100LL... Again! said:Then why are they allowed to fly airplanes? I'd say 90% of our folks were the opposite. Perhaps the PFT culture breeds that level of indifference to quality in many who join the organization.
Why are they allowed to fly airplanes? Because a lot of the check airmen let stuff slide. I had two IOE captains when I started at PCL. The first was a really nice guy, but I learned practically nothing from him. He was sloppy and never flew profiles. He implied that some of the SOPs were unimportant. The second captain was one of the best I've ever flown with. He's not a very popular guy, but he's one of the most knowledgeable pilots I've flown with. He taught me a lot about the airplane. The problem is that most of the check airmen are more like the first guy, and there's very few like the second guy. These are the check airmen that are signing off the 90% of the pilots that can't answer basic questions for the NTSB. That is the root of the problem.
If it's PFT that breeds this culture, as you assert, then I guess Comair, XJet, ASA, etc... all have the same unsafe culture. They were the original PFT airlines, not Pinnacle and Gulfstream. You'll also find that all of the majors have hundreds of former PFTers working for them. The same low standards don't apply there however. PFT isn't the problem here. It is much deeper than that.
Maybe the company bears some blame here for incomplete training, but where is the initiative to learn on your own? Missing, apparently.
I couldn't agree more. Unfortunately, most of the pilots think that the FOM and FCOM are only books to read right before they go back to recurrent. They ignore them the other 11 months out of the year. For that, the pilot are responsible and not management. However, that doesn't relieve management of the responsibility to provide an adequate training program. Both parties are responsible for safety.