gunfyter
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2002
- Posts
- 3,785
Yip,
Back in the 80's... we had this little saying at 3rd MAW we had to say at the conclusion of every flight brief...
Do you think being on call for 10 to 20 hours on a 30 minute callout ... (not knowing if you will be flying early am, late evening or late at night) and then flying freight for 12 hours part 135 ... and then fly 6 hrs back to home plate part 91 at night to low ceilings and a Detroit snow storm is a sound operating procedure? Just so the plane could be back in case there is another trip for the next crew?
Some managements do.
Back in the 80's... we had this little saying at 3rd MAW we had to say at the conclusion of every flight brief...
"Safety is paramount... no mission in peace time is so important it must be flown at the expense of safe and sound operating procedures. Doing it right is what counts."
That's how the culture of management promotes safety. We still had accidents but no one was pressured to go.
Do you think being on call for 10 to 20 hours on a 30 minute callout ... (not knowing if you will be flying early am, late evening or late at night) and then flying freight for 12 hours part 135 ... and then fly 6 hrs back to home plate part 91 at night to low ceilings and a Detroit snow storm is a sound operating procedure? Just so the plane could be back in case there is another trip for the next crew?
Some managements do.
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