attendant fatigue. They say fatigue jeopardizes their ability to fulfill safety and security rules.

The pilots union has organized a fatigue committee and expects to publish results of member polls in its journal in coming weeks.

Denver-based Frontier Airlines said that since the Little Rock accident, airlines are better managing fatigue.

In some cases, where a crew has been on duty for a long time and is headed for another flight with bad weather, the crew will be replaced, said Chris Collins, Frontier's senior vice president of operations.

Fatigue is the No. 1 issue for pilots, said Donald Hudson, an Aurora-based doctor specializing in the psychological health of airline pilots. He serves as the aeromedical adviser to ALPA.

Hudson, who is both a pilot and a doctor, said he jokes with his doctor friends, "We can only kill them one at a time, but (pilots) can kill them 300 at a time."

When fatigue increases for pilots, their reflexes and motor responses in the cockpit slow significantly, Hudson said.

They become complacent in accepting lower standards, and skills such as instrument cross-checks slow in speed and accuracy. Oral communication in the cockpit suffers and, of course, tired people may fall asleep, he said.

Pilots are flying longer hours daily, weekly and monthly, although still within federal regulations, said Continental Air Line Pilots Association head Dave Earnest, who lives in Fort Collins.

Jeff Kleymann, 45, a United Airlines pilot who lives in Morrison, said he recently worked a 13-hour day, which includes time in the cockpit and time between flights.

Fatigue became part of a debate over a federal rule that requires airline pilots to retire at age 60. Sixty-six percent of the pilots association members are over 40, although that union doesn't represent pilots at some of the smaller airlines with younger crews.

Pilot pay in the airline industry can range from less than $20,000 to well above $100,000.

Some pilots would like to work more years because of pension and wage cuts. But ALPA is not seeking a change to the law after polling its members.

"(Pilot fatigue) is more dangerous to any passenger in my opinion than age," said Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, during a subcommittee hearing last year on the age-60 rule.

Staff writer Kelly Yamanouchi can be reached at 303-820-1488 or at [email protected].
 
But will they address the commmuter pilot who has been up 12 hrs when he accepts his 10 hour flight across the pond?
 
Or how about the on-demand pilot who has been up all day taking care of the family because the wife works, and gets a call out at 10pm for a 14 hour duty day?

Nu
 
NuGuy said:
Or how about the on-demand pilot who has been up all day taking care of the family because the wife works, and gets a call out at 10pm for a 14 hour duty day?

Nu
Per the FARs, that's an individual call to raise the fatigue flag. What you do on your off duty time is a personal decision. Common sense would dictate that flying on-demand with a working wife and a family isn't a very smart decision on the part of the individual.

What is wrong is the FAA allows airlines to keep international pilots on reserve 24 hours a day, yet domestic schedules require assigned rest periods.
 
Or how about the on-demand pilot who has been up all day taking care of the family because the wife works, and gets a call out at 10pm for a 14 hour duty day?

Followed by 10 hours rest and a 0400 show the next day!

That's why people used to do this work only long enough to qualify for a scheduled or corporate job. It was a time builder and there were ten guys waiting to fill your seat when you moved on, 'cept now there are fewer places to go from here. In fact, the sched guys are coming back. For awhile anyway, before they decide they've had enough. Meanwhile, those of us who've decided to make a go of this business for the longer haul would like to see some reasonable standards for crew schedule and QOL employed by charter companies also realize that these companies will not turn down business just because it is to happen during hours which are inconvenient to the crews. But some effort must be made to avoid this flip-flopping from front to back to front side of the clock routine if we are to retain any reasonable level of mental capacity for critical judgement. That is the biggest challenge for the non-sched pilot IMHO.

Many of us are anxiously awaiting the release of the new 135 revision in the hope that some improvements to the duty rules will be adopted. However, we must also consider how this will affect the bottom line in that increased staffing may be required in order to cover the same schedule if operators must live with reduced availability from their crews. The premium charter companies will be less affected than the second and third tier comanies in that they are in a position to cherry pick the trips they want and broker out the inconvenient and/or less profitable trips to the more "hungry" operators. Mom & pop operators will become victims of industry consolidation and wink out of existence as only the larger companies will have the staffing flexibility to operate competetively. There is allready plenty of evidence of this trend as it stands now.

