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V-1 said:I agree there is no excuse for not having a good back-up plan in place. I also believe there is no excuse for using a scheduling system that was put in place when Comair was half the size it is today. The responsibility for creating the system in which employees work is given to management personnel. The fallout from the failure the airline experienced this weekend must be directed towards this same management.
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Most of the blame lays squarely on Delta management's efforts to cut costs at all cost. They have already deflected the blame.michael707767 said:You can bet that when someone starts to place the blame, upper management will deflect the blame onto someone else. Its never their fault.
Comair ran out of glycol because they are not allowed to store but so much...and when the storm came police would not let the trucks on the road to deliver more!TZFO said:I might have missed it, but did the earlier posts mention that Comair ran out of glycol and could not deice the planes?
bvt1151 said:Most of the blame lays squarely on Delta management's efforts to cut costs at all cost. They have already deflected the blame.
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Actually Comair had 7 days worth of glycol on hand, with around 6 trucks on the way and more due to the storm. All 7 days worth were used up within 24 hours, and all trucks were stuck. No more glycol could have been stored. The only thing they could have done was have those trucks standing by for a week, but with 7 days worth on hand, there isn't a single inventory model that would have suggested that. Almost all interstates around Cincinnati were closed at one time, and nearby Evansville (which is upwind from CVG) has called this the worst storm since 1918. I don't remember how the airlines reacted in 1918, but I'll bet they were out of glycol also.TZFO said:Does Cincinnati have the weather channel?
How can Delta not know a wx system was gonna rip thru?
Comair gonna have to take a pay cut for this one? It had to be the pilots fault.
.....while all the managers were at home with their families drinking egg-nog.bvt1151 said:...there are many crewmembers who have spent days in the hotel in outstations awaiting scheduling's call, and those who have gone out of their way to do what they can to help.
Wrong, cool aide drinker! The very premise of your reply is flawed. If there were 7 days supply of glcol why didn't it last 7 days? To imply this is arbitrary and sedetious. If a seven day supply can be used in 24 hours then the supply was 24 hrs!!!!bvt1151 said:Actually Comair had 7 days worth of glycol on hand, with around 6 trucks on the way and more due to the storm. All 7 days worth were used up within 24 hours, and all trucks were stuck. No more glycol could have been stored. The only thing they could have done was have those trucks standing by for a week, but with 7 days worth on hand, there isn't a single inventory model that would have suggested that. Almost all interstates around Cincinnati were closed at one time, and nearby Evansville (which is upwind from CVG) has called this the worst storm since 1918. I don't remember how the airlines reacted in 1918, but I'll bet they were out of glycol also.
I am a pilot at Comair, and while it sounds stupid to blame this on the pilots, we aren't without blame. Several pilots (and flight attendants) left outstations early to non-rev home without notifying scheduling. Granted you couldn't get ahold of scheduling, but regardless they put an unneeded and enormous strain on an already taxed scheduling system. Of course this isn't anywhere near the main reasons for this happening, but before we start pointing fingers, we need to take a look at what we did (or didn't do) to help the situation. That being said, there are many crewmembers who have spent days in the hotel in outstations awaiting scheduling's call, and those who have gone out of their way to do what they can to help. Those should be thanked, but we need to find a way to prevent the mass retreat of those pilots who went AWOL.
After spending six days in a hotel in an outstation, while the company makes no effort to get those people home, what do you expect people to do...particularly after the company failed to facilitate communication with anyone.bvt1151 said:Several pilots (and flight attendants) left outstations early to non-rev home without notifying scheduling. Granted you couldn't get ahold of scheduling, but regardless they put an unneeded and enormous strain on an already taxed scheduling system....we need to find a way to prevent the mass retreat of those pilots who went AWOL.