Guppy, Guppy, Guppyyyyyyy....?
I am hesitant to even say anything, but you really need allot more information than you have and more knowledge than you show to make the statement you made here, otherwise you sound like a "white knuckled Flyer" scared to death of flying....
I agree the weather was pretty bad all day in FWA,Bsed on the days METAR reported here, but airlines still fly, maybe delayed but fly. We dont know what Metar was in effect at the time of this flight, as you fail to mention the time this acft was on the move. I also agree with other posters here that many accidents noted were due to Pilots racing in to beat storms,and dispatchers not contatcing crews to divert flights, like at LIT. Lessions etched in many minds. You also fail to mention, probably another lack of understanding of how things work, the fact that behind every flight is a LICENSED DISPATCHER. His/her name is on that release, they have already studied the weather, the aircrafts condition at the time of departure and have fully prepped the crew with that information. When that release is sent to the crews, the PIC must AGREE with the dispatchers assement of the flight plan as well, sign it...before they push back....
If its going to be a long day of TS's then ATC will get envolved in planning departure slots out of the area to coincide with weather movements and ATC flow control, I can assure you that the Tower would not approve an aircraft to start a T/O roll with a TS at the departure end of the runway!, in fact not within 5 NM of the airport if its big enough and producing strong gusts. I've seen jets lined up in ATL more times that I can count waiting for weather to pass the extended runway centerlines, then they all get the heck out of dodge when an opening big enough comes into view...
But lets not forget the PIC, and the Dispatcher can cancel that flight at anytime they feel the situation is unsafe, on the ground or in the air, but were talking on the ground here....If I were that dispatcher and I thought my flight out there waiting to T/O was in grave danger, I would call him on company freq or ask ATC to call him with a cancelled plan and asking him to return to the gate......
My point here, no matter what the skill level is of the pilots, or dispatchers, there are many people highly trained people in the loop to keep bad things from happening, I say let people do there jobs and keep your comment professional especially if you dont know how things work. Ask a question, dont make a statement which make you sound offical to others that might see you as a whistle blower or something. The media loves this crap and can make a mountain out of the flatest land in the country...when there is no story at all.
I personally have flown many times on SA, have spoke to crews and feel they are some of the better pilots I have seen around the regional industry. They are still use to old way of flying IFR and have attained skills that many Major airline pilots have forgotten many years ago because they just dont use those skills anymore. These SA crews still drill holes in the sky where the weather is, the big boys just fly over it....
I say give these guys a break, and give the SA dispatcher more respect for knowing his responsibility.
Of course this is just my opinion,
Col. Bill USAF (ret)
Ps..everyones posts on here are now etched in stone...so be careful.....