So back to the issue of pilot fatigue. Pilots will continue to fly tired because it is in their best self interest to do so. The industry culture demands it and the rules allow it. Those that don't like it are "whiners" and should "shut up or quit and get a 9-5 job" according to their pilot peers and company management. Well, those are the realities in many companies. Learn to live with it if you really want to fly I suppose. At the same time, if you never call fatigue, it will always be assumed that you are fit and ready for duty. By our very nature, we pilots (especially in "on demand") never want to seen as someone who "can't get it done", so we don't want to turn down an assignment lest we be viewed in that way. It's a fine line between keeping your job and self-image, and exersizing the good aeronautical judgement to call it off when you are not safe. Easy to say, hard to do. It is up to each of us to do so whether the rules are imposed from above or not. The most shrewd among us have either moved on or become managers! I just hope to survive a few more years in the cockpit before I can't take any more and must retire to a desk. This flying addiction must run it's course! Get some rest if you can and fly safely out there.

Let me add that this is just one charter pilot's view from one narrow perspective. It is understood that many thoughtful individuals may see this from a different angle. Take it for what you think it's worth.

Best,
 
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Hi Charter Dog,

Right you are....by allowing ourselves to accept this, this kind of thing continues. Management can always say "pilots love to complain, but we don't see many fatiuge calls".

I was busting on YIP there, because he was obviously busting on commuting pilots, and displaying the same high horse attitude that many "townies" display when their compatriots decide not to live in a craphole, the middle of nowhere, or a frozen wasteland with obnoxious locals.

I will grant you that some guys/gals I've seen strech the commute a bit, especially coast to coast. But a greater proportion of commuters that I've seen either have VERY short commutes (less than an hour) to start a duty day, OR come in the night before and eat the $35 for a room.

I've seen a far, FAR larger proportion of my on-demand buds push a bad situation by doubling up on the family duties. They figure they'll sleep during the day with junior at home while the wife/husband works. This is probably manditory too, because the pay rate sucks, and a 2nd income is required. Of course, anyone with kids can tell you that you will NEVER sleep during the day while looking out for the kids, and chasing the family around all day is MUCH more fatiguing than riding the back of an airpane and OOPS, your on-call period just started as wifey walked in the door.

Another point is that if you fly for a carrier where you have no union protection, too many fatiuge calls, and you get sh!t canned...not for being fatigued, but by not being a "team player" or not willing "to get the job done".

I've seen a lot of management types piss and moan about the pilot's complaining about bad trips. "Bid around them" they always claim, which might not be easy if 98 percent of the trips have offensive properties. Of course, they might know that if they walked out of the training building to fly a REAL trip every once in a while.

Nu
 
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Big picture

Nuguy, I was not busting upon commuters, I was busting upon the the rest/fatique vs safety issue that is rasied all the time. If the company forces you to fly when you are not rested it is a safety issue, but if a pilot elects to stay up 24 hours with a combination commute time and trip time, it is no ones business. People are free to live anywhere, peopel are free to do whatever they want to do, that is the United States of America. But you can not look at the rest issue without looking at the bigger picutre of why piltos fly fatiqued. And Nuguy if you have all of the answers, the world is waiting for an answer.
 
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Ok YIP, if that's the case, why don't you point out all the people who make life choices and stay up all day KNOWING they can be called out anytime overnight, facing a similar or potentially worse problem than the commuter faces?

Or would that be pointing out that 24 hour reserve is a questionable, fatiguing inducing practice?

pilotyip said:
And Nuguy if you have all of the answers, the world is waiting for an answer.

Rest assured, when I become King Overlord of the Universe, there will be some changes made.

Nu
 
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Part 91 K

Nuguy how about the Part 91 K rest rules used in the fractional world. Where you are given a specific rest period, say rest from 1200 to 2200, then be on duty until 0600, rest until 1600, then be on duty until 0200, then rest until 1200. while on duty you are requried to be in the bldg for immeidate response. Would that work for everyone? Like I said in another thread the 121 supplemental rules are the most demanding upon a crew and give the company the most flexibility to get the job done legally. No one seems to be going anyplace so some people must think it is OK, BTW when you are king of the world can you get me a job as your advisor?
 
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Hummm Me Over 130 Hours in 30 days!!! I slept in today, A much needed day off!!! The fun starts again on Wednesday
 

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